Following on from snig’s post, I promised a blog on FC switch oversubscription. It’s been on my list for some time and I have discussed it before, however it has also a subject I’ve discussed with clients from a financial perspective and here’s why; most people look at the cost of a fibre channel switch on a per port basis, regardless of the underlying feature/functionality of that port.
Not that long ago, switches from companies such as McDATA (remember them? :-) ) provided full non-blocking architecture. That is, they allowed full 2Gb/s for any and all ports, point to point. As we moved to 4Gb/s, it was clear that Cisco, McDATA and Brocade couldn’t manage (or didn’t want) to deliver full port speed as the port density of blades increased. I suspect there were be issues with ASIC cost and fitting the hardware onto blades and cooling it (although Brocade have just about managed it).
For example, on Generation 2 Cisco 9513 switches, the bandwidth per port module is an aggregate 48Gb/s. This is regardless of the port count (12, 24 or 48), so, although a 48 port blade can (theoretically) have all ports set to 4Gb/s, the ports on average only have 1Gb/s of bandwidth.
However the configuration is more complex; ports are grouped into port groups, 4 groups per blade of 12Gb/s each, putting even more restriction on the ability to use available bandwidth across all ports. Ports can be dedicated or use shared bandwidth within a port group. In a port group of 12 ports, set three to dedicated bandwidth of 4Gb/s and the rest are (literally) unusable. Whilst I worked at a recent client, we challenged this option with Cisco. As a consequence, 3.1(1) of SAN-OS allows the disabling of all restrictions so you can take the risk and set all ports to 4Gb/s and then you’re on your own.
How much should you pay for these ports? What are they actually worth? Should a 48-port line card port cost the same as a 24-port line card port? Or, should they be rated on bandwidth? Some customers choose to use 24-port line cards for storage connections or even the 4-port 10Gb/s cards for ISLs. I think they are pointless. Cisco 9513’s are big beasts; they eat a lot of power and need a lot of cooling. Why wouldn’t you want to cram as many ports into a chassis as possible?
The answer is to look at a new model for port allocation. Move away from the concepts of core-edge and edge-core-edge and mix storage ports and host ports on the same switch and where possible within the same port group. This would minimise the impact of moving off-blade, off-switch or even out of port group.
How much should you pay for these ports? I’d prefer to work out a price per Gb/s. From the prices I’ve seen, that makes Brocade way cheaper than Cisco.
Showing posts with label ports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ports. Show all posts
Wednesday, 9 May 2007
Port Oversubscription
Posted by
Chris M Evans
at
9:47 pm
1 comments
Tags: Cisco, fibre channel, oversubscription, ports, SAN
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)