By
Stephen Shankland
Thursday, July 27 2006 10:38 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39378310,00.htm
When designing a data center, conventional wisdom holds that servers
should do the thinking while storage systems should hang onto the data. But some
industry heavyweights have begun seeing things a little differently.
IBM's machines based on its Power5+ processor now have features that enable a
storage-server hybrid design. And this month, Sun Microsystems began selling a
hybrid of its own, "Thumper," a 7-inch-tall, 24-terabyte system officially
called the Sun Fire X4500. And HP is tackling the idea with new blade servers.
While neither company expects hybrid systems to dominate, they argue there
are some situations where it's good to have mixed abilities. IBM likes the idea
of processing to intelligently manage storage tasks such as indexing, while Sun
sees the combination as good for those who need a powerful, reliable way to pump
data such as video streams onto a network.
"The lines are blurring," said Illuminata analyst Gordon Haff.
Historically, storage was often built into a server or directly attached to
it. But within a big-computing infrastructure, storage increasingly has been
relocated into a separate domain to improve efficiency and to ease management
and maintenance.
For that reason, some see storage-server hybrids as a throwback.
"To be honest, we're seeing the market move in the opposite direction (than
in the past)," said Patrick Rogers, vice president of products and partners at
networked storage powerhouse Network Appliance. "People are disaggregating
storage. They want to pool it for utilization and efficiency reasons."
Indeed, revenue from networked storage systems is growing faster than from
storage overall, according to an IDC study. Where the market for networked
storage devices increased 15.4 percent to US$2.8 billion from the first quarter of
2005 to the first quarter of 2006, overall storage sales grew more slowly, at
6.7 percent, to US$5.8 billion.
But Sun is bullish about the idea, and its respected x86 server engineer,
Andy Bechtolsheim, built a start-up called Kealia around the approach. Sun
acquired Kealia as part of an effort advance x86 server designs quickly, so it
could carve a place in the market it had shunned for years.
The case for Thumper
"I expect we'll be selling this in probably 60
percent of customer installations. I think it'll be a high-volume unit," said
Graham Lovell, Sun's senior director of systems.
The X4500 had been code-named StreamStor at Kealia, which planned to sell it
as a streaming video device. Sun built a much broader "Galaxy"
x86 server line around Kealia's designs, but initially canceled the
StreamStor project. When John Fowler took over the x86 server group, though, he
resurrected it and gave it the new code name, Thumper.
"StreamStor...denoted a complete package including streaming software. Nobody
was coming up with a better code name, and it was very confusing," Fowler said.
"So one day on the way to work, I decided to call it 'Thumper' after the fairy
tale rabbit, with the specific idea that this would be such a stupid name that
someone would come up with something better. No one did, and from now on I'm not
allowed to name anything."
Video streaming still is one of the uses that Lovell envisions for the X4500.
Specifically, an X4500 can be a staging area to store video data while it's
being streamed reliably to customers. The video archive could be stored on
lower-performance devices, he said.
Another use is high-performance computing. The Tokyo Institute of Technology
uses multiple systems to pump data in and out of a cluster of Sun servers that
in June was ranked the world's seventh-fastest supercomputer.
And Lovell said large retail customers are contacting Sun about using the
X4500 to store recent surveillance video. Processing power could let customers
immediately retrieve specific video from recent weeks, process and compress
data, or automatically handle archiving duties.
Some don't share Sun's enthusiasm. "Sun is out at the front of the pack on
this, but whether or not there's going to be any market demand for that is a
real unknown. It's a risky offering," said Pund-IT analyst Charles King.
But one company is betting hybrid systems will be useful: Greenplum, a
30-person start-up that sells business intelligence software for tasks such as
identifying purchasing trends or customer Web-surfing habits. The company
announced a deal with Sun on Wednesday to sell its software bundled with Sun's
hardware.
Big Blue and HP...
"For business intelligence applications, it is the killer platform. It's far
and away the most powerful general-purpose platform out there for this kind of
work," Greenplum Chief Executive Scott Yara said in an interview. The system
uses Greenplum's modified version of the PostgreSQL open-source database, called
BizgresMPP, and Sun's ZFS file system, Yara said.
The system will be sold in multi-Thumper configurations, so large data sets
can be scoured for information, he added. "Our software clusters together to
build a very large warehouse."
The Greenplum-Sun combination also illustrates one drawback: Storage-server
hybrids' unconventional design means that many companies won't know how to put
them to use. As a result, many analysts expect hybrids to be popular chiefly as
special-purpose appliances, in which a company combines the hardware and
software so its customers don't have to figure out how.
Big Blue's hybrid ideas
IBM's foray into hybrid systems is
beginning with an appliance approach. Big Blue's TotalStorage DR550 system
combines a server, System p, running IBM's AIX version of Unix with a DS4000
storage system, said Clod Barrera, a distinguished engineer and chief technical
strategist for IBM's System Storage group. The processors handle tasks such as
indexing or deciding which data should be shuttled from fast disks to slower
tape.
Eventually, such systems will be very busy handling, managing and retrieving
data. "Over time it will become very, very processing intensive," Barrera said.
The company's high-end storage system, the DS8000, is a variation of its
System p servers. The Power5+ processors and other features in those systems let
administrators carve these "Shark" systems into separate partitions.
Today, that means a DS8000 can appear to be multiple different systems for
different business units. Later, it will mean server workloads can run on the
storage system
"We have not shipped that kind of function, but we believe that is something
that will be done on Sharks," possibly in coming months, Barerra said.
Processing could be offloaded from more expensive mainframes, or some
applications such as searching, could be boosted. "It might be cheaper to
outboard that search somewhere close to the disks, so I can save myself all the
ups and downs across the various software layers," he said.
There are an increasing number of storage tasks that benefit from processing,
he said. Among them are encryption and enforcement of access rights to make sure
only authorized people can retrieve data.
HP blades: A third way
Hewlett-Packard, which sells more x86
servers than any competitor and has a solid storage business to boot, sees a
blades as the way to build hybrid products.
Because some customers need more hard drives in servers, HP moved its servers
from prevailing 3.5-inch disk drives to smaller 2.5-inch drives so that more
could be tucked into the same server case. But for true hybrids, the company
steers customers toward its new C-Class
BladeSystem chassis.
That blade server can accommodate either conventional processing blades or
storage-only blades with plenty of hard drive spindles, said Dwight Barron,
chief technologist for HP blades. HP therefore can offer a flexible ratio of
storage to processors to meet a variety of situations--including tasks such as
archiving Microsoft Exchange data that requires more processing abilities than
stand-alone storage systems can supply, he said.
"We're able to mix and match the ratio of CPU blades to storage blades,"
Barron said. "We can take that number well above the tight range the industry
has seen in the past....We believe that trend has some legs."