Data storage is a critical component of any enterprise IT infrastructure, demanding high availability, performance, and scalability. This course provides a detailed examination of dedicated storage technologies, specifically Storage Area Networks (SAN) and Network-Attached Storage (NAS). Participants will learn the architectural differences, implementation steps, and management techniques for Fibre Channel, iSCSI, and file-based storage. The curriculum is focused on practical configuration, advanced features like replication and snapshots, and optimizing storage performance to meet application demands.
Storage Area Networks (SAN) and Network-Attached Storage (NAS)
Information Technology and Digital Systems
October 25, 2025
Introduction
Objectives
Upon completion of this course, participants will be able to:
- Differentiate between DAS, NAS, and SAN and choose the appropriate solution for a given workload.
- Explain the architecture and protocols of Fibre Channel (FC) and iSCSI SANs.
- Configure SAN components including HBAs, FC switches, and LUNs.
- Set up and manage NAS solutions using protocols like NFS and SMB/CIFS.
- Implement advanced storage features such as thin provisioning, snapshots, and cloning.
- Perform basic troubleshooting for storage connectivity and performance issues.
- Understand and apply RAID levels and storage redundancy best practices.
- Manage data lifecycle and develop effective storage capacity planning strategies.
Target Audience
- Storage Administrators and Engineers.
- Virtualization Administrators managing shared storage.
- System Administrators responsible for backup and disaster recovery.
- IT Architects designing enterprise storage solutions.
- Individuals preparing for storage vendor certifications (e.g., Dell, NetApp, HPE).
Methodology
- Hands-on labs configuring LUNs, volumes, and file shares on simulated arrays.
- Individual exercises on calculating RAID capacity and performance.
- Group activities focused on designing a storage solution for a specific application workload.
- Case studies involving storage performance bottlenecks and data loss scenarios.
Personal Impact
- Gain specialized knowledge in high-demand, mission-critical storage technologies.
- Develop the skills to design and implement robust, scalable storage infrastructure.
- Improve ability to optimize application performance through efficient storage utilization.
- Acquire expertise in data protection features like snapshots and replication.
- Elevate career prospects in data center and cloud infrastructure roles.
Organizational Impact
- Ensure high availability and fault tolerance for mission-critical data.
- Optimize capital expenditure by maximizing storage efficiency with features like thin provisioning.
- Improve application performance with correctly configured high-speed SAN/NAS.
- Enable faster disaster recovery and business continuity capabilities.
- Better long-term data management and compliance through lifecycle planning.
Course Outline
Unit 1: Storage Fundamentals and Concepts
Storage Architectures- Direct Attached Storage (DAS) vs. Network-Attached Storage (NAS) vs. SAN.
- Defining block-level vs. file-level vs. object storage.
- Understanding disk technologies: HDD, SSD, and NVMe.
- Data redundancy: various RAID levels and their performance/protection trade-offs.
- Protocols: NFS (Network File System) and SMB/CIFS.
- Configuring shares, user access, and permissions on NAS devices.
- Use cases for NAS: home directories, file serving, and unstructured data.
- High-availability concepts for NAS (e.g., clustering).
Unit 2: Storage Area Networks (SAN) - Fibre Channel
FC SAN Architecture- Components of a Fibre Channel network (HBAs, FC Switches, Zoning).
- Fibre Channel protocols and addressing (WWN).
- Configuring zoning for security and fabric isolation.
- Connecting host servers to the SAN fabric.
- Creating and presenting Logical Unit Numbers (LUNs).
- Multi-pathing software and configuration (e.g., MPIO).
- Troubleshooting FC connectivity and performance issues.
- Introduction to Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE).
Unit 3: Storage Area Networks (SAN) - iSCSI
iSCSI Architecture- How iSCSI leverages standard Ethernet networks.
- Components: iSCSI Initiators and Targets.
- Configuring network switches for iSCSI traffic (e.g., Jumbo Frames).
- Security considerations for iSCSI (e.g., CHAP authentication).
- Configuring iSCSI initiators on Windows and Linux hosts.
- Setting up iSCSI targets and presenting volumes.
- Best practices for network segmentation and dedicated iSCSI networks.
- Troubleshooting iSCSI connection failures and discovery issues.
Unit 4: Advanced Storage Management Features
Capacity and Efficiency- Thin provisioning vs. Thick provisioning and its implications.
- Data reduction techniques: deduplication and compression.
- Storage tiering and automated data placement.
- Performing storage migration and expansion.
- The importance of local and remote replication.
- Implementing array-based snapshots and cloning.
- Data backup integration with SAN/NAS (e.g., VTLs).
- Developing a business continuity strategy for storage failure.
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