Tag Archives: cx4

While EMC users benefit from Replication Manager, NetApp users NEED SnapManager

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This is a follow up to my recent post NetApp and EMC: Replication Management Tools Comparison, in which I discussed the differences between EMC Replication Manager and NetApp SnapManager.

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As a former customer of both NetApp and EMC, and now as an employee of EMC, I noticed a big difference between NetApp and EMC as far as marketing their replication management tools. As a customer, EMC talked about Replication Manager several times and we purchased it and deployed it. NetApp made SnapManager a very central part of their sales campaign, sometimes skipping any discussion of the underlying storage in favor of showing off SnapManager functionality. This is an extremely effective sales technique and NetApp sales teams are so good at this that many people don’t even realize that other vendors have similar, and in my opinion EMC has better, functionality.  One of the reasons for this difference in marketing strategy is that NetApp users NEED SnapManager, while EMC users do not always need Replication Manager.

The reason why is both simple and complex…

EMC storage arrays (Clariion, Symmetrix, RecoverPoint, Invista) all have one technology in common that NetApp Filers do not–Consistency Groups. A consistency group allows the storage system to take a snapshot of multiple LUNs simultaneously, so simultaneous in fact that all of the snapshots are at the exact same point in time down to the individual write. This means that, without taking any applications offline and without any orchestration software, EMC storage arrays can create crash-consistent copies of nearly any kind of data at any time.

The EMC Whitepaper “EMC CLARiiON Database Storage Solutions: Oracle 10g/11g with CLARiiON Storage Replication Consistency” downloadable from EMC’s website has the following explanation of consistency groups in general…

“…Consistent replication operates on multiple LUNs as a set such that if the replication action fails for one member in the set, replication for all other members of the set are canceled or stopped.  Thus the contents of all replicated LUNs in the set are guaranteed to be identical point-in-time replicas of their source and dependent-write consistency is maintained…”

“…With consistent replication, the database does not have to be shut down or put into “hot backup mode.”  Replicates created with SnapView or MV/S (or MV/A, Timefinder, SRDF, Recoverpoint, etc) consistency operations, without first quiescing or halting the application, are restartable point-in-time replicas of the production data and guaranteed to be dependent-write consistent.”

Consistency is important for any application that is writing to multiple LUNs at the same time such as SQL database and log volumes. SnapManager and Replication Manager actually prepare the application by quiescing the database during the snapshot creation process. This process creates “application-consistent” copies which are technically better for recovery compared with “storage-consistent” copies (also known as crash-consistent copies).

So, while I will acknowledge that quiescing the database during a snapshot/replication operation provides the best possible recovery image, that may not be realistic in some scenarios.  The first issue is that the actual operation of quiescing, snapping, checking the image, then pushing an update to a remote storage array takes some time.  Depending on the size of the dataset, this operation can take from several minutes to several hours to complete.  If you have a Recovery Point Objective (RPO) of 5 minutes or less, using either of these tools is pretty much a non-starter.

Another issue is one of application support.  EMC Replication Manager and NetApp SnapManager have very wide support for the most popular operating systems, filesystems, databases, and applications, they certainly don’t support every application.  A very simple example is a Novell Netware file server with a NSS pool/volume spanning multiple LUNs.  Neither NetApp nor EMC have support for Novell Netware in their replication management tools.  While you can certainly replicate all of the LUNs with NetApp SnapManager, SnapManager has no consistency technology built-in to keep the LUNs write-order consistent.  The secondary copy will appear completely corrupt to the Netware server if a recovery is attempted.  Through the use of consistency groups with MirrorView/Async, the replication of each LUN is tracked as a group and all of the LUNs are write-order consistent with each other, keeping the filesystem itself consistent.  You would need to have either array-level consistency technology, or support for Netware in the replication management tool in order to replication such a server..  Unfortunately, NetApp provides neither.

