After
shelling out $1.4 billion to buy SAN maker
EqualLogic last year, it is safe to say that Dell has a hefty stake in the success and growth of the
iSCSI storage market. Given all of the
recent noise in the industry around Fibre Channel over Ethernet (
FCoE) being the preferred storage protocol of the future, Dell held a conference call with media and analysts this morning to offer its two cents on the topic.
What it boils down to is that Dell’s storage folks believe converged networks based on
lossless Ethernet technology will float all storage boats. According to Eric
Endebrock, senior manager for Dell’s storage product group,
iSCSI is here to stay and Fibre Channel storage will bolster
FCoE as a way to connect legacy
FC systems over 10
GbE networks (and eventually 100
GbE networks).
"Dell is a big believer in unifying the fabric, but that is long-term," said
Endebrock. "We are not looking to take our customers and forklift them away from the environments they have today, but they will soon have to start making some choices."
Dell’s official stance is that unified fabrics make the most sense financially for customers in the long-term.
"We are going to support 10
GbE and Data Center Ethernet (also known as Converged Enhanced Ethernet) in our
EqualLogic PS arrays. Today our PS arrays support
iSCSI and will continue to support
iSCSI in the future," said
Endebrock. "We are not changing now, but protocol flexibility is going to be a key to our success.
EqualLogic equals
iSCSI is not the best way to think about our investment in that area."
In other words, the company is not ruling out support for
FCoE in its
Dell EqualLogic PS5000 Series iSCSI SAN arrays.
At last week’s Storage Networking World conference, I asked Dell’s director of enterprise storage,
Praveen Asthana, for his take on
FCoE and how it might fit into Dell’s product plans going forward.
Asthana said
FCoE has already been successful in one respect. It has prompted customers to start thinking about the future. However, he maintained that
FCoE requires a networking overhaul and
iSCSI is still less expensive overall. He also referred to
FCoE as "a stop on the way to
iSCSI."
It is no surprise that Dell, like its competitors, is keeping its options open. In the end, customers will ultimately dictate which protocol will dominate or whether
FCoE and
iSCSI will truly coexist in converged networks.