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fibre channel

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Fibre Channel

A high-speed transport technology used to build storage area networks (SANs). Although Fibre Channel can be used as a general-purpose network carrying ATM, IP and other protocols, it has been...

Dictionary

Definition: Fibre Channel

A high-speed transport technology used to build storage area networks (SANs). Although Fibre Channel can be used as a general-purpose network carrying ATM, IP and other protocols, it has been primarily used for transporting SCSI traffic from servers to disk arrays. The Fibre Channel Protocol (FCP) serializes SCSI commands into Fibre Channel frames and uses IP for in-band SNMP network management (see SNMP). For more about storage networks, see SAN.

Specifications
Using singlemode or multimode fibers, Fibre Channel can be configured point-to-point (FC-P2P), as a switched topology (FC-SW) or in an arbitrated loop (FC-AL) with or without a hub, which can connect up to 127 nodes (see below). Transmission rates up to 12.75 Gbps in each direction are supported.

Fibre Channel uses the Gigabit Ethernet physical layer and IBM's 8B/10B encoding method, where each byte is transmitted as 10 bits. Fibre Channel provides both connection-oriented and connectionless services. Following are the class and functional levels. See FCIP, FCoE, IP storage and Director-class switch.


 Connection-oriented services
 Class 1    With acknowledgment, full bandwidth
 Class 4    Virtual connections, QoS,
             fractional bandwidth
 Class 6    Uni-directional
 Connectionless services
 Class 2    With acknowledgment
 Class 3    Without acknowledgment
 Node levels
 FC-4  Translation between Fibre Channel and
        command sets that use it: HiPPI, SCSI, IPI,
        SBCCS, IP, IEEE 802.2, audio, video
 FC-3  Common services across multiple ports
 Port levels (FC-PH standard)
 FC-2  Framing and flow control
 FC-1  8B/10B encoding, error detection
 FC-0  Electrical and optical characteristics



Fibre Channel

Arbitrated Loop
The arbitrated loop is widely used and can connect up to 127 nodes without using a switch. All devices share the bandwidth, and only two can communicate with each other at the same time, with each node repeating the data to its adjacent node. TX means transmit, and RX means receive.



Fibre Channel

Switch Fabric
A switch fabric is the most flexible topology, enabling all servers and storage devices to communicate with each other. It also provides for a failover architecture in the event a server or disk array ceases to operate.



Fibre Channel

Point-to-Point
This is the simplest topology connecting two Fibre Channel devices that communicate at full bandwidth.





Sponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources

  • The facts on Fibre Channel

    There are still many IT pros who don't understand Fibre Channel. TechRepublic's Brien Posey discusses the pros and cons of using this high-speed storage solution.

    News items | January 16, 2003 12:00am PST

  • Is your storage encrypted?

    One day, all data--in transit and at rest--will be encrypted. Neoscale says its storage encryption appliance can secure any or all data bound for Fibre Channel-based storage--with no impact on...

    News items | July 8, 2002 12:00am PDT

  • iSCSI vs. Fibre Channel

    Many IT professionals like the concept of storage area networks (SAN), but they're resistant to Fibre Channel (FC), the networking technology that brings nearly all SANs to life. As a protocol...

    News items | July 24, 2001 12:00am PDT

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