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Need for Speed? NetApp Launches the EF570

September 22, 2017 By Adam Bergh 1 Comment

Two questions for you…

1. Do you like speed? 2. Do you want to pay a lot for it?

 

If your answers are 1. Hell Yes! and 2. Hell No! – today is your day.

Here comes NetApp’s newest All-Flash dragster – The EF570

Before we get into the specs on this new kit, let’s review a little bit of a history.

NetApp’s E and EF Series storage systems run an OS called ‘SANtricity’.  SANtricity has shipped with over a million systems for over 20 Years, and is the #1 ‘SAN only’ OS deployed in the world. In short, this is no new comer to the industry and is a rock-solid enterprise class hardware platform.

SANtricity differs from NetApp’s flagship OS ‘ONTAP’ in that it’s streamlined architecture optimized for:

  1. low-latency workloads
  2. big data analytics
  3. bare metal applications
  4. price/performance considerations
  5. highest bandwidth in very dense form factor.

With that being said, let’s get into the newest in the line up:

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The EF570

The EF570 is the successor to the immensely popular EF560.

This newest system is rated for 1 Million 4k IOPS at .3ms of latency. That’s 300 MICRO seconds of latency – at ONE MILLION IOPS.

Oh, and how does 21 GBps of read throughput and and a total max capacity of 1.8PB work for you?

These numbers are up from about 850,000 IOPs at 800 micro seconds of latency and 12GBps of read throughput on the previous gen EF560. Not a bad bump.

I know what you’re thinking though, these are just marketing numbers, how about you show me an independent benchmark.

Take a look at NetApp’s SPC benchmarks below:

SPC-1 Benchmark Results

SPC-2 Benchmark Results

Guess who now holds the #1 spot all time in Price/Performance ratio in both SPC-1 and SPC-2 benchmarks?

Spoiler alert: It’s the EF570!

SPC-1 Results:

These show an incredible 500k SPC-1 IOPs with an overall response time of .26ms!

imageimage

SPC-2 Results:

The SPC-2 test is focused on throughput. Here you can see an incredible 21GBps throughput on a database query test!

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More On Performance

The pace at which NetApp keeps ramping up the performance on the EF platform is pretty staggering. Check out this comparison graph on the history of the EF lineup on OLTP workloads:

imageimage

What else is new?

An all new HTML5 management interface that’s now easier than ever with SANtricity 11.4. image

New host interfaces: 100Gb NVMe over InfiniBand, 32Gb FC, 25Gb iSCSI, 12Gb SAS, 100Gb IB

Yes that’s right, NetApp now has NVMe front-end interfaces. More on this to come in a future blog post!

When Can I Get It?!?!

The new EF570 starts to ship this October and is available for order today.

Filed Under: Data Center, NetApp, Storage Tagged With: E-Series, EF, NetApp

NetApp Announces Next Gen Hardware – FAS2600, FAS8200, FAS9000 and More

September 26, 2016 By Adam Bergh Leave a Comment

Today NetApp has dropped some huge news on the storage industry on Day 1 of NetApp Insight 2016 – An entirely refreshed FAS and All-Flash FAS (AFF) Portfolio and ONTAP 9.1!

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There is almost too much in here for one post, but I’ll get to the major highlights:

Introducing the FAS2600 – The next gen mid-range hybrid platform.

 

NetApp’s new FAS2600 is anything but entry level. The successor to the hugely popular FAS2500 series of hybrid-arrays the FAS2600 cranks the entry-level up to 11. Let’s start with what the platform is really all about – Speed. And lots of it. According to NetApp, this beast will be 3x the performance of the previous FAS2500 line. With these new specs I don’t doubt it:

  • 12 CPU cores: 3x more physical cores compared to FAS2500
  • 64GB memory: ~2x more memory compared to FAS2500
  • 8GB NVMEM: 2x more NVMEM compared to FAS2500

Published performance stats have the FAS2600 pushing over 100,000 4k NFS IOPs and 4GBps. How’s that for entry level?

Published specs are as follows vs. the FAS2552 which it’s replacing:

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Let’s take a look at the back of the new FAS2600:

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Some of the enhancements here are: Mini-SAS running at 12GB. Two dedicated 10GB SFP+ ports for the cluster network, and four 16GB/10Gbe UTA2 ports.

