Fibre Channel

Fibre Channel (FC) is a high-speed data transfer protocol (commonly running at 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, and 128 gigabit per second rates) providing in-order, lossless[1] delivery of raw block data.[2] Fibre Channel is primarily used to connect computer data storage to servers[3][4] in storage area networks (SAN) in commercial data centers. Fibre Channel networks form a switched fabric because the switches in a network operate in unison as one big switch. Fibre Channel typically runs on optical fiber cables within and between data centers, but can also run on copper cabling.[3][4]

Fibre Channel
Layer 4. Protocol mapping
LUN masking
Layer 3. Common services
Layer 2. Network
Fibre Channel fabric
Fibre Channel zoning
Registered State Change Notification
Layer 1. Data link
Fibre Channel 8B/10B encoding
Layer 0. Physical

There are various upper-level protocols for Fibre Channel, including two for block storage. Fibre Channel Protocol (FCP) is a protocol that transports SCSI commands over Fibre Channel networks.[3][4] FICON is a protocol that transports ESCON commands, used by IBM mainframe computers, over Fibre Channel. Fibre Channel can be used to transport data from storage systems that use solid-state flash memory storage medium by transporting NVMe protocol commands.

Etymology

When the technology was originally devised, it ran over optical fiber cables only and, as such, was called "Fiber Channel". Later, the ability to run over copper cabling was added to the specification. In order to avoid confusion and to create a unique name, the industry decided to change the spelling and use the British English fibre for the name of the standard.[5]

History

Fibre Channel is standardized in the T11 Technical Committee of the International Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS), an American National Standards Institute (ANSI)-accredited standards committee. Fibre Channel started in 1988, with ANSI standard approval in 1994, to merge the benefits of multiple physical layer implementations including SCSI, HIPPI and ESCON.

Fibre Channel was designed as a serial interface to overcome limitations of the SCSI and HIPPI interfaces. FC was developed with leading-edge multi-mode optical fiber technologies that overcame the speed limitations of the ESCON protocol. By appealing to the large base of SCSI disk drives and leveraging mainframe technologies, Fibre Channel developed economies of scale for advanced technologies and deployments became economical and widespread.

Commercial products were released while the standard was still in draft.[6] By the time the standard was ratified lower speed versions were already growing out of use.[7] Fibre Channel was the first serial storage transport to achieve gigabit speeds[8] where it saw wide adoption, and its success grew with each successive speed. Fibre Channel has doubled in speed every few years since 1996.

Fibre Channel has seen active development since its inception, with numerous speed improvements on a variety of underlying transport media. The following table shows the progression of native Fibre Channel speeds:[9]

Fibre Channel variants
Name Line-rate (gigabaud) Line coding Nominal throughput
per direction; MB/s
Availability
133 Mbit/s 0.1328125 8b10b 12.5 1993
266 Mbit/s 0.265625 8b10b 25 1994[6]
533 Mbit/s 0.53125 8b10b 50 ?
1GFC 1.0625 8b10b 100 1997
2GFC 2.125 8b10b 200 2001
4GFC 4.25 8b10b 400 2004
8GFC 8.5 8b10b 800 2005
10GFC 10.51875 64b66b 1,200 2008
16GFC 14.025 64b66b 1,600 2011
32GFC "Gen 6" 28.05 256b257b 3,200 2016[10]
64GFC "Gen 7" 28.9 256b257b (FC-FS-5) 6,400 2019[11]
128GFC "Gen 6" 28.05 ×4 256b257b 12,800 2016[10]
256GFC "Gen 7" 28.9 ×4 256b257b 25,600 2019[12]
128GFC "Gen 8" 57.8 256b257b 12,800 planned 2022

    In addition to a modern physical layer, Fibre Channel also added support for any number of "upper layer" protocols, including ATM, IP (IPFC) and FICON, with SCSI (FCP) being the predominant usage.

