Cancer center SAN ensures on-time treatment
Posted on: Saturday, 22 November 2003, 06:00 CST
InSite: Lessons from leading users
At the Cancer Therapy & Research Center in San Antonio, Texas, more than 200 patients each day receive radiation therapy on time because of an iSCSI storage-area network and some innovative remote boot technology.
At CTRC, eight devices known as linear accelerators need to deliver radiation doses to CTRC patients every 10 minutes -one linear accelerator per patient.
Cancer Therapy & Research Center CTO Mike Luter says keeping critical components in his data center available at all times is key to the center's care offerings.
Each accelerator communicates with a Windows NT server, which records and verifies radiation doses. The NT server, a critical part of the center's network, must stay up and running at all times so patients can get their treatment, says CTO Mike Luter.
Every minute counts
If the server is down for 10 minutes, as many as eight patients might miss life-saving radiation treatments. If a server is down for an hour while network managers rebuilds it, it can set the entire day off -50 patients won't receive treatments.
In this installation, the server connects to a 3-terabyte EMC Clariion FC4700 disk subsystem, which stores the 100M-byte-sized patient treatment plan generated from the computed tomography imaging scans, magnetic resonance imaging and Positron emission tomography scans.
The FC4700 in turn links into to the Gigabit Ethernet network via dual Cisco SN5428 iSCSI storage routers. The Unix, Linux and Windows servers that run CTRC's diagnostic applications also connect to the Gigabit Ethernet network and access the data stored on the FC4700S via the iSCSI protocol.
The boot
To keep the server that records and verifies radiation doses up and running, Luter uses software called the Cisco Network Boot, which allows a spare server to load the operating system and initialization processes and step in for the other server if it fails.
Network Boot allows CTRC to put the contents of the server's system drive, or "booting function," on the FC4700 instead of the hard disk of the server, so when a server fails, boot information and data is not lost.
Coming together
"All I need to do now is go to the [Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol] server, which has the [media access control] address of that record and verify server, change the address to that of the spare server, boot it, and now it's the record and verify server," Luter says.
Using Network Boot serves as an alternative to provisioning another server and lets Luter quickly replace a failed server, so treatments are not held up.
The data on the FC4700 disk array is mirrored using Veritas Software's Volume Manager for disaster-recovery purposes to a location 22 miles away, where Luter has another FC4700 subsystem and redundant SN5428 storage routers installed.
Fibre Channel costs
Initially Luter planned to link the two SANs with Fibre Channel. He soon found that the cost of the Fibre Channel link was prohibitive and instead decided to adopt iSCSI. Observers have said that mirrorine data using Fibre Channel over IP can cost as much as $2,000 per month, per mile.
"Our clinics and our research park are 22 miles apart," Luter says. "Its hard to run Fibre Channel 22 miles, even with SAN extension.
"We already had Gigabit Ethernet between the two sites so we could share the connection among voice over IR applications and the iSCSI mirroring," he adds. "I didn't have to buy another circuit and didn't have to put expensive Fibre Channel adapters in my servers to accomplish it."
Luter's existing IT staff is in charge of maintaining the iSCSI network.
Copyright Network World Inc. Nov 18, 2003
Related Articles
- DataCore Software Updates Storage Virtualization Free Trial Software; Includes Performance Acceleration, Migration Tools and Support for iSCSI, Fibre Channel and FCoE
- QLogic Converged Network Adapter and 8Gb Fibre Channel Products Certified With Oracle Enterprise Linux and Oracle VM; QLogic FCoE Adapters and 8Gb Fibre Channel Adapters and Switches to Be Showcased At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco
- QLogic Validates Compatibility of FCoE Networks With HP Fibre Channel Storage At Test Drive Event
- QLogic Hosts Test Drive of Fibre Channel Over Ethernet With 16 Other Industry Leaders
- Storage Magazine Names QLogic 8Gb Fibre Channel Network Products of the Year Finalist
- Emulex Teams With Nuova Systems to Showcase the First Fibre Channel Over Ethernet Demonstration in Europe
- Finisar Delivers Industry's First 10GbE Protocol Analyzer for Fibre Channel Over Ethernet (FCoE)
- ADVA Optical Networking Provides First 10G Fibre Channel DWDM Transport Solution Between Universities of Stuttgart and Hohenheim
- TRADE NEWS: Agilent Technologies Introduces RoHS-Compliant 4 Gb/S Fiber Optic Transceivers for Fibre Channel Storage Applications; Multimode Modules Compliant With European Union's RoHS Directive
- Fourth Generation Storage Networking: One Decade of Fibre Channel
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds