Lucas Mearian
Senior Reporter

Dell, Brocade to join forces in datacenter push

news
Sep 2, 20092 mins

The companies will focus on switch technology for virtualized environments

Dell said yesterday it has expanded its reseller agreement with storage switch maker Brocade Communications Systems Inc. and will now sell external FCoE (Fibre Channel-over-Ethernet), 10GbE switches, and the HBAs (host bus adapters) needed to connect servers to high-end storage arrays.

The two companies also said they will be jointly developing software to better manager virtualized server/storage environments.

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Dell is already reselling Brocade’s embedded Fibre Channel switches in its Dell M1000e and Dell PowerEdge Series blade servers as well as in its SANs. It will now also resell Brocade’s 8000 Fibre Channel-over-Ethernet FCoE Switch and Brocade’s DCX Backbone director, which enables datacenter consolidation and network convergence.

Dell will also resell the Brocade Ethernet modular switch line of NetIron MLX Series Routers and Brocade BigIron RX Series Switches with 10 Gbit/sec Ethernet and GbE ports to support data center traffic, including iSCSI virtualized applications and Internet edge-to-aggregation layers routing. Brocade acquired the Ethernet switches when it bought Foundry Networks Inc. last year.

To manage the new line of switch and router offerings, Dell will resell Brocade’s Data Center Fabric Manager, which can manage datacenter fabrics — from storage ports on networked storage systems to HBAs attached to physical or virtualized servers — through a single interface.

The two companies also said they would work together to deliver integrated toolsets to manage application delivery and deployment as business services.

“We are extending our Brocade relationship beyond storage into the broader datacenter, offering customers compelling choices and flexibility for compute, networking and storage,” Brad Anderson, senior vice president of Dell’s Enterprise Product Group, said in a statement. “Both companies share a vision that next-generation, virtualized datacenters should be open and standards-based.”

Marc Randall, senior vice president, Brocade Products and Offerings, said his company is committed to an “ecosystem-centric partnership model in developing and delivering the best-in-class solutions that customers need and want. This agreement further strengthens and diversifies Dell’s end-to-end IP and storage networking portfolio and provides customers with a cost-effective, high-performance and reliable choice to address the demands of evolving enterprise datacenters.”

Dell expects to make the new Brocade products generally available starting in December.

Lucas Mearian

With a career spanning more than two decades in journalism and technology research, Lucas Mearian is a seasoned writer, editor, and former IDC analyst with deep expertise in enterprise IT, infrastructure systems, and emerging technologies. Currently a senior writer at Computerworld covering AI, the future of work, healthcare IT and financial services IT, his 23-year tenure has included roles such as Senior Technology Editor and Data Storage Channel Editor, where he covered cutting-edge topics like blockchain, 3D printing, sustainable IT, and autonomous vehicles. He has appeared on several podcasts, including Foundry’s Today In Tech. He also served as a research manager at IDC, where he focused on software-defined infrastructure, compute, and storage within the Infrastructure Systems, Platforms, and Technologies group.

Before entering tech media, he served as Editor-in-Chief of the Waltham Daily News Tribune and as a senior reporter for the MetroWest Daily News. He’s won first place awards from the New England Press Association, the American Association of Business Publication Editors, and has been a finalist for several Jesse H. Neal Awards for outstanding business journalism. A former U.S. Marine Corps sergeant who served in reconnaissance, he brings a disciplined, analytical mindset to his work, along with outstanding writing, research, and public speaking skills.

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