But Sanrad looks to be
driving full speed into a head-on collision with Cisco
Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CSCO - message
board), which is about to release its second-generation
iSCSI switch. Moreover, Sanrad, which has a minimal U.S.
presence, is attempting to sell iSCSI -- SCSI over IP, an
immature and unproven technology -- to medium sized businesses
that may not be willing to buy into it.
Are these favorable odds for
success?
Eyal Felstaine, Sanrad's
president and CEO, realizes his firm faces big hurdles, but he
thinks he's got both the right technology and the right
marketing approach.
"Our major challenge is
to be successful at penetration in the U.S. market,"
Felstaine says. "This is the challenge of many Israeli
companies... The U.S. is the major proving ground."
Sanrad has about 50
employees, most of whom are based in Tel Aviv; the company
also has a sales and marketing office in Alameda, Calif.
Founded in April 2000, the
company has received $7 million in funding from the RAD Group
-- an Israel incubator whose companies include RAD
Data Communications Ltd. and Radware
Ltd. -- and $5 million from the Israeli government.
"In Israel, $12 million goes a lot further than it does
in the U.S.," says Felstaine.
Sanrad is positioning its
switch, which it expects to start shipping at the end of June,
as fitting in the gap between high-end storage switches and
software-only packages. The company says it will be more
powerful than software packages -- such as those from FalconStor
Software Inc. (Nasdaq: FALC - message
board) and DataCore
Software Corp. -- and more affordable than other
high-scale, multiprotocol switches from Andiamo
Systems Inc., Confluence
Networks, Maranti
Networks, Rhapsody
Networks, and Pirus
Networks.
"Unlike Pirus, we're not
going to sell the customer a huge box that will cost
$200,000," Felstaine says. (Actually, Pirus says its
PSX-1000 starts at $85,000 for a configuration that includes
four file servers [see Pirus Ships Switch].)
Sanrad's switch will cost
$18,000 without virtualization features and $36,000 with
virtualization features, which include striping, data
mirroring, concatenation, snapshotting, and access control
lists. Each switch includes three Gigabit Ethernet ports
running iSCSI, and four Fibre Channel ports for connecting
storage arrays.
But is Sanrad writing off the
big boxes because its own can't scale to high port
counts yet? Felstaine says high-scale features are coming. The
switch includes a 25-Gbit/s "scaleability port,"
which will allow customers to connect two boxes together to
act as a single system. The firmware to enable the interswitch
port will be available in the fourth quarter of 2002,
Felstaine says. In 2003, Sanrad expects to introduce a
chassis-based switch that allows switch blades to plug in for
even greater density.
For now, Cisco has its eye
trained on exactly the same space as Sanrad's entry-level
iSCSI switch. At N+I this week, Cisco showed its new SN 5428,
an eight-port Fibre Channel and two-port Gigabit Ethernet
storage router that supports iSCSI and incorporates QLogic
Corp. (Nasdaq: QLGC - message
board) FC switch technology (see Cisco
Turns to QLogic, Cisco
and Brocade: This Means War, and Cisco
SAN Plans Get Tangled). Cisco hasn't released pricing for
the 5428, but the less fully featured 5420 -- which has just
one FC port and one Gigabit Ethernet port -- has a list price
of $27,000.
Fronting up to Cisco might
seem like a daunting task for a small company like Sanrad, but
the networking giant has yet to make its mark on the storage
market, despite all its talk (see Cisco
Stalls on iSCSI).
Sanrad's differentiator,
Felstaine says, is that it combines iSCSI-to-Fibre-Channel
connectivity with data management features, while being able
to maintain throughput of 750 Mbyte/s per switch.
"What disturbs people
about iSCSI is the performance, and then with virtualization
you add another layer that adds latency," he says.
Sanrad's switch combines both network processing and
virtualization functions into a single ASIC, the company
claims. (Sanrad wouldn't say which company is supplying the
chips.)
Sanrad executives says six
beta sites are running its switch, with another six coming
online next month. Most customers that are interested in
Sanrad's switch are planning to implement remote-site backup
over IP. "It could be low-hanging fruit," Felstaine
says, "but it could be real traction."
Felstaine, an engineer by
training, has a master's degree in computer science from the Technion-Israel
Institute of Technology. His doctoral thesis,
"Scalable Routing in Hierarchical ATM Networks," is
pending faculty review. Wait a second -- ATM? "At
the time I started writing this, I was convinced that ATM
would kill IP," he says.
Now he's got the IP religion.
And he draws an analogy between Fibre Channel and ATM:
"Fibre Channel does everything better than IP -- just
like ATM did everything better than IP," he says.
"Except that it's not IP, which is cheap and well
understood."
Felstaine also worked for Allot
Communications, Intel
Corp. (Nasdaq: INTC - message
board) in Haifa, Israel, and served in a high-tech
military unit in the Israeli Defense Forces.
Zophar Sante, Sanrad's VP of
marketing, was previously head of business development and
strategic partnerships for Vicom
Systems Inc.. Prior to that he was at Tandberg
Data Inc., a tape storage company, where he was in charge
of market development and product marketing.
Rounding out the management
team are two other Technion alumni: Gadi Erlich, VP of
research and development, who spent 17 years working for National
Semiconductor Corp. (NYSE: NSM - message
board) in Israel; and Eyal Mayer, VP of operations, who
previously managed operations at WiseBand
Communications Ltd., a wireless components developer, and
worked at Lannet (now part of Avaya
Inc. [NYSE: AV]).
Industry observers familiar
with the startup say Sanrad has developed some interesting
technology -- but selling it will be a difficult trick.
"In a down economy,
their challenge is going to be trying to convince companies
they need this," says Balaji Baktha, VP of marketing in Adaptec
Inc.'s (Nasdaq: ADPT - message
board) storage networking group. "It takes money and
marketing savvy to do that."
— Todd Spangler, Senior
Editor, Byte and Switch
http://www.byteandswitch.com/