Posts Tagged ‘FusionIO’
Posted March 8th, 2012
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Array Vendors: Get out of SSD’s Way
ARRAY VENDORS THAT USE DISK-FORM-FACTOR SSD’S JUST DON’T GET IT
By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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In his blog entry entitled Are SSD-based arrays a bad idea? Robin Harris argues that packing arrays full of disk-form-factor SSD’s is counterproductive. Why? He cites several reasons, including latency, bandwidth, reliability, and cost, but mostly it boils down to squeezing a fast storage media into a slow architecture—much like driving a race car through rush hour traffic or putting wings on a bicycle. Cost and reliability come into play as well, because shoving flash into a disk form factor is less space efficient, less reliable, and more expensive than mounting it on a board.
Enterprise SSD is a young, rapidly evolving market and will continue to evolve until the industry agrees on the perfect SSD architecture and creates standards around it. Expect that to take several years. In the meantime we at Kaminario believe we have come pretty close. We agree with Harris that board-mounted flash makes a lot of sense for reasons of cost, performance, and reliability. That’s why we pack the K2 full of board-mounted PCI flash cards and DRAM. We also hold down cost with our N+1 HA architecture, RAID 10HD data protection (See What You Need to Know About SSD HA and Data Protection and Why Kaminario’s DataProtect is a Big Deal), and the use of industry standard components, the PCIe bus, and market leading Fusion-io technology.
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Tags:bandwidth, data protection, disk form factor, DRAM, enterprise SSD, Flash, FusionIO, high availability, K2, Kaminario, latency, PCIe, RAID, reliability, Robin Harris, SPEAR, SSD, SSD array, Storage Mojo
Posted in SSD Storage Performance | 1 Comment »
Posted February 9th, 2012
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Project Lightning: Perfect Storm or Sturm und Drang?
EMC’S ANNOUNCEMENT IS IMPORTANT, BUT NOT A GAME CHANGER.
By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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Scan all the news and blogs about EMC’s Project Lightning and Thunder announcements this week and you certainly get a lot of sturm und drang. Bloggers are shouting everything from EMC announcing another “me too technology” to the entry of a major market disrupter that will put a lot of cool SSD startups like Kaminario out of business.
I’m sure you expect me to say there isn’t much to this announcement, but, frankly, we’re talking about EMC so I’m not going to pretend it doesn’t matter. As Steve Duplessie says in The Bigger Truth, “EMC could put a wad of gum in a box and sell $300M worth.” Before you decide that Lightning and Thunder represent the perfect storm that will overwhelm all those other SSD solutions out there, here are a few things to keep in mind:
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Tags:application awareness, cache, DRAM, EMC, FAST, Flash, FusionIO, hard disk, HDD, K2, Kaminario, Project Lightning, Project Thunder, reads, SSD, Steve Duplessie, Storage Soup, Storage tiering, The Bigger Truth, The Storage Architect, VFCache, Wikibon, write-through cache, writes
Posted in Hybrid Storage | No Comments »
Posted January 20th, 2012
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Kaminario for Cloud Speed and Reliability
NO DARK CLOUDS HERE!
By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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In his December 18 SSD Guy blog entry, Jim Handy of Objective Analysis, citing SandForce’s new SSD processor, discusses why cloud providers need to choose their SSD solutions carefully. He discusses some of the capabilities cloud computing data centers need from SSD, including very low latency, high capacity at a low price, and high reliability.
Kaminario agrees with many of these cloud requirements. However, sometimes we go about providing them in slightly different and multiple ways. Here’s our take on SSD in the cloud and how Kaminario provides the features cloud data centers require.
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Tags:cloud computing, data center, DRAM, Flash, freedom of choice, FusionIO, high availability, Jim Handy, K2, Kaminario, latency, MLC, Objective Analysis, parallel processing, reliability, Scalability, SPEAR architecture, SSD, SSD Guy, the cloud, UPS
Posted in SSD Storage Performance | No Comments »