Among enterprise customers seeking file storage, network-attached storage (NAS) gateways --rather than standalone NAS devices--are gaining popularity. Gartner forecasts that gateways will grow from less than 2000 units in 2003 to 4700 units in 2007, with revenue increasing from less than $120 million to $195 million.
IBM seems to have taken this news to heart, and introduced the TotalStorage NAS 500. It fronts IBM's Enterprise Storage Server (Shark), FastT and any non-IBM storage hardware resident behind its Storage Volume Controller (SVC) virtualization appliance. Based on a PowerPC processor and AIX, it offers 600% the NFS performance and 50% the CIFS performance of its NAS 300, a Windows-based gateway that IBM will discontinue this month.
IBM's David Vaughn, worldwide NAS product manager, says his customers aren't interested in "point products" -- i.e., standalone NAS arrays. And if they don't have a SAN? No problem. Just connect the NAS gateway and the SAN array with a direct Fibre Channel connection.
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Rich Castagna, Editorial DirectorEMC is also following the NAS gateway path -- or rather, its customers are. According to Chuck Hollis, EMC vice president of platforms marketing, "on the back end of 2003 we saw our gateway business absolutely spike." As a result, EMC's new philosophy is to make NAS in the form of "gateways, or gateway-capable." Case in point, EMC's new NS700 is composed of a Clariion CX700 and an NS700G gateway, which can be de-aggregated at will. NetApp's position on NAS gateways is a bit more delicate, as it has a vital standalone NAS business. But according to Ed Chow, NetApp director of product marketing for platforms and systems software, the company has seen a strong demand for its gFiler, and is actively looking to qualify it with additional arrays.
For more information:
Advice: Why a NAS gateway?Advice: How difficult will gateways be to manage?
Tip: Next generation NAS
About the author: Alex Barrett is Storage magazine's trends editor.
This was first published in March 2004
Storage Management Strategies for the CIO
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