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Enterprise systems may need redesign to benefit from solid state drives

By Beth Pariseau, Senior News Writer
16 Jul 2008 | SearchStorage.com

News and trends in the storage industry
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Test results from IDC on solid-state drives (SSD) suggest the performance gap between SSDs and traditional desktop hard drives might be narrower than previously thought. IDC says that system redesigns will be necessary -- in enterprise storage systems as well as PCs -- to get the full benefit from flash.

IDC declined to disclose the specific results of the benchmarking done on laptop PCs using standard tools such as BAPCo's MobileMark and PC World's WorldBench. But after testing 2.5-inch 7,200 rpm desktop drives against multilevel cell and single-cell SSDs, as well as hybrid devices, with a third-party lab, IDC researcher David Reinsel said that the results suggest previous lab tests on isolated devices may have been misleading.

"Many tests have been done comparing 4,200 rpm hard drives to SSDs," Reinsel said. "But 5,400 rpm is now mainstream and even 7,200 rpm disks are available." He added that the gap between performance in systems with 7,200 rpm 2.5-inch drives and systems with SSDs was much smaller than expected, mainly because of the performance of the entire system rather than just the storage device.

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The testing led Reinsel and his team to conclude that system redesigns will be necessary -- in PCs and enterprise storage systems -- to gain the full benefit from flash in consumer and enterprise systems. He suggested that systems will need the intelligence to recognize when they're dealing with an SSD and feed it data accordingly. SSDs will generally write much more slowly than they read.

"There will be what's called a 'period of interdependency' with this technology," Reinsel said. "It isn't just plug and play."

All of this suggests SSDs are at least a generation away from full usability, especially in the enterprise. However, IDC is sticking with its earlier forecast that deployment of SSDs in enterprise computing will pick up by 2010 and that enterprise computing applications will grow from 12% of SSD revenue in 2007 to more than 50% by 2011, Reinsel said.

"How many times in the hard drive industry have they announced that we're coming up to some barrier that can't be overcome?" Reinsel asked. "Yet they've always found ways to overcome the hurdles with new innovations, like perpendicular recording. I expect the same to happen with flash."

Reinsel was encouraged by the improved performance of hybrid drives in IDC's recent tests. "With the first generation of these devices, we were surprised at the lackluster performance," he said. "They were OS-dependent and required the system to recognize the specific device. The second generation is OS-agnostic and has the intelligence in the drives to learn user behaviors. If that's the difference we see in the second generation, what might we see in the third and fourth generations?"

Storage vendors differ on SSD integration strategies

Some storage vendors, including Pillar Data Systems, Hewlett-Packard and Fujitsu Computer Products of America, have also taken this tack, with HP saying it plans to integrate SSDs directly into the bus on its servers rather than putting them behind the network. Other vendors, like EMC, have pointed out that even with network latency, the overall loop between server and storage is still faster with SSDs.

Mike Willard, principal at enterprise storage reseller Soccour Solutions, is inclined to side with the latter view. "Flash drives are not the only solid-state drives in use, as there are still DDR products that we have placed in I/O-intensive database environments with great success," he wrote to SearchStorage.com in an email. " The performance gap between these products and 15,000 rpm FC drives has been significant in real-world application."

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