Howard Marks

Network Computing Blogger


Upcoming Events

A Network Computing Webinar:
Avoiding Downtime: How Virtualization Can Help In Times of Trouble

June 12, 2013
11:00 AM PT / 2:00 PM ET

Are you caught between a desire for the benefits of the cloud and concerns about security and control? Then you should attend this insight-packed webinar to learn how private data networking technologies like MPLS IP-VPNs can address your concerns and allow you to safely and intelligently reap the savings, agility and other benefits associated with cloud computing.

Join us to hear top industry experts discuss the private data network technologies that are best suited for enterprise cloud access requirements. You won't want to miss this opportunity to learn how your organization can best mitigate risk while reaping the full potential benefits of the cloud.

Register Now!

More Events »

Subscribe to Newsletter

  • Keep up with all of the latest news and analysis on the fast-moving IT industry with Network Computing newsletters.
Sign Up

See more from this blogger

Solid State Storage Market Heats Up

In the roughly three years since EMC stuck some STEC solid state disks (SSDs) in its disk arrays and brought solid state to the mainstream storage market, we’ve seen flash memory work its way into disk-based storage systems both modest and grand. During the past few months, we’ve also seen vendors targeting all-solid-state systems at mainstream users and applications. Most recently, all-solid-state pioneers Texas Memory Systems and Nimbus Data introduced new versions of their systems.

I find the flash-only market fascinating. Here we have upstart vendors warming up the audience, while we all know the big boys like EMC and HP are waiting in the wings. Even better, the vendors in the market are building very different systems that should be of interest to different sets of users while they all make the case for shared flash as the right solution for primary storage.

The all-flash upstarts also have support from their flash memory suppliers. Samsung has a substantial investment in Pure Storage as Toshiba has in Violin Memory. The chip makers are betting that by establishing all-solid-state systems in the marketplace they’ll sell more flash than if users embrace caching or automated tiering.

The simplest of the new systems is Texas Memory System’s RAMSAN-810, which represents TMS’ first use of MLC, OK, eMLC flash in a 1u, 10-Tbyte rack-mount SSD that delivers a claimed 320,000 IOPs over Fibre Channel or Infiniband connections. TMS has been building SSDs for 30 years, starting, as the RAMSAN moniker implies, with RAM-based devices. They’ve long been the go-to guys when you need the ultimate in reliable performance at any cost.

By using eMLC in cards, and building its own controllers rather than using commercially available SSDs, TMS can wear level across all the flash in the system, extending the working life of the eMLC past the three years or so a RAMSAN-810 will live in your data center. The RAMSAN is a basic SSD--you can chop it into logical unit numbers (LUNs), but it doesn’t support snapshots, replication or any of the other storage management features we expect to find in a disk array.

Where the RAMSAN-810 shows TMS' heritage as an SSD vendor, Nimbus Data's S-Class continues Nimbus Data's history as a unified storage supplier providing access as network-attached storage (NAS) using SMB or NFS, as well as block access via Fibre Channel, iSCSI and Infiniband. As we'd expect from an all-flash system built from a mature unified storage platform, there's a full set of storage management features, including snapshots, replication and in-band data deduplication all over Nimbus' own flash-optimized file system. Architecturally, the S-Class is pretty conventional, with a single controller head unit and add-on shelves of SSDs.

S-Class, now in its second generation with faster processors and bigger SSDs, was the first all-solid-state system to address price-performance, not just price. eBay certainly thought the roughly $10 per gigabyte was reasonable, as it recently announced it is using 100 Tbytes of S-Class.


Related Reading


More Insights


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.
 
Vendor Comparisons
Network Computing’s Vendor Comparisons provide extensive details on products and services, including downloadable feature matrices. Our categories include:

Research and Reports

May 2013
Network Computing: May 2013

May 2013
Special Issue

Network Computing: May 2013


TechWeb Careers