QLogic SANbox 5800V SB5800V-20A8-E Hoja De Datos

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50902-00 Rev. J  06/14 
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Data Sheet
Next-Generation Stacking: A Good Idea Gets Better!
QLogic 5800V lets you connect 8Gb, 4Gb, or 2Gb devices to a SaN for 
about the same cost as competing 4Gb-only solutions, but the investment 
protection advantages go much deeper!  Unlike other solutions, the 5800V 
can phase bandwidth provisioning incrementally within your ISL fabric—
the most performance-critical area of the SaN. 
Start with “always On” 10Gb ISLs 
each QLogic 5800V ships with all four 10Gb stacking ports active by 
default.  Basic inter-switch connectivity is now included with the product.  
Customers no longer need to take ISL port costs into account when planning 
their SaNs—every port they purchase may now be connected directly to a 
server or storage device!  (See sidebar for more on stacking.)
at their default 10Gb setting, the four stacking ports provide over 50Gb of 
additional bandwidth per switch—the equivalent of six extra 8Gb ports!
10Gb ISL speed provides more than enough bandwidth for customers in 
the early stages of their 8Gb migration, when many switch ports are still 
attached to 4Gb storage and other legacy devices.
20Gb Bandwidth On Demand
When a majority of QLogic device ports are eventually connected to 8Gb 
devices, additional inter-switch bandwidth may be desired.  at that point, 
customers can nondisruptively upgrade the ISL ports on one or more 
switches to 20Gb.  at 20Gb, this is the only ISL technology that perfectly 
complements 8Gb device speeds and extends the stability, cost savings, 
and performance benefits of a true backbone architecture to next-
generation SaNs.
It managers now have all the network headroom they need to deploy new 
applications and technologies with confidence.  Best of all, because 20Gb 
uses the same cables/connectors as 10Gb, customers can upgrade their 
entire SaN at the click of a mouse—without touching a cable or purchasing 
any new hardware
.  Only QLogic offers such a cost-deferred “pay-as-you-
grow” plan for the 8Gb transition. 
What Is Stacking?
Stackable switches, long familiar to ethernet users, were 
introduced for Fibre Channel by QLogic in 2003.  Stacking cuts 
complexity
  and  costs by providing a stable, highly-expandable 
transport for aggregate ISL traffic—eliminating the disruption, port 
waste, and management hassles associated with using device 
ports as ISLs.
True Backbone Value
In a stackable architecture, each switch features dedicated ports 
for ISL; that is, for connecting to other switches.  these ports offer 
much greater bandwidth than the regular data/device ports, and 
therefore require far fewer connections to achieve specific 
bandwidth goals.
Need more server or storage ports? Simply add another switch to the 
stack—no need to move existing cables or disrupt devices.  
Affordable Now—Big Savings Later
 
Low initial cost—Out-of-the-box, dual-speed QLogic 5800V 
products provide superior performance at a price-per-port that 
is competitive with single-speed, nonstacking edge switches.
 
Reduced expansion costs—Compared to nonstackable 
switches, multiswitch QLogic networks require up to 50 
percent fewer switches
 to achieve the same device port counts. 
Because each stacking port matches the throughput of three 
device ports, QLogic ISL connections are far less expensive 
per unit of bandwidth.  For instance, a single 20Gb connection 
(25.5Gbps line rate, 51Gbps full-duplex) saves six 8Gb device 
ports for devices and eliminates the need for six expensive 8Gb 
SFPs.  Stacking has never made more sense from a budget 
versus performance perspective!
 
Longer product and topology lifespan—Other vendors force 
customers to take a nonlinear “rip and replace” approach to 
SaN growth, offering a limited solution at the low end, followed 
by a radically different architecture as the installation matures.  
QLogic’s modular ISL backbone helps customers pace 
investments and deployment activities predictably over time, 
with fewer wrong turns and reversals—even when corporate 
strategies and directions change. 

  
 
  
 
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