SOURCE: The StorageIO Group
January 23, 2008 08:00 ET
StorageIO Outlines Intelligent Power Management and MAID 2.0 Storage Techniques, Advocates New Technologies to Address Modern Data Center Energy Concerns
Intelligent Power Management and MAID 2.0 Equal Energy Efficiency Without Compromising Performance
STILLWATER, MN--(Marketwire - January 23, 2008) - The StorageIO Group, a leading data storage
industry research analyst firm, today outlined Intelligent Power Management
(IPM) and MAID 2.0, new next-generation storage techniques that provide
high energy efficiency along with the highest levels of performance in
storing and rapidly accessing enterprise data.
The characteristics of IPM and MAID 2.0 mark a significant evolution beyond
traditional MAID (Massive/Monolithic Array of Idle Disks), the data storage
technology that provides energy savings by putting unused disks into
standby mode, keeping them ready for use but not requiring full power usage
when they are not being accessed. IPM aligns variable performance and
energy savings to different applications and data on a granular basis
across different types of storage media and systems. These include general
purpose on-line or primary as well as near-line storage systems. MAID 2.0,
or second generation MAID, is an example of variable power and energy
savings that can be used to avoid application performance bottlenecks,
aligning the right level of performance and energy savings when and where
needed.
First-generation MAID technology delivered marked savings in energy
consumption by avoiding energy usage, but in some cases has been
accompanied by a significant drop in performance. MAID 2.0 implementing
IPM addresses those concerns, according to Greg Schulz, founder and chief
analyst of StorageIO.
"As an industry, we are seeing storage technologies shift from energy
avoidance to more intelligent and effective use of energy combined with
best practices ultimately leading to more energy efficient data canters,"
Schulz said. "IPM approaches including MAID 2.0 technology provide great
solutions for today's increasingly energy conscious customers without any
compromises in performance. We've reached the point where it's imperative
that we aggressively adopt storage technologies that address both sides of
this equation, that is, balancing performance, availability, capacity and
energy consumption in a more flexible and scalable manner to meet different
application service level requirements."
American data centers alone consumed 61 billion kilowatt hours of
electricity in 2006 at a cost of about $4.5 billion. Without changes in
electricity consumption and improved efficiency, the Environmental
Protection Agency estimates that data centers will consume more than 100
billion kilowatt hours by 2011, further stressing an already strained
national electric grid and driving energy costs even higher.
Spinning hard disk drives (HDDs) and their enclosures account for up to 75
percent of the power usage in commonly deployed storage solutions,
according to StorageIO's research. First-generation MAID solutions have
been rather binary, either the HDDs are on or they are off, not leaving a
lot of flexibility to address different application service requirements.
Schulz mentioned that some MAID vendors have distanced themselves from
using the term MAID to avoid negative performance implications associated
with first generation MAID. MAID technology is evolving and maturating
similar to how early generation RAID systems did 10-15 years ago. There is
a shift from purpose-built limited MAID level functionality to more
flexible and adaptable multiple MAID level storage solutions taking place.
These next-generation solutions offer variable energy savings based on
specific application and data needs over different types of HDDs on a more
granular basis. This approach will help close the gap between a solution's
energy efficiency capabilities and the diverse and variable performance
needs of a customer's applications.
MAID 2.0 leverages IPM technology to align storage performance and variable
energy consumption to match the applicable level of service being
supported. For example, a storage system can implement MAID Level-0 (no
real energy savings, no impact on performance) for active data. For less
active data, an administrator can choose a user-selectable setting to
transition the storage system or some smaller subset to MAID Level-1, which
reduces power consumption by retracting HDD read/write heads. For even
better power savings, HDDs, RAID groups or other units of storage
granularity can be put into MAID Level-2 mode, which reduces the speed of
the drive platters. The best energy savings are achieved by MAID Level-3,
which puts the storage system or some smaller granularity of the storage
into a suspended standby mode or powers it down completely.
Schulz sees an industry shift from dedicated MAID platforms to primary and
secondary storage systems implementing intelligent power management and
second generation MAID 2.0. A clear industry trend is a shift from
electrical power energy avoidance to intelligent and more effective power
management combined with best practices, data footprint reduction including
archiving, compression and de-duplication among other technologies and best
practices to lead to more energy efficient IT data canters.
The StorageIO Group explores these issues in detail in two new Industry
Trends and Perspectives white papers entitled, "MAID 2.0: Energy Savings
without Performance Compromises" and "The Many Faces of MAID Storage
Technology." These and other Industry Trends and Perspectives white papers
addressing power, cooling, floor space and green storage related topics
including "Business Benefits of Data Footprint Reduction" and "Achieving
Energy Efficiency using FLASH SSD" are available for download at
www.storageio.com
About The StorageIO Group
The StorageIO Group (www.storageio.com) is a technology analyst firm
providing services to technology vendors, end users and the industry at
large. The firm was founded by storage veteran, author and industry analyst
Greg Schulz, whose expertise encompasses Unix, Windows, Mainframe, OpenVMS
and other hardware, network, and software environments in IT data centers
including at an electrical power generating and transmission utility, as a
vendor and as an industry analyst. StorageIO is also creator and sponsor of
the power, cooling, environmental and green storage and IT information
portal www.greendatastorage.com