    Characteristics

    Two major characteristics of Fibre Channel networks is that they provide in-order and lossless delivery of raw block data. Lossless delivery of raw data block is achieved based on a credit mechanism.[1]

    Topologies

    There are three major Fibre Channel topologies, describing how a number of ports are connected together. A port in Fibre Channel terminology is any entity that actively communicates over the network, not necessarily a hardware port. This port is usually implemented in a device such as disk storage, a Host Bus Adapter (HBA) network connection on a server or a Fibre Channel switch.[3]

    Topology diagram of a Fibre Channel point-to-point connection
    • Point-to-point (see FC-FS-3). Two devices are connected directly to each other using N_ports. This is the simplest topology, with limited connectivity.[3] The bandwidth is dedicated.
    • Arbitrated loop (see FC-AL-2). In this design, all devices are in a loop or ring, similar to token ring networking. Adding or removing a device from the loop causes all activity on the loop to be interrupted. The failure of one device causes a break in the ring. Fibre Channel hubs exist to connect multiple devices together and may bypass failed ports. A loop may also be made by cabling each port to the next in a ring.
      • A minimal loop containing only two ports, while appearing to be similar to point-to-point, differs considerably in terms of the protocol.
      • Only one pair of ports can communicate concurrently on a loop.
      • Maximum speed of 8GFC.
      • Arbitrated Loop has been rarely used after 2010.
    • Switched Fabric (see FC-SW-6). In this design, all devices are connected to Fibre Channel switches, similar conceptually to modern Ethernet implementations. Advantages of this topology over point-to-point or Arbitrated Loop include:
      • The Fabric can scale to tens of thousands of ports.
      • The switches manage the state of the Fabric, providing optimized paths via Fabric Shortest Path First (FSPF) data routing protocol.
      • The traffic between two ports flows through the switches and not through any other ports like in Arbitrated Loop.
      • Failure of a port is isolated to a link and should not affect operation of other ports.
      • Multiple pairs of ports may communicate simultaneously in a Fabric.
    AttributePoint-to-pointArbitrated loopSwitched fabric
    Max ports2127~16777216 (224)
    Address sizeN/A8-bit ALPA24-bit port ID
    Side effect of port failureLink failsLoop fails (until port bypassed)N/A
    Access to mediumDedicatedArbitratedDedicated

    Layers

    Fibre Channel does not follow the OSI model layering, and is split into five layers:

    Fibre Channel is a layered technology that starts at the physical layer and progresses through the protocols to the upper level protocols like SCSI and SBCCS.
    • FC-4 – Protocol-mapping layer, in which upper level protocols such as NVM Express (NVMe), SCSI, IP, and FICON are encapsulated into Information Units (IUs) for delivery to FC-2. Current FC-4s include FCP-4, FC-SB-5, and FC-NVMe.
    • FC-3 – Common services layer, a thin layer that could eventually implement functions like encryption or RAID redundancy algorithms; multiport connections;
    • FC-2 – Signaling Protocol, defined by the Fibre Channel Framing and Signaling 4 (FC-FS-5) standard, consists of the low level Fibre Channel network protocols; port to port connections;
    • FC-1 – Transmission Protocol, which implements line coding of signals;
    • FC-0physical layer, includes cabling, connectors etc.;

    This diagram from FC-FS-4 defines the layers.

    Layers FC-0 are defined in Fibre Channel Physical Interfaces (FC-PI-6), the physical layers of Fibre Channel.

    Fibre Channel products are available at 1, 2, 4, 8, 10, 16 and 32 and 128 Gbit/s; these protocol flavors are called accordingly 1GFC, 2GFC, 4GFC, 8GFC, 10GFC, 16GFC, 32GFC or 128GFC. The 32GFC standard was approved by the INCITS T11 committee in 2013, and those products became available in 2016. The 1GFC, 2GFC, 4GFC, 8GFC designs all use 8b/10b encoding, while the 10GFC and 16GFC standard uses 64b/66b encoding. Unlike the 10GFC standards, 16GFC provides backward compatibility with 4GFC and 8GFC since it provides exactly twice the throughput of 8GFC or four times that of 4GFC.

    Ports

    FC topologies and port types: This diagram shows how N_Ports can be connected to a fabric or to another N_Port. A Loop Port (L_Port) communicates through a shared loop and is rarely used anymore.

