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Networking Category: Posts in Inside Enterprise IT
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Simplify your IT and Save

Posted by DELL-Kara K |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 22 Oct 2008
Yesterday you heard from Kris Fitzgerald on the importance of reducing IT complexity and prioritization. Here are a few more posts from our Inside IT blog that also talk about simplifying IT saving time and money. Simplify IT - A customer perspective ...more>

Yesterday you heard from Kris Fitzgerald on the importance of reducing IT complexity and prioritization. Here are a few more posts from our Inside IT blog that also talk about simplifying IT saving time and money.

Simplify IT - A customer perspective

IT Change - SaaS and cloud-computing solutions

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Virtual Connect overshot the need and created the opportunity for FlexAddress

Posted by marc_farley |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 3 Jul 2008
Dell's FlexAddress announcement on Tuesday drew this response by Gary Thome of HP. So what's a poor system admin to do if they want to manage SAN and LAN addresses for their blade systems? I'd suggest they let their accountants make the decision ...more>

Dell's FlexAddress announcement on Tuesday drew this response by Gary Thome of HP.  So what's a poor system admin to do if they want to manage SAN and LAN addresses for their blade systems?  I'd suggest they let their accountants make the decision for them

Here's the deal.  HP apparently had this elegant old technology from Tandem that used specialized switches to map network IDs to hot-swappable compute modules. They re-introduced this technology as Virtual Connect for their blade servers because they figured it solved the problem of maintaining consistent network IDs when swapping out compute blades. In fact, Virtual Connect works pretty well - all you need to do is buy fault-tolerant pairs of specialized chassis-insertable switches to provide the ID mappings.  That doesn't really force customers to change their network infrastructures, as some would suggest, but it does add a lot of cost to the blade solution.

Over the years Dell has been criticized for copying the technologies created by other companies.  Brad Anderson, Dell's Senior VP of Business Products said as much last November after Dell announced its acquisition of EqualLogic:

“It’s fair historically, if you go back a year or so, that you would have thought of Dell as more of a fast follower,” said Brad Anderson, senior vice president of Dell’s business product group. “But we recognize that if we want to solve our customers’ problems and provide leadership, we’re going to need to jump in very early.”  “With Michael coming back, things are a little bit different,” Anderson, said. “Company-wide, we are driving IT simplification very hard. It is our strategy; it is our mission. It’s also driving a cultural change within Dell.”

In other words, when we see a good idea now, we don't just try to imitate it, but try to figure out how to make it as simple to use and efficient as possible.  And that's what FlexAddress is all about.  HP had done a pretty good job providing a solution, but it was originally designed for mainframe

Dell engineers

And one other thing.  HP says that Virtual Connect was designed to enable the system admin to function independently of the network and SAN people.  Oh really?  And how are the proper tie-ins made from the Virtual Connect switching modules to the LAN and SAN switches anyway  - by divination?  C'mon guys - there is no free lunch

So let's see now.... should I buy one SD card or a pair of expensive switches that cost approximately 10X as much?  Hmmmm.....

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FlexAddress - Simplifying, Reducing Cost of Blade Management

Posted by david_graves... |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 1 Jul 2008
Here's a post on new blade technology from Chad Fenner in our sever group....Take it away Chad... Having launched the M-Series blades earlier this year, today we’ve introduced Flex Address which is designed as a low cost way to simplify blade ...more>

Here's a post on new blade technology from Chad Fenner in our sever group....Take it away Chad...

Having launched the M-Series blades earlier this year, today we’ve introduced Flex Address which is designed as a low cost way to simplify blade server changes - servicing, upgrading or replacing a blade.

What makes this very different from other blade vendors – is that you don’t have to switch your switch. Unlike some similar implementations from competitors, FlexAddress works with any switch, such as Cisco and Brocade, as well as with any pass through module. 

It works by locking a server's World Wide Name (WWN for Fibre Channel Fabrics) and Media Access Control (MAC for Ethernet Fabrics) to a blade slot instead of on the blade itself.

Normally if a server is removed, it loses its storage and ethernet connections, which then have to be re-mapped. That's like being forced to change your phone number because you lost your phone. Point being is that it takes time and effort to get done.

FlexAddress virtualizes the connection, so if a blade is replaced or upgraded it still maintains the exact same connection. Imagine a boot from SAN implementation – one server could be removed and another inserted and nothing else would need to be done to connect to the same storage LUN!

Pretty much all network administrators I talk to have been thrilled about this. It saves them time and money. The great thing about Dell's implementation is also how simple it is to implement. All a customer has to do is choose via a single click if they want FlexAddress active in the management software. It's implemented as an SD card on the Chassis Management Controller (CMC).

NerdBlog, eWeek, and Network World have weighed in…

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I thought a cluster of tigers was called a “streak”?

Posted by david_graves... |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 3 Jun 2008
When it comes to clusters, it makes sense that we’d have a few announcements – uh - clustered. And I’m not sorry about the pun. We recently showed the Purdue University team installing its new high-performance computing cluster (HPCC) in just half a day ...more>


When it comes to clusters, it makes sense that we’d have a few announcements – uh - clustered. And I’m not sorry about the pun. We recently showed the Purdue University team installing its new high-performance computing cluster (HPCC) in just half a day.

Today, it’s all about Clemson University using a next-generation HPCC to enable a wide range of academic research, from how family migration patterns impact schools and children’s development to the design of wireless communication networks.

Known as the Palmetto Cluster, it is housed at Clemson’s Information Technology Center and comprises 512 Dell PowerEdge 1950 servers. Currently benchmarked at 31 teraflops (TF), which means it can perform more than 31 trillion operations in one second, it is expected to grow to 100 TF.

Innovative and cost-effective solutions like the Palmetto Cluster are contributing to Clemson’s steady climb in the competitive U.S. News and World Report rankings for top schools.

John Mullen, our VP of higher education, recently had the opportunity to visit Clemson and meet with three of the school’s IT leaders: Jim Bottum, CIO and vice provost for Computing and Information Technology; Jim Pepin, CTO; and Jill Gemmill, the executive director  of Cyberinfrastructure Technology Integration. Here's a video of them talking about the cluster and other IT projects underway at Clemson.

Go Tigers! And FWIW – as an avid golfer myself – best of luck to Clemson sophomore Kyle Stanley who shot six-under-par in a 36-hole qualifier in Columbus, OH on Monday to make it into the field for the 2008 United States Open (June 12-15 at Torrey Pines).

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Configuring Flow Control on a Cisco 3750 or 2970 Switch

Posted by marc_farley |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 2 Jun 2008
Flow control is an important network function for iSCSI SANs. I had a question come up on it at my Storage@work site in a comment and I thought I'd put the same information out here in this blog entry: If you have a sample configuration for the iSCSI ...more>

Flow control is an important network function for iSCSI SANs.  I had a question come up on it at my Storage@work site in a comment and I thought I'd put the same information out here in this blog entry:

If you have a sample configuration for the iSCSI and Cisco Switch configuration, that would be very helpful. 

There is a document on our web site listed on this page (under the category of network switching).  You can download after registering.

http://www.equallogic.com/resources/technicaldocumentsview.aspx?id=364


There's a lot of stuff in the doc, but the section on flow control has this:

The following commands shows how to configure Gigabit Ethernet interface 0/1 on switch 1 to
auto-negotiate the correct Flow Control setting with the device to which it is connected:

Switch> enable
Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Switch(config-if)# flowcontrol receive desired
Switch(config-if)# exit
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# copy running-config startup-config

To view or confirm Flow Control status on a port, use the following command:

Switch# show flowcontrol interface gigabitethernet1/0/1

 

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