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Open-sourcing Fibre Channel over Ethernet
Dec. 20, 2007

Odds are most of us will never need the network throughput speeds of 2GB Fibre Channel or iSCSI or 10GB Ethernet.

But, if you're working at a data center with hundreds to thousands of servers, clusters and terabyte-sized databases, then every millisecond matters. This is why Intel is promoting a new, fast way of transporting data: FCoE (Fibre Channel over Ethernet) for Linux.

FCoE's purpose is to enable data centers to consolidate LAN and SAN (storage area network) traffic over 10GB Ethernet. FC, which comes in speeds from 2 to the just arriving 8G bps, is commonly used in data center SANs. In recent years it's been challenged by iSCSI. Fibre, which, despite the name can run both on copper and fiber-optic cables, is seen as faster and more reliable, while iSCSI is commonly thought of as less expensive.

Intel, along with FCoE's founder Cisco Systems, is hoping to combine the virtues of both Fibre and iSCSI with this new high-speed, dual-purpose network fabric. In addition, by making it possible to use FCoE for both LAN and SAN traffic, the companies want to gain customers who want to simplify their data center network management.

To help this happen, Intel has released the first FCoE code for Linux under the GPLv2 on the Open-FCoE site. This code is barely out of alpha. It can only run reliably, according to the Open-FCoE site, on a generic 2.6.23 Linux kernel. The installation instructions are optimized for Fedora 7 systems.

Read the rest of this article on eWEEK.com, here.


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