By now, we hope you’ve had a chance to watch one of the webcasts from the SNIA Ethernet Storage Forum’s “Great Storage Debate” webcast series. To date, our experts have had friendly, vendor-neutral debates on File vs. Block vs. Object Storage, Fibre Channel vs. iSCSI, and FCoE vs. iSCSI vs. iSER. The goal of this series is not to have a winner emerge, but rather educate the attendees on how the technologies work, advantages of each, and common use cases.
Our next great storage debate will be on August 22, 2018 where our experts will debate RoCE vs. iWARP. They will discuss these two commonly known RDMA protocols that run over Ethernet: RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE) and the IETF-standard iWARP. Both are Ethernet-based RDMA technologies that can increase networking performance. Both reduce the amount of CPU overhead in transferring data among servers and storage systems to support network-intensive applications, like networked storage or clustered computing.
Join us on August 22nd, as we’ll address questions like:
- Both RoCE and iWARP support RDMA over Ethernet, but what are the differences?
- Use cases for RoCE and iWARP and what differentiates them?
- UDP/IP and TCP/IP: which RDMA standard uses which protocol, and what are the advantages and disadvantages?
- What are the software and hardware requirements for each?
- What are the performance/latency differences of each?
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