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ESG Lab Report on DataCore Software-Defined Storage

Results on application-adaptive data Infrastructure, self provisioning VVols, hyper-converged simplicity, parallel I/O performance, automated storage tiering, CDP

DataCore Software Corporation announced the results of a hands-on evaluation and testing recently performed by Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG) Lab on its SANsymphony and Hyper-converged Virtual SAN software.

SANsymphony and Hyper-converged Virtual SAN

DataCoreSANsymphonyf2The report highlights ESG’s survey results on the Top 10 Biggest Storage Challenges. The lab testing, performed independently, was done to assess the value of company’s infrastructure-wide storage virtualisation and hyper-converged solutions for the data centre, and the tests were designed to validate the flexibility and ease of management in a heterogeneous, highly virtualised environment. ESG examined firm’ software’s performance, efficiency, and availability in fully virtualised and hyper-converged configurations.

ESG Lab test bed

DataCoreSANsymphonyf3DataCore’s SANsymphony and Hyper-converged Virtual SAN solutions proved to be robust, flexible, and responsive. The company now finds itself with incredibly relevant capabilities that truly matter to users. We found the software easy to implement and manage, virtualising any storage infrastructure with enterprise features and functionality while enhancing performance,” said Tony Palmer, senior lab analyst, ESG Lab. “ESG Lab was especially impressed with DataCore’s parallel I/O technology and its ability to deliver enterprise performance running on low-cost commodity hardware.”

After completing the testing, Palmer added: “It would benefit any organisation considering or implementing an IT virtualisation project to take a long look at DataCore Software.

ESG Lab validation highlights:

Highly available data infrastructure

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  • Enables enterprise Hyper-converged Data Infrastructure

    ESG Lab found that virtualising infrastructure with company’s Hyper-converged Virtual SAN was intuitive and straightforward. During the evaluation, a pair of servers running a hypervisor and Hyper-converged Virtual SAN provided a highly available platform to run multiple simulated applications and enterprise workloads. When a server failure was simulated with a hard power off, VMs and storage failed over to the surviving node immediately and automatically. A new server was installed and added to the failover cluster and painlessly-while applications remained online and continously available.

    ESG tested, reviewed and reported on company’s ability to go beyond traditional hyper-converged performance limits and run demanding enterprise application and storage workloads. DataCore’s hyper-converged solutions provide a range of performance and application adaptive acceleration capabilities, the most significant being its parallel I/O software.

    DataCore has been hyper-converged since before there was such a term in the industry, so it’s no surprise that its hyper-converged offering is robust, highly available, and offers very impressive price-performance with the full complement of enterprise functionality that DataCore has been honing for nearly two decades,” added Palmer.

DataCore Hyper-converged Virtual SAN

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  • Drives fastest response times and industry-best price performance
    Company’s parallel I/O software technology is designed to adaptively harness available multi-core processors to optimise and schedule I/O processing across many different cores simultaneously. It actively senses I/O load being generated by multiple VMs concurrently and dynamically assigns CPU cores as needed to process the I/O load. This enables firm to take full advantage of modern multi-core server technologies to eliminate I/O bottlenecks, speed up application performance, and drive greater workload and VM density per server.

    ESG Lab reviewed company’s recently-published Storage Performance Council SPC-1 benchmark results.

  • DataCore has published an excellent result of 459,290 SPC-1 IO/s at 100% load with an average response time of only 0.32 milliseconds in a hyper-converged configuration [1],” continued Palmer. “The 0.32 millisecond result at 100% load is the fastest response time ever reported by SPC-1, and showcases the power of parallel I/O software to reduce the time it takes for applications to access, store, and update their data.

DataCore SPC-1 benchmark results summary

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Summarizes published results

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The firm set a SPC-1 price-performance record. At full load, SANsymphony was responding at nearly two orders of magnitude below the 30 milliseconds response time threshold set by the Storage Performance Council and at 0.32 milliseconds, it is three times faster than the one milliseconds threshold considered to be the standard for all-flash systems.

