Tag Archives: vsan

VSAN Value and Paradigm Shifts

 

The VSAN story is out and doesn’t seem to be going away any time soon. It feels like everyone I talk to is asking about the product and the pricing model (see VSAN Pricing and Implications). More than once now, I’ve seen a wince or the written equivalent. I can certainly understand, as an extra $15K in licensing to a six CPU cluster is far from trivial. My goal here is to unpack the pricing a bit to examine the value that’s being delivered (the value is non-trivial as well).

Virtual Distributed Switch

Perhaps lost in the discussion of VSAN features is that the VSAN license includes the Virtual Distributed Switch (also known as the vSphere Distributed Switch) for the cluster (since every cluster member is licensed for VSAN). For anyone who’s maintained networking for a group of hosts, this is huge productivity gain, bringing centralized management, consistent naming, “network vMotion” (maintaining network state during a vMotion), Network IO Control (NIOC), and Single-Root IO Virtualization (SR-IOV). These are premium features, normally only available in Enterprise Plus licensing, which bring a lot of value to a VSAN cluster.

Here’s a great note from Punching Clouds on the deployment of 16 VSAN nodes in minutes. This is made possible in large part due to the vDS’s template creation and push deployment capability.

Paradigm Shift – Unbundling Storage Software from Hardware

I think the first time I came across this concept was in a presentation by Jon Toigo http://www.drunkendata.com/ entitled Why Storage Costs So Much and What You Can Do To Bend The Cost Curve.  It’s been almost five years, but I actually found the slide I remember.

Jon Toigo - Baseline Cost Model

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But back to the bundling thesis. A major cost is having the storage management software bundled with the hardware appliance. Buy a Tier 1 appliance, pay service and support for upgraded software during the ownership cycle, and at the end, you can’t transfer that software to a new appliance. You buy it all over again. The disruptive model that VSAN brings is the ability to buy the storage smarts independently of the storage hardware and transfer the license to a new piece of hardware at any time in the lifecycle of the hardware. Remember the closed platform of the traditional appliance? VSAN uses commodity x86 CPU cycles to run its software, the same commodity x86 CPU cycles that receive the most development and performance attention due to the sales volume.

I’d also like to point out that VSAN isn’t the first software to take this approach. HP’s StoreVirtual (decended from the Lefthand VSA), Datacore, even the VMware VSA unbundled storage smarts from the array. So there’s even more to the value story, isn’t there?

From RAID to Policy Based Storage

The previous iteration of unbundled storage software and storage appliances relies on RAID hardware controllers to handle resiliency. RAID controllers offload the processing power of RAID-based resiliency from the general purpose CPU to specialized silicon. This was especially helpful with the popular use of parity RAID, before general purpose CPU core counts and processing power went up, and before drive space was expensive relative to processing power. Today, parity RAID is less usefu, per-GB storage costs have crashed, multiple copies of data is the gold standard for data protection. To accomplish this, VSAN uses general purpose CPU cycles to create N+1 copies of the data, determined by per-VM policy.

Ok, what does that mean? In effect, administrators can adjust the policies that affect VSAN striping and number of failures to tolerate on a per-VM basis. Perhaps you determine that one of your VMs needs an increased stripe width to help destage writes or increase the speed of read caches misses. You can make that change for the individual VM rather than for all the VMs on the storage. In addition, you can make that change after deployment.

So what do you think? Does this represent more VSAN Value than you’d originally thought?

VMware PEX 2014 Day 1

OK, so I really meant to do a series of posts speculating on General Availability announcements based on a close reading of the VMware Partner Exchange Content Catalog. Life intervened, and I only got through the VSAN content. And now that VMware PEX 2014 Day 1 has come and gone, it seems anti-climactic. There were no GA announcements on VSAN, BC/DR to vCHS, Desktone’s integration into the VMware lineup, NSX in the channel, or Airwatch mobile device management integration into the EUC lineup.