Take a closer look:

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Oh yeah, one more thing. Every FAS2600 comes with 1TB of NVMe on board as FlashCache! Now every system in the field will get all the flashy goodness with some NVMe. More to come on the FAS2600 when I get my hands on one.

Introducing the FAS8200 – The Evolution of Enterprise Hybrid FASimage

Gone are the days of having four models of FAS8000 to choose from. NetApp is simplifying their product lineup with the single model FAS8200. A three rack unit high dual controller chassis that will scream with performance. Check out the new specs vs the FAS8040, which we expect the FAS8200 to slot into in terms of list price:

  • ~50% performance improvement
  • 32 CPU cores: 2 times more cores
  • 256GB memory: 4 times more memory
  • Onboard NVMe M.2 flash (Love this)
  • 4 mini-SAS3 ports for external storage
  • 2 dedicated 10GbE cluster interconnect ports
  • 4 UTA2 16Gb FC or 10GbE ports; also supports GbE
  • 2 10GbE Base-T ports
  • PCIe Gen3 architecture

The published specs vs. a FAS8040

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Let’s take a look at the back of the FAS8200

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Some of the enhancements here are the four mini-SAS connections, 2 dedicated 10GBe ports for the cluster network and the 4 16GB FC/10Gbe UTA2 ports.

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My thoughts:

This is going to be the most popular controller for the mid-range and most enterprise customers. They shaved 3U off the 8040/8060/8080 which is always nice. The performance on this box is going to be very competitive in the market.

 

Introducing the FAS9000 – AKA “The  Beast!”

imageOk, now for something totally unexpected from NetApp – An entirely new platform unlike anything we have ever seen! The FAS9000! Whoa, where do we begin on this thing. It’s an entirely new concept from NetApp. A completely modular chassis where every component can be swapped out individually. That means the the CPU controllers have been entirely decoupled from I/O modules and NVRAM.

Here are some of the highlights:

  • Single model: FAS9000
  • Modular RAS focused architecture
  • I/O slots separate from controllers
  • Individually pluggable and serviceable I/O modules
  • Hot-swap capable after ONTAP® enhancements
  • Based on latest Intel Broadwell 18-core processors
  • Uses NVMe-connected SSDs for onboard flash
  • Up to 50% performance increase over FAS8080 EX
  • Enhanced I/O capabilities, higher throughput adapters
  • 40GbE, 32Gb FC
  • Full 12Gb SAS connectivity to external drives
  • In-band ACP support
  • ~50% performance improvement
  • 72 CPU cores: 80% more cores
  • 1024GB memory: 4x increase
  • DDR4 memory
  • 64GB NVRAM: 2x more NVRAM
  • High-speed HA interconnect, 80Gb bandwidth
  • Onboard NVMe-attached SSD flash
  • Enhanced I/O layout
  • I/O slots outside processor module
  • PCIe Gen3 slots, X16 wide lanes for each I/O slot
  • 10 I/O slots per controller (plus 2 NVMe slots)

Take a look at the back of the FAS9000

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Front View

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Here are some specs of the FAS9000 compared to the previous top end FAS8080. A nice bump in all categories. This should satisfy the largest of enterprise workloads.

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Let’s talk performance

Let’s compare the new gear’s performance vs the generation be replaced:

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I think these numbers speak for themselves. NetApp is really pushing the bar upwards on what a hybrid-array is capable of. Nice Work NetApp.

More NetApp Innovation – 40GBe and 32GB FC

On the heals of becoming the first storage vendor to offer 15.3 TB SSDs in their All-Flash Arrays, NetApp is first to market with 40GB Ethernet and 32GB FC Support!

