Windows IT Pro Storage UPDATE--NAS Sites Flock to Virtualization--December 5, 2005

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December 5, 2005

10 Min Read
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1. Commentary
- Storage Virtualization Takes Hold at NAS Sites2. From the Community
- Storage-Medium Errors Could Cause Program Crash in XP3. New and Improved
- iQstor Debuts 4Gb Fibre Channel Storage Platform for SMBs
- 3PAR Offers Exchange-Aware Data-Protection Tool
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==== 1. Commentary: Storage Virtualization Takes Hold at NAS Sites ====
by Elliot King, [email protected] Storage virtualization--essentially amalgamating different storage devices so that they appear and are managed as one device--is making strong inroads in companies that use NAS. However, organizations that use SANs have been slower to adopt storage virtualization. That's the picture that emerges from two recently issued research reports. A study conducted by Coughlin Associates, a technology and marketing research group, and Peripheral Concepts, a storage and storage-management consulting firm, identifies a strong trend toward the adoption of NAS virtualization. In contrast, a study conducted by IDC finds that only 8 percent of all companies use any virtualization at all, although 23 percent of the 269 respondents said that they planned to implement virtualization of some sort over the next 12 months.Virtualization at NAS Sites
According to the Coughlin Associates/Peripheral Concepts study, 20 percent of all sites that have 1TB of data or more use some type of virtualization, and an additional 24 percent plan to implement virtualization technologies over the next year. And although the Coughlin study, which surveyed more than 2000 IT sites totaling 679 petabytes of disk storage and 4690 NAS systems, was targeted to enterprises with large NAS environments, it reveals that virtualization technology is in use at every economic tier in storage and in enterprises ranging from small-to-midsized businesses (SMBs) to huge organizations. In fact, Coughlin Associates' president Tom Coughlin told me, for him the biggest surprise in the study was that the general growth of virtualization was stronger and more widespread than he'd anticipated. The reason for the growth is fairly straightforward, Coughlin says. Virtualization lets companies address the scaling, performance, and management issues that confront storage administrators as their NAS installations grow. More than 30 percent of the sites surveyed had more than five NAS implementations. Coughlin points out that NAS is generally implemented as an appliance on an existing network. As more storage appliances are added, managing many discrete file systems and dealing with additions, changes, and migrations becomes very challenging. Virtualization has emerged as an attractive solution because it makes dealing with those challenges easier. In fact, although performance is the most important criterion in selecting a NAS device, scalability is the top consideration for NAS virtualization technology. Ease of deployment is also key. Overall, 79 percent of respondents view ease of deployment as important, and 46 percent describe it as very important. The goal is to implement virtualization without disrupting the existing infrastructure. Sixty-nine percent of respondents say they want to deploy a NAS virtualization solution that doesn't require the remounting of any clients. Companies deploy NAS virtualization primarily because they want to improve their data-migration and data-mobility functionality and leverage their existing backup and recovery procedures. "NAS is cost-effective, but as they add extra file systems it becomes a problem," Coughlin says. "Centralized NAS management addresses that."Virtualization and SANs
The picture is very different for infrastructures that use SANs. According to the IDC study, whereas 19 percent of companies with 10,000 employees or more use some virtualization technology, few companies with 1000 to 9999 employees use virtualization at all. Interestingly, in both sectors, around one-third of the respondents indicate that they plan to explore virtualization solutions in 2006. Several factors have curbed the growth of virtualization of SANs. First, major storage vendors have introduced three distinct approaches to implementing virtualization: through the use of an appliance, in a switch, or through an array. Over the past year, the boundaries between different approaches have begun to blur, making it harder for administrators to select a specific approach to virtualization. In addition, since it introduced Windows Storage Server, Microsoft has been quietly establishing itself as a formidable force in storage. Some industry observers believe that Microsoft will make virtualization part of the next release of the Windows Server OS. They argue that over time, just as the boundaries between different approaches to storage virtualization have blurred, the boundary between server virtualization and storage virtualization will also become obscured. In the long run, they contend, storage virtualization will be one element of a distributed OS for servers, networks, and storage. Although the two surveys show different results, taken together they tell the same story. Administrators are interested and aware of the potential benefits of storage virtualization. But they'll adopt the technology only when it's been proven to resolve real, pressing problems and becomes easy and cost-effective to deploy.==== Sponsor: Symantec ====Breaking Through the Dissimilar Hardware Restore Challenge Failure of a computer's hardware is inevitable. When the hardware must be replaced, the need for a rapid system recovery solution exists. In this free white paper, you will learn about recovery to virtual computer environments, hardware migration strategies, hardware repurposing for optimal resource utilization, meeting recovery time objectives, increasing disaster tolerance, and more.
http://www.windowsitpro.com/go/whitepaper/symantec/hardware?code=stgmid1205==== 2. From the Community ====Storage-Medium Errors Could Cause Program Crash in XP When you run a program on a Windows XP computer, the program might crash when it tries to read valid data from or write valid data to a storage medium (e.g., a hard disk). The problem occurs when XP can't access a file because of a problem with the hard disk that the file is stored on or with the storage-medium drivers. You can learn about the problem and obtain a workaround for it at http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=884070.==== 3. New and Improved ====
by Anne Grubb, [email protected] Debuts 4Gb Fibre Channel Storage Platform for SMBs SAN vendor iQstor Networks has released the iQ2080, a 4Gb Fibre Channel storage platform that includes integrated enterprise-level data services geared toward small-to-midsized businesses (SMBs). The product meets the needs of SMBs who want enterprise-type features such as storage virtualization, snapshots, remote replication, mirroring, and storage provisioning in a lower-priced, easy-to-use product. The iQ2080 features hot-swappable internal components, dual active-active storage controllers with transparent failover, four host ports, and four disk loops and supports RAID 0, 1, 10, 3, 5, 50, and 6. An iQ2080 houses 15 Fibre Channel disk drives in a 19-inch, 3 RU rack-mountable enclosure, providing 4.5TB of storage capacity using 300GB disk drives. Pricing for the iQ2080 pricing starts from around $12,995 with 1.2TB of storage, embedded volume-manager-based virtualization software, and the System Manager utility. For more information, contact iQstor on the Web:
http://www.iqstor.com3PAR Offers Exchange-Aware Data-Protection Tool 3PAR announced 3PAR Recovery Manager for Microsoft Exchange 2003, a solution that works in conjunction with 3PAR Virtual Copy 2.2 data-snapshot software to provide nondisruptive protection and rapid recovery of Exchange 2003 databases. 3PAR Recovery Manager is Exchange-aware and also is integrated with Microsoft Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) to ensure the nondisruptive creation of consistent, recoverable point-in-time copies of single or multiple volumes in Windows Server environments. Pricing for 3PAR Recovery Manager starts at under $3000 for an entry-level (2TB) configuration on 3PAR's InServ storage array (available separately). For more information, contact 3PAR on the Web:
http://www.3pardata.comTell Us About a Hot Product and Get a T-Shirt! Have you used a product that changed your IT experience by saving you time or easing your daily burden? Tell us about the product, and we'll send you a T-shirt if we write about the product in a future Windows IT Pro What's Hot column. Send your product suggestions with information about how the product has helped you to [email protected].

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