You may have complex applications that consist of Oracle and SQL databases, NTFS filesystems, and application servers running as VMs.  Using array-based consistency groups, you can replicate all of these components simultaneously and keep them all consistent with each other.  This way you won’t have transactions that normally affect two databases end up missing in one of the two after a recovery operation, even if those databases are different technologies (Oracle and MySQL, or PostgreSQL for example).

EMC Storage arrays provide consistency group technology for Snapshots and Replication in Clariion and Symmetrix storage arrays.  In fact, with Symmetrix, consistency groups can span multiple arrays without any host software.  By comparison, NetApp Filers do not have consistency group technology in the array.  Snapshots are taken (for local replicas and for SnapMirror) at the FlexVolume level.  Two FlexVolumes cannot be snapped consistently with each other without SnapManager.

There are a couple workarounds for NetApp users–you can snapshot an aggregate, but that is not recommended by NetApp for most customers, or you can put multiple LUNs in the same FlexVol, but that still limits you to 16TB of data including snapshot reserve space, and both options violate best practices for database designs of keeping data and logs in separate spindles for recovery.  Even with these workarounds, you cannot gain LUN consistency across the two controllers in an HA Filer pair, something the CLARiiON does natively, and can help for load balancing IO across the storage processors.

In general, I recommend that EMC customers use EMC Replication Manager and NetApp customers use SnapManager for the applications that are supported, and for most scenarios.  But when RPO’s are short, or the environment falls outside the support matrix for those tools, consistency groups become the best or only option.

Incidentally, with EMC RecoverPoint, you get the best of both worlds.  CDP or near-CDP replication of data using consistency groups for zero or near-zero RPOs plus application-consistent bookmarks made anytime the database is quiesced.  Recovery is done from the up-to-the-second version of the data, but if that data is not good for any reason, you can roll back to another point in time, including a point-in-time when the database was quiesced (a bookmark).

So, while EMC has, in Replication Manager, an equivalent offering to NetApp’s SnapManager, EMC customers are not required to use it, and in some cases they can achieve better results using array-based consistency technologies.

EMC Unified: The benefit of having options

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I’ve been having some fun discussions with one of my customers recently about how to tackle various application problems within the storage environment and it got me thinking about the value of having “options”.  This customer has an EMC Celerra Unified Storage Array that has Fiber Channel, iSCSI, NFS, and CIFS protocols enabled.  This single storage system supports VMWare, SQL, Web, Business Intelligence, and many custom applications.

The discussion was specifically centered on ensuring adequate storage performance for several different applications, each with a different type of workload…

1.)  Web Servers – Primarily VMs with general-purpose IO loads and low write ratios.

2.)  SQL Servers – Physical and Virtual machines with 30-40% write ratios and low latency requirements.

3.)  Custom Application  – A custom application database with 100% random read profiles running across 50 servers.

The EMC Unified solution:

EMC Storage already sports virtual provisioning in order to provision LUNs from large pools of disk to improve overall performance and reduce complexity.  In addition, QoS features in the array can be used to provide guaranteed levels of performance for specific datasets by specifying minimum and maximum bandwidth, response time, and IO requirements on a per-LUN basis.  This can help alleviate disk contention when many LUNs share the same disks, as in a virtual pool.  Enterprise Flash Drives (EFD) are also available for EMC Storage arrays to provide extremely high performance to applications that require it and they can coexist with FC and SATA drives in the same array.  Read and write cache can also be tuned at an array and LUN level to help with specific workloads.  With the updates to the EMC Unified Platform that I discussed previously, Sub-LUN FAST (auto tiering), and FAST Cache (EFD used as array cache) will be available to existing customers after a simple, non-disruptive, microcode upgrade, providing two new ways to tackle these issues.

So which feature should my customer use to address their 3 different applications?

Sub-LUN FAST (Fully Automated Storage Tiering)

Put all of the data into large Virtual Provisioning pools on the array, add a few EFD (SSD) and SATA disks to the mix and enable FAST to automatically move the blocks to the appropriate tier of storage.  Over time the workload would even out across the various tiers and performance would increase for all of the workloads with much fewer drives, saving on power, floor space, cooling, and potentially disk cost depending on the configuration.  This happens non-disruptively in the background.  Seems like a no-brainer right?

For this customer, FAST helps the web server VMs and the general-purpose SQL databases where the workload is predominately read and much of the same data is being accessed repeatedly (high locality of reference).   As long as the blocks being accessed most often are generally the same, day-to-day, automated tiering (FAST) is a great solution.  But what if the workload is much more random?  FAST would want to push all of the data into EFD, which generally wouldn’t be possible due to capacity requirements.  Okay, so tiering won’t solve all of their problems.  What about FAST Cache?

FAST Cache

Exponentially increase the size of the storage array’s read AND write cache with EFD (SSD) disks.  This would improve performance across the entire array for all “cache friendly” applications.

For this customer, increasing the size of write cache definitely helps performance for SQL (50% increase in TPM, 50% better response time as an example) but what about their custom database that is 100% random read?  Increasing the size of read cache will help get more data into cache and reduce the need to go to disk for reads, but the more random the data, the less useful cache is.   Okay, so very large caches won’t solve all of their problems.   EFDs must be the answer right?

EFD Disks

Forget SATA and FC disks; just use EFD for everything and it will be super fast!!   EFD has extremely high random read/write performance, low latency at high loads, and very high bandwidth.  You will even save money on power and cooling.

The total amount of data this customer is dealing with in these three applications alone exceeds 20TB.  To store that much in EFD would be cost prohibitive to say the least.  So, while EFD can solve all of this customer’s technical problems, they couldn’t afford to acquire enough EFD for the capacity requirements.

But wait, it’s not OR, it’s AND

The beauty of the EMC Unified solution is that you can use all of these technologies, together, on the same array, simultaneously.

In this customer’s case, we put FC and SATA into a virtual pool with FAST enabled and provision the web and general-purpose SQL servers from it.  FAST will eventually migrate the least used blocks to SATA, freeing the FC disks for the more demanding blocks.

Next, we extend the array cache using a couple EFDs and FAST Cache to help with random read, sequential pre-fetching, and bursty writes across the whole array.

Finally, for the custom 100% random read database, we dedicate a few EFDs to just that application, snapshot the DB and present copies to each server.  We disable read and write cache for the EFD backed volumes which leaves more cache available to the rest of the applications on the array, further improving total system performance.

Now, if and when the customer starts to see disk contention in the virtual pool that might affect performance of the general-purpose SQL databases, QoS can be tuned to ensure low response times on just the SQL volumes ensuring consistent performance.  If the disks become saturated to the point where QoS cannot maintain the response time or the other LUNs are suffering from load generated by SQL, any of the volumes can be migrated (non-disruptively) to a different virtual pool in the array to reduce disk contention.

Options

If you look at offerings from the various storage vendors, many promote large virtual pools, some also promote large caches of some kind, others promote block level tiering, and a few promote EFD (aka SSDs) to solve performance problems.  But, when you are consolidating multiple workloads into a single platform, you will discover that there are weaknesses in every one of those features and you are going to wish you had the option to use most or all of those features together.

You have that option on EMC Unified.

EMC CLARiiON and Celerra Updates – Defining Unified Storage

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This past week, during EMC World 2010 in Boston, EMC made several announcements of updates to the Celerra and CLARiiON midrange platforms.  Some of the most impressive were new capabilities coming to CLARiiON FLARE in just a couple short months.  Major updates to Celerra DART will coincide with the FLARE updates and if you are already running CLARiiON CX4 hardware, or are evaluating CX4 (or Celerra), you will want to check these new features out.  They will be available to existing CX4(120,240,480,960)/NS(120,480,960) systems as part of a software update.

