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ALL TOOLS, TRENDS & ANALYSIS
NOV '02 TABLE OF CONTENTS

Additional Tools, Trends & Analysis
Brocade, McData Bolster Midrange Families
The Whys and Wherefores of Failed Backups
Migrating Data No Picnic - and No Bargain
Definition
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Features
Get top performance from database storage
TCO analysis: does it work for storage?
Bocada clarifies backup picture
Towards the new data center
How to make your budget case
  >> SEE ALL FEATURES

Columns
Time to sign up: Time to sign up.
Behind the firewall: Latest Veritas follies ... Switch guys duke it out ... Cisco's big secret ... Yikes! Gadzoox lives ... Microsoft makes SCSI.
Hot Spots: Create a storage services group now: Our new columnist looks at creating a storage services group.
It still comes down to good old backup and restore: Storage Bin: After all these years, it still comes down to good old backup and restore.
Do you use 1Gb/s or 2Gb/s switches?: Do you use 1Gb/s or 2Gb/s switches?
  >> SEE ALL COLUMNS

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Microsoft Scales Data Center Wall with MPIO

Issue: Nov 2002


Microsoft is exhausting data center managers' objections to running Windows in the data center. With its recently announced Multipath I/O (MPIO), applications running on Windows 2000 Server and .NET Server will access an I/O fabric across multiple channels.

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Multipathing solves two problems: It provides for failover and load balancing between the multiple SCSI or Fibre Channel adapters.

"Many people will not run, say, an Oracle database without multipathing software," says Rahul Mehta, CEO at storage software vendor NuView.

Unix and mainframe operating systems are no strangers to multipathing. Veritas also delivers multipathing capabilities in Volume Manager, as does EMC with PowerPath.

Veritas and EMC are just two of the 23 vendors that have pledged to support MPIO. Why? "They're doing it so they can offer seamless support to the Windows environment, and not have to rely on third-party software," says Rick Walsworth, director of product marketing at Maranti Networks, which is building an MPIO-compliant multiprotocol switch.





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