A CIO had been struggling to keep up with the increasing demand for data
storage capacity. He wanted to expand the storage capacity by cutting down the
painstaking migration and integration processes. Having installed virtualization
software on a SAN, however, he can pool all his data regardless of which device
it comes from and manage it on a single web console. Besides, a few of his NT
servers were utilizing only half of their disk space. All these issues were
sorted out using the virtualization software solution. Now, the CIO can cut
costs by reducing the number of disks and can buy devices of different kinds. He
need not bring down the network whenever he needs to re-configure the SAN.
Storage virtualization promises to enable users to pool together data from
any type of physical device. Here, the pooling can be done irrespective of the
vendor or device type. However, vendors have been providing their own definition
of the term, depending on whether they are offering virtualization at the
storage device, network device or server level. But what remains to be seen is
whether virtualization solutions offered by vendors are fulfilling the promise
of unifying devices.
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"Each sector of the market has its own strategy to take advantage of the
opportunity posed by storage virtualization. This automatically leads to some
difference in answers. However, by and large all of them basically denote the
same thing. Though the tracks are different, the direction is same," says
Owais Khan, business manager, enterprise solutions, Compaq.
"Organizations around the world and in India are facing an exponential
growth of information. The key challenge is to manage the information explosion
with a limited budget and resources i.e. do more with less. So virtualization is
all about automation and simplicity," says T Srinivasan, country manager,
EMC.
The concept of virtualization is typically treated as an extension of a SAN
environment and users cannot utilize the full potential of SAN (and NAS) without
virtualization. Therefore virtualization is to be looked upon as adding more to
the existing features of SAN and in most cases, NAS.
"More and more people will understand the benefits of virtualization and
use it. Virtualization and physical networks with DAS, NAS and SAN will
co-exist," says Avijit Basu, marketing manager (NSSO), HP.
Where will it exist?
Storage virtualization can happen at the server, the network device (fabric
switches/router) and at the storage device levels. There is an ongoing debate
about the level at which virtualization would be most effective (sometimes even
a combination of all these levels are used to bring about the most from
virtualization).
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Software companies like Computer Associates (CA), Veritas, and Tricord offer
server based virtualization software solutions. These software tools provide a
single point of integration and control storage devices by pooling data from
across devices and networks. For example, CA’s solutions along with SAN and
NAS management capabilities manage storage appliances. "Lately, there has
been a trend to evaluate purely software based virtualization (server level)
solutions that make virtualization independent to the architecture (SAN/NAS) as
well as the storage fabric (fiber channel or gigabit Ethernet)," says Rohit
Ghai, CTO, CA.
Software almost always accompanies virtualization. The infrastructure for
virtualization would be either purely software based, software with a firmware
(on the storage device) or software along with a virtual storage device,"
says Ghai. According to Basu, "In most cases, the customer need not buy any
infrastructure apart from our storage virtualization device. The idea is to have
zero impact on the host and other than data migration, there’s no change. The
cost depends on customer requirements."
The right time is now
SANs are expected to exploit virtualization in a major way. "SANs are being
deployed in increasing numbers and it is the next logical step to embrace a
virtualization solution with a SAN. By the end of 2002, half the major
IT-utilizing enterprises will have some type of SAN installed and a high
percentage of those will have a virtualization solution," says Khan.
Organizations, when investing in storage, should consider virtualization as
well. "As organizations begin to realize and assess their storage needs and
requirements, they need to invest in storage virtualization appropriately.
However, investing in storage virtualization depends on any company’s storage
requirements," says M Ganesh, enterprise systems group, IBM.
Those intending to use the technology must first fully understand what
virtualization has to offer. They must know what to ask for and not fall for the
claims made by vendors. They must ignore the features that vendors promise but
stress on the benefits that they would accrue on implementation. "
Businesses must bear in mind that virtualization is only a piece of the overall
storage management solution. Many virtualization solutions available offer
nothing more than just disk pooling and lack in full functionality,"
cautions Srinivasan.
Is SAN the only option?
With a vast majority of storage still on DAS and NAS environments, will
virtualization extend beyond SAN? "Storage virtualization for DAS is
possible but the rewards to be reaped do not justify the effort involved. As for
NAS architectures, virtualization is definitely possible and has been
implemented by certain vendors," says Ghai. He adds, "Virtualization
in the NAS environment is definitely a more palatable option for SMEs from both
a cost and manageability perspective."
Experts believe virtualization will make headway in India and APAC in the
next two years. Khan adds that at a later stage, storage virtualization will be
an all-pervading technology… very similar to ‘our daily bread and bandwidth’.
Something which is a necessity, but not sufficient.
Radhika Bhuyan in New Delhi