Here’s a list of key changes in FLARE 30:

  • Unified management for midrange storage platforms including CLARiiON and Celerra today, plus RecoverPoint, Replication Manager and more in the future.  This is a true single pane of glass for monitoring AND managing SAN, NAS, and data protection and it’s built in to the platform.  “EMC Unisphere” replaces Navisphere Manager and Celerra Manager and supports multiple storage systems simultaneously in a single window. (Video Demo)
  • Extremely large cache (ie: FASTCache) – Up to 2TB of additional read/write cache in CLARiiON using SSDs (Video Demo)
  • Block level Fully Automated Storage Tiering (ie: sub-LUN FAST) – Fully automated assignment of data across multiple disk types
  • Block Level Compression – Compress LUNs in the CLARiiON to reduce disk space requirements
  • VAAI Support – Integrate with vSphere ESX for improved performance

These features are in addition to existing features like:

  • Seamless and non-disruptive mobility of LUNs within a storage array – (via Virtual LUNs)
  • Non-Disruptive Data Migration – (via PowerPath Migration Enabler)
  • VMWare Aware Storage Management – (Navisphere, Unisphere, and vSphere Plugins giving complete visibility  and self-service provisioning for VMWare admins (Video Demo) AND Storage Admins
  • CIFS and NFS Compression – Compress production data on Celerra to reduce disk space requirements including VMs
  • Dynamic SAN path load balancing – (via PowerPath)
  • At-Rest-Encryption – (via PowerPath w/RSA)
  • SSD, FC, and SATA drives in the same system – Balance performance and capacity as needed for your application
  • Local and Remote replication with array level consistency – (SnapView, MirrorView, etc)
  • Hot-swap, Hot-Add, Hot-Upgrade IO Modules – Upgrade connectivity for FC, FCoE, and iSCSI with no downtime
  • Scale to 1.8PB of storage in a single system
  • Simultaneously provide FC, iSCSI, MPFS, NFS, and CIFS access

All together, this is an impressive list of features for a single platform. In fact, while many of EMC’s competitors have similar features, none of them have all of them in the same platform, or leverage them all simultaneously to gain efficiency.  When CLARiiON CX4 and Celerra NS are integrated and managed as a single Unified storage system with EMC Unisphere there is tremendous value as I’ll point out below…

Improve Performance easily…

  • Install a couple SSD drives into a CLARiiON and enable FASTCache to increase the array’s read/write cache from the industry competive 4GB-32GB up to 2TB of array based non-volatile Read AND Write cache available to ALL applications including NAS data hosted by the array.
  • Install PowerPath on Windows, Linux, Solaris, AND VMWare ESX hosts to automatically balance IO across all available paths to storage.  PowerPath detects latency and queuing occuring on each path and adjusts automatically, improving performance at the storage array AND for your hosts.  This is a huge benefit in VMWare environments especially.
  • When VMWare releases the updated version of vSphere ESX that supports VAAI, ESX will be able to leverage VAAI support in the CLARiiON to reduce the amount of IO required to do many tasks, improving performance across the environment again.
  • Upgrade from 1gbe iSCSI to 10gbe iSCSI, or from 4gbe FiberChannel to 8gbe FiberChannel, without a screwdriver or downtime.
  • Provide NAS shared file access with block-level performance for any application using EMC’s MPFS protocol.

Improve Efficiency and cost easily…

  • Create a single pool of storage containing some SSD, some FC, and some SATA drives, that automatically monitors and moves portions of data to the appropriate disk type to both improve performance AND decrease cost simultaneously.
  • Non-disruptively compress volumes and/or files with a single click to save 50% of your disk space in many cases.
  • Convert traditional LUNs to more efficient Thin-LUNs non-disruptively using PowerPath Migration Enabler, saving more disk space.

Increase and Manage Capacity easily…

  • Add additional storage non-disruptively with SSD, FC, and SATA drives in any mix up to 1.8PB of raw storage in a single CLARiiON CX4.
  • Using FASTCache, iSCSI, FC, and FCoE connectivity simultaneously does not reduce total capacity of the system.
  • Expanding LUNs, RAID Groups, and Storage Pools is non-disruptive.
  • Migrating LUNs between RAID groups and/or Storage Pools is non-disruptive using built-in CLARiiON LUN Migration, as is migrating data to a different storage array (using PowerPath Migration Enabler)!
  • Balancing workload between storage processors is non-disruptive and at individual LUN granularity.

