Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySharlene Blair Modified over 9 years ago
1
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Network Attached Storage (NAS) Module 3.2
2
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 2 NAS – Network Attached Storage After completing this module, you will be able to: Discuss the benefits of NAS based storage strategy Describe the elements of NAS Discuss connectivity options for NAS Discuss NAS management considerations by environment Identify the best environments for NAS solutions
3
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 3 In this Module … This module contains the following lessons: What is NAS? Managing a NAS Environment NAS Application Examples
4
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 4 Lesson: What is NAS? Upon completion of this lesson, you should be able to: Define NAS and describe its key attributes List the benefits of NAS Describe NAS connectivity
5
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 5 NAS Evolution Network Attached Storage (NAS) Stand Alone PC Networked File Sharing Networked PCs Portable Media for File Sharing
6
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 6 What is NAS? NAS is shared storage on a network infrastructure. Clients Application Server Print Server NAS Device NAS HeadStorage
7
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 7 General Purpose Servers vs. NAS Devices Network Operating System I/O File System Print Drivers Applications General Purpose Server (NT or Unix Server) Network Operating System File System Single Function Device (NAS Server)
8
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 8 Why NAS? Supports global information access Improves efficiency Provides flexibility Centralizes storage Simplifies management Scalability High availability – through native clustering Provides security integration to environment (user authentication and authorization)
9
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 9 Customer Demands for NAS Have Changed T H E P A S TT O D A Y Outside the Data Center Islands of Information Tools and Scripts Critical Business Applications (Databases) Integrated Infrastructure Enterprise Management
10
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 10 NAS Device Components NAS Device CIFS NFS Network Interface Storage Interface NAS Device OS SCSI, FC, or ATA IP Network
11
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 11 NAS File Services Protocols: NFS and CIFS NAS Device Network Interface Storage Interface NAS Device OS SCSI, FC, or ATA CIFS NFS IP Network Windows Unix NFS CIFS
12
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 12 Network File System (NFS) Client/server application Uses RPC mechanisms over TCP protocol Mount points grant access to remote hierarchical file structures for local file system structures Access to the mount can be controlled by permissions
13
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 13 Common Internet File System (CIFS) Public version of the Server Message Block (SMB) protocol Client applications access files on a computer running server applications that accept the SMB protocol Better control of files than FTP Potentially better access than Web browsers and HTTP
14
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 14 NAS Connectivity: A Closer Look Physical Data Link Network Transport Session Presentation Application OSI Seven-Layer Module FTP, Telnet SMTP, SNMP NFS XDR RPC TCP, UDP IP ARP / RARP Not Defined Internet Protocol Suite
15
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 15 I/O Example Storage Interface Storage Protocol NAS Operating System NFS / CIFS TCP/IP Stack Network Interface Application Operating System I/O Redirect NFS / CIFS TCP/IP Stack Network Interface Client IP Network NAS Device Block I/O to storage device
16
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 16 UNIX and Windows Information Sharing Protocol Layer Common File System (CFS) Multi-protocol support layer OS I/O layer NFS Traffic CIFS Traffic FTP
17
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 17 NAS Physical Elements Data movers/filers Management interface – Configure network interfaces – Create, mount, or export file system – Install, configure and manage all data movers/filers – Can be accessed locally or remotely Connectivity – NAS head to storage – NAS head to network Storage
18
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 18 Integrated vs. Gateway NAS Integrated NAS NAS Gateway IP Network FC Fabric NAS Head
19
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 19 Integrated NAS System NAS Head Storage Direct Attach IP Network
20
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 20 Gateway NAS System Clients Application Servers Storage NAS Gateway FC Switch IP Network
21
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 21 Lesson Summary A NAS server is an appliance optimized for file serving functions. Generally it has a specialized operating system NAS supports multiple protocols NAS can be implemented as an integrated system or as a gateway
22
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 22 Lesson: Managing in a NAS Environment Upon completion of this lesson, you will be able to: Describe the issues involved in managing a NAS environment Differentiate between the issues related to managing an integrated system vs. a gateway system
23
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 23 About Managing NAS Devices Most ship with vendor management software Have unique management issues Require preliminary analysis Need additional complementary software
24
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 24 NAS Management Concerns Performance Discovery Space Management Backup/Recovery Asset Management
25
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 25 Managing NAS Environments Managing an Integrated System – Both NAS component and the storage array are managed via NAS management software Managing a Gateway System – NAS component managed via NAS management software – Storage array managed via array management software
26
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 26 Lesson Summary Key points covered in this lesson: NAS management involves several areas: performance, discovery, space management, backup/recovery, and asset management The management is handled differently in integrated and gateway NAS environments
27
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 27 Lesson: NAS Examples Upon completion of this lesson, you will be able to: Discuss environments that would benefit from a NAS solution including: – NAS solution for HTTP file server – NAS consolidation – NAS solution for Gateway NAS system
28
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 28 NAS HTTP File Server Scenario Business ClientsSurfers, Shoppers Internal Users LANs / WANs SAN (Fibre Channel) Current Environment Web Database Transaction Mission Critical Servers
29
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 29 NAS HTTP File Server Example Business ClientsSurfers, Shoppers Internal Users SAN (Fibre Channel) Solution HTTP Server LANs / WANs Database transaction mission critical servers NAS Head
30
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 30 NAS Server Consolidation Scenario Current Environment Internet/Intranet General purpose OS serving files via FTP, CIFS, NFS, HTTP... UNIXNT W2K UNIXWindows
31
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 31 NAS Server Consolidation Example Solution Internet/Intranet UNIXWindows NAS File Server General purpose OS serving files via FTP, CIFS, NFS, HTTP...
