Virtualization News Desk
Elllison's Pillar Data Improves Its Virtualization Server Environment
New Application-Aware Storage Profiles
Mar. 24, 2008 01:15 PM
Pillar Data Systems announced the availability of
application profiles for use in virtual server environments, including VMware
and Oracle VM. This news builds on a series of application profiles Pillar has
made available with the delivery of its Application-Aware Storage system.
Pillar Axiom’s Application-Aware Quality of Service (QoS)
technology eliminates the need for companies to purchase double the amount of
storage required in order to alleviate the utilization and performance
degradation associated with virtualized server projects.
One of Pillar’s partners, AccessFlow, a VMware Premier
Partner and the 2007 recipient of VMware’s Rising Star of the Americas Award,
touts the benefits of using the Pillar Axiom in virtual environments.
“In many cases of actual VMware deployments, we’re seeing an
additional 200-400 percent of storage required to overcome the performance and
utilization degradation associated with traditional storage systems. In those
situations, the incremental cost of that extra storage can potentially offset
the cost benefits of a virtualized server environment,” said Steve Kaplan,
President and co-founder, AccessFlow Inc. “Pillar overcomes that problem. The
Axiom’s architecture eliminates the need to buy double or quadruple the storage
a business actually needs, bringing massive cost savings and unique synergies
in a virtualized infrastructure.”
Pillar Axiom’s storage system allows administrators to
provision storage tuned to the application need and priority running on virtual
servers by using profiles. Storage can be provisioned in both a “thin” and
“physical” context. The administrator selects an application profile from a
drop-down menu in the AxiomONE management console. Once selected, the profile
automatically configures the Axiom in a way that maximizes performance for the
application running in a virtual machine by assigning greater priority, more
cache, and faster spindles to those actions deemed most important.
“Businesses are demanding IT to bring on more applications,
but at the same time reduce the number of physical assets, and the associated
power and space requirements. Their storage environments are the first place
they look to reduce these physical assets,” said Bob Maness, vice president of
marketing, Pillar Data Systems. “When deciding to move to a virtualized
environment, the IT administrator needs to build an infrastructure where
virtual servers and virtual storage work together to provide differentiated
performance, utilization, and availability service levels based on different
application priorities. As the world’s first and only true Application-Aware
Storage system, Pillar Axiom has a rich feature set to handle the storage
capacity demands of virtual servers as we differentiate service levels similar
to virtualized servers.”
Typically, server virtualization projects require as much as
2-4 times more storage to mitigate the utilization and performance degradation
associated with traditional storage systems in virtual environments. Pillar
Axiom alleviates this problem and increases cost savings by reducing deployment
time, management, and training costs while providing as much as three times the
disk utilization rates of competing storage systems. Additionally, the Axiom
reduces storage administration complexity by automating data layout and volume
allocation prioritization - even with applications that fluidly change due to
virtual server resource scheduling and load balancing.
In addition to provisioning an array to provide optimal
performance service levels to applications, the Axiom can assign or re-assign
storage to improve performance for the applications deemed most important, allowing
an increased amount of virtual machines to be placed on a physical server by
clearing up back-end storage contention. This helps reduce or eliminate the
server I/O bottleneck in high consolidation projects.
“It's good to see Pillar expanding the list of specific uses
for its recently announced Application-Aware storage platform. Tuning the Axiom
to virtualized server environments makes a lot of sense," said Mark
Peters, analyst, Enterprise Strategy Group. "ESG research has found that
54 percent of current users say server virtualization has required a net
increase in their total storage capacity. For many users this is an unexpected
and unpleasant surprise; and it's a hindrance to the adoption of virtualized
servers that Pillar can help mitigate. By managing storage resources based on
application needs, Axiom can provide performance and utilization gains compared
to traditional storage systems."
Brett Littrell, network manager for the Milpitas Unified
School District, which
includes nearly 10,000 students and 1,000 employees, and houses approximately
2,000 client computers in its network, saw the benefits from implementing the
Pillar Axiom in his virtual environment.
“In our recent SAN upgrade, we decided to move to blade
servers and virtualized servers. After several tests, we moved forward with
VMware as our virtual platform and set up the SAN on a Pillar Axiom," said
Littrell. "Throughout this process, I was most concerned that the
performance on the SAN would be limited. However, the Application-Aware
solution from Pillar had features such as quality of service and LUN mapping
alleviated that concern, and in fact, allowed us to set predictable service
levels within our storage environment. Overall, we're thrilled with the
results."
About Virtualization News DeskSYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.