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тАО06-28-2007 02:43 AM
тАО06-28-2007 02:43 AM
difference between a regular san switch and director
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тАО06-28-2007 09:14 AM
тАО06-28-2007 09:14 AM
Re: difference between a regular san switch and director
In general, switches are single units with embedded management and have a fixed number of ports, no blades. The new Cisco 9216 is an exception to this rule, however.
Director-class switches are much larger and a blade-based architecture. They also have dual (redundant) supervisor modules so everything in the enclosure is redundant.
Now that we have 64-port switches the break point for director class systems is 128 ports and above.
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тАО06-28-2007 02:36 PM
тАО06-28-2007 02:36 PM
Re: difference between a regular san switch and director
Generally it means a switch with high avalability features such as redundent components and the ability to do hardware and software updates without having to take the device down. Typically, director class switches can support a high number of ports.
As far as the end devices (hosts and disk arrays) are concerned there is no difference.
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тАО07-02-2007 12:03 AM
тАО07-02-2007 12:03 AM
Re: difference between a regular san switch and director
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тАО07-02-2007 03:44 AM
тАО07-02-2007 03:44 AM
Re: difference between a regular san switch and director
Contact your HP reseller and have them talk to their Brocade rep. You can probably get a rebate for replacing your 1 Gbps McData director with a new 4 Gpbs Brodcade director.