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{{short description|Storage connectivity product manufacturer}}
{{Unreferenced |date= August 2013}}
{{advert|date=February 2018}}

{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| name = ATTO Technology, Inc.
|
| logo =ATTO_Technology_Logo.png
name = ATTO Technology Corporation
| type = Private
|
| key_people = Tim Klein, President and CEO <br /> David Snell, CTO and Vice President of Engineering
logo =ATTO_Technology_Logo.png
| industry = [[Computer storage|Storage]]
|
| foundation = {{start date and age|1988|11|11}}
type = Private
| location = [[Amherst, New York]], United States
|
| homepage = [https://www.atto.com/ www.atto.com]
key_people = Tim Klein, President and CEO <br /> David Snell, CTO and Vice President of Engineering
|
industry = [[Computer storage|Storage]]
|
foundation = November 11, 1988
|
location = [[Amherst, New York]], United States
|
homepage = [https://www.attotech.com/ www.attotech.com]
}}
}}


'''ATTO Technology''' is a manufacturer of storage connectivity products for [[data-intensive computing]]. ATTO manufactures host bus [[adapter (computing)|adapters]], RAID adapters, Fibre Channel switches, Desklink devices, protocol conversion bridges, [[RAID]] storage controllers, Mac OS X iSCSI initiator software and acceleration software with storage [[network interface|interface connectivity]] to [[SCSI]], [[SATA]], [[Serial Attached SCSI|SAS]], [[Fibre Channel]], [[FCoE]], [[Intel Thunderbolt|Thunderbolt]] and [[iSCSI]].
'''ATTO Technology, Inc.''' is a manufacturer of storage connectivity products for [[data-intensive computing]]. ATTO manufactures Fibre Channel and [[SAS (software)|SAS/SATA]] [[host bus adapter]]s, [[RAID]] adapters, Fibre Channel switches, [[protocol converter|protocol conversion]] bridges, storage controllers, [[MacOS]] [[iSCSI]] initiator software and acceleration software with storage [[network interface controller|interface connectivity]] to [[SATA]], [[Serial Attached SCSI|SAS]], [[Fibre Channel]], [[Intel Thunderbolt|Thunderbolt]] devices, [[Ethernet]] and [[NVMe]].


== History ==
== History ==


===1988: Founding===
===1988: Founding===
The company was founded in 1988 by Timothy J. Klein and David A. Snell and is headquartered in [[Amherst, New York]].<ref>http://www.buffalonews.com/city-region/atto-found-niche-in-data-storage-market-20131205</ref> All of ATTO's products are engineered and assembled in the United States and ATTO has delivered more than an estimated 2 million products to the market in a broad range of storage applications and environments.<ref>http://dscon.ru/docs_atto/ATTO_Resource_Guid___28th_Edition___Web.pdf</ref>
The company was founded in 1988 by Timothy J. Klein and David A. Snell, and is headquartered in [[Amherst, New York]].<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.buffalonews.com/city-region/atto-found-niche-in-data-storage-market-20131205| url-status = dead| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160915202342/http://www.buffalonews.com/city-region/atto-found-niche-in-data-storage-market-20131205| archive-date = 2016-09-15| title = ATTO found niche in data-storage market - Business - The Buffalo News}}</ref>


===1989-95: First Products===
===1989–95: First Products===
[[File:ATTO_SiliconDisk.tif|thumb|SiliconDisk]]
ATTO’s first product was the SiliconDisk, a SCSI-based solid-state disk, released in 1989. ATTO received its first OEM contract with Kodak shortly thereafter, in 1990.<ref>https://www.buffalo.edu/content/dam/www/news/photos/2014/03/inventors-entrepreneurs-flyer.pdf</ref> In 1992, ATTO introduced the ISA, EISA and MicroChannel (MCA) host bus adapters for the PC market at the Comdex trade show. By 1995, ATTO added to its product line yet again with the introduction of the ExpressPCI SCSI-3 Accelerator, which received the MacUsers Editor’s Choice award that year.<ref>http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+winner!+ATTO's+ExpressPCI+(MC)+SCSI-3+accelerator+captures...-a017913940</ref>
The first ATTO product was the SiliconDisk, a [[SCSI]]-based solid-state disk, released in 1989. The company received its first OEM contract with [[Kodak]] shortly thereafter, in 1990.<ref>{{Cite web |title=University at Buffalo - inventors-entrepreneurs-flyer.pdf |url=https://www.buffalo.edu/content/dam/www/news/photos/2014/03/inventors-entrepreneurs-flyer.pdf |website=www.buffalo.edu}}</ref> In 1992, ATTO introduced the [[Industry Standard Architecture|ISA]], [[Extended Industry Standard Architecture|EISA]] and [[Micro Channel architecture|Micro Channel]] (MCA) host bus adapters for the PC market at the [[COMDEX]] trade show. By 1995, ATTO added to its product line with the introduction of the ExpressPCI SCSI-3 Accelerator, which received the MacUsers Editor's Choice award that year.<ref>http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+winner!+ATTO's+ExpressPCI+(MC)+SCSI-3+accelerator+captures...-a017913940 {{Dead link|date=February 2022}}</ref>


