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(707) 595-3607 International Technology Group 9128 Strada Place, Suite 10115 Naples, Florida 34108-2931 Telephone: +1 888 513 0222 Email: [email protected] Website: ITGforInfo.com Management Brief November 2015 Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools
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Page 1: ITG-Nov15-MgmtBrief-Cost-Benefit-Comparison-IBM-VMware

(707) 595-3607

 

International Technology Group 9128 Strada Place, Suite 10115

Naples, Florida 34108-2931 Telephone: +1 888 513 0222

Email: [email protected] Website: ITGforInfo.com

Management Brief November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools

Table of Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1

New Approaches 1  Cost Structures 1  

Overview 1  Personnel 2  Capacities and Tiers 3  

Stability and Skills 4  Conclusions 5  

SOLUTIONS 6 IBM Offerings 6  

IBM Spectrum Storage Portfolio 6 IBM Spectrum Control Base Edition 7 IBM Spectrum Control Storage Insights 7 IBM Virtual Storage Center 7 Multivendor Support 8  

VMware Storage Tools 9  Overview 9 Virtual SAN and Virtual Volumes 10

DETAILED DATA 12 Basis of Calculations 12  Cost Breakdowns 13  

 

List of Figures 1. Five-year Costs of Ownership – Averages for All Installations 2  2. FTE Storage Administrators – All Installations 2  3. Capacities by Tier – Averages for All Installations 4  4. IBM Spectrum Storage Solutions 6  5. IBM Spectrum Control Base Edition Components 7  6. Principal Platforms Supported by IBM Spectrum Virtualize 9  7. Capacities by Tier – All Installations 12  8. Five-year Costs of Ownership 13  

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 1

Executive Summary

New Approaches Data growth has emerged as one of the greatest challenges facing IT organizations. Users face escalating costs. Quality of service may be undermined, while processes such as backup, replication and recovery become increasingly problematic. Even in midsize organizations, storage environments have become increasingly complex and management overhead has increased.

One reason why this has occurred is that, in most organizations, new storage technologies have been exploited in a piecemeal manner. This has particularly been the case for storage virtualization. Fragmented deployments have left large segments of storage capacity unused or underutilized. Inadequate management and analytics tools mean that many organizations cannot properly identify, let alone remove inefficiencies.

Storage virtualization has lagged the server world. While 40 to 60 percent of servers in large organizations are now virtualized, the comparable statistic for storage capacity appears to be less than 20 percent. Equally, while some organizations can claim that 80 percent to 100 percent of servers are virtualized, this is rarely the case for storage resources. New approaches are needed.

This report focuses on two such approaches: (1) use of VMware tools to virtualize and manage storage as well as server resources; and (2) IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control, packaged as IBM Virtual Storage Center (VSC).

These approaches are entirely different. VMware addresses storage as an extension of existing VMware server infrastructures and management practices. In contrast, IBM VSC is a broad-based, storage-specific solution that may be implemented across multiple tiers and diverse vendor arrays.

VMware’s server-centric emphasis is reflected in the company’s software defined storage (SDS) strategy. Storage management is handled through the company’s core vCenter Server, while features such as VMware Virtual SAN (VSAN) and VMware Virtual Volumes (VVols) are dedicated to virtual machine- (VM) specific storage tasks. It is questionable whether this approach would be viable at the organizational level.

In contrast, IBM SDS strategy is built around a more stable portfolio of IBM Spectrum Storage solutions that have been widely deployed in large as well as midsize organizations. The company recently added IBM Spectrum Control Storage Insights, a cloud-delivered set of storage monitoring and analytics tools designed for midsize users. Storage Insights, which allows users to better understand their existing storage bases, has enjoyed strong initial reception among these.

There are also differences between VMware storage tools and IBM solutions in cost structures, stability and skill requirements that are addressed below.

Cost Structures

Overview Costs for use of IBM solutions are significantly lower than for use of VMware storage tools. This may be demonstrated by comparisons based on input from 17 midsize users of VMware storage tools, along with 3 users of IBM VSC and 12 users of IBM SAN Volume Controller (SVC), upon which VSC is based.

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 2

Comparisons are for installations in midsize retail, health care and e-commerce companies with initial capacities of 179 to 612 terabytes (TB) of raw disk storage, and 200 to 800 VMware VMs. Calculations allow for annual capacity growth rates of between 15 and 35 percent, depending on applications. Companies employed IBM DS8000 and Storwize V7000; EMC VMAX and VNX; and HP 3PAR platforms respectively.

In these installations, five-year costs of ownership for use of IBM solutions averaged 35 percent less than for use of VMware storage tools. Combined hardware, maintenance, software license and support costs averaged 17 percent less, while personnel costs for storage administrators averaged 56 percent less. Facilities costs, primarily for energy, averaged 33 percent less.

These differences are summarized in figure 1.

Figure 1: Five-year Costs of Ownership – Averages for All Installations

Based on user input, hardware and software configurations, numbers of full time equivalent (FTE) storage administrators and costs of ownership were calculated for use of VMware storage tools and IBM VSC for each installation. Costs include acquisition of new hardware capacity to support growth, along with maintenance, software licenses and support, personnel and facilities.

Most organizations also employed other software that is part of the vSphere 5 suite, including VSAN. vSphere 6, which became generally available in March 2015, had not yet seen widespread production use, although many organizations had initiated proof of concept and/or test projects. There was little experience with VVols, although there was a great deal of interest in these.

Software stacks employed for VMware calculations included array operating systems and tools for tiering, copying services, disaster recovery and storage resource management, including non-VMware solutions where appropriate. IBM VSC provides comparable functionality.

A five-year measurement period was employed because the benefits of large-scale storage virtualization are typically cumulative – three-year calculations tend to understate long-term savings. This is particularly the case in that vendors often raise maintenance and support costs substantially after three years.

Personnel The largest disparity in VMware and IBM solutions costs is in personnel. In the installations employed for comparisons in this report, numbers of FTE storage administrators were as shown in figure 2. It was assumed that staffing levels remained consistent over five years.

Retail Company

Health Care Company

E-commerce Company

VMware Storage Tools 2.45 FTEs 1.4 FTEs 0.75 FTE

IBM Virtual Storage Center 1.0 FTE 0.45 FTE 0.25 FTE

Figure 2: FTE Storage Administrators – All Installations

IBM Virtual Storage Center

VMware Storage Tools

Hardware & maintenance Software & support Personnel Facilities

2,123.0

1,382.4

$ Thousands  

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 3

VMware administrators typically handled server as well as storage administration tasks. Users estimated that between 30 and 60 percent of administrator time was spent on storage. Many could not quantify breakouts.

VMware tools tend to be more labor-intensive in accomplishing tasks such as multitier configuration, data movement and management, and capacity allocation for storage systems. This is particularly the case when storage infrastructures experience high growth, frequent changes or both.

In contrast, IBM VSC draws upon the strengths of conventional storage administration solutions and practices, while adding new features in analytics, automation and other areas. Integrated analytics enable administrators to more rapidly identify and resolve problems, and to identify and exploit opportunities to improve efficiency. The solution employs a graphical user interface (GUI) that has drawn widespread industry praise.

VMware storage tools offer some capabilities that are functionally equivalent to IBM VSC. They are, however, less well integrated and automated, and there is less user experience with them. In practice, this results in higher administrative overhead.

Capacities and Tiers Industry-wide, the norm for storage capacity utilization is generally estimated at around 30 percent. Levels can be materially improved by storage virtualization.

Some VMware users reported utilization levels in the 50 to 70 percent range. The norm appeared to be 30 percent or less, although typically this applied to departmental or small-scale projects involving dozens rather than hundreds of terabytes. (In this as in other areas, statistics cited by VMware users tended to be imprecise.) In comparison, IBM VSC users reported utilization levels of 80 to 90 percent, and SVC users, without the IBM Spectrum Control function in VSC, levels of 60 to 80 percent.

Higher utilization means that less physical capacity is required. Costs are, however, affected not only by total capacity, but also by the type of platform employed. Tier 1 arrays, which offer the highest levels of performance, availability and recoverability, are more expensive than lower-tier equivalents. This is the case not only for hardware and maintenance, but also for systems software, copy services, replication, failover and recovery, storage management and other functions.

Industry-wide, however, Tier 1 arrays represent an average of more than 70 percent of installed capacity. Many organizations employ these even for data that does not require business-critical resilience and performance.

The ability of IBM solutions to reduce dependence on Tier 1 arrays should be highlighted. Users of these solutions have reduced Tier 1 capacity to as little as 30 percent within a few years, while maintaining performance, availability and recoverability targets.

Similar effects are apparent in the installations employed for comparisons in this report. Initial capacities, which are the same for use of VMware storage tools and IBM solutions, averaged 68 percent on Tier 1 and 32 percent on midrange arrays. Over five years, users of IBM solutions were able to reduce the proportion of capacity on Tier 1 systems to an average of 24 percent, or half that realized with VMware storage tools.

Figure 3 illustrates these results.

Movement and management of data between multiple tiers of arrays can, in principle, be realized with VMware storage tools. This is, however, reported to be a complex process, particularly when – as is now common – arrays themselves are configured with tiered mixes of solid state (SSD), high-performance SAS and high-capacity Nearline SAS (NL-SAS) or SATA drives.

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 4

Figure 3: Capacities by Tier – Averages for All Installations

VMware advances, such as VSAN (which is geared to server-based storage) and VVols (which extend integration of VMware and storage administration), do not directly address this issue. In contrast, movement of data to lower-tier systems has typically been a major goal of IBM VSC deployment initiatives.

Further information on profiles, methodology and assumptions employed for calculations, along with cost breakdowns may be found in the Detailed Data section of this report.

Stability and Skills In these areas, there are marked differences between VMware storage and IBM solutions.

Although VMware has supported storage interfaces since its inception, the company’s move to extend vSphere to direct virtualization and management of storage is more recent. Most deployments have occurred in the last few years, and many have been small, and/or have been test or proof of concept systems.

One reason for this is that, in most organizations, separate teams handle server and storage administration. Conventionally trained VMware specialists often have little familiarity with the challenges of managing business-critical arrays, while storage administrators lack VMware exposure.

(This issue has been highlighted by VVols. In principle, these allow VMware and storage administrators to cooperate in allocating, managing and troubleshooting VMware files on arrays. In practice, however, organizations often do not have structures in place that would allow this to occur.)

For the next few years, VMware users will be preoccupied with integrating new features in vSphere 5.5 and vSphere 6. vSphere software is, moreover, intended to form part of VMware’s software-defined data center (SDDC), an evolving architecture for management of virtualized compute, storage and network resources in cloud environments. Interdependencies between the vSphere environment and SDDC will add complexity.

In comparison, VSC integrates a set of IBM software offerings that have been in widespread use since the 2000s. These are stable, widely deployed solutions. IBM VSC is geared to established storage administration practices. According to users, existing administrators can adapt easily to its capabilities.

Conversely, users of VMware storage tools reported that retraining was typically required, and that – to quote one organization – the mindsets of server and storage administration were different. Organizations can address these issues by drawing upon the VMware ecosystem for additional high-end management solutions, consulting services or both. Cost structures tend, however, to change significantly when this occurs.

IBM Virtual Storage Center

VMware Storage Tools

Base Configuration

Tier 1

Midrange

Beginning of Period

End of Period 370 TB

630 TB

481 TB

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 5

Conclusions The choice between VMware storage tools and IBM VSC is, to a great extent, a choice between an evolving architecture and a simple, stable and tightly integrated solution. The components of IBM VSC offer a full set of enterprise-class capabilities in a single package that is priced by terabytes of managed data.

VMware and IBM VSC are not, moreover, an either/or choice. IBM VSC fully supports integration with VMware server and network environments. All IBM VSC users who contributed to this report had incorporated VMware environments in their deployment strategies, or planned to do so.

VMware integration has also been a major focus of IBM VSC product strategy. VMware integration for IBM storage systems was recently converged in the IBM Spectrum Control Base Edition package, which enables centralized provisioning, virtualization, monitoring and management of IBM storage resources in VMware cloud environments.

The broader strategies of VMware (the company) and IBM also diverge. Although VMware continues to update its storage offerings, its corporate focus has moved toward networking, next-generation data centers and cloud solutions and services. Although IBM also targets these areas, it treats storage solutions as a distinct business.

SDS represents an IBM corporate investment priority. The IBM Spectrum Storage portfolio has emerged as the broadest and most effective SDS solution set offered by any major vendor. In February 2015, the company announced plans to invest more than $1 billion over five years in this portfolio.

In the final analysis, the choice is between treating storage as an extension of existing VMware server bases or managing it as a distinct set of resources. The industry trend is toward the IBM approach. Server bases are not growing at 40 to 80 percent per year. A growing number of users recognize that enterprise SDS infrastructures offer the only viable long-term approach to controlling storage growth.

IBM VSC offers a means of addressing these challenges, yielding results in (at most) one or two years. Longer-term gains, as this report demonstrates, may be a great deal larger.

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Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 6

Solutions

IBM Offerings

IBM Spectrum Storage Portfolio The IBM Spectrum Storage portfolio, which forms the backbone of IBM SDS strategy, combines established IBM storage and data management offerings with new components such as IBM Spectrum Scale for file and object storage; IBM Spectrum Accelerate (a software-only implementation of the XIV Storage System); IBM Spectrum Protect for data backup and recovery; and IBM Spectrum Archive for cold data storage.

The IBM Spectrum Storage portfolio currently includes the solutions summarized in figure 4.

DESCRIPTION BASED ON

IBM SPECTRUM ACCELERATE Offers unique capabilities in real-time provisioning, low-overhead administration,

dynamic load balancing, snapshots, replication, recovery & other areas. IBM XIV Storage System software

IBM SPECTRUM SCALE Parallel file system enables multi-petabyte scaling with single global namespace. IBM General Parallel File System (GPFS) &

Elastic Storage Server (ESS)

IBM SPECTRUM VIRTUALIZE Large-scale, cross-platform storage virtualization solution. Supports automated

tiering, real-time data compression & other advanced functions. IBM SAN Volume Controller (SVC)

IBM SPECTRUM CONTROL Provides single-console monitoring & management of large, heterogeneous storage

environments. Includes analytics, deployment, performance optimization & replication management functions.

IBM Tivoli Storage Productivity Center (TPC)

IBM SPECTRUM PROTECT Provides single-console monitoring & management of enterprise-wide backup &

recovery processes. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager (TSM)

IBM SPECTRUM ARCHIVE Enables direct access to archival data stored in IBM tape systems. Eliminates need

for separate tape management software. IBM Linear Tape File System (LTFS) tape drives & libraries

IBM SPECTRUM CONTROL STORAGE INSIGHTS Cloud-delivered storage monitoring & analytics solution designed for midsize users. New offering

Figure 4: IBM Spectrum Storage Solutions

IBM Spectrum Storage offerings are built upon established systems and technologies that have been in widespread use for five years or more. For example, IBM Spectrum Virtualize, which became available in 2013, employs technology that first reached the marketplace in IBM SVC more than a decade before.

This portfolio is expected to expand. According to IBM, major emphasis will be placed on enhancing integration and simplifying management mechanisms across the portfolio; enabling unified console-based management and orchestration of all storage and data; and providing operational insights and automatic optimization based on embedded state-of-the-art analytics to reduce cost and avoid performance and capacity issues before they arise.

The company also plans to continue support for all major IBM and third-party storage platforms, including flash- and disk-based, along with file and object-based storage (FOBS) systems. Conformance with OpenStack and Hadoop-related standards will be maintained.

A multi-cloud connector will be added to the IBM Spectrum Storage portfolio. This offering, according to IBM, will enable users to dynamically migrate data across multiple in-house and/or external clouds while maintaining high levels of availability and security.

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Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 7

IBM Spectrum Control Base Edition Introduced in March 2015, IBM Spectrum Control Base Edition provides a common backend server for VMware vSphere users accessing IBM storage resources. Its components are summarized in figure 5.

VMWARE PLATFORM SUPPORT IBM CLOUD INTERFACES

vCenter Server Storage Provider for VMware VASA

vSphere Web Client Storage Enhancements for VMware vSphere Web Client

vSphere APIs for Storage Awareness (VASA) Storage plug-in for VMware vCenter Orchestrator

vCenter Operations Manager Storage Management Pack for VMware vCenter Operations Manager vCenter Orchestrator

Figure 5: IBM Spectrum Control Base Edition Components

The offering is designed to facilitate integration of VMware environments into IBM Spectrum Storage-managed cloud storage. VVols are fully supported at their current level of definition. IBM has committed to upgrading Spectrum Control Base Edition to support the future evolution of VMware specifications and standards.

IBM Spectrum Control Storage Insights A new IBM offering (announced and available in June 2015), Spectrum Control Storage Insights is a cloud-delivered package of storage analytics tools incorporating advanced technology developed by the IBM Research Division. It is designed primarily for midsize users that have limited capability for and experience in organizational storage management.

Storage Insights allows users to inventory storage assets; monitor and analyze capacity utilization and performance in a highly granular manner; and determine historical trends for these. Users may also identify unused or underutilized capacity, and more effectively optimize data placements.

Early users report that Storage Insights may be rapidly deployed – typically in less than one-half hour – and may begin delivering actionable results almost immediately. The solution is said to be easy to use by personnel without advanced storage administration skills, and is capable of learning as storage workloads evolve. A 30-day no-charge trial period is available.

According to IBM, Storage Insights is meant to provide a simple, inexpensive starting point for midsize users to develop more effective storage management approaches. It appears to be succeeding.

IBM Virtual Storage Center IBM VSC is built around two main components: IBM Spectrum Virtualize acts as a common storage hypervisor, and IBM Spectrum Control enables storage optimization across multiple heterogeneous array types.

IBM Spectrum Virtualize incorporates the same storage virtualization and management software employed in the earlier IBM SAN Volume Controller, and in IBM Storwize and FlashSystem V9000 arrays. It enables non-disruptive volume mobility and pooling across multiple arrays, resulting in higher capacity utilization.

IBM Spectrum Virtualize tools include Easy Tier, which automatically promotes active data extents to higher-performance tiers for an up to three times increase in overall throughput; thin provisioning; scale-out capabilities; high availability; synchronous and asynchronous replication using fibre channel (FC) and/or Internet Protocol (IP) communications.

IBM Real-time Compression is also supported. One of the most efficient compression technologies available today, this enables compression of active data at levels of up to five times, depending on workloads.

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Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 8

These features may be extended to arrays virtualized by IBM Spectrum Virtualize, even if they do not otherwise support them.

IBM Spectrum Control is the new name for IBM’s core data and management software. VSC includes IBM Spectrum Control Advanced Edition, which provides a full range of monitoring, automation and analytics capabilities for multivendor storage environments. IBM Spectrum Control Advanced Edition also includes IBM Spectrum Protect Snapshot for application-aware, snapshot and copy management.

These tools operate across all virtualized systems. The management console is based on a high-productivity, easy-to-use GUI originally developed for the IBM XIV Storage System.

When these capabilities are exploited, it is not necessary to employ equivalent array-based-tools. Savings in license and support fees may be substantial.

