As high-end storage systems come out with new features, those features tend to migrate down over time to systems intended
for the smaller enterprise. Two midrange SANs, Compellent’s Storage Center 3.3 and Xiotech’s Magnitude 3D 3000e, are taking
advantage of this, offering a wealth of features that as recently as six months ago were limited to much more expensive systems.
The list of these previously high-end capabilities includes multiple tiers of storage (15,000-rpm Fibre Channel, 10,000-rpm
FC, SATA), migration of data from one tier to another, the capability to migrate data from a RAID10 FC volume to a RAID5 SATA
volume without interrupting access to the data, and the capability to expand existing volumes without reformatting. Given
the rapid growth of data in most enterprises and the order-of-magnitude difference between high-end SCSI or FC drives and
SATA-based storage, these features -- especially multiple tiers of storage in one system -- give administrators much-needed
flexibility.
The products are comparable in price and features, although Compellent has an edge in performance and maturity -- what takes
a dozen steps with the Xiotech system can be accomplished in a couple of steps with the Compellent system. It’s not that the
Xiotech system won’t do what the Compellent box will do; it’s just that it’s more complicated.
Compellent Storage Center 3.3
To test these systems, I attached them to Windows and Linux hosts, created volumes and mapped them to specific hosts, created
replicas of the initial volumes, expanded the volumes beyond their initial size, migrated volumes from first- to second-tier
storage, and ran IOmeter performance tests.
The Compellent Storage Center consists of a storage controller and one or more drive shelves. The drive shelf accommodates
16 SCSI U320 or ATA drives. Setting up the system was as simple as installing the drives in the drive shelf, powering on,
and connecting to the browser-based interface.
Compellent’s administrative interface is clean and easy to navigate, showing a level of maturity that Xiotech can’t quite
match. Creating volumes is straightforward, and all tasks you might need to perform are readily accessible and well documented
through the help system. A topology view allows you to see a logical map of the SAN and to click and drag to connect servers
to volumes; a folder view allows assigning management of specific server/volumes to specific users.
Many of the setup tasks are automated, so administrators who haven’t been specifically trained on storage administration will
find them less daunting. Wizards make initial setup straightforward. Just as simple to perform are tasks such as setting up
replication or data migration.
The automated data migration is an excellent example of Compellent’s streamlining work. There are three tiers of storage available:
RAID10 on high-performance drives, RAID5 on high-performance drives and SATA drives. You can define a high-performance partition
as tier one or two, and a SATA partition as tier three.