Virtualization News Desk
Taneja Group Forecasts Next-Generation Virtualization Storage Market
Report Identifies Shifts in Fibre Channel Storage Market and Forecasts Growth for Highly Virtualized Storage Arrays
May. 9, 2008 01:45 PM
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3PAR announced that a recently released report by the Taneja
Group defines and analyzes a new category of next-generation Fibre Channel
storage systems from vendors including 3PAR. The report forecasts revenue
growth for next-generation Fibre Channel storage systems for the period between
2007 and 2011 and identifies shifts in the Fibre Channel storage market that
Taneja believes are largely responsible for driving revenue growth for this new
segment.
According to the report, the Fibre Channel storage systems
market is "undergoing tremendous architectural and technology transition
as end user purchasing criteria shift." Taneja cites the new emphasis on
price-performance, energy efficiency, capacity optimization, and simplified
storage management among these shifting criteria. In addition, the report
asserts that server consolidation through the use of server virtualization
technologies continues to be one of the strongest drivers for change in the
infrastructure. "Consolidated, virtualized server infrastructure drives
the need for advanced storage virtualization capabilities," states the
report.
"We have a situation where a new class of storage
systems designed to provide a simpler, more efficient, high-performance
alternative to traditional monolithic and dual-controller arrays are posing a
serious challenge to the status quo," said Arun Taneja, Founder and
Consulting Analyst for the Taneja Group. "This new breed of storage
systems directly addresses the needs of the virtualized datacenter -- something
that traditional storage systems were never designed to do."
The report identifies key trends in the marketplace that
Taneja believes are responsible for the forecasted shift away from traditional
monolithic storage. These trends include the rise of storage consolidation
initiatives based on ROI optimization, the prioritization of green storage in
purchasing decisions, the use of virtualization and automated management to
reduce OPEX, and the need for a more agile and dynamic infrastructure to
support service-oriented IT. "Server virtualization and consolidation,
green storage initiatives, and the need to contain OPEX costs associated with
storage management are forcing users to rethink their traditional storage solutions,"
states the report.
In the report, "next-generation" storage is
defined by Taneja as a new class of systems that meet a majority of a stated
list of criteria which includes the use of clustered controller design,
sub-disk virtualization, self-configuring and self-tuning storage, automated
storage tiering, and "thin technologies." Thin technologies are
defined as features that enable capacity to be dedicated on write, not on
allocation. This includes support for "reservationless" snapshots,
where only a single copy of changed volume data is stored for all snapshots
associated with a given volume.
The report segments next-generation Fibre Channel storage
systems into two main markets -- "high-end storage" and
"mid-range systems." High-end Fibre Channel storage systems are
defined by Taneja as those suited for the most demanding I/O workloads and the
most mission-critical datacenter applications. Products are classified as
"high-end" due to their random I/O performance, partitioning and security
capabilities, and scalability characteristics. According to Taneja,
next-generation storage from vendors such as 3PAR represents an evolution in
storage system design and offers a simpler, more efficient, high-performance
alternative to traditional monolithic storage systems from vendors such as EMC,
IBM, and Hitachi Data Systems.
"We believe that the shifting priorities of datacenters
and IT organizations have increased the demand for alternatives to traditional
storage," said David Scott, CEO and President of 3PAR. "Particularly
in the area of server virtualization, next-generation storage has been proven
to reduce physical capacity needs, ensure high performance, and increase
flexibility in the infrastructure. 3PAR's highly virtualized, utility-based approach
is designed to integrate with server virtualization technologies to provide an
alternative for customers who want to build a complete utility computing
infrastructure."
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