IBM Spectrum Control is one of the industry’s highest-rated SRM solutions. Distinctive capabilities include:

• Tier optimization. This tightly integrated feature set allows administrators to balance performance of selected storage pools within a single tier, or move these between tiers based on workload characteristics (e.g., frequently accessed pools may be up-tiered and less active data down-tiered).

Administrators may choose to perform these actions manually. Alternatively, the process may be automated based on I/O utilization thresholds and/or age of data.

• Volume transformation. This allows administrators to select volumes or groups of volumes, and convert these to thin provisioned or compressed form (or vice versa) with a single click.

Organizations that have taken advantage of these functions have reported significant improvements in the efficiency delivered by their storage resources. Available capacity may be more evenly matched with application requirements, and risks of performance bottlenecks reduced. Integrated analytics tools support both feature sets.

IBM VSC components have long histories of use among large organizations. IBM Spectrum Virtualize, for example, has been routinely employed to virtualize hundreds of terabytes of disk storage, and larger installations have been in the multi-petabyte range. IBM Spectrum Control has been widely adopted for IBM and mixed-vendor storage environments since the mid-2000s.

Additional IBM tooling includes SmartCloud Cost Manager for chargeback accounting and Intelligent Storage Services Catalog, which enables document applications to be mapped to storage system capabilities.

Multivendor Support IBM Spectrum Virtualize may be employed with the broadest range of disk, hybrid and all-flash arrays, host environments, switches and adapters of any storage virtualization solution available today. Currently, more than 340 different storage array brands and models are supported.

The offering may also be used with the storage components of integrated server and storage systems such as Cisco UCS, HP BladeSystem and Lenovo (formerly IBM) BladeCenter.

Principal supported platforms are currently as summarized in figure 4.

IBM VSC also includes driver-enabling automated provisioning through the OpenStack Cinder volume management standard. OpenStack, which is developed and managed by the OpenStack Foundation, is the leading independent suite of cloud standards.

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Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 9

STORAGE ARRAYS

Bull Storeway FDA & Optima Dell Compellent SC030/40, SC8000 EMC 8000 Series, DMX through DMX-4 EMC VMAX, VNX & VNX2 EMC Clariion CX Series Fujitsu Eternus HP 3PAR Series HP EVA 4000 through 8400, P6000 HP MSA 1000 through 2000 HP XP48 through XP24000, P9500

Hitachi USP100 through USPv Hitachi VSP & HUS VM Huawei S Series & Dorado IBM DCS3700 & N Series IBM FlashSystem IBM Storwize Family IBM DS8100 through DS8870, ESS IBM DS3000 through DS6000 IBM XIV Storage System NEC iStorage M & S Series

NetApp E Series & FAS Nexsan E Series & SATABeast Oracle Pillar Axiom PureStorage FA-400 Series Sun StorEdge 9000 Series StorageTek D-Series & 6000 Texas Memory Systems Ramsan Toshiba FL6000 Flash Array Violin Memory 3000 & 6000 Xiotech X-IO Series, ISE1

HOSTS

Apple Mac OS X Server Citrix Xen Server, Debian HP-UX 11i, OpenVMS, Tru64 IBM AIX & i, z/VM, z/VSE Novell OES2

Oracle VM Server Red Hat EL 5, 6 & 7 SLES 10 & 11 VMware VASA, VAAI & SRM Windows Server 2003, 2008 & 2012

Windows Server Hyper-V SunOS 5.8 through Solaris 11 SGI Irix

INTEGRATED SYSTEMS SWITCHES HOST BUS ADAPTERS

Cisco UCS B & C Series Servers HP BladeSystem IBM Flex V7000 Lenovo (formerly-IBM) BladeCenter

Brocade Converged Switches Cisco MDS & Nexus McData Eclipse Qlogic Fabric Switches Juniper QFabric

Brocade, Emulex, Qlogic Various

OTHER IBM Spectrum Accelerate IBM Spectrum Scale IBM General Parallel File System IBM Elastic Storage System IBM ProtecTIER Deduplication Gateway

Figure 6: Principal Platforms Supported by IBM Spectrum Virtualize

VMware Storage Tools

Overview VMware has, since its inception, placed a strong emphasis on interoperability with storage arrays. The company’s key APIs – VAAI and VASA – are de facto industry standards supported by all major array vendors and most smaller players.

Starting with the vSphere 4 suite, introduced in 2009, VMware began to position its tools to manage storage as well as server resources. Further enhancements were added in vSphere 5 starting in 2011. Key offerings have included Distributed Resource Scheduler (Storage DRS), an extension of the server DRS load balancing solution; Storage vMotion for data movement and Storage I/O Control (server I/O prioritization).

These are managed through vCenter Server, and interface to the Site Recovery Manager (SRM) disaster recovery solution and other VMware software.

It is unclear how much traction VMware storage tools have gained within the VMware community. During research for this report, it was found that most VMware-managed storage installations were relatively small, or were at early stage of deployment, or both. Some larger, more sophisticated organizations have, however, adopted VMware as a strategic storage platform.

EMC has, since 2003, been majority owner of VMware, currently holding approximately 80 percent of the company’s stock. Although the two companies have collaborated closely, VMware has continued to publish vendor-neutral APIs. Other storage vendors have been able to offer interoperability comparable to that of EMC.

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Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 10

Virtual SAN and Virtual Volumes Over the last few years, VMware (the company) has started to move toward an SDS model that is designed to allow use of server- as well as array-based storage within a broader framework of policy-driven storage.

Key components of this model include the following:

• Virtual SAN (VSAN) enables virtualization and management of server-based storage as pools within vSphere clusters. VMware has described VSAN as a converged hypervisor extending the core VMware ESXi hypervisor to server-based disk and flash memory. According to VMware, more than 12,000 users worldwide signed up as beta customers.

The first Virtual SAN version became generally available in March 2014 as part of vSphere 5.5. It was enhanced in vSphere 6.0 in February 2015. Maximum cluster size was increased from 32 to 64 nodes (up to 6,400 VMs) and from 4.4 to 8 petabytes (PB) of storage. Most installations are a great deal smaller.

By the end of first quarter 2015, the company claimed that VSAN was enjoying strong sales, reporting that it had more than 1,000 paying customers already utilizing this platform.

Most of the VSAN customers identified in research for this report were small or midsize organizations (200 to 3,000 employees) facing rapid storage growth. Typically, organizations already had major investments in VMware server virtualization tools and/or virtual desktop infrastructure, and saw VSAN as a way to avoid investment in new SANs and/or arrays. Installations employed one or two nodes.

• Virtual Volumes (VVols) were introduced in 2012 as a Technology Preview and became generally available in vSphere 6. They complement VSAN in that they enable closer integration of disk, flash and hybrid arrays into vSphere environments.

VVols allow arrays to publish the services they offer (e.g. RAID, snapshot copying, replication) through the VASA interface in a manner that allows administrators to assign them to individual VMs. In principle, neither logical units (LUNs) nor volumes need to be configured on arrays if VVols are employed.

VVols have generated a great deal of interest in the VMware community. Early user experiences suggest, however, that deployments of VVols tend to require a great deal of investment in administrator time and effort. Ongoing maintenance overhead may also be high as storage environments and VMware solution sets evolve.

All major storage array vendors and many smaller ones support VVols, which have already emerged as a de facto industry standard.

The overall VMware SDS framework is based on a standard Control Plane and Data Plane design, which is still incomplete. According to the company, the Control Plane will be anchored by VMware Storage Policy-Based Management (SPBM), which is in turn based on vRealize Automation (formerly vCloud Automation Center). VSAN and VVols provide Data Services integrating server- and array-based storage respectively.

