Do You Need All-Flash, All of the Time?
All-flash arrays are becoming the standard piece of hardware in many data centres. Businesses are changing how they look at storage management in order to meet the demands of big data and a growing need for improved data protection. Last quarter, the all-flash market experienced nearly 55% year on year growth, pulling in $2.1 billion in revenue.* That represents a jump to over 15% of the entire enterprise storage market and 35% of the external storage market.* With double the growth rate of either market, that figure is only set to increase. Storage networks need to provide fast access and deliver scalable, easy to install and centrally managed products. The increased importance of data analytics to many businesses means finding more accessible ways to store long-term data. Flash offers faster access to applications and better data management performance — potentially offering the perfect solution to this issue. But, the catch is, flash costs more. Being able to use cheaper hybrid and even older HDD hardware allows businesses to access more storage on more reasonable budgets. Ultimately, the differences between Flash Storage and HDD are complex. NetApp and Pure Storage deliver two different solutions to this problem. NetApp has all-flash offerings, but is distinguished in the market by their software management tool ONTAP 9. This uses caching read/write protocols to augment and accelerate the capabilities of hybrid arrays. ONTAP 9 also delivers a uniquely versatile platform capable of native interoperability with third-party hardware to create an intuitive and unified storage environment. Pure Storage is focused on raw power within their own ecosystem, using advanced dedupe and compression technology to maximise the available storage within their expensive all-flash arrays. Here, we will explore the pros and cons of these two very different approaches to storage and discuss how each company is laying out a vision for the future of the data centre.NetApp: The Original Unified Storage Solution
NetApp was founded in the early 1990s and became a leader in NAS configurations. In 2015, NetApp acquired SolidFire, bringing all-flash arrays into their line-up. Since, NetApp has excelled in the delivery of hybrid and all-flash arrays in a unified storage environment optimised for multi-tier and multi-vendor operations. In September 2018, Lenovo and NetApp announced a ‘global strategic partnership’, bringing together a range of technologies that will diversify their ‘in-house’ offerings. This move will put NetApp’s internal support offerings on par with conglomerate giants such as Dell Technologies and HPE. NetApp, however, is already the second largest external storage vendor on the market and can ultimately offer anything you want.
NetApp delivers all-flash storage, hybrid-flash storage, NVMe, HCI, converged systems, backup, cloud and managed infrastructure. NetApp added block storage capabilities to its FAS [Fabric-Attached Storage] platform in 2002 and now provides FC, iSCSI, NAS or hybrid connectivity options.
NetApp’s Software-Defined Weapon: ONTAP 9
In addition to their out-of-the-box offerings and in-house hardware configurations, what a NetApp product really gives you is ‘ONTAP 9’. ONTAP is NetApp’s proprietary OS that enables you to interface with all of your storage components in an efficient and clean manner — providing analytics and dashboard features that empower decision-making. ONTAP can be purchased by itself (ONTAP Select), as part of a NetApp cloud package or in combination with NetApp hardware. ONTAP delivers a bunch of benefits from ‘SnapMirror’ replication, compression, deduplication and thin provisioning to analytics, system visibility, and maintenance troubleshooting capabilities.* Compared to other software solutions on the market, ONTAP has two big standout features — virtualised third-party integrations and WAFL. WAFL (Write Anywhere File Layout) is a proprietary write process based on Journal File System Technology. Data and metadata are stored on a ‘transaction log’ (generated on high-speed local Flash or NVRAM), rather than being written directly to its permanent location. Later, when demand for system processing power is lower, that data can be transferred back to its final destination. This approach enables two things. First, it provides outstanding performance for random write patterns because almost all of the disk subsystem bandwidth is converted to IOPS (input/output operations per second). Second, it allows for all active interactions with data to be undertaken using the fastest locally available hardware. This enables hybrid systems to function at speeds much closer to all-flash arrays for a large chunk of the interactions operators have with the data. The value of this technology, however, is reduced if you access programs in a sequential order and/or do not require repeated access to the same data. Applications have to be spun up from HDD the first time they are accessed and are only available on flash during subsequent reads/writes. ONTAP 9 makes itself even more useful by delivering market-leading third-party integration capabilities. Like many software solutions, ONTAP 9 has an advanced VMware plugin. ONTAP 9, however, also supports native third-party hardware integrations using ‘FlexArray Virtualization’. This allows you to unify your entire storage ecosystem under the control of ONTAP, without hypervisor investments, no matter what hardware you are using. System-wide information is fed into ONTAP’s analytics engine, and provisioning can be done from a single point of control. All data is written using WAFL technology, SnapMirror backups are created and ONTAP storage efficiency dedup/compression/thin provisioning protocols are applied. NetApp delivers a truly hardware-agnostic control system straight out of the box.Pure Storage: All-Flash All of The Time
Pure Storage was founded in 2009. The company has focused on flash since the beginning and currently offers a wide range of all-flash arrays. Like for like, Pure Storage arrays are better than NetApp hardware.* Like for like, Pure Storage all-flash arrays are better than anything on the market. The problem is that they are expensive. The real question is if they are better for the cost. You also need to ask yourself if you really need the power that Pure Storage offers, and if powerful hardware is the only thing you are in the market to buy. Many enterprise applications only require 10-15% of data to be stored on flash for maximum performance.* You need to make sure that you are not paying for flash storage that you do not actually need simply to jump on the all-flash trend within the industry.Purity: The Pure Storage Software Solution
In addition to their amazing hardware, Pure Storage delivers ‘Purity’, the ‘software-defined engine’ of their all-flash arrays. Purity is only really designed to work with Pure Storage hardware. It relies on REST APIs to integrate with third-party hardware, including integration with VMware virtualised platforms.* REST APIs are a popular tool used within data centres to standardise the management of ecosystems built from multi-vendor components. They depend on HTTP operations like GET, POST and DELETE. The big downside to REST APIs is that they do not offer a native GUI interface and do not provide an intuitive experience for inexperienced operators. The big advantage that Purity provides over ONTAP 9 (and all other software solutions on the market) is advanced compression/deduplication technology. Pure Storage boasts 10:1 total efficiency without an impact on performance.* This is compared to NetApp’s 6:1 reduction.* This doesn’t really speak poorly of NetApp’s performance, but highlights the standout nature of Pure Storage’s capabilities. However, this advantage is less dramatic in the context of what Pure Storage offers — expensive all-flash arrays. They have invested in this advanced compression and deduplication technology specifically to get their cost per terabyte down closer to what the hybrid vendors can offer. This is vital to the affordability of their arrays and will be important to future data centre trends. But, when it comes to total capacity, Pure Storage is still more expensive.>>Use our quote builder and architect the Pure Storage SAN solution that fits your business needs within seconds<< 👉BUILD YOUR SAN SOLUTION👈