On the other hand, I’d have to characterize VMware PEX Day 1 as a success. I saw great content on the future BC/DR in vCHS product and great technical content on VSAN. VSAN and disaster recovery to vCHS is scheduled for “Q1” (only 7 weeks left!), but that could change. Seriously, it could. The sessions answered a lot of nagging questions I had (Q: Is the VSAN disk group a RAID 0 under the covers? A: No.) and brought up some others (Q:Can vCHS be used as a BC/DR target for a VMware  View environment? A: Hmmmm…).

The class on qualifying/positioning vSphere Data Protection Advanced was really nice. If you have access to the content, definitely check it out. It’s a refinement of the existing material on vDPA, so if you’ve seen it before, it’s probably not earth-shattering. But an refinement nonetheless. The big differentiator was the ability to back up physical environment, namely SQL, Exchange, and Sharepoint. The impression I got was that this was application focused, not bare-metal. Anyone else think that too?

The Solution Center (exhibition hall) was quite interesting. I finally got to talk to someone at Hitachi Data Systems (“No, I don’t think we go through you at all for distribution”) about their solution stack. Their purpose-built flash storage was pretty interesting (though I can’t find it on the corporate web site). I didn’t see Cloud Physics at the Solution Center or on the list. What gives?
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Oh, I sat down and got a free social media consultation, which focused on LinkedIn rather than this blog, but was still valuable.

Another interesting opportunity is asking random Partners what they’re seeing which is interesting.  Do they think VSAN will be as disruptive for low-end storage?

If you’re here at PEX and would like to meet up to chat about this stuff during breaks, after the day, or over dinner, ping me and we can set it up.

PEX 2014 VSAN – Content Catalog Part 1

The PEX 2014 Content Catalog is online, so I had quite a bit of searching, slicing, and dicing to do. My initial read-through was looking for clues about announcements which might happen before Partner Exchange, but I gave up on that very quickly. If you think you’ve found something I’ve overlooked, I’d love to hear about it in the comments. Maybe a problem I had was getting sidetracked by content. So it seemed more productive to think about the interesting sessions. This is the first of a few posts about interesting stuff I saw in the content catalog.

PEX 2014 VSAN Content

SDDC3521-BC – Software-Defined Storage & Virtual SAN (VSAN) – Sales Boot Camp
EUC3208 – Architecting VMware View with VSAN – The VCDX Way
T
EX3060 – VDI Horizon View on vSAN
TEX3243 – Benefits of Using Virtual SAN (vSAN) with View

It’ll be interesting to see how VSAN’s sales positioning is going to be handled. Are they going to stick with lab and View as the primary use cases? That seems to make sense with the number of sessions targeting  the Horizon View (VDI) use case. The “VCDX Way” is especially intriguing.
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So will VMware target the SMB SAN market, which is who actually seems to be clamoring for the product? The VSAN open beta is supposed to be amazingly popular. Of course, whether SMB storage is economically possible with VSAN will depend on the pricing. Since I can’t really extrapolate whether VSAN will be GA by Partner Exchange, it’s tough to do anything besides hope. February would seem to be a good date (offset from VMworld) with plenty of time to shake out first revision bugs and qualify configurations, additional use cases. and more best practices to release around VMworld. But that’s my small fish view on product strategy without any insight into where they are in the engineering effort.

SDDC3522-BC – Software-Defined Storage Technical Boot Camp
TEX3204 – Driving Lower Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) with the Right Direct Attached Drives for your Workload using VMware vSAN

More technically focused sessions which I personally find exciting. Doing a good POC (and partner teams to do them) is a big part of what I want to bring to partner engagements. The second session is the only hint of future product developments I’ve seen, with a discussion of an all-flash VSAN configuration (high-endurance SSD fronting standard-endurance SSD). What does this signal to you? Anything? What does it mean to you about a GA schedule, if anything?