Home > Storage Technology News > EMC and Ibrix elbow out Panasas at Disney Studios
Storage Technology News:
EMAIL THIS

EMC and Ibrix elbow out Panasas at Disney Studios

By Beth Pariseau, News Writer
23 Jan 2007 | SearchStorage.com

News and trends in the storage industry
Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google

Walt Disney Studios purchased fellow animation powerhouse Pixar Animation Studios almost a year ago in a blockbuster $7 billion deal. With the deal came some turnover in creative executives and sparked new ideas about the direction of Disney's next animated feature, Meet the Robinsons due out in March -- changes that Disney feature animation vice president of technology Jack Brooks said were "not trivial."

"It required us to install an entirely new system in three to four weeks to accommodate all the changes we were making," Brooks explained. Disney is heavily reliant on 25 million "texture" files -- small but high-resolution images that are grafted onto 3-D models to create colors and textures, like skin, hair or fur on characters.

More info on NAS clusters
Amazon search unit deploys SAN file system

High-end clustering users contemplate snapshots

Isilon adds snapshots, makes a play for mainstream NAS
A major character usually appears in at least 50% to 75% of the shots and Disney was continually hitting about 1 million of those 25 million texture files. This was creating "hot spots" in the firm's Panasas Inc. cluster that Brooks said was becoming outdated. Add to the process the revisions from the new creative executives, and it would far exceed the capabilities of the older network attached storage (NAS) cluster.

Disney, Brooks said, figured out it needed to do two things: replace the Panasas cluster and its included storage with a system three times as big, with three times as much throughput, within a month, tops.

"It was a complete panic," Brooks said. Because of that, the company reached out to Ibrix, already battle-tested by its subsidiary.

Pixar has been using the Ibrix SAN filesystem since the production of its latest feature, Cars. Brooks said the recommendation from Pixar was what spurred Disney to work with Ibrix, but that the system Disney put together was newer, bigger and faster.

"They bought their's a year to two years ago," Brooks said, adding that the moviemaking processes of the two studios remain largely separate. "Ours has much more cache on the Dell Inc. NFS heads -- 32 GB each, much more memory and more capacity." Disney also has a bigger "render farm" of 2,000 server nodes that puts all the digital information into each animation frame.

NetApp OnTap GX wasn't a consideration

Behind the Dell servers and the Ibrix file system is the usual suspect: EMC Corp. Disney has two EMC CX3-80 storage area networks (SAN) running at the back end of this system. The studio also added two new Network Appliance Inc. (NetApp) filers for Tier-2 and Tier-3, using a FAS 6070 Fibre Channel-based system and a FAS 6030 with 500 GB SATA disks respectively.

Asked whether NetApp's OnTap GX clustering system had been a possibility, Brooks responded, "No -- at the time, it really wasn't ready to go." (GX had just started shipping last June; Brooks said the purchase process for the Ibrix system took place around July and August last year.) Otherwise, according to Brooks, Disney is a large NetApp shop in general, and he said he will be evaluating OnTap GX again at a later date.

"For right now, though, we're completely happy with the EMC/Ibrix system," he said. Disney did not evaluate newer Panasas products due to time constraints.

The studio is "in transition" between finishing Meet the Robinsons and starting its next animated feature. The next step after completing Meet the Robinsons footage will be to "park" the files on the Tier-3 NetApp filer for awhile before sending them off to archival media, which Brooks declined to describe in detail.

"There isn't a lot of migration with our tiered storage system," he said. "It's designed so that we put the correct data in the correct place only once or twice during the whole process and then just leave it there. It's more about freeing up performance on the most heavily used files than anything else."



Tags: NAS managementVIEW ALL TAGS

Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google


RELATED CONTENT
NAS management
Storage Decisions Chicago 2009 Session Downloads
Isilon expands with transactional and archive systems
Digital Reef aims for data classification scalability
EMC adds file-level single instancing, Flash to Celerra
Scale-out NAS poised for growth
How to determine a NAS system's scalability
Top five NAS tips of 2008
Storage Decisions San Francisco 2008 Session Downloads
Sun repackages open storage NAS products
Attune file virtualization software reports on Windows NAS performance
NAS management Research

RELATED GLOSSARY TERMS
Terms from Whatis.com − the technology online dictionary
direct-attached storage  (SearchStorage.com)
file transfer  (SearchNetworking.com)
File Transfer Protocol  (SearchEnterpriseWAN.com)
file virtualization  (SearchStorage.com)
NAS accelerator  (SearchStorage.com)
NDMP  (SearchStorage.com)
Network File System  (SearchWinIT.com)
network-attached storage  (SearchStorage.com)
storage filer  (SearchStorage.com)
unified storage  (SearchStorage.com)

RELATED RESOURCES
2020software.com, trial software downloads for accounting software, ERP software, CRM software and business software systems
Search Bitpipe.com for the latest white papers and business webcasts
Whatis.com, the online computer dictionary



Backup Solution Directory and Archiving Reseller Resources
TechTarget Storage Media
Storage Magazine View this month\\'s issue and subscribe today.
Storage Decisions Apply online for free conference admission.
SearchStorage.com
HomeNewsMagazineTopicsLearningMultimediaWhite PapersBlogsEventsAbout Us

About Us  |  Contact Us  |  For Advertisers  |  For Business Partners  |  Site Index  |  RSS
TechTarget provides technology professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective purchase decisions and managing their organizations' technology projects - with its network of technology-specific websites, events and online magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Site Map




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2000 - 2009, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts