Posted May 14th, 2012
Eyal Markovich

Thoughts on Solving Oracle Performance Problems

AND SOME DIFFERENCES BETWEEN FLASH CACHING APPLIANCES AND SSD SANS

By Eyal Markovich
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George Crump, of Storage Switzerland, published an interesting post recently titled Cost Effectively Solving Oracle Performance Problems. Crump explains the challenges of solving Oracle storage performance problems (including several Oracle instances) while keeping Oracle data in shared storage.

In his analysis, Crump details three solid-state storage solutions that address Oracle performance:

  • Augmentation to existing mechanical storage via tiering or caching;
  • Using SSD on Oracle’s application server itself to cache data;
  • Using forklift upgrade solutions or database machines such as Oracle Exadata.

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Posted May 7th, 2012
Gareth Taube

Array Rumble at Storage Tech Field Day

SSD ARRAY VENDORS FACE OFF OVER SOLID-STATE STORAGE ARCHITECTURES

By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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SSD Vendors RumbleAnother interesting seminar at Stephen Foskett’s Tech Field Day, hosted by Nigel Poulton, addressed the best architecture for an SSD array. Participants included Thomas Isakovich, CEO and Founder of Nimbus Data Systems, Umesh Maheswhari, CTO and founder of Nimble Storage, Jonathan Goldick, software CTO at Violin Memory, and Dave Wright, founder and CEO of SolidFire. It was a pretty lively debate, with Goldick grinning broadly through much of it and taking jabs at the others. One couldn’t help but wonder what he was grinning about.

The truth is, there was a lot of disagreement over the best array architecture and sometimes the argument got a tad heated and personal, much to the delight of the audience. However, there were three things everyone could agree to. First, the best architecture is one that provides an ideal balance of scalability, share ability, reliability, and performance, not performance alone. Second, for all but the few most performance- and latency-sensitive applications, it’s more important to provide consistent, predictable performance for an array of applications, than to provide the absolute best performance. And third, the best architecture is a mix of commodity hardware and a software architecture designed from the ground up for SSD. Sound familiar? Read the rest of this entry »

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Posted May 2nd, 2012
Gareth Taube

Kaminario’s Dani Golan Speaks at Tech Field Day

SOLID-STATE STORAGE IS THE NEXT BIG IT REVOLUTION

By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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Last week, Kaminario CEO Dani Golan presented at Stephen Foskett’s Tech Field Day in San Jose. The event afforded us the opportunity to have conversations with several data storage bloggers including Howard Marks, Nigel Poulton, Chris Evans, Ray Lucchesi, Robin Harris and Hans DeLeenheer to name a few.

I was fortunate to be in the room, and the feedback I heard is gratifying. In fact, DeLeenheer published his thoughts about Kaminario in his blog and said we were worth watching.

In addition to providing a K2 product overview, Golan shared insights about the SSD market and where Kaminario fits. “Solid-state storage is the biggest storage revolution in the last 30 years…one of the biggest in IT since virtualization.”

One of the effects of this revolution is that definitions for high end, mid range and low end are being turned on their head. Improving price/performance and increasing application requirements make it tough to distinguish among tier 0, tier 1, tier 2 etc. I would argue “that our software stack is far superior to a $3 million high-end [HDD] array,” Golan said.

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Posted April 30th, 2012
Gareth Taube

Welcome to the Party, EMC

EMC’S LIKELY ACQUISITION OF XTREMEIO VALIDATES SSD AS A TIER 1 STORAGE SOLUTION

By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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Welcome to the Party, EMCThe press has picked up on indications that EMC is about to acquire future SSD array vendor XtremeIO. This is an interesting development coming on the heels of EMC’s Project Lightning and Thunder announcements. As everyone knows, EMC is the mother of all disk storage vendors and has, until now, touted SSD primarily as a cache solution fronting and accelerating scores of legacy EMC disk storage arrays. Project Lightning and Thunder reflect this strategy, with Lightning providing a server based PCI SSD read cache solution and Project Thunder looking to do the same thing with a storage array.

XtremeIO is in prerelease semi-secretive mode right now, but has said clearly that it aims to produce pure SSD arrays to compete with the likes of Kaminario, Violin Memory, and all the other usual SSD array suspects. An EMC acquisition of such a vendor indicates that holes have developed in EMC’s SSD cache armor and the disk storage giant feels forced to validate SSD arrays as a large, viable, growing market competing with disk. It will be interesting to see how EMC integrates XtremeIO’s technology into its strategy without eating into its bread and butter disk array product line.

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Posted April 23rd, 2012
Gareth Taube

Built for Speed and Endurance

FLASH WEAR IS AN ISSUE THAT IS FADING FAST

By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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You’ve probably heard about the endurance limitations of Flash–particularly MLC–and the hoops manufacturers jump through to lengthen life expectancy. If you really want to understand what this issue is all about and how SSD vendors handle it, check out Eric Slack’s Storage Switzerland post entitled Why Flash Wears Out and How to Make it Last Longer.

