Cisco andNetApp's FlexPod converged infrastructure continues to provide an ideal platform for delivering groundbreaking technologies and making those innovations safe and consumable for enterprise organizations. I'd like to introduce you to one innovation called 'MAX Data' that is proving to accelerate the performance of enterprise applications. I'd like to illustrate the concept with an analogy that hopefully most can relate to -the speed of getting served in a store to the speed of data in an application.
This fall, a new enhancement from our FlexPod partner, NetApp is coming and already showing increased application performance in the lab. Its an exciting, optional feature called "MAX Data". MAX Data is an innovative NetApp server-side storage technology that works with Intel Optane. When using Max Data, it presents Optane media as a traditional POSIX compliant file system enabling existing Unix and Linux based apps to work natively with Optane without rewrite. It's not a cache but it will deliver a persistent storage layer and eventually include integrated data protection and replication to protect application data against faults. So, FlexPod with MAX Data will bring the performance of persistent memory to many of the applications you run today, delivering orders-of-magnitude faster transactions. Check out the NetApp blog for even more details.
To illustrate the basic concept of MAX Data, I offer an example most people can probably relate to... automotive parts stores. As a teenager, I had an after-school job as a sales clerk in an automotive parts store. Customers would come in looking for parts to repair their old vehicles. Depending on the availability of the parts (i.e., the "data") there were four different speeds (i.e., "latency") they could expect. Let's say a customer came into the store looking for an oil-filter for his 1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass (yeah, it was many years ago!). He might expect that exchange to go something like this:
What if you could move as many high-volume auto-parts (i.e. "data") onto the store shelves (i.e. "memory") as possible without quite the typical expense? This is a little like the operating model many stores eventually went to in recent years -serve-your-self in a big-box warehouse. With MAX Data, NetApp's latest testing shows double the VM density and three times the storage performance which is like having less clerks with better productivity.
From the auto parts store perspective, this would provide maximum satisfaction to as many customers ("applications") as possible, benefiting the store (i.e. the FlexPod within your data center) immensely. It would also result in faster through-put and likely more revenue for the store due to no extra steps and wait-time.
This is like what adding persistent memory with MAX Data does. Max Data is designed to deliver both accelerated performanceand data services like adding a sophisticated security system so the inventory (again, your "data") is protected from fire and theft (i.e., rapid recovery), up to the last transaction, in the event of sudden database server failure.
Is all this available on a FlexPod CVD today?... no. But we are continuing to test and run configurations that are giving some terrific results. Check out our Accelerated Data for FlexPod white paper. That white paper is a living document and we'll keep updating it as we test out new features, new use-cases and new performance characteristics with this exciting new technology on FlexPod.
Cisco and NetApp's FlexPod converged infrastructure is working to provide an ideal platform for delivering groundbreaking technologies and innovations that are safe and consumable for enterprise organizations. We'll be at VMWorld this August, so be sure to come check us out at both the NetApp and Cisco booths for more information.
In late October we'll be at "Insight", NetApp's annual showcase. We'd love to see you at either event and show how using these two powerful technologies can help you with your company's unique needs.