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In With The New

As vendors race to be better, faster and to differentiate themselves in an already busy marketplace, the real needs of the storage teams can be left un-met and also that of the storage consumer. At times it is as if the various vendors are building dragsters, calling them family saloons and hoping that nobody notices. The problems that I blogged about when I started out blogging seem still mostly unsolved.

Management

Storage management at scale is still problematic; it is still extremely hard to find a toolset that will allow a busy team to be able to assess health, performance, supportability and capacity at a glance. Still too many teams are using spreadsheets and manually maintained records to manage their storage.

Tools which allow end-to-end management of an infrastructure from rust to silicon and all parts in-between still don’t exist or if they do, they come with large price-tags which invariably do not have a real ROI or a realistic implementation strategy.

As we build more silos in the storage-infrastructure; getting a view of the whole estate is harder now than ever. Multi-vendor management tools are in general lacking in capability with many vendors using subtle changes to inflict damage on the competing management tools.

Mobility

Data mobility across tiers where those tiers are spread across multiple vendors is hard; applications are generally not currently architected to encapsulate this functionality in their non-functional specifications. And many vendors don’t want you to be able to move data between their devices and competitors for obvious reasons.

But surely the most blinkered flash start-up must realise that this needs to be addressed; it is going to be an unusual company who will put all of their data onto flash.

Of course this is not just a problem for the start-ups but it could be a major barrier for adoption and is one of the hardest hurdles to overcome.

Scaling

Although we have scale-out and scale-up solutions; scaling is a problem. Yes, we can scale to what appears to be almost limitless size these days but the process of scaling brings problems. Adding additional capacity is relatively simple; rebalancing performance to effectively use that capacity is not so easy. If you don’t rebalance, you risk hotspots and even under-utilisation.

It requires careful planning and timing even with tools; it means understanding the underlying performance characteristics and requirements of your applications. And with some of the newer architectures that are storing metadata and de-duping; this appears to be a challenge to vendors. Ask questions of vendors as to why they are limited to a number of nodes; there will sheepish shuffling of feet and alternative methods of federating a number of arrays into one logical entity will quickly come into play.

And then mobility between arrays becomes an issue to be addressed.

Deterministic Performance

As arrays get larger; more workloads get consolidated onto a single array and without the ability to isolate workloads or guarantee performance; the risk of bad and noisy neighbours increases. Few vendors have yet grasped the nettle of QoS and yet fewer developers actually understand what their performance characteristics and requirements.

Data Growth

Despite all efforts to curtail this; we store ever larger amounts of data. We need an industry-wide initiative to look at how we better curate and manage data. And yet if we solve the problems above, the growth issue will simply get worse..as we reduce the friction and the management overhead, we’ll simply consume more and more.

Perhaps the vendors should be concentrating on making it harder and even more expensive to store data. It might be the only way to slow down the inexorable demand for ever more storage. Still, that’s not really in their interest.

All of the above is in their interest…makes you wonder why they are still problems.

 

 


3 Comments

  1. Kevin Stay says:

    On Management – The various Unified Computing Platforms are a step in the right direction. You do not get to customize the solution that much and some of the management is still lacking, but it is a major step up from rolling your own.

    On Mobility – In this area right now you get to either have a VSP (or HUS VM) or an SVC. The latter is getting long in the tooth and off-ramping storage you previously virtualized with it is significantly harder than with a VSP.

    On Scaling – While not yet at all ideal IMHO today 3PAR 10k and VSP appear to be the most worthwhile established enterprise plays here. IF you have one of the still relatively rare workloads well matched to it then Isilon has no real peers in that space.

    On Deterministic Performance – We recently brought in a NexGen (now Fusion I/O I/OControl I believe) to address a specific pain point. Very much still a young product lacking in a number of features, but this 1st generation storage QoS is doing what we needed and a step in the right direction. Under the hood it is a very generic dual controller ALUA design with a bunch of SAS drives behind Fusion I/O cards. Still the QoS absolutely delivers and volumes can be dynamically raised and lowered on a schedule or ad hoc. (Are you listening Tier 1 guys?!?)

    1. storagebod says:

      Kevin,

      thanks for the reply, if I had one take-away from this; you need an awful lot of products to meet the challenges that we all face today. And you will end-up making compromises; for example, if you take a Unified Computing Platform, you are probably going to loose any kind of heterogenous flexibility.

      It’s all a bit of mess still…

      1. Kevin Stay says:

        For me right now the goal is to minimize the sprawl. Surprisingly, the HDS UCP bundle up looks comparable to the UCS; good integrated management, which is the last thing folks expect from HDS, and solid kit which is what everyone expects from HDS.

        In any case, all of this begs the question what will the datacenter that can actually deliver on all this look like?

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