Virtually Speaking

Dan Kusnetzky, Paula Rooney and Ken Hess

IBM's high performance SAN products target cloud and virtual data centers

By | September 8, 2011, 3:15am PDT

Summary: IBM’s smarter SAN infrastructure should improve storage performance for virtual and cloud workloads.

IBM’s analyst relations folks sent me an storage area network (SAN) infrastructure announcement a while ago. Since I was busy working on projects for several clients, I filed it away for later study.  I did a fantastic job of filing the announcement - I couldn’t find it later.  The message just turned up. It had gotten filed in a trip folder along with the flight itinerary and hotel reservations. I’m sorry IBM.

IBM launched several storage area network products designed to improve overall storage performance by adding intelligence to the Fibre Channel network infrastructure, the switching that is designed to use that infrastructure and the IBM network advisor that is designed manage the network and the SAN infrastructure. Those organizations that have adopted converged network/SAN infrastructure will find these products interesting.

Here’s how IBM summarizes the announcement

The new offerings include:

  • IBM System Storage SAN768B-2 and SAN384B-2 backbones – among the industry’s newest Fibre Channel switching infrastructure, providing reliable, scalable, high-performance foundations for private cloud storage and highly virtualized environments.
  • IBM System Storage SAN48B-5 SAN switch – designed to meet the demands of hyper-scale, private cloud storage environments by delivering 16 Gbps Fibre Channel technology and capabilities that support highly virtualized environments.
  • IBM Network Advisor – software management platform that unifies network management for storage area networks (SAN) and converged networks.

Snapshot analysis

Announcements of this sort, basic infrastructure components, are often not as flashy or interesting as the announcement of some new storage server. That being said, each component of a SAN can enhance or degrade overal performance.

IBM has put quite a bit of thought into these devices and software. The goal was to make the SAN more intelligent to improve support for virtualized desktops, servers and better support remote private, public or hybrid cloud implementations. Another goal was to make converged network/SAN infrastruture more manageable and fit into a single management dashboard.

What IBM and other competitors have learned is that virtual and cloud SAN use cases make different demands upon the storage infrastructure than more traditional physical systems supporting similar workloads. The read/write mix is different and that defeats some of the cache optimization techniques used for previous generations of high performance storage systems.

IBM appears to have spent quite a bit of time evaluating real world storage systems to determine where their engineers could add value and these products are the result.

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Daniel Kusnetzky is a distinguished analyst and the founder of the Kusnetzky Group LLC.

Disclosure

Dan Kusnetzky

The Kusnetzky Group LLC is an independent technology industry research firm that focuses on system software, virtualization and cloud computing technology.

Dan's opinions are based upon research, personal experiences and actual use of technology. They are not based upon the relationships the company may or may not have with suppliers, end user organizations, the media, consultants or other analysts.

Dan's research is available on a subscription basis through the Kusnetzky Group LLC. Dan's attendance at industry events or at client meetings may be sponsored by the client. Clients may provide hardware or software for testing prior to the publication of analysis that includes that product. Clients may also provide shirts, jackets, coffee cups, folders, backpacks, pens and other event chotchkies. While nice, these don't effect Dan's opinions or insight about those clients or their products.

Biography

Dan Kusnetzky

Daniel Kusnetzky, Analyst and Founder of Kusnetzky Group LLC, is responsible for research, publications, and operations. Mr. Kusnetzky has been involved with information technology since the late 1970s. Mr. Kusnetzky has been responsible for research operations at the 451 Group; corporate and marketing strategy for Open-Xchange; system software and virtualization research at IDC; and program and product management at Digital Equipment Corporation.; Today, Mr. Kusnetzky focuses on system software, virtualization technology and cloud computing.

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