32GB FC Notes:

  • NetApp is launching 32Gb FC target adapter in ONTAP 9.1
  • Will be supported in currently shipping FAS/AFF80x0 controllers
  • Also supported in new FAS & AFF platforms (FAS8200, FAS9000, AFF A300, AFF A700)
  • Provides FC target connectivity for end-to-end 32Gb FC installs
  • FC Initiator support a possible candidate for a future ONTAP release
  • Shipped with two short wave length SFP+ optics included

40GBe Notes:

  • NetApp is launching 40GbE adapter in ONTAP 9.1
  • Supported in new FAS & AFF platforms
  • FAS8200, FAS9000, AFF A300, AFF A700
  • Provides end to end 40GbE support from host to storage backend
  • 40Gb to 40GbE connection or fan out to 4 x 10GbE connections
  • QSFP+ Passive Copper and extended Short Reach(eSR) cables

Next Gen All Flash FAS –A300 and A700

Today NetApp has also announced new distinct naming conventions for the “AFF” All-Flash hardware lineup – The A300 and A700

The A300 is essentially the FAS8200 and the A700 is the FAS9000 with new bezels.

A300 Front View

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A700 Front View

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The hardware specs match the FAS8200 and FAS9000 systems.

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Let’s take a look at the performance of this hardware in the all flash configurations:

NetApp is estimating that the A300 can produce 50% higher throughput that an AFF8040, and the A700 100% improvement in IOPs at half the latency of a AFF8080. Not a bad step up in performance.

image

 

ONTAP 9.1 – What’s New

Stay tuned for more blog posts on a full breakdown of what’s new in ONTAP 9.1. For now here are some of the key highlights in the 9.1 release:

Update: ONTAP 9.1RC1 now available to download from NetApp Here: http://mysupport.netapp.com/NOW/download/software/ontap/9.1RC1/

Along with support for the new gen of hardware are two huge new features – Volume based encryption and “FlexGroups”.

NetApp Volume Encryption

Finally! Encryption on FAS and AFF arrays that do not require special disk drives!

Key Features:

  • Software encrypt any volume, any disk, any system
  • FAS, AFF, and ONTAP® Select
  • Lower cost: no need for hardware self-encrypting drives
  • More granular: volume level
  • Onboard key manager
  • Leverage storage efficiency features
  • Deduplication, compression, compaction
  • Future proof encryption solution
  • Software updates will keep the algorithms up to date

Some Additional Note on the new Volume Encryption Feature:

Unique protection for every data volume
• XTS-AES-256 data encryption key per volume
• Node root and SVM root volumes are not encrypted

$0 license required to enable NVE
• Encryption keys are stored and protected by Onboard Key Manager (OKM) – OKM included with ONTAP 9 at no cost

Supported platforms:
• AFF8000 and new AFF platforms
• FAS8000, FAS6280/90, and new FAS platforms
• Encrypting an existing volume
• Re-keying and decrypting a volume is done via a volume move operation
• FIPS 140-2 Level 2 compliance
• NetApp Storage Encryption (NSE) systems and external KMIP server still required

NetApp FlexGroups: massively scalable, high-performance data container

If you’re familiar with NetApp’s seldom used feature called “Infinite Volume” you will instantly recognize what NetApp is trying to do with FlexGroups. FlexGroups basically fix all the shortcomings of Infinite Volume and add a whole lot more to the picture.

The goal of FlexGroups is to create a Single Name Space that meets the following goals:

  • Linear scale for performance and capacity
  • Scales to 20PB and 400 billion files
  • Operational simplicity
  • Single mount point with automated load and space distribution
  • Consistent high performance
  • Predictable, consistent low latency
  • All-flash containers
  • Leading resiliency
  • ONTAP® nondisruptive operations
  • Flexibility to scale as you grow
  • 6x performance gain
  • 50% lower cost compared to nearest competitor
  • Inline efficiency guarantees with AFF

FlexGroup — Target Industries and Workloads

  • Software Dev
  • Software build environments
  • Product design
  • Product Dev/PLM
  • Life Sciences
  • Semiconductor logic design and physical design workflows
  • Seismic processing and interpretation
  • Rendering and post production
  • Genomics scanning/ingest, sequencing, interpretation/visualization

More to come of this feature as we get our hands on it in our labs.

That’s it for now folks! Stay tuned for the latest updates coming out of NetApp Insight 2016!

