SANRAD Storage
SANRAD brings two new V-switches on the market: V-switch 3440 and V-switch 3840 mountain view, United States 9 April 2008. SANRAD brings two new switches on the market, in which many intelligent features are integrated with the V-switch 3440 and 3840 V-switch. The products developed for the economic operation of virtual storage infrastructure put on an open system architecture. This makes them suitable for use in heterogeneous storage networks, where components of from different manufacturers are used. Equipped with fibre channel, iSCSI, and Gigabit Ethernet ports (1000Base-t, 100BASE-SX and 1000Base-LX) you can connect it on all the common infrastructure. An integral part of the new switch solutions is the StoragePro software, which boasts a revised, more user friendly designed user interface.
An easy-to-use application available, lets you easily manage the entire storage environment is storage administrators. Among the standard equipment of the new products including storage virtualization and disaster recovery services. Thus, they are ideal in particular for companies which want to operate already virtual server environments and complement them. In addition storage array cross-consistent snapshots can be without costly manual intervention and restore data. The V-switch 3440 is available in the course of April, the V-switch 3840 is expected to be offered from June. Both products can be obtained from the sales and technology partner of SANRAD. The new solutions at a glance using the expandable V-switch models 3440 and 3840 can offer physical and virtual servers in a SAN and consistently manage the entire storage infrastructure. The systems serve, inter alia, to make system-wide memory pool, similarly, virtualization and management services are part of the solutions. The products are equipped with redundant power supply modules, CompactFlash interfaces, and fibre-channel (FC) ports. The V-switch 3440 GB / s FC ports has the V-switch 3840 about eight now four 4, 4 GB/s FC ports and supports also higher throughput rates.