===1996–2008: New Technologies===
==Products==
ATTO released its Fibre Channel host bus adapters, bridges and hubs in 1996. In 1999, it introduced its first enterprise-class ATA-based RAID storage array. In 2002, the company released the iPBridge, an iSCSI to SCSI bridge. In the early 2000s, ATTO started a focus on the Fibre Channel market, developing and releasing the Celerity line of Fibre Channel host bus adapters in 2003 with 1 GB connectivity. By 2005, ATTO expanded its Celerity offerings with the 4 GB host bus adapters, as well as introducing the FibreBridge storage controller for data centers and the FastStream Fibre Channel RAID controllers. In 2007, ATTO stepped into the SAS/SATA market with ExpressSAS RAID and host bus adapters. The following year, ATTO released 8 GB Fibre Channel and 6Gb ExpressSAS adapters, and in 2009 the company rolled out the first 8 GB Fibre Channel storage controller. ATTO introduced its FibreConnect family of switches in 2010 and introduced a revised product in 2012, providing scalable, end-to-end [[storage area network|SAN]] connectivity. In 2011, ATTO released its first FastFrame network interface cards and converged [[network adapter]]s, enabling connectivity to Ethernet networks. In 2012, ATTO introduced its [[Thunderlink|ThunderLink]] and ThunderStream devices, the company's first Thunderbolt enabled products.
ATTO products are sold directly to [[original equipment manufacturer]]s (OEMs), ODMs, White Box Systems Integrators as well as through ATTO authorized distributors and resellers.
Products include: acceleration software, RAID Adapters, and Host Bus Adapters (HBAs) (4Gb and 8Gb [[Fibre Channel]], 10GbE [[FCoE]], Ultra320 [[SCSI]], 3Gb and 6Gb [[Serial Attached SCSI|SAS]], 3Gb [[SATA]] and 1GbE and 10GbE [[iSCSI]]), sometimes called Storage Adapters or Host Adapters.


===2015–Present: New Developments===
Other products include: RAID Storage Controllers—self-contained hardware that add RAID protection for stored data to SAS, SATA or Fibre Channel JBOD Storage Enclosures. RAID storage controllers also provide a single point of management for shared (networked) storage.
By 2015, ATTO had expanded its FastFrame offering to include both 10 GB and 40 GB Ethernet connectivity, in single-, dual- and quad-port configurations. The following year, 2016, was a banner year for ATTO, introducing both 32 GB and 16 GB Gen 6 Celerity host bus adapters and debuted the renamed XstreamCORE storage controller, replacing all but a few of its Fibre Channel storage controllers. At the same time, ATTO's ExpressNAV software was rebranded as XstreamVIEW. ThunderLink and ThunderStream Thunderbolt connectivity devices now support Thunderbolt 2 and Thunderbolt 3 platforms and provide connectivity to 6 GB SAS/SATA RAID, Fibre Channel and 10 GB Ethernet networks. Thunderbolt 3 to 40 GB Ethernet and both 32 GB and 16 GB Fibre Channel products were also introduced.
Connectivity for all-in-one, laptop and small form factor computer systems which lack PCIe slots are served with their desklink devices. These devices support Thunderbolt to Fibre Channel, SAS/SATA or 10Gb Ethernet.

