Abstract:
Techniques for CDP/R services are disclosed. In one particular exemplary embodiment, the techniques may be realized as a method of transitioning continuous data protection and replication comprising determining whether a first appliance node connected to a switched fabric contains one or more transactions received from a host node, unregistering a world wide port name of a target port of the first appliance node, registering the world wide port name to a target port of a second appliance node connected to the switched fabric, associating one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node with the target port of the second appliance node, exporting the one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node, logging the target port of the second appliance node into a switched fabric, and logging the target port of the second appliance node into a remote node port of the host node.

Description:
FIELD OF THE DISCLOSURE 
     The present disclosure relates generally to data storage and replication, and, more particularly, techniques for non-disruptive transitioning of continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE DISCLOSURE 
     Transitioning continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services from one CDP/R appliance node to another CDP/R appliance node in a cluster of appliance nodes in a manner that is not disruptive to application hosts relying on the CDP/R services is a significant challenge, but nevertheless desirable for several reasons. First, it may enable load balancing of CDP/R services in one or more clusters of appliance nodes. Secondly, it may allow the upgrade of a CDP/R appliance node without disrupting the services provided to one or more application hosts. 
     Currently, transitioning CDP/R services from a first appliance node to a second appliance node often requires disrupting input/output received from an application on a host node relying on the first appliance node until the host node is reconfigured to use the second appliance node. This produces a disruption in CDP/R services that is often unacceptable to many applications relying on CDP/R services. 
     Another approach would be to require a host node to have two or more paths from a host node to an appliance cluster and to use two or more separate appliance nodes for CDP/R services. This approach is expensive and very complex. This can be achieved using an Active/Passive configuration or an Active/Active Configuration. Either approach requires a dynamic multi-pathing (DMP) driver on the host node. 
     An Active/Passive configuration may involve one appliance node with an active path to the host and one or more appliance nodes with passive paths to the host. During failover a cluster controller of the appliance cluster must be notified by the host node of the new active path for the host. This requires extra coordination and software on the host. Additionally, there may be conflicts and performance degradation if more than one host node fails and tries to utilize the same appliance node. The resulting conflicts and coordination problems between hosts that may choose different paths to the same appliance node (i.e.—different ports but on the same host bus adapter of an appliance node) can result in severe performance degradation. 
     An Active/Active approach requires a host node to have two or more appliance nodes with active paths to the ports. It is very difficult to synchronize data writes across two or more appliance nodes. This approach also requires a distributed locking mechanism to be implemented amongst the various active nodes, which is not inherently scalable. 
     In view of the foregoing, it may be understood that there are significant problems and shortcomings associated with current methods of transitioning CDP/R services. 
     SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE 
     Techniques for non-disruptive transitioning of continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services are disclosed. In one particular exemplary embodiment, the techniques may be realized as a method of transitioning continuous data protection and replication comprising determining whether a first appliance node connected to a switched fabric contains one or more transactions received from a host node, unregistering a world wide port name of a target port of the first appliance node, registering the world wide port name to a target port of a second appliance node connected to the switched fabric, associating one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node with the target port of the second appliance node, exporting the one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node, logging the target port of the second appliance node into a switched fabric, and logging the target port of the second appliance node into a remote node port of the host node. 
     In another particular exemplary embodiment, the techniques may be realized as an article of manufacture for transitioning continuous data protection comprising at least one processor readable carrier, and instructions carried on the at least one carrier, wherein the instructions are configured to be readable from the at least one carrier by at least one processor and thereby cause the at least one processor to operate so as to determine whether a first appliance node connected to a switched fabric contains one or more transactions received from a host node, unregister a world wide port name of a target port of the first appliance node, register the world wide port name to a target port of a second appliance node connected to the switched fabric, associate one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node with the target of the second appliance node, export the one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node, log the target port of the second appliance node into the switched fabric, and log the target port of the second appliance node into a remote node port of the host node. 
     In yet another particular exemplary embodiment, the techniques may be realized as a system for transitioning continuous data protection comprising one or more processors for determining whether a first appliance node connected to a switched fabric contains one or more transactions received from a host node, and one or more cluster controllers for controlling a cluster of appliance nodes, wherein the cluster controller is configured to unregister a world wide port name of a target port of the first appliance node, register the world wide port name to a target port of a second appliance node connected to the switched fabric, associate one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node with the target of the second appliance node, export the one or more logical unit numbers of the second appliance node, log the target port of the second appliance node into the switched fabric, and log the target port of the second appliance node into a remote node port of the host node. 
     The present disclosure will now be described in more detail with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof as shown in the accompanying drawings. While the present disclosure is described below with reference to exemplary embodiments, it should be understood that the present disclosure is not limited thereto. Those of ordinary skill in the art having access to the teachings herein will recognize additional implementations, modifications, and embodiments, as well as other fields of use, which are within the scope of the present disclosure as described herein, and with respect to which the present disclosure may be of significant utility. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       In order to facilitate a fuller understanding of the present disclosure, reference is now made to the accompanying drawings, in which like elements are referenced with like numerals. These drawings should not be construed as limiting the present disclosure, but are intended to be exemplary only. 
         FIG. 1  shows a system of non-disruptive dynamic load balancing of continuous data protection and replication services in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure. 
         FIG. 2  shows a method of non-disruptive dynamic load balancing of continuous data protection and replication services in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS 
     Referring to  FIG. 1 , there is shown a system  100  of non-disruptive transitioning of continuous data protection and replication services in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure. Host  110  may represent an application host using continuous data protection and replication services (CDP/R) from appliance node  150  via storage area network (SAN) fabric  125 . Host  110  may contain one or more node ports (N_ports)  115  which may contain a link control facility (LCF) and may be capable of connecting to one or more fabric ports (F_ports) of SAN fabric  125 . SAN fabric  125  may be a fibre channel switched fabric and may contain one or more fibre channel switches. F_port  120  may represent a port containing a link control facility (LCF) that N_port  115  is currently connected to. F_port  140  may represent a port connected to virtualized world wide port name WWPN_B  130  of host bus adapter (HBA)  145 . WWPN_A  135  and WWPN_B  130  may represent virtualized or aliased world wide port names (WWPN) associated with an N_port of host bus adapter (HBA)  145 . HBA  145  may be a host bus adapter providing access to one or more logical unit numbers (LUNs)  155  associated with appliance node  150 . LUNs  155  may provide access to SAN storage. F_port  165  may represent a port connected to a virtualized world wide port name (WWPN)  160  of HBA  170 . HBA  170  may be a host bus adapter providing access to one or more logical unit numbers (LUNs)  180  associated with appliance node  175 . Appliance nodes  150  and  175  may access journal  180 . Journal  180  may be a database, a log file or other storage. 
     World wide port names (WWPN) of a host bus adapter may be virtualized using N_Port identifier virtualization. World wide port names of a host bus adapter may also use multi-id aliasing or other techniques to allow a single fiber channel port (FCP) of a host bus adapter to be shared by more than one application. The aliased port identifier, virtualized port identifier or other N_port sharing technique may allow an N_Port identifier such as a virtualized world wide port name to be unregistered from a fiber channel port of a first appliance node and registered with a second appliance node. A fiber channel port of a host bus adapter on a first appliance node may contain a permanent world wide port name (WWPN). Aliasing or virtualizing the WWPN may enable an application on host  110  to maintain a connection to the aliased or virtualized WWPN and allow the WWPN to be migrated from a first node to a second node in a non-disruptive manner. For example, an application running on host  110  may be connected via N_Port  115  to F_port  120  of SAN fabric  125 . F_port  120  may be connected to F_port  140 . WWPN_B  130  may be logged into F_port  140 . WWPN_B  130  may be a virtualized or aliased WWPN on HBA  145 . WWPN_B  130  may provide access to LUNs  155 . It may be desirable for continuous data protection and replication services to be transitioned from appliance node  150  to appliance node  175 . Pending input/output (I/O) transactions of the application on host  110 , which may be in memory of appliance node  150  but have not yet been written to storage, may be stored in journal  180 . In one or more embodiments, pending input/output (I/O) transactions may be forwarded to a second appliance node for processing. In some embodiments, if pending input/output (I/O) transactions are detected, the transitioning from one appliance node to a second appliance node may wait for any pending input/output (I/O) transactions to be processed and may then resume once processing of the transactions is complete. WWPN_B  130  may be unregistered from HBA  145 . WWPN_B  130  may be registered and bound to HBA  170  of appliance node  175 . If the HBA  145  supports extended link services, it may explicitly logout of F_port  140 . WWPN_B  130 , which may now be associated with HBA  170 , may perform a fabric login (FLOGI) and may login in to f-port  165  of SAN fabric  125 . WWPN_B  130  may then perform a port login (PLOGI) to login with the remote node port of the Host  110 . WWPN_B  130  may login with N_Port  115  of host  110 . At this point, CDP/R services may be performed for host  110  by appliance node  175 . This transition from CDP/R services of appliance node  150  to CDP/R services of appliance node  175  may occur in less time than a SCSI (small computer systems interface) timeout period. Thus, any I/O attempts by host  110  to WWPN_B  130  may be retried as part of the normal SCSI protocol and may resume without disruption to host  110 . If there were any pending I/O transactions of appliance node  150 , they may be read by appliance node  175  from journal  180  and processed. 
