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Fibre Channel

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Fibre Channel is a gigabit speed network technology primarily used for Storage Networking. Fibre Channel is standardized in the T11 Technical Committee of the InterNational Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS), an American National Standard Institute (ANSI) accredited standards committee. It started for use primarily in the supercomputer field, but has become the standard connection type for storage area networks in enterprise storage. Despite its name, Fibre Channel signaling can run on both twisted-pair copper wire and fiber optic cables.

History

Fibre Channel started in 1988, with ANSI standard approval in 1994, as a way to simplify the HIPPI system then in use for similar roles. HIPPI used a massive 50-pair cable and gigantic connectors, and had limited cable lengths. Fibre Channel was primarily interested in simplifying the connections and increasing the lengths, as opposed to increasing speeds. Later it broadened its focus to address SCSI disk storage, providing higher speeds and far greater numbers of connected devices.

It also added support for any number of "upper layer" protocols, including SCSI, ATM, and IP, with SCSI being the predominant usage.

Fibre Channel topologies

There are three major Fibre Channel topologies,

Attribute Point-to-Point Arbitrated Loop Switched Fabric
Max Ports 2 127 ~16777216 (2^24)
Max Bandwidth 2x Link Rate 2x Link Rate (Number of Ports) x Link Rate
Address Size N/A 8-bit ALPA 24-bit Port ID
Address Assignment N_Port Login Loop Init. and Fabric Login Fabric Login
Concurrent Connections 1 1 Switch Ports/2
Effect of Port Failure Link Fails Loop Fails unless bypassed Switch and Port Link Fails
Concurrent Maintenance Link Down May Disrupt Entire Loop Switch and Port Link Down
Expansion Additional P2P Links Attach loop to Fabric Expand Fabric
Redundancy Add Redundant P2P Link Use Dual Loops Use Redundant Switches
Link Rates Supported All All (all devices must be same) All (Mixed rates available)
Media Types Supported All All All
Classes of Service Supported All 1, 2 & 3 All
Frame Delivery In Order In Order Not Guaranteed
Access to Medium Dedicated Arbitrated Dedicated
Cost per Port Port Cost Port Cost + Loop Function Port Cost + Fabric Port

Fibre Channel layers

Fibre Channel is a layered protocol. It consists of 5 layers, namely:

FC0, FC1, and FC2 are also known as FC-PH, the physical layers of fibre channel.

Fibre Channel products are available at 1 Gbit/s, 2 Gbit/s and 4 Gbit/s. An 8 Gbit/s standard is being developed. A 10 Gbit/s standard has been ratified, but is currently only used to interconnect switches. No 10 Gbit/s initiator or target products are available yet based on that standard. Products based on the 1, 2, 4 and 8 Gbit/s standards should be interoperable, and backward compatible; the 10 Gbit/s standard, however, will not be backward compatible with any of the slower speed devices.

Ports

The following ports are defined by Fibre Channel:

Optical Carrier Medium Variants

Media Type Speed (MB/s) Transmitter Variant Distance
Single-Mode Fiber 400 1300nm Longwave Laser 400-SM-LL-I 2m - 2km
200 1550nm Longwave Laser 200-SM-LL-V 2m - >50km
1300nm Longwave Laser 200-SM-LL-I 2m - 2km
100 1550nm Longwave Laser 100-SM-LL-V 2m - >50km
1300nm Longwave Laser 100-SM-LL-L 2m - 10km
1300nm Longwave Laser 100-SM-LL-I 2m - 2km
Multimode Fiber (50µm) 400 850nm Shortwave Laser

400-M5-SN-I 0.5m - 150m
200 200-M5-SN-I 0.5m - 300m
100

100-M5-SN-I 0.5m - 500m
100-M5-SL-I 2m - 500m
Multimode Fiber (62.5µm) 400 850nm Shortwave Laser

400-M6-SN-I 0.5m - 70m
200 200-M6-SN-I 0.5m - 150m
100

100-M6-SN-I 0.5m - 300m
100-M6-SL-I 2m - 175m

Fibre Channel Infrastructure

Fibre Channel switches are divided into two classes of switches. These classes are not part of the standard, and the classification of every switch is left up to the manufacturer.

[Brocade], *[Cisco] and *[McData] provide both Director and fabric switches. *[QLogic] provides fabric switches.

Fibre Channel Host Bus Adapters

Fibre Channel HBAs are available for all major open systems, computer architectures, and buses, including PCI and SBus (obsolete today). Each HBA has a unique World Wide Name (WWN), which is similar to an Ethernet MAC address in that it uses an Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI) assigned by the IEEE. However, WWNs are longer (8 bytes). There are two types of WWNs on a HBA; a node WWN, which is shared by all ports on a host bus adapter, and a port WWN, which is unique to each port. Some Fibre Channel HBA manufacturers are Emulex, LSI Logic, QLogic and [ATTO Technology].

Fibre Channel Storage

Storage Virtualization Software and Hardware

Fibre Channel References

RFCs
Drafts
Other References

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

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