StorONE Said Flash Drive Shortage Forces New Thinking
About enterprise storage
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on June 18, 2021 at 2:33 pmWith flash media inventories depleted and the cost of drives increasing rapidly, enterprises have been forced to pivot to meet their need for capacity and performance.
Experts at StorONE, Inc., software-defined enterprise storage platform company, offered advice for users.
Flash drive pricing has increased by 30%, and buyers are seeing 8-week delays so far in 2021, due in part to worldwide pandemic shutdowns of manufacturing facilities. Although limited production has resumed, current supply is quickly being stockpiled by the largest technology companies. Depleted inventories, long waits and production challenges are likely to cause much worse and far more prolonged shortages; drive vendors expect the exceptionally high price per terabyte for flash to persist through next year, especially because of bitcoin mining and Chia farming.
“We expect the AFA segment to dramatically change in the near future due to shortages and price increases, and users need to be prepared for an ongoing crisis,” said Gal Naor, CEO and co-founder, StorONE. “AFAs and other enterprise flash solutions will be very costly and customers need to manage their purchasing carefully.”
Company recommends rethinking AFA according to following five recommendations:
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Drive flexibility
Users should look for drive flexibility in systems that support all drive types (NVMe, SSD and HDD) and tier data to the proper media for its access and performance requirements. Storage arrays should be able to use different type of drives, density and performance specs in the same pool.
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Boost utilization
Inefficiency in how data is written and distributed across individual drives leads to poor utilization, and forces buyers to overprovision. Ensure the storage array can get the maximum IO/s, throughput and capacity of the media investment, so you pay only for the resources needed today, and can add drives as requirements grow and/or prices fall. The company’s enterprise storage platform is unique in that it achieves 90% drive utilization, thus reducing the amount of drives needed. “This is especially critical with the high price per terabyte,” said Naor. “Fewer drives will reduce the overall cost and ease future maintenance.“ -
Don’t skimp on data protection
Don’t compromise on data protection to cut costs. “It’s a short-term solution at best, and if you have a heavy investment in media, you want to budget appropriately to ensure high data protection per volume,” said Naor. -
Use auto tiering
Newer auto-tiering technology is even more critical when media is in short supply. Users can start small, with any capacity per tier, and increase the relevant tier when needed. Data can also be automatically tiered to less expensive resources like HDD or cloud as it ages. “With such a high price per terabyte, there’s no way to justify purchasing total capacity in advance,” said Naor. “Buy it when prices go back to normal, and in the meantime, use tiering to conserve the flash capacity you have.” -
Open platforms
Choose a storage system that allows multiple protocols to access the same flash drives and is independent of any one particular hardware vendor, custom storage controller, or custom flash media designs. Buying and provisioning separate systems for different use cases is unrealistic given the high costs. The company’s platform is protocol-independent, including fibre, iSCSI, NFS, SMB and S3.
“Companies can survive the current crisis by using a storage platform that delivers optimal performance from as few SSDs as possible, rather than relying on AFAs,” said Naor. “Staying open and flexible, implementing new storage management tools, and being able to use any commodity flash that’s available will help everyone weather the storm.“
The S1 Enterprise Storage Platform simplifies organizations’ storage infrastructures while reducing costs. It provides IT professionals with a solution that exceeds the objectives of SDS, creating a storage platform the meets all present storage needs and is ready for future innovation. The platform is also protocol independent including fibre, iSCSI, NFS, SMB and S3. All members of the Enterprise Storage Platform are available on-premises or in the cloud and come with the same enterprise feature set, driven by the same interface which reduces the cost of storage operation.
Resellers and service providers looking to simplify their go-to-market strategy while helping customers overcome the challenges of flash array availability can learn more here.