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Filed Under: Data Center, NetApp, Storage, Uncategorized Tagged With: AFF, FAS, NetApp, ONTAP

SolidFire Set To Change The Way We Buy Storage

June 2, 2016 By Adam Bergh 1 Comment

SolidFire_logo_RGB

 

During today’s analyst event in Boulder, Colorado, the home of SolidFire, there was some big news dropped on the storage industry.

SolidFire has announced a plan they are calling “FlashForward”. The “FlashForward” program is essentially a capacity based licensing model for the SolidFire software, designed to separate out the capital spend on hardware and software. SolidFire has grown up in the service provider space and as such has seen unique trends in the industry. Gone are the days of licensing being tied to hardware. Gone are the days of rigid pricing models that don’t fit the on-demand nature of today’s businesses. The whole idea here is to offer supreme flexibility in a dynamic allocation pricing model.

To quote Dave Wright, SolidFire Founder, VP & GM: “The days of ridiculous storage hardware prices combined with software licenses forever bound to a specific piece of hardware are over. Customers want a fundamentally more flexible and fair way to procure storage in the next generation data center. FlashForward delivers our customers a more agile, cost-effective and future-proofed approach to buying storage relative to the unnecessary burdens imposed by legacy storage purchasing models.”

The key components of the FlashForward program that help contribute to this substantial cost savings include:

● Fully Perpetual & Transferrable Licensing – no need to rebuy software when upgrading or replacing hardware

● Granular Capacity Licensing – greater alignment of software license purchases with actual usage

● Provisioned Capacity-Based Pricing – eliminates the cost uncertainty stemming from unpredictable data reduction rates and the reliance on high data reduction workloads to make All Flash Storage cost effective by selling software licenses based on provisioned capacity

● Pooled Capacity Model – Software licenses are enterprise-wide, eliminating stranded capacity and allowing for seamless repurposing of hardware to new sites as business needs dictate

● Built-In Economies of Scale – built-in capacity-tier discounts ensure pricing goes down as deployed capacity goes up

This is really going to be game changing for the segment of storage buyers that are creating dynamic storage environments and want to break away from the traditional model of storage purchasing.

New Product Announcements

Image result for SF19210

Today SolidFire is announcing an all new storage node as well: the SF19210 Node

Here are some of the juicy specs of this new beast of a storage node: Twice the performance and capacity in the SF Series – and lowest cost per GB/IOPS. Up to 40-80TB effective capacity, 100,000 predictable IOPS and sub-millisecond latency.

This new node is going to be well suited for those huge database application needing massive IOPs and throughput.

SolidFire is also announcing version 9 of Element OS – Code Named Fluorine

● Integration with VVols – By integrating SolidFire’s Quality of Service (QoS) with VMware VVols, customers can achieve the most granular control over storage performance on a per-virtual machine (VM) basis. This functionality allows them to set min, max and burst IOPS levels, ensuring exact amounts of capacity and guaranteed performance for even the most performance-sensitive VMs. Both capacity and performance can be changed on-the-fly without migrating data or impacting performance.

● Increased Fibre Channel (FC) scalability – Element OS 9 doubles the number of FC node connectivity in a SolidFire cluster to four, allowing users to scale out to 40 storage nodes. Fluorine also increases the limit of IOPS per FC node from 300,000 to 500,000 IOPS, resulting in 2,000,000 IOPS per a four-FC node cluster — over three times better aggregate performance.

● Expanded VLAN features – New features within Fluorine allow for tagging default networks and supporting more flexibility in multi-tenant networks by enabling customers to use overlapping IP addresses on VLANs via separate routing tables, preserving limited IP address resources.

● New user interface (UI) – Re-built from the ground up, the new UI consolidates the storage system data into a single dashboard, saving customers time and resources.

SolidFire’s Field CTO Val Bercovici has this to say about the OS: “Element OS 9 (Fluorine) is a demonstration of our commitment to continuously improving and building an innovative, solid and flexible all-flash array for a broad range of use cases. By simply upgrading to Fluorine, customers gain access to a new set of features that help them transition to a service delivery infrastructure,”  “Our unique software-based approach to storage allows customers to enable the next-generation data center in every data center and achieve what’s never been possible before.”

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Filed Under: Data Center, NetApp, Storage, Uncategorized Tagged With: NetApp, SolidFire

NetApp Announces ONTAP 9! All Release Info Here!

