Posts Tagged ‘EMC’

Addressing the enterprise performance gap

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Ok, I want to get back to the issue I was discussing a couple of posts ago.

The question I’m exploring is what can be done about the growing gap between disk drive and enterprise network performance, as well as the escalating inefficiencies?   One only has to look at the root cause:  the mechanical nature of disk drives.  The solution is obvious; eliminate the mechanics. 

Easier said than done! 

The Holy Grail for primary storage has always been directly addressable low latency, non-volatile random access memory.  This remains a long way off, but it is time to begin the next evolutionary step.  Solid state technology (particularly Flash) cost and performance continues to improve geometrically, and new and even more competitive semiconductor storage technologies are around the corner.  Meanwhile, disk drive performance (seek, latency) is stagnating, with only limited foreseeable improvements and with cost per I/O leveling off or even beginning to increase with time. 

Last year Greg Schulz of the StorageIO Group predicted the increasing use of solid state technology in enterprise storage applications, saying (paraphrased) that 2008 will be the year of awareness and early adoption by vendors and early deployment by customers, while 2009 will be the broader adoption phase.   Supporting that projection, EMC has recently announced their commitment to Flash and is the first major enterprise storage company to do so (http://www.emc.com/about/news/press/us/2008/011408-1.htm).  Although it was a limited announcement with what I consider an ‘entry level’ SSD technology, it is the first step towards validation of Flash technology as an enterprise primary storage device.

Solid state storage has the potential to be transformational, relegating disk drives to applications that better match their strengths, low cost per GB and large block sequential applications (for the old timers amongst us, it should be noted this is similar to the role disk played years ago with respect to magnetic tape drives).

But Flash comes with its own set of problems…(Stay tuned)

Amyl Ahola

A different “Green IT” point of view

Monday, March 10th, 2008

I was intrigued by a blog post by Chuck Hollis of EMC last week (“Chuck’s Blog”) offering an interesting perspective on the whole “green IT” issue:  http://chucksblog.typepad.com/chucks_blog/2008/03/green-it—-are.html

Chuck suggests that the IT industry may be missing the point on “green IT.”  Specifically, while it is important to pursue green IT goals from an energy efficiency perspective, the real goal should be “efficient IT,” which can, as a result, generate a number of green benefits, including improved power consumption and footprint reductions.  He further suggests that just because something is green, it doesn’t necessarily mean it is efficient.

I couldn’t agree more.  While I believe that green IT is a critical objective for virtually all enterprise IT environments, there are a number of IT efficiency issues that must be addressed now for their own sake.  Take the use of enterprise HDDs for example.  Many of today’s IT managers are using 3 to 4 times more HDDs than they need from a capacity perspective just to meet growing I/O performance requirements.   This “over provisioning” is at best a band-aid approach to improving I/O, and is probably one of the most inefficient uses of IT technology I’ve seen.

I’ll have more to say on this later, but for now I just wanted to note the importance of pursuing efficient IT for its own sake.  The benefits can be many, not the least of which is a greener IT environment.

Amyl Ahola