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тАО09-07-2008 06:39 AM
тАО09-07-2008 06:39 AM
Our highest use servers in terms of IO(exchange, sql, file server) combine for about 12MB per sec total I/O on average(roughly 7.5MB reads and 4.5MB writes). Sadly I haven't yet done perf monitoring on all server to know totals of all servers.
Main question is for the above requirements (including budget) is the StorageWorks 2012i Dual Controller Modular Smart Array the best choice in the HP line? Does it seem up to the tasks outlined above?
One of my main concerns is the 2012i says it only supports 16 hosts. Offerings like the Dell/EMC AX4-5i support up to 64 hosts. We are an HP shop and would like to stay exclusively that way, but at the same time need to find the best product for this task.
Any thoughts or help would be much appreciated!
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО09-07-2008 09:44 AM
тАО09-07-2008 09:44 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
http://h18006.www1.hp.com/products/storageworks/eva4400/index.html
for e.g. the following reason:
a) iscsi support
http://h18006.www1.hp.com/products/storageworks/evaiscsiconnect/index.html?jumpid=reg_R1002_USEN
b) SAN support (if needed)
c) flexibility to act also as a NAS storage with the HP Polyserve filer heads
d) very good price/performance ratio
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тАО09-07-2008 10:30 AM
тАО09-07-2008 10:30 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
Having to keep paying more for something you've already purchased if you decide to use it differently just annoys me to no end :-)
My initial concern with the 2012i 16 host limit was it was because performance wise it just cannot handle more. Seeing the 4400 iSCSI situation, perhaps this is just a licensing issue to get you to upgrade to more expensive systems?
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тАО09-07-2008 10:53 AM
тАО09-07-2008 10:53 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
http://bizsupport.austin.hp.com/bc/docs/support/SupportManual/c01519273/c01519273.pdf
here is all eva related iscsi documentation:
http://h20000.www2.hp.com/bizsupport/TechSupport/DocumentIndex.jsp?contentType=SupportManualтМй=en&cc=us&docIndexId=64179&taskId=101&prodTypeId=329290&prodSeriesId=1833384
Note:
try to consult the pricing (iscsi licensing included) with the local HP representative, to see why the EVA is said to be the "enterprise" at the "low entry" price pls :-)
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тАО09-09-2008 10:27 PM
тАО09-09-2008 10:27 PM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
Your correspondent works for HP! We just bought a 4400 with 25 TB....to use with VMWare on HP blades....WHAT A BAD DECISION!
You want to give Dell, or EMC a call as you indicated as the iSCSI opportunities are VERY limited with this system....
Building a SAN
into A Pile of Bricks
Vincent
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тАО09-10-2008 03:42 AM
тАО09-10-2008 03:42 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
Could you provide any insight into the issues/weaknesses you have seen in your HP system? Performance? Management? Interoperability? etc?
Appologies if an HP hosted forum isn't the proper place to ask such a question, but as previously stated we are a loyal HP shop and the best way to keep us that way is to ensure we don't buy a HP product that cannot do what we want. So from a customer satisfaction standpoint at least I'll assume such discussion is OK.
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тАО09-10-2008 04:02 AM
тАО09-10-2008 04:02 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
Is there any particular reason that you're looking at iSCSI over Fibre Channel ? I'm guessing cost ?
Taking a look at the latest SAN guide from VMware:
http://www.vmware.com/pdf/vi35_san_guide.pdf
will show you that none of the HP supported arrays support Boot from iSCSI.
The last time I looked at ESX server (which is a while ago it should be said), it was a little limiting in what it could do with the storage on iSCSI. A number of the HA features, only worked with FC...
Hope this helps,
Regards,
Rob
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тАО09-10-2008 04:38 AM
тАО09-10-2008 04:38 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
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тАО09-10-2008 04:47 AM
тАО09-10-2008 04:47 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
1) Cost. Not exactly the main reason, but of course is a factor.
2) Internal knowledge. Currently only two dedicated IT resources internally and neither have any experience with FC. We are already streched very thin and adding new technology is a last resort.
3) Complexity. We have office in Cayman Islands and Toronto. If we want to do replication that would require FC-to-IP switch, etc that just adds complexity we cannot handle (see point 2 above)
4) External knowledge/supply. Main office in Cayman Islands means FC supplies and experience isn't that easy to find. FC HBA or switch fails, we'll be waiting for a few days for a new one. Ethernet switch or NIC fails we can get a replacement in a couple hours (even if it is a temp solution until higher quality version can be shipped in).
We don't have heavy IO requirements so it seems iSCSI will work for us today. A few years when 10gig ethernet is in our price range, it certainly won't be an issue.
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тАО09-10-2008 04:59 AM
тАО09-10-2008 04:59 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
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тАО09-10-2008 04:59 AM
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тАО09-10-2008 06:08 AM
тАО09-10-2008 06:08 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
> Booting ESX guest VMs from iSCSI has been
> supported for quite some time
Correct... I read your original post to mean that you were looking to boot the ESX boxes themselves from the SAN, rather than the VMs.
Cheers,
Rob
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тАО09-10-2008 08:58 AM
тАО09-10-2008 08:58 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
> supported for quite some time
But that requires third-party software (emBoot), because a VM does not have an iSCSI HBA.
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тАО09-10-2008 02:50 PM
тАО09-10-2008 02:50 PM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
wouldn't you just boot the guest oses from the esx host OS provided disk, rather than directly to a 'disk' over the network? that seems like a no-brainer...
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тАО09-10-2008 09:38 PM
тАО09-10-2008 09:38 PM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
The standard way is to put the boot disk as a virtual disk container file (.vmdk) onto a VMFS file system. A VMFS can be stored on an DAS (local storage) or SAN (Fibre Channel or iSCSI attached LUN).
If you twist your mind a bit, you can claim that you are 'booting from iSCSI', even if it's an iSCSI attached VMFS ;-)
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тАО09-11-2008 04:10 AM
тАО09-11-2008 04:10 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
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тАО09-11-2008 04:16 AM
тАО09-11-2008 04:16 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
Anyway, back to the original question (in short version). Seems for my price range the 2012i and the "all in one" systems are the main options. 2012i seems the better system for my needs. Anyone with experience with this to validate if it will be up the the specs throughput in the original post? Thoughts on 2012i vs EMC AX4-5i as far as performance and scalability as that is another system that seems in my price range?
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тАО09-13-2008 08:30 AM
тАО09-13-2008 08:30 AM
Re: Affordable iSCSI SAN
I really, really suggest that you try to get an idea how many IOPS (read/write) your environment will require so that you can get an idea how many disk drives you need.
I've done some tests with a non-HP iSCSI array and could easily fetch 80 MegaBytes / second via the VMkernel iSCSI initiator. Using the Microsoft iSCSI initiator within a virtual machine, two paths and round robin load balancing, I was able to fetch about 180 MB/s.
So the servers will not be the problem. The question is whether the storage array can perform well and whether it has enough disk drives.