Compared to earlier TOE-less EMC attempts at iSCSI--the NS500 and NS700--these arrays deliver two to three times the performance, claims Joyce.
But existing iSCSI vendors say EMC's use of TOE has more to do with the outdated processors powering the Clariion controllers than it does with luring iSCSI power users. While the Clariion controller uses a 1.6GHz Intel Xeon processor, LeftHand Networks uses a 2.6GHz Xeon, says Tom Major, LeftHand Networks' VP of marketing. "We have plenty of CPU cycles left over to do storage processing," he notes.
For its part, Network Appliance (NetApp) will also add TOE to its product line, probably in the first half of this year, says David Dale, NetApp industry evangelist. The company has more than 1,000 iSCSI customers in production.
But so far, the vast majority of NetApp customers have done just fine without TOE--or iSCSI host bus adapters (HBAs) for that matter. "When we first came out with iSCSI, there were some problems with iSCSI hardware," Dale says, so the company decided to stick with a software target. Given the kinds of applications that iSCSI
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On the initiator side, the EMC arrays have been qualified for Microsoft's iSCSI initiator and QLogic's iSCSI HBA. Pricing of the iSCSI and Fibre Channel Clariions is approximately the same, but software support is not: A few Clariion staples such as SANCopy and MirrorView are conspicuously absent from the iSCSI lineup.
This was first published in March 2005
Storage Management Strategies for the CIO

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