    Fibre Channel ports come in a variety of logical configurations. The most common types of ports are:

    • N_Port (Node port) An N_Port is typically an HBA port that connects to a switch's F_Port or another N_Port. Nx_Port communicating through a PN_Port that is not operating a Loop Port State Machine.[13]
    • F_Port (Fabric port) An F_Port is a switch port that is connected to an N_Port.[14]
    • E_Port (Expansion port) Switch port that attaches to another E_Port to create an Inter-Switch Link.[14]

    Fibre Channel Loop protocols create multiple types of Loop Ports:

    • L_Port (Loop port) FC_Port that contains Arbitrated Loop functions associated with the Arbitrated Loop topology.[14]
    • FL_Port (Fabric Loop port) L_Port that is able to perform the function of an F_Port, attached via a link to one or more NL_Ports in an Arbitrated Loop topology.[14]
    • NL_Port (Node Loop port) PN_Port that is operating a Loop port state machine.[14]

    If a port can support loop and non-loop functionality, the port is known as:

    • Fx_Port switch port capable of operating as an F_Port or FL_Port.[13]
    • Nx_Port end point for Fibre Channel frame communication, having a distinct address identifier and Name_Identifier,providing an independent set of FC-2V functions to higher levels, and having the ability to act as an Originator, a Responder, or both.[13]
    A Port has a physical structure as well as logical or virtual structure. This diagram shows how a virtual port may have multiple physical ports and vice versa.

    Ports have virtual components and physical components and are described as:

    • PN_Port entity that includes a Link_Control_Facility and one or more Nx_Ports.[14]
    • VF_Port (Virtual F_Port) instance of the FC-2V sublevel that connects to one or more VN_Ports.[14]
    • VN_Port (Virtual N_Port) instance of the FC-2V sublevel. VN_Port is used when it is desired to emphasize support for multiple Nx_Ports on a single Multiplexer (e.g., via a single PN_Port).[13]
    • VE_Port (Virtual E_Port) instance of the FC-2V sublevel that connects to another VE_Port or to a B_Port to create an Inter-Switch Link.[14]

    The following types of ports are also used in Fibre Channel:

    • A_Port (Adjacent port) combination of one PA_Port and one VA_Port operating together.[14]
    • B_Port (Bridge Port) Fabric inter-element port used to connect bridge devices with E_Ports on a Switch.[13]
    • D_Port (Diagnostic Port) A configured port used to perform diagnostic tests on a link with another D_Port.[15]
    • EX_Port A type of E_Port used to connect to an FC router fabric.[15]
    • G_Port (Generic Fabric port) Switch port that may function either as an E_Port, A_Port, or as an F_Port.[14]
    • GL_Port (Generic Fabric Loop port) Switch port that may function either as an E_Port, A_Port, or as an Fx_Port.[14]
    • PE_Port LCF within the Fabric that attaches to another PE_Port or to a B_Port through a link.[13]
    • PF_Port LCF within a Fabric that attaches to a PN_Port through a link.[13]
    • TE_Port (Trunking E_Port) A trunking expansion port that expands the functionality of E ports to support VSAN trunking, Transport quality of service (QoS) parameters, and Fibre Channel trace (fctrace) feature.[16]
    • U_Port (Universal port) A port waiting to become another port type[15]
    • VA_Port (Virtual A_Port) instance of the FC-2V sublevel of Fibre Channel that connects to another VA_Port.[14]
    • VEX_Port VEX_Ports are no different from EX_Ports, except underlying transport is IP rather than FC.[15]

    Media and modules

    Fibre Channel predominantly uses the SFP module with the LC connector and duplex cabling, but 128GFC uses the QSFP28 module and the MPO connectors and ribbon cabling.

    The Fibre Channel physical layer is based on serial connections that use fiber optics to copper between corresponding pluggable modules. The modules may have a single lane, dual lanes or quad lanes that correspond to the SFP, SFP-DD and QSFP form factors. Fibre Channel has not used 8 or 16 lane modules (like CFP8, QSFP-DD, or COBO) used in 400GbE and has no plans to use these expensive and complex modules.

    The small form-factor pluggable transceiver (SFP) module and its enhanced version SFP+, SFP28 and SFP56 are common form factors for Fibre Channel ports. SFP modules support a variety of distances via multi-mode and single-mode optical fiber as shown in the table below. The SFP module uses duplex fiber cabling that has LC connectors.

    The SFP-DD module is used in high-density applications that need to double the throughput of traditional SFP ports.

    The SFP-DD module is used for high density applications that need to double the throughput of an SFP Port. The SFP-DD is defined by the SFP-DD MSA and enables breakout to two SFP ports. As seen in the picture, two rows of electrical contacts enable the doubling of the throughput of the module in a similar fashion as the QSFP-DD.

    The quad small form-factor pluggable (QSFP) module began being used for switch inter-connectivity and was later adopted for use in 4-lane implementations of Gen 6 Fibre Channel supporting 128GFC. The QSFP uses either the LC connector for 128GFC-CWDM4 or an MPO connector for 128GFC-SW4 or 128GFC-PSM4. The MPO cabling uses 8- or 12-fiber cabling infrastructure that connects to another 128GFC port or may be broken out into four duplex LC connections to 32GFC SFP+ ports. Fibre Channel switches use either SFP or QSFP modules.

    Fiber

    Type

    Speed (MB/s)Transmitter[17]Medium variantDistance
    Single-mode

    Fiber (SMF)

    12,800 1,310 nm longwave light 128GFC-PSM4 0.5m - 0.5 km
    1,270, 1,290, 1,310 and 1,330 nm longwave light 128GFC-CWDM4 0.5 m – 2 km
    6,400 1,310 nm longwave light 64GFC-LW 0.5m - 10 km
    3,200 1,310 nm longwave light 3200-SM-LC-L 0.5 m - 10 km
    1,600 1,310 nm longwave light[ITS 1] 1600-SM-LC-L[ITS 2]0.5 m – 10 km
    1,490 nm longwave light[ITS 1] 1600-SM-LZ-I[ITS 2]0.5 m – 2 km
    800 1,310 nm longwave light[ITS 3] 800-SM-LC-L[ITS 4]2 m – 10 km
    800-SM-LC-I[ITS 4]2 m – 1.4 km
    400 1,310 nm longwave light[ITS 3][ITS 5] 400-SM-LC-L[ITS 6]2 m – 10 km
    400-SM-LC-M[ITS 4]2 m – 4 km
    400-SM-LL-I[ITS 7]2 m – 2 km
    200 1,550 nm longwave light[ITS 8] 200-SM-LL-V[ITS 8]2 m – 50 km
    1,310 nm longwave light[ITS 5][ITS 3]200-SM-LC-L[ITS 6]2 m – 10 km
    200-SM-LL-I[ITS 7]2 m – 2 km
    100 1,550 nm longwave light[ITS 8] 100-SM-LL-V[ITS 8]2 m – 50 km
    1,310 nm longwave light[ITS 9][ITS 3] 100-SM-LL-L[ITS 10]
    100-SM-LC-L[ITS 6]
    2 m – 10 km
    100-SM-LL-I[ITS 10]2 m – 2 km
    Multi-mode

    Fiber (MMF)

