The architecture of the DS8000® is
based on three major elements providing function specialization and
three tiers of processing power.
Figure 1 illustrates the
elements:
- Host adapters (also known as front-end adapters) manage the I/O
interfaces to other systems. They also manage the Fibre Channel path
protocols for host I/Os and for replicating data to remote DS8000s.
- Device adapters (also known as back-end adapters) manage the internal
storage devices. They also manage the SAS paths to drives, RAID protection,
and drive sparing.
- A pair of high-performance redundant active-active Power servers,
functionally positioned between the adapters and a key feature of
the architecture.
Figure 1. DS8000 architecture
The front-end and back-end adapters offload the bulk of the work
to be done to the Power servers. Each Power server has multiple processor
cores managed as a symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) pool of shared
processing power to process the work done by that server. Each server
runs an AIX® kernel that manages
the processors, manages processor memory as a data cache, and more.
For additional details on DS8000 architecture
and design, see the latest IBM®
DS8000 Architecture and Implementation
redbook.
Major benefits of the DS8000 architecture
include:
- Server foundation
- Promotes high availability and high performance through the use
of field-proven Power servers
- Reduces custom components and design complexity
- Positions DS8000 to reap
the benefits of server technology advances
- Operating environment
- Promotes high availability and provides a high quality base for
the system’s unique software through a field-proven AIX-based operating
system kernel
- Provides an operating environment specifically optimized for Power
servers (including performance and Reliability Availability Serviceability)
- Provides shared processor (SMP) efficiency
- Reduces custom code and design complexity