May 30, 2016 By Adam Bergh 5 Comments

imageUpdate: You can now download ONTAP 9 GA from here: http://mysupport.netapp.com/NOW/download/software/ontap/9.0/

There’s so much here, so let’s start with the obvious first – The Name Change. NetApp’s flagship OS “Clustered DataONTAP” is now simple just “ONTAP” with the new release to simply be known as “ONTAP 9”. What’s also a bit different is that NetApp will not refer to ONTAP as an OS, but rather just “NetApp® ONTAP® software.” This has a lot to do with the upcoming release of ONTAP Select, the version of ONTAP that will run on white box hardware (more on that later). Other slight name changes include the renaming of NetApp Cloud ONTAP to just “ONTAP Cloud.”

Here’s a chart comparing the old and new names:

image
What’s Not Changing:
Technical references to specific Data ONTAP products—including clustered Data ONTAP, Data ONTAP 8.x, and Data ONTAP operating in 7-Mode.

So why the name change and why now? In a word, simplicity. NetApp is heading in the right direction here. NetApp has never been known as the array that’s the most simple to use and operate, but you’ll see that with ONTAP 9 and all utilities going forward this will be a major focus for NetApp and it starts with the name change. A good portion of what’s new in the ONTAP 9 release is to simplify deployments and operations.

Let’s talk about new features in ONTAP 9

This is not meant to be a full list, just some of what I think is really cool.

1. New RAID format: RAID-TEC (Triple Erasure Encoding). This new RAID format is designed for triple parity protection for the larger SATA and SSD disk sizes. This will essentially allow for much larger RAID Group sizes on the large disks. Translation: More usable space and better protection of large drives sizes. RAID-TEC will be the default going forward on any drives 6TB and larger and required for drives 10TB and larger. You will be able to covert existing RAID-DP aggregates non-disruptively to RAID-TEC groups as well. Keep an eye out for an upcoming blog post for more in depth breakdown of RAID-TEC.

image

2. New inline data reduction technology: Compaction. From the company that pioneered data dedupe and compression on tier 1 data, comes a brand new technology from NetApp: Compaction. So what the heck is Compaction? First of all, NetApp currently has inline dedupe and inline compression. Compaction works inline in conjunction with dedupe and compression. The idea of compaction is that storage space usage can be considerably reduced if multiple I/Os or files can be stored together in a singular 4KB block. Compaction happens on logical blocks as they are being organized before being written to storage. NetApp claims this process uses very little CPU and has no performance impact. I’ll detail the space savings on existing volumes as soon as I have a chance to try out this new tech.

imageimage

 

3. Onboard Key Manager for Full Disk Encryption at rest! Making full disk encryption more easily accessible is always a good thing. One of the most welcome features of ONTAP 9 has to be onboard key management. This feature was designed to quickly and simply deploy encryption at rest technology. Only a single passphrase is required to set this up. All keys are automatically generated and stored locally in the ONTAP cluster. Most importantly, no need to manage encryption keys! Of course, external key management (KMIP) servers are still supported as needed, but I’m digging this new feature.

 

 

4. Advanced Data Partition Enhancements – NetApp has put a ton of work into enhancing the “ADP” feature that was release in ONTAP 8.3. If you recall, the idea of this feature was to return a ton of usable space that was locked up in the required root aggregates in ONTAP. This ended up being a huge improvement in usable space from RAW. The new enhancements in ONTAP 9 take this idea and expand on it further, which is now even more critical with the larger SSD drive sizes hitting the street. NetApp estimates that the changes in ADP will return 17% more usable space in 24-drive configurations vs 8.3.x implementations. Not bad at all.

image

Other Enhancements:

  • SnapLock returns. If you remember this feature from the 7-mode days, this gives storage operators WORM capabilities and greater compliance with data retention requirements by being able to lock data in place and guarantee that it has been unaltered.

 

  • All Flash Performance Enhancements. It seems that every release from NetApp bumps up performance on all-flash configurations, and ONTAP 9 is no different.  NetApp claims that ONTAP 9 should produce 60% more IOPS versus 8.3.1 code.

