Storage spawns where it’s needed, from sensibly architected SANs serving transaction-intensive systems to storage appliances
bought impulsively to fill a departmental need. That leaves IT to manage many islands of storage strewn across the enterprise
at a time when the need for centralized storage management has never been greater. Compliance requirements, multimedia-rich
applications, and a proliferation of databases are pushing IT departments to increase the size and complexity of storage networks
across the enterprise.
“I tell our senior management that we grow our storage at a rate of 40 to 50 percent per year and they can’t believe it,”
says Lev Katz, datacenter operations manager for EMC storage customer MidAmerica Bank. “But then, if our business grew 30
percent last year, it makes sense for storage to grow the same amount, if not more. You have that many more people, you have
that much more e-mail, you have that many more files.”
Point solutions and hands-on labor are no longer enough. To help IT wrap its arms around the storage problem, major storage
vendors such as AppIQ, Computer Associates, CreekPath, Crosswalk, EMC, HP, IBM, Softek, and Veritas offer a range of storage-management
software that enables administrators to find and manage all the components of a storage area network.
“Automated storage management is an easy means to create operational efficiencies and help reduce IT costs,” says Matt Fairbanks,
director of product marketing for storage management leader Veritas. ‘The IT workforce is more productive and they are able
to deploy more assets, increase storage capacity, and reduce complexity.” (See our Test Center Reviews of Veritas CommandCentral and Veritas Backup Exec Suite.)
Each vendor’s applications vary in the number and type of SAN devices they support. If you’re lucky enough to have standardized
on a single server platform and single storage vendor on a single Fibre Channel SAN, your environment will be relatively easy
to install and manage. Distributed, heterogeneous, wide-area SANs, however, can be tough.
“As coincidence would have it, 90 percent of our storage is EMC-provided,” says Scott Roemmele, SAN engineer team leader for
online mortgage lender Quicken Loans. “But we do design most of our platforms to be open vendor — they don’t really have to
be used with one particular thing. EMC Control Center actually has a lot of open-endedness to where it will actually recognize
other vendors' storage as well.”