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    RE: iSCSI: Support Alias in the protocol



    
    Martin,
    I think your view is "Right-ON".  Over the years I have had the "marvelous"
    opportunity to work in the management of an IS/IT organization.  It is the
    presents of little things like this Alias that make or break so much of
    what we attempted.  I was not only responsible for the management of a
    Large Data Center (at IBM Santa Teresa Lab) but also its satellites  It was
    in the satellite systems, where the full featured Management Software was
    most likely not to exist.
    
    I expect that this view is the rule in smaller installations, that is, you
    will not generally find the large Network and Storage Management Software
    in those environments.  They will have a number of simple low end, or no,
    general Management Software.
    
    Though I would like to have Tivoli or HP Open View (for example)
    everywhere, I know this will not happen.  We need to do everything possible
    to support the small installation as long as it does not cause a big impact
    on the iSCSI protocol.
    
    I think that the Alias capability, though not a hard requirement for iSCSI,
    is a very worthwhile feature, that will help humans.
    
    .
    .
    .
    John L. Hufferd
    Senior Technical Staff Member (STSM)
    IBM/SSG San Jose Ca
    Main Office (408) 256-0403, Tie: 276-0403,  eFax: (408) 904-4688
    Home Office (408) 997-6136
    Internet address: hufferd@us.ibm.com
    
    
    "Martin, Nick" <Nick.Martin@compaq.com>@ece.cmu.edu on 08/21/2001 11:34:54
    AM
    
    Sent by:  owner-ips@ece.cmu.edu
    
    
    To:   "'Robert Snively'" <rsnively@Brocade.COM>, "'ips@ece.cmu.edu'"
          <ips@ece.cmu.edu>
    cc:
    Subject:  RE: iSCSI: Support Alias in the protocol
    
    
    
    Bob,
    
    I agree that the iSCSI Name is analogous to the VIN number on a car.
    The VIN number and the iSCSI Name are supposed to be constant for the life
    of the device.
    In my mind the iSCSI Alias is like the license plate tag.  If someone is
    looking for your car, in the mall parking lot you don't tell them the
    manufacturer assigned VIN number, you tell them the tag.  (You may also
    mention the make, model, and color.)  The VIN number is used for
    confirmation when required.  These are administrator assigned regionally
    and
    duplicate numbers are not much of a problem.
    
    Initiator Target relationships are defined by the InitiatorName and
    TargetName.  The protocol does not need aliases, but I believe the
    administrators do.  We need to allow administrators to assign their own
    tags
    to devices, and I believe these should be carried within the protocol so
    that no external databases are required.  When reporting a problem to an
    administrator, the device alias should be reported along with the device
    name.  The chances for error and confusion will be greatly reduced.  The
    alias or "tag" value will be easier for humans to deal with on a daily
    basis
    than a name field or VIN number would be.
    
    I support Alias within the iSCSI protocol.
    
    Thanks,
    Nick
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Robert Snively [mailto:rsnively@Brocade.COM]
    Sent: Monday, August 20, 2001 4:25 PM
    To: 'Mark S. Edwards'; ips@ece.cmu.edu
    Subject: RE: iSCSI: Support Alias in the protocol
    
    
    Folks,
    
    I remain concerned about this called consensus.  Clearly there
    will be thousands of Targets and Initiators running around
    a network.  Creating a set of human useable aliases
    that will distinguish all these seems to me somewhat farfetched.
    We don't even do very well on kings.  George, George II, etc.
    
    To create aliases in the context of a single management environment
    makes some sense, but again, that should be outside the
    scope of iSCSI.
    
    That we call our car Skeezix (human useable, for management
    purposes within the tightly constrained context of our own
    family) is non-architected information.  Whenever anyone cares
    which car it is (including during servicing and upgrades) they
    use the VIN, a registered and architected non-human-readable value.
    
    If Marjorie and I are the only voices in the woods, we have
    clearly had the consensus called against us, but this is high
    on my list of things that really aren't much help to anyone
    and shouldn't be in the document.
    
    Bob
    
    > >Let me also acknowledge as valid Marj's opinion that anything of
    > >this sort belongs in a management tool rather than the protocol.
    >
    > But it only works if everyone uses the same management tool,
    > or the tools agree upon the location and storage format of the
    > information
    > --  Somebody dig me up from my grave when Tivoli and
    > OpenView merge.
    >
    > As a way of easily identifying virtual LUN's or LU's within a
    > Target Space of potential hundreds or thousands the alias
    > is very valuable.
    
    
    
    


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Last updated: Tue Sep 04 01:03:56 2001
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