Can Integrated Storage Systems Survive?
By George Crump
InformationWeek
Integrated storage systems are storage solutions where you get both the storage hardware and storage services (snapshots, thin provisioning, replication) from a single vendor. Their goal is to provide a turnkey solution that is easier to implement and support.
They are being challenged by software-based virtualization that is either done by an appliance or hypervisor, bringing storage services to almost any vendor's storage hardware. It is the classic turnkey vs. build battle. but the hypervisor may make the build concept easier and may mean that integrated storage needs to up its offerings to compete.
Innovate Through Software
One way that integrated storage systems can continue to maintain their dominance is to continue to innovate through their own storage software. In some cases, this means keeping pace with what standalone or hypervisor-based storage solutions can do. For example, several storage vendors now have the capability to move volumes between different storage systems like hypervisors can. This brings live volume migration to the non-virtualized environment and to those hypervisors that can't perform live storage migrations.
In other cases, software innovation means doing what the storage virtualization solutions cannot--like thin reclamation instead of just thin provisioning, automated tiering for block-level data movement between storage types instead of whole volumes, or more robust snapshot and cloning capabilities.
Innovation may go so far as adding a feature that a storage virtualization tool simply does not have and may never have, like primary storage deduplication. As we discussed in our recent article "Which Primary Storage Optimization Strategy is Best?" deduplication could be a key differentiator especially in virtualized environments.
Innovate Through Hardware
Another area that storage systems vendors can innovate is in the storage hardware itself by using custom-designed ASICs or FPGA's that improve on performance. This breaks with the conventional wisdom of using "off the shelf" hardware, but it is an area that makes sense for storage vendors to invest in to stop the encroachment of software-only solutions. If you are a hardware vendor, you might as well leverage hardware to improve performance of such features like thin provisioning, automated tiering, and snapshots.
Compliment The Storage Hypervisor
As we discussed in our earlier entry "The Storage Hypervisor," the storage service capabilities of the virtualization vendors are improving dramatically and their shortcomings can be overcome by third-party software add-ons. As a result, the final area that we think that storage hardware vendors should focus on is creating great hardware. Too many vendors are counting on software ingenuity to differentiate their systems and are using off-the-shelf components for the hardware part of their solutions. That is a reasonable strategy, but it means constantly racing to stay ahead of what the storage hypervisor and standalone storage virtualization software vendors can provide. Eventually, many users may decide that the capabilities of the software virtualization stack may be all they need.
As we discuss in our article "The Requirements for Building Reliable Storage Systems," vendors should look to building reliable hardware that is cost effective and space efficient. This allows them to be a compliment, not a competitor, to the feature sets that are being added to the hypervisor. We think this gives storage vendors that invest in their own hardware innovations a key advantage as the storage virtualization market takes hold.
Follow Storage Switzerland on Twitter
George Crump is lead analyst of Storage Switzerland, an IT analyst firm focused on the storage and virtualization segments. Storage Switzerland's disclosure statement. George Crump is lead analyst of Storage Switzerland, an IT analyst firm focused on the storage and virtualization segments. Storage Switzerland's disclosure statement.
Federal agencies must eliminate 800 data centers over the next five years. Find how they plan to do it in the new all-digital issue of InformationWeek Government. Download it now (registration required).
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. |
Virtual Infrastructure Reports
Informed CIO: VDI Snake Oil Check
You won't lose your shirt on a desktop virtualization initiative, but don't expect it to be simple to build or free of complications. This report examines the three biggest problems when developing a business case for VDI: storage costs, ongoing licensing, and the wisdom of prolonging the investment in PC infrastructure.
Fundamentals: Next-Generation VM Security
Server virtualization creates new security threats while turning the hypervisor into a network black hole, hiding traffic from traditional hardware defenses -- problems a new breed of virtualization-aware security software tackles head-on.
Delegation Delivers Virtualization Savings
IT can't-and shouldn't-maintain absolute control over highly virtualized infrastructures. Instituting a smart role-based control strategy to decentralize management can empower business units to prioritize their own data assets while freeing IT to focus on the next big project.
The Zen of Virtual Maintenance
Server virtualization has many advantages, but it can also lead to chaos. Many organizations have unused or test VMs running on production systems that consume memory, disk and power. This means critical resources may not be available in an emergency: say, when VMs on a failed machine try to move to another server. This can contribute to unplanned downtime and raise maintenance costs. Easy deployment also means business units may come knocking with more demands for applications and services. This report offers five steps to help IT get a handle on their virtual infrastructure.
Pervasive Virtualization: Time to Expand the Paradigm
Extending core virtualization concepts to storage, networking, I/O and application delivery is changing the face of the modern data center. In this Fundamentals report, we'll discuss all these areas in the context of four main precepts of virtualization.
Virtually Protected: Key Steps To Safeguarding Your VM Disk Files
We provide best practices for backing up VM disk files and building a resilient infrastructure that can tolerate hardware and software failures. After all, what's the point of constructing a virtualized infrastructure without a plan to keep systems up and running in case of a glitch--or outright disaster.



Subscribe to RSS