 

  • Faster take over and give back performance.  Planned and unplanned failovers should be much faster in ONTAP 9  vs. previous releases. NetApp is claiming ONTAP 9 should have these events down to 2-15 seconds.image

 

  • Enhanced Analytics. Keep an eye out for a new “head-room” metric that works in conjunction with the upcoming OnCommand Performance Manager 3.0. The idea of this new feature will be to show how “utilized” each node in a cluster is. This provides insight into how much additional workload your system is able to handle.

image

 

  • System Manager Enhancements. The evolution of the on cluster System Manager software continues with ONTAP 9:
    • New menu placements
    • Real-time performance graphs on any object in the cluster are some of the highlights

image

  • ONTAP Select – This one is going to require a whole dedicated blog post for, so keep an eye out for that. In a nutshell this is a full ONTAP 9 single node or 4-node cluster that runs as virtual machines on any hardware. This is the full goodness that is ONTAP with the full flexibility to run on any commodity hardware! This is certainly an evolution of ONTAP Edge, but EDGE was never multi-node clusters with HA. More to come on this.

Hardware Announcements

With all that is new with ONTAP 9, let’s not forget about all the new hardware announcements as well.

  • 15.3 TB SSD – Yes, you read that right. Don’t let the start-ups let you think they’ve cornered the market on innovation. NetApp is first to the market with 15.3TB SSD in a 2.5” form factor. Imagine a single 2 rack unit high – 24 drive shelf full of 15.3TB SSD drives. NetApp is now estimating a 4:1 effective capacity on All-Flash FAS running ONTAP 9. If those numbers hold, a single shelf of these drives would yield over 1PB effective capacity!
  • New 12GB SAS Disk Shelves –With shiny new SSD drives we’re going to need some new SAS shelves, correct? In step the new 12GB SAS drive shelves. Take a look at the new drive shelves being announced below. Historically the last digit in the NetApp shelf ID has been the SAS speed of the shelf. So why “C” you ask? “C” just happens to be “12” in hexadecimal.

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Want to try on ONTAP 9 for yourself? Neil Anderson over at FlackBox.com has produced a free ebook on how to set up an ONTAP 9 simulator on your workstation to try out all the lovely ONTAP goodness. You can get the free ebook HERE. Thanks Neil!

 

 

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Filed Under: Data Center, NetApp Tagged With: NetApp, ONTAP 9, Storage

Setting Up A NetApp E-Series Array In Under 30 Minutes

April 30, 2014 By Adam Bergh 6 Comments

SettingUpE-Series-Title

I wanted to put together a quick guide on setting up an E-Series array with a base configuration to show how fast you can have one of these online. In this example, I will use an EF550 array and demonstrate how we can go from out of box to having a LUN mapped in under 30 minutes.

This Guide Will Cover The Following:

  • The Software You Need
    • SANtricity Storage Manager
    • Open DHCP Server
  • Connecting To The E-Series Array
    • Starting Your DHCP Server
    • Launching SANtricity Manager
  • Creating Volumes on SANtricity

 

The Software You Need

SANtricity Storage Manager

We will need a couple pieces of software on your laptop to get things started. NetApp E-Series runs an operating system called “SANtricity”. You will need to download the SANtricity Storage Manager software from NetApp. In this guide we will be using SANtricity 11.10 which can be downloaded from Netapp HERE

Once downloaded, go ahead and install the software on your machine using all the default settings.

Open DHCP Server

The next piece of software that we will need need is a DHCP server. I run one locally on my Windows laptop. By default the E-Series arrays come preset to DHCP on the management ports. If you are connecting them to a network that has a DHCP server already running, you can skip this set. I prefer to directly connect the E-Series array to my laptop during initial setup. The DHCP server that I run on my laptop is called Open DHCP Server, which can be downloaded from HERE. Open DHCP Server is a light-weight open source DHCP server that can be run on your laptop that works perfect for setting up these E-Series arrays.