    12,800 850 nm shortwave light[ITS 11][ITS 12][ITS 13] 128GFC-SW4 0 – 100 m
    6,400 64GFC-SW 0 - 100m
    3,200 3200-SN 0 – 100 m
    1,600 1600-M5F-SN-I[ITS 14]0.5 m – 125 m
    1600-M5E-SN-I[ITS 14]0.5–100 m
    1600-M5-SN-S[ITS 14]0.5–35 m
    1600-M6-SN-S[ITS 15]0.5–15 m
    800 800-M5F-SN-I[ITS 14]0.5–190 m
    800-M5E-SN-I[ITS 16]0.5–150 m
    800-M5-SN-S[ITS 16]0.5–50 m
    800-M6-SN-S[ITS 16]0.5–21 m
    400 400-M5F-SN-I[ITS 14]0.5–400 m
    400-M5E-SN-I[ITS 16]0.5–380 m
    400-M5-SN-I[ITS 17]0.5–150 m
    400-M6-SN-I[ITS 17]0.5–70 m
    200 200-M5E-SN-I[ITS 16]0.5–500 m
    200-M5-SN-I[ITS 17]0.5–300 m
    200-M6-SN-I[ITS 17]0.5–150 m
    100 100-M5E-SN-I[ITS 18]0.5–860 m
    100-M5-SN-I[ITS 19]0.5–500 m
    100-M6-SN-I[ITS 19]0.5–300 m
    100-M5-SL-I[ITS 19]2–500 m
    100-M6-SL-I[ITS 20]2–175 m
    Multi-mode fiberFiber diameterFC media designation
    OM162.5 µmM6
    OM250 µmM5
    OM350 µmM5E
    OM450 µmM5F
    OM5 50 µm N/A

    Modern Fibre Channel devices support SFP+ transceiver, mainly with LC (Lucent Connector) fiber connector. Older 1GFC devices used GBIC transceiver, mainly with SC (Subscriber Connector) fiber connector.

    Storage area networks

    The Fibre Channel SAN connects servers to storage via Fibre Channel switches.

    The goal of Fibre Channel is to create a storage area network (SAN) to connect servers to storage.

    The SAN is a dedicated network that enables multiple servers to access data from one or more storage devices. Enterprise storage uses the SAN to backup to secondary storage devices including disk arrays, tape libraries, and other backup while the storage is still accessible to the server. Servers may access storage from multiple storage devices over the network as well.

    SANs are often designed with dual fabrics to increase fault tolerance. Two completely separate fabrics are operational and if the primary fabric fails, then the second fabric becomes the primary.

    Switches

    Fibre Channel director with SFP+ modules and LC optical fiber connectors with Optical Multimode 3 (OM3) fiber (aqua).

    Fibre Channel switches can be divided into two classes. These classes are not part of the standard, and the classification of every switch is a marketing decision of the manufacturer:

    • Directors offer a high port-count in a modular (slot-based) chassis with no single point of failure (high availability).
    • Switches are typically smaller, fixed-configuration (sometimes semi-modular), less redundant devices.

    A fabric consisting entirely of one vendors products is considered to be homogeneous. This is often referred to as operating in its "native mode" and allows the vendor to add proprietary features which may not be compliant with the Fibre Channel standard.

    If multiple switch vendors are used within the same fabric it is heterogeneous, the switches may only achieve adjacency if all switches are placed into their interoperability modes. This is called the "open fabric" mode as each vendor's switch may have to disable its proprietary features to comply with the Fibre Channel standard.

    Some switch manufacturers offer a variety of interoperability modes above and beyond the "native" and "open fabric" states. These "native interoperability" modes allow switches to operate in the native mode of another vendor and still maintain some of the proprietary behaviors of both. However, running in native interoperability mode may still disable some proprietary features and can produce fabrics of questionable stability.

    Host bus adapters

    Dual port 8Gb FC host bus adapter card.
    Dual port 16Gb FC host bus adapter card.

    Fibre Channel HBAs, as well as CNAs, are available for all major open systems, computer architectures, and buses, including PCI and SBus. Some are OS dependent. Each HBA has a unique World Wide Name (WWN), which is similar to an Ethernet MAC address in that it uses an Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI) assigned by the IEEE. However, WWNs are longer (8 bytes). There are two types of WWNs on a HBA; a node WWN (WWNN), which can be shared by some or all ports of a device, and a port WWN (WWPN), which is necessarily unique to each port.

    gollark: `npm`'s way better than `pip`.
    gollark: ..........
    gollark: ... except pip, which does everything stupidly.
    gollark: Package managers provide nice utilities like being able to update things, and reproducibly download/install packages.
    gollark: That sounds unpleasant.

