One thought. There are now a fair number of 10g switches with FCOE and ISCSI QOS optimizations builtin (Dell/force10, Arista, Brocade, etc.). If you are going to jump into FCOE (not saying you should or shouldn't), it's worth looking at this. They act as virtual fabric enhancers.
On Tue, Apr 1, 2014 at 10:38 AM, Christina Plummer <[email protected]>wrote: > My company is in the process of planning a new data center, and is looking > to avoid the cost associated with traditional fibre channel storage. The > original plan was use 10Gb NFS for everything (mostly ESXi hosts, plus some > big Oracle RAC servers on RHEL6). But after doing some more research, the > database guys are balking at NFS and want to stick with block devices. So, > that is leading us back to FCoE for the Oracle databases (they'll stick > with NFS for the ESXi hosts). > > They apparently attempted FCoE about 4 years ago when the converged > network adapters were new, and ran into a number of issues (I don't know > what they were). I've personally worked a lot with traditional FC on RHEL, > but haven't ever done anything with FCoE. Our network gear is Cisco, the > storage is NetApp. > > Does anyone have any comments, experiences or things to watch out for? > > Thanks, > Christina > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/discuss > This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators > http://lopsa.org/ > >
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