Network attached storage architecture

SAN with Fibre Channel network hardware that has a greater effect on a user’s purchasing decisions. This article is about how emerging technology may blur the network-centric distinction between NAS and SAN. For example, the decreasing specialization of SAN protocols promises SAN-like devices on Ethernet network hardware. Alternatively, the increasing specialization of NAS systems may embed much of the file system into storage devices. For users, it is increasingly worthwhile to investigate networked storage core and emerging technologies. Today, bits stored online on magnetic disks are so inexpensive that users are finding new, previously unaffordable, uses for storage. At Dataquest’s Storage2000 conference last June in Orlando, Fla., IBM reported that online disk storage is now significantly cheaper than paper or film, the dominant traditional information storage media. Not surprisingly, users are adding storage capacity at about 100% per year. Moreover, the rapid growth of e-commerce, with its huge global customer base and easy-to-use, online transactions, has introduced new market requirements, including bursty, unpredictable spurts in capacity, that demand vendors minimize the time from a user’s order to installation of new storage. In our increasingly Internet-dependent business and computing environment, network storage is the computer. NETWORK ATTACHED STORAGE ARCHITECTURE