    See also

    References

    1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2018-03-01. Retrieved 2018-02-28.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
    2. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-08-29. Retrieved 2018-03-22.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
    3. Preston, W. Curtis (2002). "Fibre Channel Architecture". Using SANs and NAS. Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly Media. pp. 19–39. ISBN 978-0-596-00153-7. OCLC 472853124.
    4. Riabov, Vladmir V. (2004). "Storage Area Networks (SANs)". In Bidgoli, Hossein (ed.). The Internet Encyclopedia. Volume 3, P-Z. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 329–338. ISBN 978-0-471-68997-3. OCLC 55610291.
    5. "Fibre Channel internals". Introduction to Storage Area Networks. IBM. 2016. p. 33.
    6. IBM 7319 Model 100 Fibre Channel Switch 16/266 and IBM Fibre Channel Adapter/266
    7. Fibre Channel Physical and Signaling Interface (FC-PH) Rev 4.3, June 1, 1994
    8. Tom Clark, Designing Storage Area Networks: A Practical Reference for Implementing Fibre Channel and IP SANs
    9. "Roadmaps". Fibre Channel Industry Association. Archived from the original on 2012-11-27. Retrieved 2013-01-06.
    10. Brocade 32Gb platform released, Storagereview.com "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-04-04. Retrieved 2016-04-04.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
    11. Fibre Channel – Physical Interface-7 (FC-PI-7)
    12. John Petrilla, Scaling 64GFC to 256GFC (T11-2017)
    13. Fibre Channel - Framing and Signaling - 4 (FC-FS-4)
    14. Fibre Channel - Switch Fabric 6 (FC-SW-6)
    15. "BCFA in a Nutshell Study Guide for Exam" (PDF). Brocade Communications, Inc. February 2014. Archived (PDF) from the original on September 7, 2015. Retrieved June 28, 2016.
    16. "Cisco MDS 9000 Family Fabric Manager Configuration Guide, Release 4.x". Cisco Systems, Inc. November 11, 2013. Archived from the original on August 21, 2016. Retrieved June 28, 2016.
    17. Transmitter values listed are the currently specified values for the variant listed. Some older versions of the FC standards listed slightly different values (however, the values listed here fall within the +/- variance allowed). Individual variations for each specification are listed in the references associated with those entries in this table. FC-PH = X3T11 Project 755D; FC-PH-2 = X3T11 Project 901D; FC-PI-4 = INCITS Project 1647-D; FC-PI-5 = INCITS Project 2118D. Copies are available from INCITS Archived 2010-09-15 at the Wayback Machine.

    INCITS Fibre Channel standards

    1. FC-PI-5 Clause 6.3
    2. FC-PI-5 Clause 8.1
    3. FC-PI-4 Clause 6.3
    4. FC-PI-4 Clause 8.1
    5. FC-PH-2 lists 1300nm (see clause 6.1 and 8.1)
    6. FC-PI clause 8.1
    7. FC-PH-2 clause 8.1
    8. FC-PI-4 Clause 11
    9. FC-PH lists 1300nm (see clause 6.1 and 8.1)
    10. FC-PH Clause 8.1
    11. FC-PI-5 Clause 6.4
    12. FC-PI-4 Clause 6.4
    13. The older FC-PH and FC-PH-2 list 850nm (for 62.5µm cables) and 780nm (for 50µm cables)(see clause 6.2, 8.2, and 8.3)
    14. FC-PI-5 Clause 8.2
    15. FC-PI-5 Annex A
    16. FC-PI-4 Clause 8.2
    17. FC-PI Clause 8.2
    18. PC-PI-4 Clause 8.2
    19. PC-PI Clause 8.2
    20. FC-PH Annex C and Annex E

    Sources

    • Clark, T. Designing Storage Area Networks, Addison-Wesley, 1999. ISBN 0-201-61584-3

    Further reading

    • RFC 2625 – IP and ARP over Fibre Channel
    • RFC 2837 – Definitions of Managed Objects for the Fabric Element in Fibre Channel Standard
    • RFC 3723 – Securing Block Storage Protocols over IP
    • RFC 4044 – Fibre Channel Management MIB
    • RFC 4625 – Fibre Channel Routing Information MIB
    • RFC 4626 – MIB for Fibre Channel's Fabric Shortest Path First (FSPF) Protocol
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