Slack provides a very thorough explanation of how and why NAND Flash degrades, why MLC degrades faster than SLC, what actually happens during that degrading process, and all the tricks SSD manufacturers employ to slow it down. Techniques include sophisticated error correction, spare blocks of NAND flash that take over when one block degrades, and wear leveling, which distributes write operations across available blocks to ensure that a single block doesn’t wear out prematurely. Vendors also embed advanced technologies, such as digital signal processing, in their SSD controllers to reduce bit errors and reduce the workload on the error correcting (ECC) engine, and employ sophisticated read level adjustments to recognize data on a degraded Flash block. Some SSD controllers can also make sophisticated adjustments to the way a cell is read and written to minimize wear.

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Posted April 16th, 2012
Didi Atzmony

Does Your SSD Array Protect Your Data?

ASK YOUR STORAGE VENDOR THESE QUESTIONS

By Didi Atzmony, Director, Kaminario
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Does your array have a single point of failure?
Single points of failure are a liability for your HA solution. Some storage arrays still have them especially if they have only one controller. If that is the case, you might need two systems mirrored to prevent complete outages. Depending on the implementation, there could also be single points of failure in servers or Flash cards.

Kaminario K2 is fully N+1 redundant. There is NO single point of failure allowing the K2 to withstand any single failure.

Are your hardware components including Flash hot-swappable?
Can you swap a FRU (Field Replaceable Unit) while the system is operational? Many vendors claim their arrays are hot-swappable but they are not usable during the swap unless it is fully mirrored. Those products require downtime to allow opening a server so Flash cards can be exchanged. This process increases the time needed to return to full speed.

All hardware FRUs in the Kaminario K2 are hot swappable. Kaminario demonstrated this capability in a video.

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Posted April 8th, 2012
Gareth Taube

Murphy’s Law and Home-Grown SSD HA

BAKED IN BEATS WRAP AROUND

By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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Murphy’s Law and Home-Grown SSD HAIn his recent StorageSearch blog, High Availability Enterprise SSD’s, Zsolt Kerekes discusses why building a do-it-yourself HA solution typical of data center Fibre Channel or IP SAN hard disk array installations is not a viable option for an enterprise SSD array. The reasons, according to Zsolt, boil down to performance, flexibility of use, risk, complexity, and scalability. I would add Murphy’s Law.

Zsolt points out that any home-grown HA solution sitting in front of an SSD storage controller is likely to introduce considerable latency and time to the recovery process. When it comes to the mission critical applications typically running on SSD arrays, such as online transaction processing, time really is money and simply not something you want to sacrifice. “Wrap around” HA, as Zsolt calls it, also introduces architectural complexity and controller configuration issues that can gum up the works.

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Posted April 3rd, 2012
Gareth Taube

SSD: The Server Terminator

SSD ELIMINATES MORE THAN I/0 BOTTLENECKS

By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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Most of you know that SSD is a great way to eliminate I/O bottlenecks, but did you know that it can also eliminate servers in the data center–with all the requisite hardware, power, cooling, and real estate savings?

In SSDs and Server Consolidation, Jim Handy of Objective Analysis demonstrates how the use of SSD eliminates the need for server-hungry I/O acceleration techniques, such as running the Open Source caching program memcached on its own server or sharding, which splits large databases into smaller parallel data sets running on multiple servers.

Add SSD, either as local or shared storage–including the Kaminario K2 mentioned in Jim’s blog (Thanks Jim)–and you can get the same or better performance results without all that unsightly excess server hardware. And you get less complexity and better reliability to boot. I’ll be back.

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Posted April 2nd, 2012
Gareth Taube

Reflections on a Launch

A MONTH HAS PASSED SINCE KAMINARIO INTRODUCED DATAPROTECT

By Gareth Taube, Vice President Marketing, Kaminario
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Analyst and Media Reaction to the DataProtect Launch
It has been just over a month since Kaminario launched the DataProtect™ high availability and data protection capabilities for the Kaminario K2 product line. Analyst and media reaction has been very positive — highlighting the advantages and challenges that we have ahead.

After reviewing the DataProtect coverage, three messages stood out:

  • High availability and data protection features such as DataProtect are needed for SSDs to be accepted as a HDD replacement in the data center;
  • Kaminario is moving beyond the high-performance storage niche segment and aiming squarely at primary storage;
  • DataProtect gives Kaminario some advantages but market competition is very aggressive.

Just to recap the coverage highlights, I’d like to share a selection of comments that capture much of the feedback we have observed.

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Posted March 28th, 2012

Which Data Protection Features Would You Like to See in SSD SAN Storage Arrays?

CALL FOR YOUR OPINION

By Kaminario
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Kaminario is embarking on a research project to learn more about what data protection features customers want in their SSD SAN storage arrays. We will be sharing the results with you to continue conversations about SSD adoption in the enterprise data center.

We want your opinion too! Tell us in the blog comments. Also, feel free to publish your thoughts on your blog. Send us the link.

WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Please identify the data protection features you would most like to see in SSD SAN storage arrays.

If more data protection features become available in SSD SAN storage arrays, how will it impact your interest in acquiring one?

LET US KNOW.

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