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TCO

 

Reinvented

 

 

Copyright IBM Corporation 2009 

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other components, enabling organizations to capitalize on market advances in capacity 
and cost while meeting their dynamic performance and budget requirements.  
 
The XIV system allows integration of multiple generations of hardware 

– new alongside 

older 

– on an in-production system. Component upgrades and replacements are non-

disruptive and require little management. Adding capacity with the XIV system is similarly 
seamless, with the new capacity available immediately, without the need to reconfigure 
and without performance degradation.

 

Very High Density Slower Rotation (VHDSR) disk drives 

Enterprise storage systems are traditionally configured with Fiber Channel (FC) drives 
generally known for speed and reliability and, consequently, high cost. The XIV system 
uses only Very High Density Slower Rotation (VHDSR) disk drives 

– known for their very 

high densities as well as comparatively low cost. The XIV system applies innovative load 
balancing and other advanced algorithms to provide tier 1 performance, reliability, and 
availability, coupled with the dramatic per terabyte savings, and power, cooling, and 
maintenance efficiencies that result from using the capacity-rich VHDSR drives. 

 

 
Gartner Inc. notes that: “…higher-capacity SATA disks generally cost less than smaller 
FC or Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) disks on a $-per-GB basis, and consume much less 
power and cooling. When the use of these high-capacity 1 TB disks reduces the overall 
disk count in the storage system, relative to a system configured with FC or SAS disks, it 
also reduces the frequency of disk-

related repair activities.”

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For more information on XIV’s high-end performance using VHDSR drives, see the  

IBM XIV Performance Reinvented

 white paper. 

 

Built-in thin provisioning 

Most enterprise systems now offer thin provisioning 

– the ability to define a system’s 

logical capacity as larger than its physical capacity, so as to defer physical capacity 
purchases (see below). However, in many systems, this feature has been added to the 
existing architecture, making it harder to manage and of limited scope. The IBM XIV 
system provides thin provisioning as a core feature of its design, handily managed at the 
click of a button. 

 

 
Organizations can leverage XIV’s easy to manage thin provisioning capability to 
significantly reduce capital and operating expenses and postpone capacity purchases by 
acquiring physical capacity for only the total space actually written rather than the total 
space allocated. For more information, see the 

IBM XIV Thin Provisioning

 white paper. 

 

                                                           

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“IBM's XIV: Next-Generation Scale-Out Disk Storage,” Stanley Zaffos, Valdis Filks, Nov. 20, 2008, Gartner, 

Inc. and/or its Affiliates 

Summary of Contents for XIV STORAGE SYSTEM

Page 1: ...I IB BM M X XI IV V S St to or ra ag ge e S Sy ys st te em m Optimizing Enterprise Storage Total Cost of Ownership TCO with IBM XIV White Paper June 2009...

Page 2: ...product or services available in your area Any statements regarding IBM s future direction and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice and represent goals and objectives only The in...

Page 3: ...s 10 Power and cooling consumption 10 Floor space use 11 Summary How to reduce environmental costs 11 Administration and Management Costs 12 Less management overhead 12 Summary How to reduce managemen...

Page 4: ...stem is truly more favorable to the company s bottom line The chart below shows a fuller set of storage array cost factors and their generally recognized relative impact on a system s overall cost 1 F...

Page 5: ...V do not use 1 TB drives for tier 1 or even tier 2 storage rather for archiving and other needs that do not require high performance or high reliability The XIV system provides enterprise class perfor...

Page 6: ...balanced and comprehensive approach to reducing all cost factors the XIV system succeeds in dramatically reducing TCO where other systems fail Backup Restore Snaps with no performance impact Differen...

Page 7: ...ents makes customized hardware unnecessary and makes it possible to integrate newer state of the art hardware as soon as it becomes available and without delay Innovative use of highly economical disk...

Page 8: ...re eliminates the complexity and cost of migrating data from tier to tier and of maintaining different architectures for different tiers The XIV system offers further cost efficiencies by enabling sca...

Page 9: ...that higher capacity SATA disks generally cost less than smaller FC or Serial Attached SCSI SAS disks on a per GB basis and consume much less power and cooling When the use of these high capacity 1 T...

Page 10: ...s the presence of the defined physical capacity in the system even if years go by before its use Upfront purchases commit capital unnecessarily and waste IT resources in managing the unused capacity U...

Page 11: ...em s optimization of capacity use is its self management of data XIV s automated volume distribution mechanism optimizes the use of capacity across all system disks at all times including at peak time...

Page 12: ...us reclaiming it XIV management tools enable administrators to easily zero out space no longer in use so that the XIV system can automatically reclaim it and allow its reuse Traditional system have a...

Page 13: ...A single tier architecture Hardware as an interchangeable upgradable commodity Inexpensive VHDSR disks Reduced capacity needs up front and ongoing Easy scaling and on the same platform Built in featu...

Page 14: ...lves For existing storage this can translate to a space savings of more than 80 to clarify VHDSR drives take up the same space as the MDFR drives but provide 1 TB of storage capacity rather than 146 G...

Page 15: ...example that DBAs handle provisioning without external assistance controlling only those volumes they are authorized to handle based on role The XIV system s ability to enable lesser skilled personne...

Page 16: ...irectly and indirectly The XIV system keeps data availability continuous and minimizes the extent and cost of downtime through redundant hardware automated and pro active maintenance and efficient har...

Page 17: ...r maintenance is another inevitable source of friction as maintenance must compete with other higher priority demands In traditional systems rolling out a business application may also require system...

Page 18: ...acy systems the XIV approach greatly reduces the time and space that backups require and consequently the costs involved In addition the XIV storage system offers logical backup and low cost recovery...

Page 19: ...h disk requires less power cooling and space as well as less supporting infrastructure and add on software The calculations provided here assume that MDFR drives are replaced by the equivalent amount...

Page 20: ...High Density Drive Size 100 For example Assuming you are comparing your existing 450 GB drives to XIV s 1 TB 1000 GB drives the floor space savings is calculated as follows S Sa av vi in ng gs s i in...

Page 21: ...gs in Power Cooling 1 0 75 146 1000 100 8 89 9 To compare RAID 5 drives to XIV s VHDSR drives use the following formula Savings in Power Cooling 1 0 75 0 8 Your MDFR Drive Size 0 5 the XIV system VHDS...

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