SDS forms a subset of VMware’s broader Software Defined Data Center (SDDC), a generalized scheme designed for the data center of the future. SDDC components, as defined by the company, include the vCloud Suite, vCenter Server and NSX for vSphere, a network virtualization solution set introduced in 2013. SDDC is, according to the company, an evolving design.

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Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 11

It is clear, however, that both the SDS framework and SDDC will consist largely of proprietary VMware solutions. Although the company has pledged to continue supporting OpenStack, its primary goal is to leverage the existing VMware server base. This will inevitably pose migration challenges for customers, who typically employ a variety of VMware products, including multiple versions of these.

Adoption of SDDC has to date been among early adopters, and even among these, implementation is still at an early stage. It can be expected that VMware will continue its practice of providing basic software components and APIs, while relying upon partners to handle integration for individual customers. Realization may take years.

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Detailed Data

Basis of Calculations Comparisons of five-year costs of ownership were based on calculations of raw capacities for Tier 1 and midrange arrays in the three installations as summarized in figure 7.

Retail Company Health Care Company E-commerce Company Average

BASE CONFIGURATION (TERABYTES)/PERCENT OF TOTAL CAPACITY Tier 1 496 81% 192 60% 69 39% 252 68%

Midrange 116 19% 127 40% 110 61% 118 32%

Total 612 100% 319 100% 179 100% 370 100%

END OF PERIOD CAPACITY (TERABYTES)/PERCENT OF TOTAL CAPACITY

Use of VMware Storage Tools Tier 1 551 54% 258 59% 148 34% 319 51%

Midrange 468 46% 180 41% 284 66% 311 49%

Total 1019 100% 438 100% 432 100% 630 100%

Use of IBM Virtual Storage Center Tier 1 197 22% 76 32% 72 23% 115 24%

Midrange 691 78% 165 68% 242 77% 366 76%

Total 888 100% 241 100% 314 100% 481 100%

Figure 7: Capacities by Tier – All Installations

Tier 1 arrays included IBM DS8000, EMC VMAX and HP 10000 systems in the retail, heath care and e-commerce companies respectively. Midrange arrays included IBM Storwize V7000, EMC VNX and HP 7000 series systems.

System costs include hardware acquisition and maintenance for capacity upgrades, systems software licenses and support, personnel and facilities. IBM VSC costs include licenses and software support for IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control, as well as servers upon which these solutions are deployed.

Personnel costs were calculated based on numbers of FTEs shown in figure 2. Calculations were based on annual average salaries of $91,369 for IBM VSC storage administrators and $77,048 for VMware administrators. Salaries were increased by 57.8 percent to allow for bonuses, benefits and other per capita costs.

Facilities costs include costs of data center occupancy and energy. Occupancy costs were calculated based on footprints for arrays and supporting power and cooling systems, including allowance for service clearances, aisles and other inactive areas. Costs were calculated per square foot per year for midsize data centers.

Energy costs were determined using vendor ratings and independent estimates for arrays, and for power and cooling equipment. Calculations were based on specific utilization levels and hours of operation. A conservative assumption for average cost per kilowatt-hour was employed. This remained constant over five years.

All cost calculations were for the United States.

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools 13

Cost Breakdowns These are summarized in figure 8.

Retail Company Health Care Company E-commerce Company

VMWARE STORAGE TOOLS Hardware & maintenance 513,348 1,187,658 188,395

Software & support 494,031 909,341 76,618

Personnel 1,489,377 851,073 455,932

Facilities 93,480 52,783 57,040

TOTAL ($) 2,590,236 3,000,855 777,985

IBM VIRTUAL STORAGE CENTER Hardware & maintenance 370,865 557,963 136,369

Software & support 979,573 471,488 268,822

Personnel 720,901 324,405 180,225

Facilities 63,801 37,232 35,545

TOTAL ($) 2,135,140 1,391,088 620,961

Figure 8: Five-year Costs of Ownership

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International Technology Group November 2015

Cost/Benefit Analysis of IBM Spectrum Storage: Comparing IBM Spectrum Virtualize and Control to VMware Storage Tools

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