Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Hitachi releases speedy, bigger array

Network World

Storage in the Enterprise




Network World's Storage in the Enterprise Newsletter, 05/22/07

Hitachi releases speedy, bigger array

By Deni Connor

Hitachi Data Systems last week set out to prove that bigger and faster is better with the launch of a refreshed storage system.

The Universal Storage Platform (USP) V offers 3.5 million I/Os per second of performance and scales to as much as 247PB of data capacity. The USP V has a 4Gbps Fibre Channel switch backplane, which provides customers with immediate access and storage of their business-critical data.

Like its predecessor, the USP V allows the virtualization of external heterogeneous storage. A new feature, Dynamic Provisioning allows storage utilization to exceed 85%.

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The internal virtualization of the USP V includes thin provisioning, logical storage pools, wide striping, virtual partitions and QoS. Its external virtualization allows management of heterogeneous storage systems.

The USP V is 520% faster in writes to disk and 210% faster than its predecessor. The company also improved the performance of its Hitachi Universal Replicator by 130% and its TrueCopy Synchronous link performance by 200%.

The crossbar switch architecture now features full 4Gbps Fibre Channel connectivity from front-end director level switches to back-end disks.

Further, the USP V is capable of 320 concurrent internal memory operations, a figure Hitachi claims is 900% faster than ultra large scale storage systems from EMC and IBM. The control memory of the USP V has doubled from 16GB to 32GB and the dedicated control paths increased 33% to 256. Dedicated control bandwidth has increased by 138% to 38Gbps and total internal bandwidth has increased by 31% to 106Gbps, which according to Hitachi’s claims, is a 560% increase over systems from EMC and IBM.

Finally, the USP V offers 224 front-end 4Gbps Fibre Channel ports for connection to host computers. It supports 112 4Gbps FICON ports and 112 ESCON ports.

Editor's Note: Does Apple belong in enterprise data centers?: We're putting together a story to be published in Network World looking at the enterprise-readiness of Apple technology, and we need your help. Have you deployed or evaluated Apple's XServe servers or its XServe RAID storage platform? What did you find? Do you think Apple's server and storage gear is ready for enterprise data centers? What are the biggest drivers or deterrents? Should IT administrators become more Mac friendly? We're looking to tap into our readership and share your experiences with our audience. Please send your ideas and contact information to senior editor Deni Connor.


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Contact the author:

Deni Connor is senior editor for Network World magazine covering storage, archiving and compliance, IT in healthcare, Novell and data center-related issues. E-mail Deni.

 



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