===Architecture===
With the introduction of XstreamCORE ATTO launched two new technologies to help their products stand out against competing architectures. xCORE IO Acceleration features multiple parallel IO acceleration engines with end-to-end IO processing, hardware buffer allocation management and real-time performance and latency analytics. These features combine to provide very high, reliable throughput and IOPS with deterministic latency of under 4 [[microsecond]]s. Unlike general purpose processor based architectures xCORE maintains performance and latency as services and features are added. This is accomplished with the help of ATTO's other new technology the eCORE Control Engine. The eCORE offloads non-data related commands from xCORE and adds common, open storage services, integrates with industry standard [[API]]s, manages reservations, storage routing and host and mapping functions. The eCORE Control Engine also manages traffic for data mover offload with added error handling and diagnostic tools. These features add value to [[JBOD]] (Just a Bunch of Disks/Drives), JBOF (Just a Bunch of [[Flash memory|Flash]]) or RAID storage while providing tight integration with server based software.{{citation needed|date=February 2018}}

==Products==
ATTO products are sold directly to [[original equipment manufacturer]]s (OEMs), [[original design manufacturer|ODMs]], [[White box (computer hardware)|white box]] systems integrators as well as through ATTO authorized distributors and resellers. Products include: acceleration software, RAID Adapters, and host bus adapters (HBAs) 8 GB, 16GB and 32 GB [[Fibre Channel]], 12 GB and 6 GB [[Serial Attached SCSI|SAS]]/[[SATA]], and Network Interface Cards (NICs) 40 GbE and 10 GbE. NetApp is a customer of ATTO and has integrated the ATTO FibreBridge product line in the NetApp MetroCluster business continuity solution.


Protocol conversion products, called Bridges, convert one protocol to another while adding cutting edge monitoring and management features, for example: Fibre Channel to SAS/SATA, iSCSI to SAS/SATA, Fibre Channel to iSCSI or Fibre Channel to SCSI.
Protocol conversion products, called storage controllers, convert one protocol to another while adding monitoring and management features, for example: Fibre Channel to SAS/SATA, iSCSI to SAS/SATA. Switches are also offered which provide 8, 16, 24, or 48 ports in 16 GB or 8 GB Fibre Channel to enable an end-to-end SAN solution when using Fibre Channel HBAs.
Switches are also offered which provide 8, 16 or 24 8Gb Fibre Channel ports to enable an end to end SAN solution when using Fibre Channel HBAs.


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
*[https://www.attotech.com/corporate/about-atto About ATTO at corporate site]
*[https://www.atto.com/corporate/about-atto About ATTO at corporate site]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Atto Technology}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:ATTO Technology, Inc.}}
[[Category:Computer companies established in 1988]]
[[Category:Computer companies established in 1988]]
[[Category:Manufacturing companies based in New York]]
[[Category:Manufacturing companies based in New York (state)]]
[[Category:Computer companies of the United States]]
[[Category:Computer hardware companies]]

Latest revision as of 19:09, 14 October 2024

ATTO Technology, Inc.
Company typePrivate
IndustryStorage
FoundedNovember 11, 1988; 36 years ago (1988-11-11)
HeadquartersAmherst, New York, United States
Key people
Tim Klein, President and CEO
David Snell, CTO and Vice President of Engineering
Websitewww.atto.com

ATTO Technology, Inc. is a manufacturer of storage connectivity products for data-intensive computing. ATTO manufactures Fibre Channel and SAS/SATA host bus adapters, RAID adapters, Fibre Channel switches, protocol conversion bridges, storage controllers, MacOS iSCSI initiator software and acceleration software with storage interface connectivity to SATA, SAS, Fibre Channel, Thunderbolt devices, Ethernet and NVMe.

History

[edit]

1988: Founding

[edit]

The company was founded in 1988 by Timothy J. Klein and David A. Snell, and is headquartered in Amherst, New York.[1]

1989–95: First Products

[edit]
SiliconDisk

The first ATTO product was the SiliconDisk, a SCSI-based solid-state disk, released in 1989. The company received its first OEM contract with Kodak shortly thereafter, in 1990.[2] In 1992, ATTO introduced the ISA, EISA and Micro Channel (MCA) host bus adapters for the PC market at the COMDEX trade show. By 1995, ATTO added to its product line with the introduction of the ExpressPCI SCSI-3 Accelerator, which received the MacUsers Editor's Choice award that year.[3]

1996–2008: New Technologies

[edit]

