Do you want to build a vSAN? It doesn’t have to be VMware vSAN

Storage Area Networks have been an important part of organizations’ IT infrastructure for the past thirty years. Originally consisting of several interconnected disk arrays, tape libraries, hubs and/or switches, this family of network storage devices and software stack pools of block-based storage provides clients and servers with their own file systems.

Ten years ago, VMware introduced a virtual SAN, a software-based distributed storage system. A vSAN was supposed to eliminate the need for expensive, overloaded storage controllers by installing software on the existing servers and using standard server-class storage media. By virtualizing the SAN environment in such a way, organizations can reduce the cost of their storage architectures by taking advantage of the distinct price advantages that vSANs have over other storage architectures.