     Referring to  FIG. 2 , there is shown a method of non-disruptive dynamic load balancing of continuous data protection and replication services in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure. At step  210 , the transition of continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) from a first appliance node to a second appliance node may begin. At step  215 , it may be determined whether the first appliance node contains any pending input/output (I/O) transactions. One or more pending input/output transactions, received by a first appliance node from a host node but not yet processed, may be recorded to a log, a journal or other storage. In one or more embodiments, pending transactions may not be recorded and may be forwarded to a second appliance node to for processing. In some embodiments, if pending transactions are detected, the process may wait until the transactions are processed by the first node and may continue when no pending transactions are detected. There may be no pending transactions detected and the process may continue at step  220 . At step  220 , a world wide port name which is virtualized or aliased may be unregistered from a host bus adapter (HBA) of the first appliance node. At step  225 , the virtualized world wide port name may be registered or bound with a host bus adapter (HBA) of the second node. At step  230 , one or more logical unit numbers (LUNS) of the second appliance node may be associated with the target virtualized or aliased world wide port name (WWPN). At step  235 , one or more logical unit numbers (LUNS) of the second appliance node may be exported. At step  240 , it may be determined whether an N_Port of the first appliance node to which the WWPN was associated supports extended link services. If it does, the method may continue at step  245 . At step  240 , if the N_Port does not support extended link services, the next time the N_Port logs in, it may cause an implicit logout of the prior session. If the N_Port does not support extended link services, the method may continue at step  250 . At step  250 , an N_Port of the second appliance node may perform a fabric login (FLOGI) and may be logged in to a SAN fabric. At step  255 , the N_Port of the second appliance node may perform a port login (PLOGI) and may log in to a remote port of the host node. At this point, continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services may resume. One or more of steps  210  through  255  may occur prior to a SCSI timeout value and may thus transition CDP/R services from a first appliance node to second appliance node without disruption to a host node. At step  260 , the second appliance node may read one or more pending input/output transactions of the first appliance node from a journal, a log file, a database or other storage. The second appliance node may then process the transactions. At step  265 , a SCSI retry may occur and the host node may resume CDP/R services from the second appliance node. At step  270 , the host application functionality may resume without disruption. 
     Transitioning continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services may be performed for one or more reasons. Transitioning CDP/R services may be performed to facilitate dynamic load balancing and may enable the transitioning of CDP/R services from a heavily utilized appliance node in a cluster to an appliance node with more capacity. CDP/R services may be transitioned in response to a degraded application performance of an application on a host node. CDP/R services may be transitioned manually by an administrator or other personnel monitoring performance. In some embodiments, CDP/R services may be transitioned automatically by a performance monitoring tool that may be monitoring CDP/R appliance nodes in a cluster. CDP/R services may be transitioned in response to a number of input/output operations on an appliance node, a number of snapshots in memory on an appliance node, an application priority metric, a service level agreement (SLA) metric, memory consumption of an appliance node, processor utilization of an appliance node, or other performance metrics. In one or more embodiments, CDP/R services may be transitioned from a first appliance node to a second appliance node in order to enable a first appliance node to be upgraded, repaired, moved or otherwise accessed in a manner that may be disruptive to users of CDP/R services from the first node. 
     At this point it should be noted that non-disruptive dynamic load balancing of continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services in accordance with the present disclosure as described above typically involves the processing of input data and the generation of output data to some extent. This input data processing and output data generation may be implemented in hardware or software. For example, specific electronic components may be employed in an appliance node, fibre channel switch, or similar or related circuitry for implementing the functions associated with non-disruptive dynamic load balancing of continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services in accordance with the present disclosure as described above. Alternatively, one or more processors operating in accordance with stored instructions may implement the functions associated with non-disruptive dynamic load balancing of continuous data protection and replication (CDP/R) services in accordance with the present disclosure as described above. If such is the case, it is within the scope of the present disclosure that such instructions may be stored on one or more processor readable carriers (e.g., a magnetic disk), or transmitted to one or more processors via one or more signals. 
     The present disclosure is not to be limited in scope by the specific embodiments described herein. Indeed, other various embodiments of and modifications to the present disclosure, in addition to those described herein, will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from the foregoing description and accompanying drawings. Thus, such other embodiments and modifications are intended to fall within the scope of the present disclosure. Further, although the present disclosure has been described herein in the context of a particular implementation in a particular environment for a particular purpose, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that its usefulness is not limited thereto and that the present disclosure may be beneficially implemented in any number of environments for any number of purposes. Accordingly, the claims set forth below should be construed in view of the full breadth and spirit of the present disclosure as described herein.