SANBlaze Granted Second Storage Emulation Patent
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on Tue, December 20th, 2011
Method for testing storage network including port level data handling
SANBlaze Technology, Inc. was granted a second patent for its storage emulation solution.
The patent for Method for testing a storage network including port level data handling (U.S. Patent 8,065,133) covers the method for emulating targets in computer memory, receiving data from initiators, and passing to computer memory only a portion of the data received.
SANBlaze systems have been helping storage developers, test and QA engineers save millions of dollars in capital expense and time since their introduction in 2004.
The invention enables full bandwidth testing at all test clients simultaneously due to bandwidth of internal memory and paths to memory being de-coupled from devices under test attached to ports. Data passed on a wire is returned or discarded at the port or bus level. Incorporated in the SANBlaze VirtuaLUN Software as the SANBlazter feature, this method has been a critical element for testing networks that have high bandwidths, and for testing large SANs.
"We are very happy to have been awarded a patent on this aspect of our storage testing method and solution," said Vince Asbridge, Director of Systems and Software at SANBlaze. "The product and invention represents 1000s of hours of software development and innovation. The addition of this patent combined with our latest product offerings solidifies SANBlaze as the leading innovator in storage emulation."
SANBlaze storage emulation products is a tool for any company that provides storage solutions, both hardware and software. The product's original focus on emulating FC targets has been expanded since its inception to include both target side emulation (disks, arrays and tapes) as well as initiator solutions (hosts and servers). In addition to FC, SANBlaze provides emulation solutions for additional storage protocols including SAS, FCoE and iSCSI.
The patent for Method for testing a storage network including port level data handling (U.S. Patent 8,065,133) covers the method for emulating targets in computer memory, receiving data from initiators, and passing to computer memory only a portion of the data received.
SANBlaze systems have been helping storage developers, test and QA engineers save millions of dollars in capital expense and time since their introduction in 2004.
The invention enables full bandwidth testing at all test clients simultaneously due to bandwidth of internal memory and paths to memory being de-coupled from devices under test attached to ports. Data passed on a wire is returned or discarded at the port or bus level. Incorporated in the SANBlaze VirtuaLUN Software as the SANBlazter feature, this method has been a critical element for testing networks that have high bandwidths, and for testing large SANs.
"We are very happy to have been awarded a patent on this aspect of our storage testing method and solution," said Vince Asbridge, Director of Systems and Software at SANBlaze. "The product and invention represents 1000s of hours of software development and innovation. The addition of this patent combined with our latest product offerings solidifies SANBlaze as the leading innovator in storage emulation."
SANBlaze storage emulation products is a tool for any company that provides storage solutions, both hardware and software. The product's original focus on emulating FC targets has been expanded since its inception to include both target side emulation (disks, arrays and tapes) as well as initiator solutions (hosts and servers). In addition to FC, SANBlaze provides emulation solutions for additional storage protocols including SAS, FCoE and iSCSI.
With all the daily news
on the WW storage industry, this
website is updated every day at 9AM
in Chicago or 4PM in Paris.
You can subscribe to receive
an email with the daily headlines.
COMPLETE STORAGE
START-UP DATABASE
It contains more than 350 current
storage start-ups in the world
(2/3 in USA), with, for each firm:
- Company name,
- Headquarters, web site, CEO
- Year founded,
- Business activity,
- Yearly financial funding
and total received,
- Classification by sector.




Print this news