Configuring Open DHCP Server is pretty straight forward. I put a static IP on my laptop’s ethernet port of 192.168.1.1. Open the OpenDHCPServer.ini file and make the following changes:


[LISTEN_ON]
#Specify the Interfaces you would like Server to listen
#if you have more than one NIC card on your server
#always specify which cards will listen DHCP/DNS requests
#Requests from diffent Interfaces look for matching DHCP ranges.
#Requests from relay agents look for matching range to relay agent IP.
#upto 125 interfaces can be specified
#Default is All static Interfaces
192.168.1.1

[RANGE_SET]
#This is first and simple DHCP range section example,
#This example may be good enough for simple/home use.
#If you need range filters, look at example below
DHCPRange=192.168.1.2-192.168.1.3
;DHCPRange=192.168.5.1-192.168.5.254
#Following are range specific DHCP options.
#You can copy more options names from [GLOBAL_OPTIONS]
SubnetMask=255.255.255.0
;DomainServer=192.168.55.252
Router=192.168.1.1
#Lease Time can be different for this Range
;AddressTime=360


These settings will tell Open DHCP Server to listen in on your 192.168.1.1 interface and serve up two IPs via DHCP: 192.168.1.2 and 192.168.1.3.

 

Connecting To The E-Series Array

Starting Your DHCP Server

Connect your laptop to the E-Series management port or ports if you happen to have a switch with you. Launch Open DHCP Server. If all is well you should see output like this below:

 

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As you can see, my DHCP server is supplied 192.168.1.2 and 192.168.1.3 to the management ports.

Launching SANtricity Manager

Now, launch SANtricity Manager. When you launch the software for the first time you will be greeted by the Add Storage Array Dialog Box.

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Select Manual and enter the IP addresses your DHCP server gave to the array:

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You should now have your E-Series array listed and ready to connect to:

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Upon connecting to your array you will be greeted by a dialog box to create your disk pool. With SANtricty version 11.10, we now have the option of creating “Dynamic Disk Pools” instead of complicated RAID groups. This is now the preferred method of pooling your available space. Choose all disks and leave no spares. Super easy! To read more on Dynamic Disk Pools and why they rock, check out this brief white paper HERE.

In this example, my array only has 12 drives. I will add them all to the same pool. You can uncheck the “Allow me to create” check box so that it doesn’t take you to the volume creation wizard. We will do that later.

image

 

We now have available space to build volumes (LUNs) on the E-Series array. We should now set up access. If you have a Fiber Channel array you will need to zone it in real quick. My EF550 in this example is an 10GB ISCSI model. I will need to set the IP addresses on the ISCSI interfaces.

This is done from the Setup Tab, “Configure ISCSI Host Ports” button. It will launch a dialog box for you to specify the IP addresses for the HIC ports on the array. Simple enough.

image

The next order of business if to create a “Host Mapping”. A host mapping is basically inputting the end hosts WWPN or ISCSI IQN. This will give us something to map our LUNs to.

In this example I will be mapping to the ISCSI IQN of my laptop.

To start the host add wizard, go to the “Host Mapping” tab and right click on “Default Group” and Define a New Host.

 

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Type in the name for the host.

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Paste in your IQN, give it a user label and click the Add button.

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You should now have a host you can map a volume to.

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Creating Volumes on SANtricity

This is pretty easy and straight forward. Find your disk pool on the “Storage and Copy Services Tab”, right-click on the free capacity and choose “Create Volume”.

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The volume creation wizard is pretty straight forward. Set the size of the LUN and choose the host to map.

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Congrats, you should now have a new LUN on your host system to play with!

 

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That’s it folks! Thanks for reading. Please comment below if you have any questions on this setup or tweet me at @ajbergh

-Adam Bergh

Filed Under: Data Center, E-Series, NetApp, Storage Tagged With: E-Series, Guide, NetApp, Storage

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A Little About Me…

Adam Bergh is a storage and virtualization expert - cloud computing junkie. You can follow him on twitter and via this blog for insights and opinions on the latest SAN, virtual data center and cloud technology.

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Areas of Expertise:

Data Centers, VMware VSphere, NetApp SAN and NAS, Cisco UCS, Cisco Nexus, FlexPod, Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Planning

Certifications:

VMWare VCP4/VCP5, VTSP, NetApp NCIE, NCDA, Cisco UCS, CCNA, MCSE, MCSE+Security, MCSA, MCSA+Security, MCP, CompTIA Security+, Compellent SAN

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