32
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 32 Gateway NAS Scenario Why purchase additional Integrated NAS Storage when you have SAN Storage? Capitalize on your storage investment and purchase NAS functionality without the cost of additional NAS Storage.
33
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 33 Gateway NAS Example NAS Gateway IP Network Multipurpose Servers NTUNIX FC Switch
34
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 34 Example Summary Key points covered in this lesson: HTTP example Consolidation example Gateway example
35
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 35 NAS Challenges Speed – Network latency and congestion – Protocol stack inefficiency – Application response requirements Reliability Connectivity Scalability
36
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 36 Module Summary Key points covered in this module: A NAS server is a specialized appliance optimized for file serving functions. Overview of physical and logical elements of NAS Connectivity options for NAS Common NAS topologies NAS connectivity devices NAS management considerations by environment Best environments for NAS solutions
37
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 37 Check Your Knowledge What are the differences between a General Purpose Server and a NAS Device? What are the components of a NAS device? What protocol is used to connect to and manage physical disk storage resources in a NAS system? Give an example of a file sharing protocol. What is the difference between an integrated NAS system and a gateway NAS system?
38
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 38 Apply Your Knowledge… Upon completion of this topic, you will be able to: Describe EMC’s product implementation of a NAS solution
39
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 39 NAS equipment building blocks NAS device consists of: – Network interface device (EMC called Data Mover) – Storage interface device (EMC called Data Mover) – Management interface device (EMC called a Control Station) – Storage connectivity mechanism Direct connect Gateway connect Storage device Storage Interface DeviceManagement Interface Device CLARiiON Storage ProcessorNavisphere Manager Symmetrix FA (Fibre Channel Adapter)Service Processor
40
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 40 What is a Data Mover ? A Data Mover is a specialized hardware platform with : Dual Intel Processors PCI or PCI-X based High memory capacity Multi-port Network cards Fibre Channel connectivity to storage arrays No internal storage devices Operates on a highly specialized Operating System, DART (Data Access in Real Time).
41
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 41 What does a Data Mover Do? Once a Data Mover has been presented storage from a storage array, the storage is divided up using an Automated Volume Management feature of DART to provide volumes for file system creation. The Data Mover supports both NFS and CIFS protocols simultaneously and is able to server out data to either protocol individually or data to both protocols at the same time. In order to share data out to differing clients simultaneously the Data Mover integrates into the security structures of both environments seamlessly
42
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 42 Data Mover Summary NS500 Data Mover NS700 Data Mover NSX Blade Fibre I/O module GbE I/O module
43
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 43 What is a Control Station ? A Control Station is a dedicated management, Intel processor based computer running EMC Linux to provide: Specialized software installation and upgrade portal Management of high availability features – Fault monitoring – Fault recovery – Fault Reporting (CallHome) Management of Data Mover configuration and storage for the system configuration database Remote diagnosis and repair
44
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 44 Control Station System Management – Command Line The Control Station provides both management interfaces to NAS administrators: Command line can be accessed on the Control Station via: – An ssh interface tool (e.g. PuTTy) – Telnet (not enabled by default for security) Its primary function is for the scripting of common repetitive tasks that may run on a predetermined schedule to ease administrative burden It has approximately 80 UNIX command-like commands: – nas_ - Generally for the configuration and management of global resources – server_ - Generally for the configuration and management of Data Mover specific resources – fs_ - Generally for special file system operations
45
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 45 Control Station System Management – GUI Management
46
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 46 Celerra NS Family – Control Station Hardware
47
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 47 Joining the Building Blocks - Integrated Data Mover Control Station Internal Network Switch Serial cable connect Internal network connect Fibre Channel storage connect IP Network
48
© 2006 EMC Corporation. All rights reserved. Networked Attached Storage (NAS) - 48 Joining the building blocks - Gateway Data Mover NAS Control Station Serial cable connect Internal network connect Fibre Channel storage connect IP Network Fibre Channel Switch SAN SAN Host(s) Internal Network Switch
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.