Thursday, April 29, 2010

And EqualLogic comes back by growing EqualLogic engineering team by 50 per cent

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/22/dell_eqlc_eng_head/

Thursday, April 22, 2010

how is equallogic fairing under dell

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/21/dell_paula_long/

With paula long leaving some are worried about how EqualLogic will be handled.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Dell EqualLogic SAN experience and review

http://www.spoonapedia.com/2010/04/dell-equallogic-san-experience-review.html

Pro's


* Easy to use

* Great performance

* Lots of useful features

* No hidden feature costs

* Excellent support

* Snapshot integration with VMware/Exchange/SQL is a nice touch

* Regular firmware updates

Con's

* No WAN optimisation for replication

* Replication can be a little fiddly to maintain

Left Hand, New network RAID features

http://vstorage.wordpress.com/2010/04/05/the-new-networkraidfeatures-of-saniq-8-5/
Interesting new features, although seems complex

Prior to 8.5 you had the choice of Network RAID-10 with 2-way replica, 3-way replica or 4-way replica. i.e 2, 3 or 4 copies of your volumes distributed across the nodes for redundancy – the downside of this; decreased usable capacity.


8.5 introduces Network RAID-5 and RAID-6.

Network RAID-5 needs three data and one parity as a minimum configuration i.e 3+1 , meaning four nodes as a starting point.

Network RAID-6 needs four data and two parity as a minimum configuration i.e 4+2 , meaning six nodes are required initially.

Unlike Network RAID-10 which creates mirror replica(s) of a volume, the documentation states the new RAID levels stripe parity across all nodes in the cluster.

Network RAID–5 and and Network RAID–6 volumes require snapshots in order to achieve space utilization benefits.


This means that deleting the last snapshot of a Network RAID–5 volume causes its space requirement to be the same as a Network RAID–10 (2-Way Mirror) volume.

Similarly deleting the last snapshot of a Network RAID–6 volume causes its space requirement to be the same as a Network RAID–10+1 (3-Way Mirror) volume.

It is possible, therefore, for the storage cluster not to have enough space to accommodate the snapshot deletion.

Deleting the last snapshot of a Network RAID-5 or Network RAID-6 volume is not recommended.

Followers