Lucas Mearian
Senior Reporter

Clustered NEC arrays scale from gigabytes to a petabyte

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May 10, 20074 mins

NEC storage series achieves new benchmarks in scalability, performance, and availability

Taking a cue from its supercomputing legacy, NEC Corporation of America on Wednesday introduced a series of storage arrays that achieve new benchmarks in scalability, performance, and availability for the storage vendor by scaling from a terabyte to a petabyte nondisruptively and offering different hard drive classes in the same enclosure.

The arrays have Fibre Channel front ends, but they use both Serial ATA (SATA) and Serial SCSI (SAS) hard drives on the back end, allowing users to create tiered storage infrastructures within a single rack. The arrays can also be configured to withstand up to two disk drive failures at a time with RAID 6.

The D-Series storage arrays scale from 219GB to 1.15PB capacity and from 2GB to 128GB of memory. The systems also scale from four to 64 4Gbit/sec. Fibre Channel ports, and from three to 1,156 disk drives.

Mike Fisch, an analyst at Clipper Group in Wellesley, Mass., said the D-series is unique because it can scale from an array for small or medium-size businesses to a fully functional, enterprise-class system.

The one drawback to the new D-series arrays is that NEC is based in Japan and is relatively new to the U.S. market, so customers who purchase D-series products will be doing business with a lesser-known storage vendor, Fisch said.

The arrays come in the following five models:

— D1-10, which comes with four Fibre Channel ports, up to 72 SAS and/or SATA hard disk drives and 2GB memory;

— D3-10, which comes with 12 Fibre Channel ports, up to 144 SAS and/or SATA hard disk drives and 4GB of memory;

— D8-10, which comes with 16 Fibre Channel ports, up to 384 SAS and/or SATA hard disk drives and 32GB of memory;

— D8-1020, which is a two-node system that comes with 32 Fibre Channel ports, 768 SAS and/or SATA drives and 64GB of memory; and

— D8-1040, which is a four-node system that features up to 64 Fibre Channel ports, 1,536 SAS and/or SATA drives, and 128GB of memory.

The systems are modular in that an entry-level or midrange D3-10 system that is 2U (3.5 in.) high can be upgraded nondisruptively by swapping out its controller for that of a D8-series controller, which can then scale to a high-end, enterprise-class system.

“You can start from under 1TB of capacity and upgrade a thousand-fold nondisruptively to 1.1PB,” said Victor Gamaly, a senior product marketing manager for the storage business in NEC. “Part of this technology is derived from our supercomputer business. That’s basically the high-speed switches that allow you to do clustering.”

The D-series systems come with four power supplies and allow administrators to set the systems to spin-down disk drives not being used to conserve on power. For example, an administrator could manually set disks to shut off at 7 a.m. and turn back on at 11 p.m. for backups, NEC said.

Because the arrays all use the same management software, an administrator can manage both an enterprise-class system in a data center and an entry-level system at a remote office through a single portal, according to Gamaly.

The software also offers multiple data replication techniques, including snapshots, full internal and external synchronous replication for business continuity and synchronous remote data replication for disaster recovery.

“From one Web-client GUI interface, you can create LUNs, delete LUNS, perform backups, create tiers of storage and decide which volumes are for snapshots and which volumes are for full data copies,” Gamaly said.

The D-Series arrays mirror cached data for business continuity. Gamaly said the systems create four sets if mirrored cache, so if one mirror fails another takes over dynamically. “So you’re still writing at electronic speeds versus writing at electromechanical speeds [on disk drives],” he said.

The D1-10 starts at $15,000 and the D3-10 starts at $26,000. Both are currently available. Prices for the D8-Series range from $43,000 to $153,000. The D8 series will be available at the end of summer, NEC said.

Lucas Mearian

With a career spanning more than two decades in journalism and technology research, Lucas Mearian is a seasoned writer, editor, and former IDC analyst with deep expertise in enterprise IT, infrastructure systems, and emerging technologies. Currently a senior writer at Computerworld covering AI, the future of work, healthcare IT and financial services IT, his 23-year tenure has included roles such as Senior Technology Editor and Data Storage Channel Editor, where he covered cutting-edge topics like blockchain, 3D printing, sustainable IT, and autonomous vehicles. He has appeared on several podcasts, including Foundry’s Today In Tech. He also served as a research manager at IDC, where he focused on software-defined infrastructure, compute, and storage within the Infrastructure Systems, Platforms, and Technologies group.

Before entering tech media, he served as Editor-in-Chief of the Waltham Daily News Tribune and as a senior reporter for the MetroWest Daily News. He’s won first place awards from the New England Press Association, the American Association of Business Publication Editors, and has been a finalist for several Jesse H. Neal Awards for outstanding business journalism. A former U.S. Marine Corps sergeant who served in reconnaissance, he brings a disciplined, analytical mindset to his work, along with outstanding writing, research, and public speaking skills.

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