ESG stated that the company’s SPC-1 result proves its suitability for response time sensitive applications (e.g., virtualisation and database workloads, OLTP, ERP, etc.) and demonstrates the headroom available to scale up and scale out to much larger configurations and capacities.

  • Simplifies vSphere storage management: Self-provisioning with Vvols
    Administrators crave the simplicity, power and fine-grain control promised by vSphere Virtual Volumes (VVols); however, most current storage arrays and systems do not support VVols. With company’s enabled, virtually any storage becomes VVol capable allowing vSphere administrators to self-provision virtual volumes from virtual storage pools — and instantly specify the capacity and class of service needed for their applications without having to know anything about the storage or underlying hardware.

    ESG Lab tested firm’s self-provisioning VVols. In the testing scenario, ESG set up Platinum, Gold, Silver, and Bronze policies to define different levels of service. The company made provisioning storage a integrated part of VM creation, empowering administrators to provision storage for VMs using predefined storage policies that were able to define performance, availability, and locality of data without ever having to touch the back-end storage.

    The company automatically took care of the entire behind-the-scenes configuration, which is the responsibility of specialised storage administrators in traditional storage environments. ESG Lab reported that it was impressed with the speed, simplicity, and completeness of the firm’s integration. VMs based on these predefined profiles were created in minutes using native VMware tools. ESG noted that this capability is particularly of value as much of the existing storage in data centres can never be retrofitted to support VVols, so the fact that SANsymphony extends VVols self-provisioning to existing storage investments and any new devices not yet able to support VVols, is a powerful capability.

  • Automates infrastructure-wide storage tiering to maximize cost-effective performance
    ESG Lab validated the business value of firm’s automated storage tiering. All performance testing was completed using test tools to simulate a typical OLTP workload. ESG first measured the performance on a non-tiered storage pool using a SAS disk. Next, an SSD was added to the storage pool. The software immediately started the rebalancing process of tiering, moving hot, or frequently accessed, data blocks from the SAS disk to the higher performance flash disk.

    After completing the rebalancing process, the firm’s solution dedicated all resources to performing storage operations for the application. The effect of storage tiering was immediately visible, the company’s software reported a total of 1,392 IO/s-a 700% improvement over the non-tiered storage pool.

  • Supports continuous availability, Metro-wide clustering, Remote DR, advanced data protection and automated failover and self-healing functionality
    ESG Lab further validated that SANsymphony and Hyper-converged Virtual SAN provide an array of advanced data protection capabilities that can cost-effectively satisfy the most stringent BC and DR requirements. Synchronous mirroring across metropolitan areas, automated failover and self-healing, full and incremental snapshots, roll-back in time CDP, and asynchronous remote replication to distant DR sites can all be used without being dependent on any specific model or brand of storage device. For example, customers can take advantage of a hyper-converged system at a remote site and establish it as a contingency site for larger data centres.

    ESG noted that firm’s CDP capability was easy to configure and use, enabling rollback to a specific point in time without having to create multiple snapshots. An ideal solution for recovering the state of applications and configurations prior to bad events when snapshots were not invoked or to recreate ‘any-point in time’ restores.

  • View ESG Lab report and top 10 biggest storage challenges
    In addition to the lab report on the company, ESG recently conducted a survey of 373 IT professionals and respondents who were asked to identify what they would consider to be their biggest challenges with respect to their storage environment. As one might expect from a captive audience of server virtualisation users, there was significant focus on both data growth and data protection (each cited by 26% of respondents), as well as staff costs and data migration (coming in at 23% each). Perhaps of greatest interest and significance, however, is that hardware costs (27%) was the most-cited storage challenge.

    Bottom-line, in addition to the added flexibility to deal with growth and change, overcoming TCO including the rising people and hardware costs are now the primary business motivators driving the increased momentum to deploy software-defined storage solutions such as those from the company.

ESG Lab report and survey information

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