Enterprises are facing an ever increasing requirement for storage because of
data retention policies and growing use of digital media files, according to
computer giant Dell. At the same time, recent trends such as the move towards
virtual machines are complicating the way storage is utilised, leading to
headaches for IT departments trying to manage and stay on top of their storage
needs.
Dell believes that storage virtualisation is going to play an important part
in addressing this issue, and that a key part of providing this capability will
be better storage area network (SAN) technology based on
iSCSI.
This is not perhaps surprising, as Dell is now the leading global iSCSI
supplier, according to figures from analyst firm Gartner, following its
acquisition of storage vendor
EqualLogic earlier this
year.
IT managers are familiar with the fact that the volume of storage required on
their network continually grows, especially as there is a need to retain certain
kinds of information for future reference as well as regulatory compliance
reasons. Digital media files such as photos are also adding to the burden as
these tend to be large in size.
Within a corporate environment, three types of information currently tend to
occupy the lion’s share of storage allocation, Dell said. Email takes up 26 per
cent on average, with files and shared storage using up another 20 per cent,
while backup and protection of vital information accounts for a further 11 per
cent.
The growth in storage also brings complexity, according to Dell, which
estimates that 70 per cent of enterprise investment in storage is going on “just
keeping the lights on”, a situation that the company is aiming to address using
future products from its EqualLogic storage division.
“We want to change this situation and flip it around,” said Robin Kuepers,
head of storage marketing for Dell in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, adding
that customers wanted to spend more on innovating, and “want help to slow
storage growth”.
Deploying iSCSI is one way to simplify storage, Kuepers said, pointing out
that this protocol runs over standard Ethernet infrastructure, something that
enterprises already have and are comfortable managing. In contrast, a
Fibre
Channel SAN requires costly dedicated infrastructure.
While iSCSI is often seen as an entry-level solution, there is increasing
corporate interest in the technology because it easily scales up, Kuepers said.
He said that because iSCSI boxes typically come with Ethernet ports built in,
adding more storage adds bandwidth to the storage array at the same time.
Another trend that will worsen storage management headaches within
datacentres is server virtualisation. This is employed to make the most
efficient use of modern hardware, which is often capable of handling several
virtual servers simultaneously.
However, virtualisation can complicate backup and recovery operations, according
to Praveen Asthana, enterprise storage director at Dell.
This is because virtual machines in a SAN-based VMware implementation are
typically stored in a
VMFS
cluster file system configured as a logical unit number
(LUN).
If a snapshot is taken of the LUN, this creates a backup of all the virtual
machines within it, making it difficult to roll back just one of the virtual
servers if the need arises.
With iSCSI, data sets can be configured and accessed as individual LUNs,
according to Dell, which makes recovery as simple as un-mounting the virtual
machine from its disk volume, rolling it back to an earlier snapshot, then
re-mounting it.
Forester Research senior analyst Andrew Reichman wrote in a report earlier
this year that “iSCSI is inherently more virtualised than Fibre Channel,
allowing for more granular addressing, especially important for virtual server
environments”.
Another problem that enterprises currently face is that data is distributed
here and there around the network, on numerous different servers and often on
client systems as well.
“Organisations don’t know exactly how much storage they have. They know where
their big databases are, but don’t know how many PCs they have, or what
information is on them,” said Tony Lock of analyst firm Freeform Dynamics.
According to John Joseph, Dell vice president of storage marketing, this has
led to storage “islands” as new workloads are deployed onto separate physical
servers with their own local storage. This situation is inefficient, as most of
this local storage is under-utilised and difficult to manage, he explained.
Not surprisingly, Dell believes the solution is for companies to separate
servers from their storage and put it onto a SAN, effectively consolidating all
storage into the datacentre. Previously, implementing a SAN would have been a
costly investment, but Dell claims that iSCSI now makes it possible to build a
SAN for less than £5,000.
One of the reasons for this is the falling cost of
10
Gigabit Ethernet (10GbE), which is increasingly being used for iSCSI storage
arrays. Praveen Asthana also said that Ethernet will scale to offer greater
bandwidth than rival technologies in future.
“Fibre Channel went from 2G to 4G, and there are plans to offer 8G, while
Ethernet is on 10 gigabits today and there are plans for 40,” he said.
Joseph said that with Dell’s EqualLogic kit, companies can build a virtual
storage environment, one where administrators can manage a pool of storage
instead of individual storage devices. This pool can simply be expanded as
necessary by adding extra iSCSI equipment as required.
One existing feature of EqualLogic’s kit is its support for a
tiered
storage architecture. Logical storage volumes are sliced up and the blocks
distributed across the virtual storage array, and can also be moved around as
necessary, depending on how often the data in them is accessed.
Joseph said that Dell plans in future to offer the same capability for
virtual machine images, but declined to give a timeframe for this move.
“In future, we will be able to move a virtual machine to storage with a
better quality of service if necessary,” said Joseph. This means that virtual
machines servers or desktops with a heavy workload can be moved
automatically to faster storage hardware.
Conversely, virtual machines that are less critical will be migrated by the
storage management system to slower storage, according to Joseph, from 15,000RPM
disk arrays to 10,000RPM, for example.
“You’ll be able to automatically move less frequently accessed data from
$9,000 per terabyte storage to $3,000 per terabyte storage,” he said.
According to Dell, this will take some of the burden of management away from
the IT staff, and go some way towards helping tackle the problem of the ongoing
growth in storage.
Lock said that this kind of feature will become more prevalent in the future.
“Apart from the biggest organisations, most companies do not have dedicated
staff to manage areas such as storage,” Lock said, adding that in future storage
will be based on virtualisation and become much more flexible.
“Tiered storage is going to happen, but there’s a desperate need for data
discovery tools, and automatic classification of data,” he said.
Comments
Have your say on this article