are you really though? are your raid sets configured evenly across cabinets? its one thing to be 2N at the head/controller node its another to be 2N across raid sets across cabinets and JBODs. that can be done with EMC but it isn't as easy.Im 2n for most things
if you can accomplish the same thing for 1/4 the cost, why wouldn't you?then you should have the money to buy a branded hardware solution if you really care about your data and business that much.
you would be surprised how good their support is. further, i also have a hardware partner to fall back on.that impacts your nexenta install, but it will be outside the realm of nexenta support.(Hardware).
a good storage admin would figure it out in a week while working with nexenta support who has full documentation of my configs.Unless there is a training class that has the exact config you have, it would be impossible for someone to pick it up out the shoot.
and? really not terribly difficult to hit 5 9s of availability. uptime be damned idc if i reboot my heads monthly, i don't but as an example if that was required (it isnt) as long as the data is available is all that matters.I can get 5 9's of uptime with my gear, and deliver the performance by business partners need.
i cant or you cant? cause it is quite doale and done a lot.and you can pretty much expect it to perform the same way every time. You can't do that with a DYI solution. It's impossible.
i read updates and unless i plan on upgrading CPUs i rarely upgrade the bios. if it isn't rebooting, crashing, or has a remote exploit what is the point?Your hardware/software stack could completely break because your server manufacture did a firmware update that busted the way your sas cards work.
what about those flare updates that went wrong? i just did an OS upgrade that went fine with zero downtime ... that is what a HA system is for.I don't have that problem with a solution that my vendor tested for me when I do a code upgrade on it.
as opposed to my variables?The amount of hardware variables are pretty small.
Lets see,
Intel servers ... same as EMC
STEC SSDs ... same as EMC
Seagate SAS drives ... same as EMC
JBODs made by the same folks who make them for EMC, just not with the EMC logo ... ok you got me there i'm totally hosed.
that is a nice if, however when was the last time you went to a youtube video and it didn't load and wasnt removed for violation or deleted by the OP? Do you really think it is ok for youtube to randomly not serve a video request? you don't think they lose money for downtime? really?Youtube while a good example, is also a bad example. If a youtube video doesn't load.. People goto the next video..
not just mine, i host datastores for quite a few fortune 1000. their admins are all the same, just like you. they come in hating on 'that nexenta thing' and during the migration there is always something that goes wrong and they instantly point the finger at me but it is ALWAYS some other problem. a few months later after zero downtime, better performance, and half the cost they all shut up.With the work that I do, if the service my company provides doesn't work, we go out of business. I would almost guess the same for you, if one of your large data stores took a dumb, there would be a fairly large impact to your business.
im in the data center business. people come to us for VPDC/cloud, IaaS, colo+services etc. typically they come to us to cut costs and improve uptime. typcially the C levels are also somewhat disappointed in their own IT ... some of it is unjustified but much of it is (especially costs).While I do agree, yes, there are some terrified admins.. but that's a small view of things.
not just storage, dont get me started on cisco.I think your view of the storage landscape is a bit jaded.
my tier0 benchmarked out to 600k IOPs ... not over the wire i would lose probably 40% of that over the wire but none the less i hit 600k iops. my hybrid pools are good for 50k ish. i can go higher on the hybrids, just haven't had a need yet. once the quad socket sandy stuff is blessed by nexenta i double my controller throughput and at least double my IOP capability. i can do in place upgrades on that too, sure, its a new mobo/cpus/ram but it will be a zero downtime upgrade. will probably run about 30k for upgrade since i can reuse the ram and HBAs. how much would it cost to double the performance potential of your EMC heads?Anyone and any solution can provide giant dumping grounds of space. Not everyone can provide the level of performance,
ease of use is relative. i can train someone to present nfs or iscsi to clients in a week. replacing failed drives, 2 weeks. the ins and outs of the hardware config and why it is built the way it is might take another day or two. anyone that is comfortable with linux/unix can ick it up pretty easily really and there is a nice gui that makes certain things a breeze (cli is better imo but im weird like that).ease of use and level of uptime except a few key players.
ok cool, just know that if they ever start talking about cost cutting and go looking for a data center partner to help them cut costs or completely take over their hardware you're going to be competing with guys like me delivering the same or better performance at a lower cost.I have zero problems presenting a 7 figure quote to my leadership when I know it's aligned with their goals and the level of service they expect from me.
I just went to nexentas website and did a search for "uptime".. Found 1 hit in regards to how things are monitored. I did the same with EMC's front page, and first document, dated 2007 talking about CX3 Clarrions has 5 9s of uptime right here on page 4. If a storage vendor doesn't brag about uptime, then its a storage vendor I would be wary of.tell your boss i'll sell him a 5 9's SLA for less than he spends on IT now ...
EMC tried to buy my business. we game them our requirements. 2 HA/clustered setups for two different locations with X usable space at the main location and half that at the DR site. we also had a raw IOP requirement for the main location. the first quote came back at just under 3 million (2x vnx7500s, 2 x 5700s). we said we'll continue exploring our options.400% markup is silly, and rarely if ever see that. If my sales guy tried to pull those kinds of shenanigans.. then we just get a different sales guy.
brought DDN in, great company, amazing hardware, still too expensive but they were under 7 figures.
by this time i had the hardware config done for a nexenta based HA solution. all LSI, all SAS, lots of SSD, 512GB ram in each server head, screaming fast ... total cost for 4 heads, licensing and all the JBODs/drives was just over 400k .. i also learned a lot from DDN in how they lay out the raid sets i hadn't thought of that before but now that is part of how i build my pools.
anyway, EMC kept calling and said they would do anything. we told them what we were building with nexenta and if they could match it ok cool. they dropped like 83% off list and were still 100K more expensive only now we didnt have HA at either site ...
i spent less and got over twice the usable space and a boat load more SSD AND got HA and you're telling me they aren't marking up 400%? i have seen their quotes. i've talked to my hardware partners who sell directly to EMC. their markup starts at 400% and if you run extreme volume they'll drop their shorts to move the hardware however what they will not do, under any circumstances is discount the support which is done on a pre-discounted rate.
if your setup costs 5 million but they really really love you and take 50 percent off and you spend 2.5 million for the hardware guess what the support is based on ... not 2.5 million ... 5 million.
how much do you buy 3TB SAS drives for from EMC? I'm guessing about 900 dollars, at best. that is 3 times the cost of buying a SAS drive direct from seagate. the only difference is a sticker and a special firmware. thats the only difference.
EMC are fucking criminals man.