ONTAP Hardware

Difference between FAS and E series

Satheesh_kumar
24,962 Views

Hi All,
 
I am new to Netapp storage.
Just want to know what is the main difference between Netapp FAS and E series arrays.
 
Guess FAS series are for File level storage and E series for block level storages.
Kindly correct me if i am wrong.

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

bobshouseofcards
24,934 Views

There are a couple of key differences between E-Series and FAS.  The two product lines address significantly different needs

 

You are correct about E-series - it is block only - FCP/iSCSI.  Without getting into the weeds about RAID/snapshot capability, etc., the core of E-series is speed.  Lots of disks going as fast as they can with extremely low latency controllers and data paths.  You can mix and match disk types from SATA to SSD and build up a large pool given the shelf types.  At the end the core of E-series is fast block level storage.

 

FAS is a different animal.  First, FAS is multiprotocol in one box.  That is it can do NAS (CIFS/NFS) and Block (iSCSI/FCP/FCoE).  But that is just the start.  FAS is built around data management. To that end, FAS clusters can grow really big as you need them to.  They support fully non-disruptive updates and replacement mechanisms with transparent data movement between elements of the cluster.  FAS is software defined storage in that the physical space can be carved into many logical storage systems, each with separate domains of administration, access, and protocol.  In short FAS is fully multi-tenant if you need that.

 

In addition, FAS has a rich set of data capabilities around efficiency, replication and protection, business continuity and disaster recovery, data preservation and compliance for those who need that built in as a standard part of the storage platform by design.

 

If your core need is fast block storage or gobs of block storage for which you don't need many bells and whistles, than E-Series presents as a screaming data delivery device or as a high capacity data storage device.  Providing raw data for a Hadoop cluster for instance is a good use of E-series as one example where speed comes into play.  Another is as the bulk storage behind an object store engine.  In both cases external systems are providing the management intelligence.  The E-series is the fast or big chunk of storage.

 

I've worked in a number of environments where FAS is used for both block and file as well.  In these settings with the wide variety of applications it's easier to use the FAS storage features around data protection and replication as a central focus to backup/DR plans rather than try to implement something separate for each application.  As a file sharing device it's very good at massive file counts - my last "customer" position housed about 8.5 Billion files in 3PB on FAS storage with another PB for block access.  FAS is the jack of all trades giving you flexibility and control at the storage layer beyond most anyone's single platform.

 

 

Hope this helps you.

 

Bob Greenwald

Senior Systems Engineer | cStor

NCIE SAN ONTAP, Data Protection

 

 

Kudos and/or accepted solutions are always appreciated where applicable.

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5 REPLIES 5

bobshouseofcards
24,935 Views

There are a couple of key differences between E-Series and FAS.  The two product lines address significantly different needs

 

You are correct about E-series - it is block only - FCP/iSCSI.  Without getting into the weeds about RAID/snapshot capability, etc., the core of E-series is speed.  Lots of disks going as fast as they can with extremely low latency controllers and data paths.  You can mix and match disk types from SATA to SSD and build up a large pool given the shelf types.  At the end the core of E-series is fast block level storage.

 

FAS is a different animal.  First, FAS is multiprotocol in one box.  That is it can do NAS (CIFS/NFS) and Block (iSCSI/FCP/FCoE).  But that is just the start.  FAS is built around data management. To that end, FAS clusters can grow really big as you need them to.  They support fully non-disruptive updates and replacement mechanisms with transparent data movement between elements of the cluster.  FAS is software defined storage in that the physical space can be carved into many logical storage systems, each with separate domains of administration, access, and protocol.  In short FAS is fully multi-tenant if you need that.

 

In addition, FAS has a rich set of data capabilities around efficiency, replication and protection, business continuity and disaster recovery, data preservation and compliance for those who need that built in as a standard part of the storage platform by design.

 

If your core need is fast block storage or gobs of block storage for which you don't need many bells and whistles, than E-Series presents as a screaming data delivery device or as a high capacity data storage device.  Providing raw data for a Hadoop cluster for instance is a good use of E-series as one example where speed comes into play.  Another is as the bulk storage behind an object store engine.  In both cases external systems are providing the management intelligence.  The E-series is the fast or big chunk of storage.

 

I've worked in a number of environments where FAS is used for both block and file as well.  In these settings with the wide variety of applications it's easier to use the FAS storage features around data protection and replication as a central focus to backup/DR plans rather than try to implement something separate for each application.  As a file sharing device it's very good at massive file counts - my last "customer" position housed about 8.5 Billion files in 3PB on FAS storage with another PB for block access.  FAS is the jack of all trades giving you flexibility and control at the storage layer beyond most anyone's single platform.

 

 

Hope this helps you.

 

Bob Greenwald

Senior Systems Engineer | cStor

NCIE SAN ONTAP, Data Protection

 

 

Kudos and/or accepted solutions are always appreciated where applicable.

Harishbailwad14
22,992 Views

Hi

 

Since the Topic was difference between FAS and E-Series, please someone could let us help and more clearity on usable disk space. when we configure FAS on Base-2 storage capacity calculation., we get a hit of 10% which is call ONTAP OS on all the FAS Series Disk., since we have OS on the Storage System. and the after the Disk Right Size, and we do formatting of the disk, ONTAP gets vertulisze all the disk which take 10% toll of the usabe capacity and we get less  actual usable capacity., which is why we calculate on Base2 and not on Base10.

 

But when we configure E-Series SAN Storage, the SANTricity Storage OS is outside of storage. so how we can differentiate difference of E-Series from FAS on during Capacity sizing., should calcuate the capacity based on Base-2 or Base-10, if we do E-Seires Storage calculatation on Base-2 then why we do that, since SANtricity OS is outside all the managment of storage is done from outside.

 

regards

Harish

AlexDawson
22,868 Views

Hi Harish,

 

A bit of google stalking suggests you work for one of our partners - is there a reason you are not using our Synergy tool? (https://synergy.netapp.com). 

 

Synergy provides easy calculation of capacity for either platform, and this would be my strong recommendation for how to size for capacity. For processing capacity (vs storage), I would use spm - spm.netapp.com

 

Tom_Holz
6,954 Views

Hi Alex, link is outdated, fyi. 

AlexDawson
6,942 Views

It has been 5 years Tom, I hope you will forgive me for not retroactively correcting links from so long ago 🙂

 

Our current sizing tool for staff and partners is at https://fusion.netapp.com

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