ATTO released its Fibre Channel host bus adapters, bridges and hubs in 1996. In 1999, it introduced its first enterprise-class ATA-based RAID storage array. In 2002, the company released the iPBridge, an iSCSI to SCSI bridge. In the early 2000s, ATTO started a focus on the Fibre Channel market, developing and releasing the Celerity line of Fibre Channel host bus adapters in 2003 with 1 GB connectivity. By 2005, ATTO expanded its Celerity offerings with the 4 GB host bus adapters, as well as introducing the FibreBridge storage controller for data centers and the FastStream Fibre Channel RAID controllers. In 2007, ATTO stepped into the SAS/SATA market with ExpressSAS RAID and host bus adapters. The following year, ATTO released 8 GB Fibre Channel and 6Gb ExpressSAS adapters, and in 2009 the company rolled out the first 8 GB Fibre Channel storage controller. ATTO introduced its FibreConnect family of switches in 2010 and introduced a revised product in 2012, providing scalable, end-to-end SAN connectivity. In 2011, ATTO released its first FastFrame network interface cards and converged network adapters, enabling connectivity to Ethernet networks. In 2012, ATTO introduced its ThunderLink and ThunderStream devices, the company's first Thunderbolt enabled products.

2015–Present: New Developments

[edit]

By 2015, ATTO had expanded its FastFrame offering to include both 10 GB and 40 GB Ethernet connectivity, in single-, dual- and quad-port configurations. The following year, 2016, was a banner year for ATTO, introducing both 32 GB and 16 GB Gen 6 Celerity host bus adapters and debuted the renamed XstreamCORE storage controller, replacing all but a few of its Fibre Channel storage controllers. At the same time, ATTO's ExpressNAV software was rebranded as XstreamVIEW. ThunderLink and ThunderStream Thunderbolt connectivity devices now support Thunderbolt 2 and Thunderbolt 3 platforms and provide connectivity to 6 GB SAS/SATA RAID, Fibre Channel and 10 GB Ethernet networks. Thunderbolt 3 to 40 GB Ethernet and both 32 GB and 16 GB Fibre Channel products were also introduced.

Architecture

[edit]

With the introduction of XstreamCORE ATTO launched two new technologies to help their products stand out against competing architectures. xCORE IO Acceleration features multiple parallel IO acceleration engines with end-to-end IO processing, hardware buffer allocation management and real-time performance and latency analytics. These features combine to provide very high, reliable throughput and IOPS with deterministic latency of under 4 microseconds. Unlike general purpose processor based architectures xCORE maintains performance and latency as services and features are added. This is accomplished with the help of ATTO's other new technology the eCORE Control Engine. The eCORE offloads non-data related commands from xCORE and adds common, open storage services, integrates with industry standard APIs, manages reservations, storage routing and host and mapping functions. The eCORE Control Engine also manages traffic for data mover offload with added error handling and diagnostic tools. These features add value to JBOD (Just a Bunch of Disks/Drives), JBOF (Just a Bunch of Flash) or RAID storage while providing tight integration with server based software.[citation needed]

Products

[edit]

ATTO products are sold directly to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), ODMs, white box systems integrators as well as through ATTO authorized distributors and resellers. Products include: acceleration software, RAID Adapters, and host bus adapters (HBAs) 8 GB, 16GB and 32 GB Fibre Channel, 12 GB and 6 GB SAS/SATA, and Network Interface Cards (NICs) 40 GbE and 10 GbE. NetApp is a customer of ATTO and has integrated the ATTO FibreBridge product line in the NetApp MetroCluster business continuity solution.

Protocol conversion products, called storage controllers, convert one protocol to another while adding monitoring and management features, for example: Fibre Channel to SAS/SATA, iSCSI to SAS/SATA. Switches are also offered which provide 8, 16, 24, or 48 ports in 16 GB or 8 GB Fibre Channel to enable an end-to-end SAN solution when using Fibre Channel HBAs.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "ATTO found niche in data-storage market - Business - The Buffalo News". Archived from the original on 2016-09-15.
  2. ^ "University at Buffalo - inventors-entrepreneurs-flyer.pdf" (PDF). www.buffalo.edu.
  3. ^ http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+winner!+ATTO's+ExpressPCI+(MC)+SCSI-3+accelerator+captures...-a017913940 [dead link]