Brocade offers the highest level of fabric switching and device compatibility, helping organizations maximize the value of their data center infrastructure investments.
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True compatibility, or interoperability, is possible only through extensive testing, a broad range of partnerships, and the right technology. Because Brocade supports native fabric interoperability throughout its comprehensive family of SAN backbones, directors, and switches, organizations can expand their existing fabrics and build new SANs in the most seamless, efficient, and supportable manner possible. This level of compatibility means that host and/or storage nodes communicate using interconnected Fibre Channel switches from multiple vendors.
Interoperability within a SAN today is commonplace, since no single vendor provides switches, storage nodes, and host nodes (HBAs). In fact, virtually every SAN has more than one HBA vendor and multiple storage vendors (a disk vendor and a tape vendor or two different disk vendors, for example). Moreover, SAN device interoperability is well understood: SAN vendors provide compatibility matrix documents and have extensive experience designing, implementing, managing, and troubleshooting heterogeneous fabrics.
Brocade performs rigorous compatibility testing of its products with those from leading OEMs, strategic partners, and system integrators. In addition to testing, Brocade maintains the largest portfolio of Fibre Channel-based solutions and publishes certified interoperability solutions for enterprise SANs. Brocade provides a detailed list of devices and applications tested by Brocade, OEM Partners, and developer partners for compatibility with Brocade SAN solutions.
Browse a complete listing of all Brocade resources. View All Resources
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Based on testing and existing product installations, Brocade has developed the following compatibility guideline
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This document provides the requirements for running Brocade FLM 4.0.
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Based on testing and existing product installations, Brocade has developed the following compatibility guideline
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This matrics includes Brocade M-Class directors, switches, and routers as well as legacy McDATA SAN products.
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This document details the metrics required to establish whether or not Brocade supports a particular fabric and/or metaSAN configuration. It provides scalability guidelines that can be used to design and deploy extremely stable Fibre Channel SANs.
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The Brocade Host Bus Adapter Compatibility Matrix lists supported configurations for the Brocade 815, 825, 415, and 425 Fibre Channel HBAs. It includes known compatible operating systems, servers, storage, tape devices, switches, and third-party software, as well as partner certified applications.
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Based on testing and existing product installations, Brocade has developed the following compatibility guideline
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Based on testing and existing product installations, Brocade has developed the following compatibility guideline
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Based on compatibility testing and existing product installations, Brocade has developed the following guidelines. Solutions created by members of the Brocade Developer Program have undergone rigorous interoperability testing by Brocade and are certified as Brocade Data Center Ready.
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This matric includes Brocade M-Class directors, switches, and routers as well as legacy McDATA SAN products.
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The Brocade Data Center Fabric is a foundation for designing, building, and managing enterprise data centers. A critical advanced technology integrated into the fabric is Brocade Adaptive Networking services, which provides Quality of Service to ensure fabric support for critical application service levels.
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Enterprise data centers are undergoing a transformation driven by the need to reduce costs and increase performance. The evolving data center fabric exploits developing virtualization technologies for a data- and application-driven solution that reduces complexity and enables unified management on a common framework.
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Describes and illustrates scenarios that demonstrate how the Brocade DCX Backbone platform can be added non-disruptively into the core of existing Storage Area Networks (SANs) and new data center fabrics.
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This paper delves into the experiences of 30 IT managers who relocated their data centers, analyzing the primary drivers, issues, strategies, and lessons learned.
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The results of a benchmarking study performed in Brocade test labs demonstrate that SQL Server can be deployed on VMware ESX Server 3.5 for Online Transaction Processing (OLTP) applications in very favorable server consolidation ratios to meet corporate IT business requirements.
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This guide describes best practices for incorporating cabling in a typical data center, plus tips for selecting cabling components and information on data transmission media.
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This paper explores how key capabilities within Brocade Data Center Fabric Manager (DCFM) help simplify infrastructure management.
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This paper describes how Brocade StorageX software utilizes global namespace technology to provide comprehensive file management services.
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This paper shows how Brocade StorageX enables tiers of storage across Windows and NetApp storage to align storage practices with organizational objectives.
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This paper describes how System z users can leverage the Brocade DCX Backbone to address their most pressing business challenges while preparing for future technologies.
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This paper examines how FICON channel architecture greatly expands the distance, throughput, and scale of implementation for IBM mainframe environments.
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This paper explores the challenges of block-level data migrations and how Brocade Data Migration Manager increases data migration efficiency while reducing risk and operational costs.
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This paper explores the various approaches Brocade is taking toward heterogeneous fabric connectivity following its acquisition of McDATA.
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This paper describes how FastWrite, a Brocade capability available in Brocade SAN Routers, addresses the performance issues of SCSI write operations over long-distance, high-latency links.
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This paper describes the basics of Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE), how FCoE solutions fit into data centers, and how Brocade is driving standardization efforts.
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Brocade Data Migration Manager (DMM) is designed to provide a fast, reliable, and cost-effective way to simplify data movement.
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This paper describes how Brocade StorageX global namespace technology provides comprehensive data management services for enterprise storage environments.
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This paper outlines key aspects of SAN security and ways that new features in Brocade Fabric OS 6.0 help increase SAN security in enterprise environments.
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This detailed paper explains the technical story behind the emerging Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) protocol, including how it helps extend existing Fibre Channel investments.
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This paper examines how Brocade Storage Application Services enable EMC RecoverPoint to support heterogeneous fabric-based data replication for all open-system server solutions across any distance.
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Describes a FOS 6.2 capability: Virtual Fabrics (VFs). Using VFs, customers can partition a physical switch into multiple Logical Switches, each of which belongs to a Logical Fabric, which has independent data paths, fabric configuration (zoning, Quality of Service, fabric mode) ,and management.
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This paper examines the fundamentals and benefits of the Brocade Access Gateway, the latest evolution in Fibre Channel SAN connectivity built on blade server technology.