SAN Gear No Go for Grid Computing

Experts say commercial storage equipment is not up to the job for global networks

October 4, 2001

2 Min Read
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The National Science Foundation has awarded $13.65 million over five years to a consortium of 15 U.S. universities and four national laboratories that mean to create a global computing and storage network for major scientific experiments.

The only problem is, none of the commercially available technology, particularly in the storage world, is up to the job, according to Bill St. Arnaud, director of network operations for Canarie Inc. (the Canadian equivalent of Internet2), an organization devoted to futuristic networking.

The consortium, called the iVDGL, (International Virtual Data Grid Laboratory) will build its grid” in partnership with the European Union, Japan, and Australia to form the world's first truly "global grid," for physics, astronomy, biology, and engineering research, iVDGL spokespeople say.

"Grid computing" is essentially a buzzword for clusters of servers joined together over the Internet. The idea is to allow organizations spread across geographies to share applications, data, and computing resources. They employ specially developed protocols provided by the open source community (Globus) and other open source technologies, like Linux.

Because of the distributed nature of the network, technologies like Fibre Channel that create isolated islands of storage are wholly inappropriate for grid environments, according to St. Arnaud. “Many of the commercial products don’t meet our requirements at all,” he says. “They are fine for banks and institutions, but we need an order of scale and complexity that far exceeds this.”The only SAN company that appears to have the basic idea of what's needed for this experiment is startup Yotta Yotta, St. Arnaud says. “They are the only ones responding, and we are trying to get them to meet our requirements. Otherwise we are going to have to concoct our own storage technologies."

If Yotta Yotta succeeds in meeting the project requirements, it might find itself with a wider scope of work. Management of the iVDGL will be integrated with that of the GriPhyN Project, funded by NSF in September 2000 for $11.9M. GriPhyN and Particle Physics Data Grid (PPDG) will provide the basic R&D and software toolkits needed for the laboratory. The European Union DataGrid is also a major participant and will contribute basic technologies and tools.

— Jo Maitland, Senior Editor, Byte and Switch http://www.byteandswitch.com

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