HP Wednesday said it will
introduce new storage consolidation and business continuity hardware and
software to make data storage and disruption recovery easier and less
expensive.
The Palo Alto, Calif. firm, which will make the announcement official at the
HP ENSA@Work conference in Amsterdam next Tuesday, said the new products
are part of HP’s Enterprise
Network Storage Architecture-extended strategy, which is designed allow
customers adapt their storage infrastructure to their business via
automation and intelligent management.
On the storage consolidation side, HP’s new StorageWorks Virtual Array 7110
has been upgraded to delivers six times the
capacity and twice the performance of its predecessor, the VA7100. Disk
drive capacity has been bumped to 45 from 15 drives, and with new 146 GB
drives, total system capacity is 6.5 TB. The HP StorageWorks Director 2/140
simplifies large storage area network
switch to help customers keep up with increasing storage and connectivity
needs.
Lastly on the new hardware side, the StorageWorks Edge Switch 2/24 is geared
for small SANs or an edge-placed switch for data center infrastructures.
Offered as a “pay as you grow” format, it delivers 2 Gb performance in
eight-, 16- or 24-port
configurations. Also, beginning in the first half of this year, HP will
offer the Cisco MDS line of fabric switches in HP StorageWorks SANs.
Storage consolidation, a realm in which many systems vendors such as Sun
, Dell
and EMC
also
jockey for position, is lucrative to infrastructure players because many
enterprises seek to consolidate their infrastructure to reduce operating
expenses, while keeping their applications up with little or no
interruption.
HP Wednesday also reported additions to its suite of business continuity
products, which allow customers to automate backup procedures and maintain
uptime as backup windows are reduced and application availability increased.
First among these is the HP StorageWorks Non-Disruptive Backup and Remote
Mirroring for Oracle 9i on UNIX. This ensures that databases are backed up,
while avoiding application downtime or performance degradation. HP
StorageWorks Rapid Restore for Exchange 2000 offers quick recovery and
preservation of Exchange 2000 environments on HP StorageWorks Enterprise
Virtual Arrays and HP StorageWorks Modular Arrays. Lastly, the HP
StorageWorks Secure Path 4.0 for Windows Workgroup Edition
manages and maintains continuous data access to HP StorageWorks systems with
support for Microsoft Windows Workgroup Edition.
The company didn’t stop there, also choosing to enhance its StorageWorks
Modular SAN Array 1000 to chip away at the cost of entry-level SAN products
and broaden support for customers with heterogeneous server environments.
Pat McMullan, Product Manager of MSA1000, told internetnews.com the MSA1000’s popularity led his team to improve the product, which he said has found its way in the form of 6,500 shipped terabytes in the marketplace.
The MSA1000 Fibre Channel storage array, which enables companies to move
from direct-attach storage DAS to SANs, now supports
multi-cluster servers to simplify storage management and increase
utilization of storage resources. HP has doubled the maximum capacity to six
terabytes (TB) and improved performance by up to 80 percent over the
previous version.
The MSA1000 is also now available with a three-port embedded hub or an MSA
Fabric Switch 6, as well as support for concurrent access to an MSA1000 by
servers running Windows, NetWare and Linux.
The MSA1000 does wonders for storage consolidation, according to HP. McMullan said one of the obvious reasons of moving from DAS to SAN is that the storage effiency is very low — about 25 percent.
Tom Rallens, Director of Entry-Mid Online Storage at HP, also said the MSA1000 lowers the cost of moving from DAS to San systems.
“You have to have the availability of external storage to get to such features as clustering,” Rallens said. “To have the ability to take the disk drive out of a ProLiant and put it in a MSA1000 without data migration is a value proposition that is hard to beat.”