Special Coverage Series

Network Computing

Special Coverage Series

Commentary

Howard Marks
Howard Marks Network Computing Blogger

Don't Trade High Availability for Flash Performance

The rise of SSDs has also resurrected the single-controller architecture--along with its single point of failure. IT shouldn't gamble on high availability just for flash's amped-up performance.

As flash-based SSDs revolutionize the storage industry, I thought it might be worth taking a look at how some basic storage system architectures compare when the storage media changes from spinning disks to SSDs.

The most basic storage architecture is essentially a RAID controller with a SAN or NAS target. The controller, whether custom hardware or a standard server, is a single point of failure. As a result, unicontroller systems have been relegated to the very low end of the disk array market, where they're used by SMBs or to hold additional copies of data. The vast middle of the storage market is dominated by dual-controller, modular arrays that will fail over transparently if one controller goes down.

More Insights

Webcasts

More >>

White Papers

More >>

Reports

More >>

Amazingly enough, the move to SSD has resurrected the unicontroller design in the form of rackmount SSDs from the likes of IBM's Texas Memory Systems and Astute Networks' VISX, as well as more feature-rich systems like Nimbus Data's S-Class. The risk of data loss inherent in a unicontroller design might be tolerable for some applications, such as analytics or VDI with non-persistent desktops, but for the vast majority of cases I would find it hard to pay $50,000 or more for a product that doesn't offer high availability.

When asked about high availability, proponents of unicontroller systems will generally recommend a pair of appliances with synchronous replication. If the vendor has done its homework and written a fail-over mechanism into its arrays, a cluster of unicontrollers is available enough for most applications.

Basically, a typical dual controller, active/passive modular storage system is what the systems guys would call a shared disk cluster, much like a typical Windows Server cluster. A pair of unicontroller systems that replicate data is a shared nothing cluster.

In the disk era, unicontrollers were built on industry-standard servers, which offset the additional cost of a second set of disk drives. This meant that unicontroller designs, some of which provided some degree of scale-out as well, like Lefthand's iSCSI array and NexentaStor, have sold thousands of units.

The problem with unicontroller systems in the SSD era is that the flash makes up a much higher fraction of the cost of a storage system than disk drives. In fact, some all-flash unicontroller systems cost as much as competing systems that include HA.

I've even heard vendors suggest that customers buy one flash device and manage HA by using host volume managers or storage virtualization appliances.

But if you mirror in your host computer's volume manager or synchronously replicate from an all-SSD array to a disk-based system to avoid the cost of two all-SSD systems, you give up the performance advantage the all-flash system has on writes. That's because writes will only be acknowledged to your applications after they've been written to both the flash and disk-based systems. This limits application performance to the write speed of the slower disk system.

If instead you asynchronously replicate data across the mixed storage systems through host- or application-level software, you've turned a simple device failure into a full-blown disaster with associated RPOs and RTOs. By contrast, device failure on a true high-availability system would cause no data loss, and at worst a few seconds of failover delay

Users and senior management can accept some downtime, and even some performance loss, in the face of a disaster caused by an external event like a tornado or hurricane. They're a lot less understanding when they are inconvenienced by a problem within the IT department, even if it was the failure of a key piece of equipment.

The only place I can think of where a replicating pair of unicontroller systems might be an advantage would be on a college campus. At the college where I worked, we had two data centers at opposite ends of the campus connected by a loop of 128 strands of single-mode fiber. In an environment like that, a user could put one system in each data center, and get both high availability and disaster recovery with one replicating array pair taking advantage of the lower cost of unicontroller systems.

A year or two ago, speed was the only performance factor that people cared about with all-flash systems; we were so happy with the performance we didn't care about other functionality. But as the all-flash market matures, I'm less willing to sacrifice things like high availability for speed.



Related Reading



Network Computing encourages readers to engage in spirited, healthy debate, including taking us to task. However, Network Computing moderates all comments posted to our site, and reserves the right to modify or remove any content that it determines to be derogatory, offensive, inflammatory, vulgar, irrelevant/off-topic, racist or obvious marketing/SPAM. Network Computing further reserves the right to disable the profile of any commenter participating in said activities.

 
Disqus Tips To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | Please read our commenting policy.
 

Editor's Choice

RESEARCH: 2013 Backup Technologies Survey

RESEARCH: 2013 Backup Technologies Survey

Think backups are boring? Not so, say more than 500 IT pros. Most, 60%, use two, three or even more different backup applications, and the percentage encrypting all media has jumped 15 points since 2011.
Get full survey results now! »

Digital Issue: The Standardization Debate

Digital Issue: The Standardization Debate

An IT infrastructure constructed from uniform blocks of hardware and software is easier to manage and secure, and new services can be rolled out fast. But giving business units carte blanche can deliver more flexibility, drive innovation and better meets employee needs. Two IT executives square off in this debate, and almost 400 survey respondents weigh in too.
Get the Digital Issue »

WEBCAST: Avoiding Downtime: How Virtualization Can Help In Times of Trouble

WEBCAST: Avoiding Downtime: How Virtualization Can Help In Times of Trouble

Server and storage virtualization can help keep systems alive even in the face of demand spikes, disasters and other troubles. Attend this webcast to learn how virtualization can maximize application availability, create business continuity options for critical apps, and improve disaster recovery.
Register Today »

Related Content

From Our Sponsor

Implementing Energy Efficient Data Centers

Implementing Energy Efficient Data Centers

Electrical power costs over the life of a data center may exceed the initial cost of the IT equipment. As described in this paper, recognizing the appropriate IT design architecture necessary and being able to quantify the potential electrical savings can significantly increase cost savings over time.

Creating Order from Chaos in Data Centers and Server Rooms

Creating Order from Chaos in Data Centers and Server Rooms

IT Professionals who are challenged with managing a chaotic data center - messy racks, sub-standard floor air distribution and cable sprawl - can now leverage innovative methods for dealing with and eliminating the root causes of disorder. This paper outlines the solutions available to help create an organized data center.

High-Efficiency AC Power Distribution for Green Data Centers

High-Efficiency AC Power Distribution for Green Data Centers

In order to create optimal electrical efficiency and simplified data centers, the use of 240 volt power distribution is highly recommended. This paper describes the various configurations for this distribution architecture as well as the quantified benefits. Note: Applicable to North America only.

Energy Efficient Cooling for Data Centers: A Close-Coupled Row Solution

Energy Efficient Cooling for Data Centers: A Close-Coupled Row Solution

The trend of increased heat densities in data centers has held consistent with advances in computing technology. As power density increased, the degree of difficulty in cooling these higher power loads was also increasing. This article discusses the efficiency benefits of row-based cooling compared to two other common cooling architectures.

Data Center Projects: Standardized Process

Data Center Projects: Standardized Process

As the design and deployment of data centers evolve into more complicated projects, the benefits of a standardized and predictable process are compelling. This paper presents an overview of a standardized, step-by-step process methodology that can be adapted and configured to suit individual requirements, thus reducing costs and eliminating waste.