V-Switch Overview

The V-Switch provides protocol bridging, routing, switching and volume management in a single platform.

Figure 1, page 17, details a standard V-Switch network topology. Two V- Switches sit in the center of the network, providing load balancing and failover ability.

Above the V-Switches are IP clouds connecting the network(s) management and host stations. The hosts can connect to the V-Switch directly or via an IP cloud. An iSCSI initiator agent in the host allows access to virtual volumes in the V Switch.

Below the V-Switches are the network storage devices, which include both JBOD (Just a Bunch Of Disks) and RAID subsystems. The V-Switch provides the ability to connect via both SCSI and FC protocols, including FC clouds, increasing the number of potential attached storage devices.

The V-Switch can be used in two modes: iSCSI bridging switch

Storage virtualization switch

End-to-end Fibre Channel protocol networks are expensive to implement. As an iSCSI bridging switch, the V-Switch acts as a protocol bridge between storage devices on a Fibre Channel network and hosts on a standard IP network.

The V-Switch also acts as a protocol bridge between SCSI storage devices and hosts on a standard IP network.

Simple exposure of each storage device as a single LUN is an inefficient use of storage resources. As a storage virtualization switch, the V-Switch enables barrier-independent storage pooling with precise LUN carving of new virtual volumes which support mirroring and striping with managed exposure.

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SANRAD V-Switch User Manual

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SANRAD V-Switch manual Switch Overview