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CLARiiON is a discontinued SAN disk array manufactured and sold by EMC Corporation, it occupies the entry-level and mid-range

of EMC's SAN disk array products. Upon launch in 2008, the latest generation CX4 series storage arrays support fibre channel and iSCSI front end bus connectivity. The fibre channel back end bus offers 4 Gbit/s of [3] bandwidth with FC-SCSI disks or SATAII disks. The EMC Celerra NAS device is based on the same X-blade architecture as the CLARiiON storage processor. The first CLARiiON was developed in 1992 by Data General Corporation, one of the first minicomputer companies. CLARiiON was an early commercial example of a RAID product and initially sold exclusively as an array with the company's AViiON line of computer systems. Realizing the enormous potential of storage arrays, Data General created a separate CLARiiON division and began selling the product as an OEM offering to its systems competitors. While this somewhat lessened the advantages of AViiON in the marketplace, and was a source of internal corporate friction, it allowed the company to sell higher volumes and popularize the brand. The strategy paid dividends as the company was acquired by EMC in 1999, primarily for the CLARiiON line of products. As of 2011 the Clariion and Celerra products have been replaced by the new VNX series of unified [5] storage disk arrays. Internally the VNX is labeled the CX5.
Contents
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[4] [2]

[1]

1 History 2 Architecture 3 Product lineup

o o o o

3.1 AX series 3.2 CX series 3.3 CX3 series 3.4 CX4 UltraFlex series

4 References 5 External links

[edit]History The CLARiiON disk array project started in the early 1990s when Tom West (the protagonist of the Pulitzer Prize winning book The Soul of a New Machine) convinced Data General to develop the array. West realized the potential for more advanced and openly compatible data-storage devices, as did [6] competitors such as Digital Equipment Corporation with their StorageWorks product. Patented in 1994, the CLARiiON disk array had some interesting features that later became standard in the data-storage and computing industry. Features mentioned in the patent paperwork included [7] optional hot swapping, guide rails for proper electrical contact, and a method to lock the drives in place

once they were secured in the disk enclosure. Other notable features include industry's first dual active[citation needed] controller design, mirrored write cache, full system redundancy and hot repair. The CLARiiON line was soon extended to contain SCSI disk arrays ranging from 7 to 30 slots. In 1997, Data General's CLARiiON division took the unusual step of adopting an emerging standard Fibre Channel. The FC5000 array utilized aFibre Channel Arbitrated Loop connection that doubled the performance of SCSI arrays at that time. It was also the first to use RAID level 5 on Fibre Channel [citation needed] drives. From there, the CLARiiON range grew into a faster, more expandable midrange storage platform, culminating in the FC5700 under Data General. After EMC's acquisition of Data General, significant development of a new range of CLARiiON arrays took place, resulting in the FC4500 and FC4700. Within a couple of years, the first CX series of CLARiiONs (CX200, CX400 and CX600) was developed. Subsequent processor and bandwidth upgrades led to a new CX lineup (CX300, CX500, CX700) and a low end SATA based CLARiiON array, the AX100 (now updated to AX150). In 2003, CLARiiON became the industry's first NEBS-certified storage system. In May 2006, EMC introduced the third generation of CLARiiON, named CX3 UltraScale. The lineup, consisting of the CX3-20, CX3-40 and CX3-80, was the industry's only storage platform to leverage endto-end 4 Gbit/s (4 billion bits per second) Fibre Channel and PCI-Express technologies. Later in 2007, the line was expanded to include a new entry-level storage system, the CX3-10. Most newer CLARiiON models run a version of Windows XP Embedded. [edit]Architecture The CLARiiON is built on an Intel platform and has quite unique software layer: it runs two operating environments in parallel. Windows XP Embedded or stripped down version of Windows server for [8] management and maintenance tasks and proprietary UNIX-based FLARE as an actual "data mover" . Embedded Windows (in the fourth generation this is 64-bit Windows Storage Server, the third generation used 32-bit Windows XP). The form factor is a half-width 1U or 2U device known as an X-blade, two of which are mounted side by side in the storage processor enclosure. This provides a fully redundant active-active configuration, with both storage processors serving requests and each acting as failover for the other so that initiators see the array as active-passive. An integrated UPS provides security for data in the event of power failure. Storage is fibre attached, initiators may be fibre or IP attached, the architecture supports both on the same array depending on configuration. Storage is connected via back-end loops with up to 120 drives per loop, the drives are contained in Disk Array Enclosures (DAEs) of 15 drives each. The operating environment, FLARE (Fibre Logic Array Runtime Environment), resides on the first five disks of the first DAE (bus 0 enclosure 0), which is also supplied by the integrated UPS. In the event of power failure this space is also used to store the contents of the write cache so that all writes are completed on restoration of power. Management of the CLARiiON is usually through inbuilt Java-based management software called Navisphere.
[citation needed] [when?]

With the fourth generation UltraFlex series, IO is provided through pluggable modules providing either IP or fibre connectivity, allowing additional back end and front end connections to be added over the life of the array. Advanced functionality of the CLARiiON is licensed and enabled through software. This includes SAN replication, Quality of service (QOS) and snapshots.

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