Design Considerations - HP StorageWorks 4000/6000/8000 - Enterprise Virtual Arrays Reference Manual

San design
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Recommended SAN solutions and conventions, see

Design considerations

To design or modify a SAN, evaluate the following:
Geographic layout
The locations of campuses, buildings, servers, and storage systems determine the required SAN
connections. SAN infrastructure components support long-distance connections and multiple
nl
interswitch cable segments. Fibre Channel routing interconnects independent SAN islands (fabrics)
or VSANs to form a single, geographically distributed SAN.
For information about supported distances, see
Data availability
A resilient SAN environment minimizes vulnerability to fabric or device failures and maximizes
performance. A mixture of availability levels can be implemented in the same SAN, depending
on the level of protection required for specific applications or data.
For information about availability levels, see
Connectivity
Provide enough ports to connect servers, storage systems, and fabric components. To create a
high-capacity SAN, you can connect multiple fabrics or VSANs using routing.
For information about the connections available in a SAN fabric topology, see
"SAN fabric
Storage capacity
Calculate the total storage capacity requirement and determine the type and number of storage
systems needed for current and future requirements.
For storage systems information, see:
"MSA storage system
"EVA storage system
"XP and VA storage system
Heterogeneous platforms and operating systems
Customize your SAN for specific hardware platforms and operating systems. In a heterogeneous
environment, component interoperability depends on the capabilities and limitations of each
platform.
For information about configuring systems in a heterogeneous environment, see
"Heterogeneous server
Scalability and migration
Choose a design that can be expanded incrementally over time as storage and connectivity needs
increase. Migration paths for each of the topologies provide flexibility to expand a SAN. Fibre
Channel routing accommodates expansion with minimal disruption to the network, especially
where growth requirements are not known.
For information about scaling and migrating, see
Backup and restore
Provide adequate connectivity and bandwidth to maximize the performance of SAN-based backup.
For information about centralized backup, see
Disaster tolerance
Consider remote data replication requirements to ensure protection against site failures and recovery
of critical data.
32
SAN design overview
topologies" on page 35.
rules" on page 235
rules" on page 247
rules" on page 263
rules" on page 185.
"Best
practices" on page 417.
"B-series switches and fabric
"Data
availability" on page 53.
"Best
practices" on page 417.
"Enterprise Backup
Solution" on page 275.
rules" on page 93.

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