Protect your data easily…

  • Snapshot, Clone, and Replicate any of the data to anywhere with built in array tools that can maintain complete data consistency across a single, or multiple applications without installing software.
  • Maintain application consistency for Exchange, SQL, Oracle, SAP, and much more, even within VMWare VMs, while replicating to anywhere with a single pane-of-glass.
  • Encrypt sensitive data seamlessly using PowerPath Encryption w/RSA.

Maintain Flexibility…

  • While you can do all of these things quickly and simply, you still have the flexibility to create traditional RAID sets using RAID 0, 1, 5, 6, and 10 where you need highly predicable performance, or tune read and write cache at the array and LUN level for specific workloads.  Do you want read/write snapshots? How about full copy clones on completely separate disks for workload isolation and failure protection? What about the ability to rollback data to different points in time using snapshots without deleting any other snapshots?  EMC Storage arrays have been able to do this for a long time and that hasn’t changed.

There are few manufacturers aside from EMC that can provide all of these capabilities, let alone provide them within a single platform.  That’s the definition of simple, efficient, Unified Storage in my opinion.

Clariion CX4 – New Features in Flare 29

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EMC released FLARE 29 (04.29.000.5.001) for Clariion CX4 systems a few days ago.  The release of the CX4 hardware platform was a very significant upgrade for the Clariion series – moving to a 64bit operating system, implementing hot-add and hot-swap I/O modules, as well as multi-core CPUs for higher performance and scalability.  FLARE 28 was released to support the CX4 platform and introduced Virtual Provisioning (EMC’s name for thin provisioning) to the Clariion feature list.

According to the release notes FLARE 29 adds a couple of new features and builds on existing ones.  All of them will become available with the standard non-disruptive upgrade Clariion owners are accustomed to.

New Features in FLARE 29:

  • 2-port 10Gbps iSCSI IO modules are now available
  • The ability to hot swap IO modules for faster modules (ie: upgrade from 4gb FC to 8gb FC)
  • Idle SATA drives can now spin down to save power
  • iSCSI ports now support VLAN tagging
  • LUNs and MetaLUNs can now be shrunk if using new versions of Windows (ie: Windows 2008)

Additional Updates:

  • The maximum number of LUNs has been increased for all CX4 models (to 8192 for the CX4-960)
  • MirrorView now supports replicating to and/or from Thin provisioned LUNs
  • SANCopy now supports copying to and/or from Thin provisioned LUNs
  • The maximum number of MirrorView/Async sessions has increased to 256 and up to 64 consistency groups with up to 64 mirrors per group.  Up to 512 MirrorView/Sync sessions are supported on CX4-960 hardware.

The really big news here is with MirrorView.  When Virtual Provisioning was released in FLARE 28 on CX4 you could not use MirrorView with any thin LUNs, whether they were the source or destination.  This limited the use of thin LUNs to those applications and/or customers that don’t need or use array-based replication.  EMC’s RecoverPoint product did support thin LUNs but that is a separate, fairly expensive, solution.  The ability to replicate non-thin (fat) LUNs to thin LUNs could be really useful for maximizing the disk utilization at a DR location where performance isn’t a primary concern.

The added ability to upgrade I/O modules to faster versions while online is also very handy.  It means you can tackle problems like increasing iSCSI bandwidth or upgrading core infrastructure (ie: network and SAN switches) with little or no downtime on the storage system.  VLAN tagging with iSCSI can be useful for sharing a storage system between disparate server environments that need to be separated for security or performance reasons.

As a Clariion and MirrorView user myself, I look forward to taking advantage of the added thin provisioning support with our upcoming CX4-960.