In addition to the reduction in manufacturing costs that standardizing the enclosures brings, the dual support for SAS and
SATA drives by the SAS interface means enterprises can mix both types of drives in the same enclosure. That could help consolidate
storage in one physical structure while supporting the typical functional split between the drives: using SAS for high-performance,
high-transaction applications and SATA for low-performance, long-read applications such as archiving and streaming media.
But mixing the two drives together could cause problems if the drive enclosures aren’t designed for it, notes Harry Mason,
president of the SCSI Trade Association and director of industry marketing at chip-set maker LSI Logic. Due to their distinct
disk rotations, SAS and SATA drives vibrate differently, causing the cabinet to shake. If they don’t want the box walking
across the floor, storage administrators who want to mix the two drive types in the same cabinet must ensure that the enclosure
vendor has designed the cabinet to quell such vibrations.
In addition, some interfaces will be dual-use, whereas others will not. To prevent someone from plugging in an SAS drive to
a SATA-only connector, the SAS cables have a plastic bump that prevents them from being inserted into anything but an SAS
connector. SATA cables fit in both SATA and SAS connectors.
According to IBM’s Butler, the SAS interface’s support for both SATA and SAS drives “will make it easier to do tiered storage.”
A common interface means that enterprises can easily configure some drives for backup and archiving using SATA drives and
others for transactional access using SAS drives, all with the same array cabinets and racks. The common interface will also
make it cheaper for vendors to offer “cost-effective products up and down the line,” he says, encouraging the use of tiered
storage.
A less obvious benefit from SAS is that SCSI goes from being a parallel technology to a serial one. Current SCSI interfaces
allow a maximum of 15 drives per cable, but the cables don’t have the bandwidth to simultaneously support that many drives
in real-world environments. The move to SAS increases the addressable number of connections per port -- without using expanders
-- to 4,032, compared with 127 for FC (Fibre Channel).
Because the connection to each drive is serial, there is no bandwidth sharing to prevent storage systems from using all those
connections. SAS’s serial nature also means that a failure of one drive cannot affect other drives. (The possibility of failure
is one reason that SCSI has been such a highly reliable technology: The parallel architecture increased the impact of any
one drive’s failure.) In the past, the parallel approach was used because more data could be moved simultaneously per connection.
But today’s serial technology -- and the controllers to manage all the individual connections -- have progressed to the point
where serial is the preferred approach, as exemplified by FireWire, USB, FC, and Ethernet connections.
SAS also promises to break SCSI’s performance barrier, with a current transfer rate of 3Gbps. “You can’t drive parallel [technology]
to any greater transfer rates. We’re at the end of the bucket,” Gartner’s Monroe says. Initial SAS devices will also run at
300Mbps, and transfer rates should double to 6Gbps by 2008 and to 12Gbps by 2010, according to the SCSI Trade Association.
SAS also adds support for dual ports, which provide two connections to one drive for fail-over reliability, as well as for
redundant RAID controllers -- just as FC does.
The result of the greater device support and the faster transfer speeds will be larger clusters of drives in arrays with very
high storage capacities and high performance. That should help SAS displace FC in all but the highest-performance storage
tier, where FC’s higher cost will be worth the better performance, IBM’s Butler says.
SAS also has a use in near-line storage, according to LSI Logic’s Mason. IT can aggregate several SAS devices -- arrays or
external drives -- via direct SAS-to-SAS connections without having to put in a local SAN or share that network with other
traffic, he says. Mason expects some enterprises to use SAS to create these near-line storage loops as an adjunct to, rather
than replacement for, SANs. Similarly, IBM’s Butler expects SAS to be used for two-node external storage clusters.
Still, vendors expect SAS to make its first mark in servers, which now rely on SCSI drives because of their high performance
and reliability. SAS extends that performance and reliability while allowing vendors to use the same chip sets and connectors
for their servers as they do for their PCs, reducing costs. The drives will become standard on servers by 2006, IBM’s Butler
notes. But because many enterprises have recently replaced their servers, SAS-based servers won’t be deployed in large numbers
until “the next refresh,” Gartner’s Monroe says.
Minidrives: Two transition paths
Servers will also take advantage of the second SCSI trend: the move to smaller, enterprise-class drives. The 2.5-inch drives
take less power and generate less heat, and their performance -- access and seek times -- is better than that of 3.5-inch
drives because there is less distance for the drive heads to travel. That makes them perfect for transaction-intensive applications.
The small size provides another advantage. According to LSI Logic’s Mason, 2.5-inch SAS drives mean blade servers will be
capable of using reliable, high-performance SCSI technology rather than the 2.5-inch ATA drives -- designed for notebooks
-- they’ve had to use in the past.
“We know we’ll put 2.5-inch drives in a server or blade where there’s less physical capacity,” IBM’s Butler agrees.
For drive arrays, Optimus’ Hartzog expects midtier arrays to adopt 2.5-inch SAS drives first. Most midtier arrays hold 14
drives in a 19-inch rack, he notes, but could hold 30 drives if they switch to the 2.5-inch size. “You can add more spindles,”
Hartzog says.
“SAS will really capitalize on the move to 2.5-inch and outstrip the other technologies,” LSI Logic’s Mason says. “The small
form factor is a fairly big deal.”
Although 2.5-inch SAS drives help vendors deliver smaller drive arrays or increase the total capacity in the same cabinet
space, Seagate’s Castaldini says the 3.5-inch drive will remain in use for many years. That’s because SATA drives don’t have
an enterprise-class 2.5-inch version, so to gain the benefit of mix-and-match enclosures, vendors will stick with the drives
of the same size. Another reason is that the price of 2.5-inch SATA drives won’t be as low as for 3.5-inch versions on a per-gigabyte
basis for some time. “It’s not clear what the cost per gigabyte is compared to 3.5-inch drives,” IBM’s Butler says, noting
they will need to achieve price parity to gain broad adoption.
Nonetheless, change in the normally staid world of hard drives is in the air. Despite regular predictions of its demise, the
hard drive has soldiered on, with storage density enhancements exceeding the transistor density increases postulated by Moore’s
Law. Soon the enterprise SCSI drive will take another leap forward -- this time in convenience, reliability, and lower cost
of operation.