SATA and ISCSI
Jurgen Kramer
gtm.kramer at inter.nl.net
Fri Nov 28 19:49:42 UTC 2003
If you're not afraid of compiling your own kernel there's an iSCSI host
implementation at:
http://www.ardistech.com/iscsi/
And you can use the target driver from Cisco with it:
http://linux-iscsi.sourceforge.net/
There's also something called HyperSCSI which is like SCSI over
ethernet:
http://nst.dsi.a-star.edu.sg/mcsa/hyperscsi/index.html
Cheers,
Jurgen
On Fri, 2003-11-28 at 14:45, WipeOut wrote:
> Matt Temple wrote:
>
> > << snip >>
> >
> >
> >> AFAIK, you have to be running SCSI disks in the target server to use
> >> iSCSI..
> >
> >
> > I don't think that's precisely true. The target has to present
> > itself as an iSCSI device and Consensys/Raidzone has an iSCSI product.
> > (There are others; I just happen to know this one.) It's run on their
> > own customed RedHat distribution. But, to the point, it's an IDE RAID
> > device that looks like a SCSI device to the OS.
> >
> > Matt
>
> Probably like the 3ware ATA RAID cards, AFAIK they look like a SCSI
> device to the OS.. I hadn't thought of that.. :)
>
> I don't think you can use standard IDE drives and controllers on the
> motherboard for an iSCSI target.. Thats what I was getting at..
>
> Later..
>
>
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