The History of Flash in a Flash

August 28, 2012

Image representing Fusion-io as depicted in Cr...

Image via CrunchBase

Many people don’t know that flash isn’t really all that new. While it’s only gained popularity in the past decade, flash was invented more than 25 years ago to be used as a new form of memory. Over the years though, developers instead implemented it as storage because flash memory is persistent, like disk drives.

The history of flash is so interesting, our team at Fusion-io wanted to share a bit of it with the world. So we created this whiteboard video to show how flash has changed the world we live in and is now powering the digital age. Along the way, we also reveal the secrets behind the Fusion ioMemory difference.

So take a few minutes and learn how flash is powering both sides of the Internet, how you can unlock its true potential, and how it’s changing the world.


Best Practices for Deploying ioMemory in VDI Environments

July 23, 2012

Image representing Fusion-io as depicted in Cr...

Image via CrunchBase

Fusion Powered VDI servers deliver uncompromised I/O to support a guaranteed number of users at a far lower cost than centralized storage.

The benefits of Fusion-io for VDI are significant, and include the following:

  • More virtual desktops per virtual server
  • High performance even during peak loads
  • Faster clone generation
  • Low latency for faster end user desktop experiences
  • Reduced reliance on expensive, complex external storage
  • Lower overall cost per desktop

VMware View VDI environments are ideal for ioMemory. The figure below illustrates a Fusion Powered VDI architecture.

Figure 1. Example ioMemory and VMware View VDI architecture

Fusion’s Technical Guide 209 – Deploying ioMemory in VMware Environments provides information on how to use ioMemory, VMware View 5.x, and ESXi 5 in VDI configurations to increase desktop performance and density, while lowering costs. For example, you can provision 100 or more virtual desktop sessions per server, with the ability to scale overall installation nearly linearly by adding more servers — while minimizing external storage costs.

For more information please contact http://www.c24.co.uk

 


Evolution Beats Extinction: Big Data Opens New Niches with Fast Flash Memory

July 20, 2012

65 million years ago, a six-mile-wide asteroid ended the reign of the dinosaurs, reopening ecological niches that were promptly filled by members of the class Mammalia, one of which, a long time later, went on to invent things like writing, the wheel, and information technology.

Big Data—ultra large scale data storage and analysis—is the storage market’s equivalent of that big rock, but rather than causing mass extinction, it’s simply opening up a lot of new ecological niches for storage technologies, especially advanced solutions like Fusion ioMemory modules and the new release of DataCore’s SANsymphony-V storage hypervisor. The advent of Big Data also offers a unique opportunity to re-architect your storage management infrastructure in a way that can prolong the life of storage “dinosaurs” and make it more adaptable in every respect and more easily aligned to business needs.

As profiled in the New York Times, Big Data is transforming business, government, and education. One researcher reported that a study of 179 large companies showed that those adopting the data-driven decision-making that Big Data makes possible “achieved productivity gains that were 5 percent to 6 percent higher than other factors could explain.”

Big Data is more than just big. It’s restless, too, and best used when hot. Let it cool off, and you lose the situational awareness that can lead to big-time financial rewards. It’s not just a matter of storing a gazillion bytes—you can’t possibly store it all, so your retention policies have to change, and the need to widely share data as quickly as possible means your networking strategies have to change as well.

Fortunately, a storage hypervisor can be a big help in adapting to Big Data. Even better, the benefits of this software layer, which insulates you from all the hardware variables that Big Data can throw your way, kick in long before Big Data arrives. A scalable and comprehensive storage hypervisor like DataCore’s SANsymphony-V is an agent of change: you get the pay-off today and a future-proof storage infrastructure. It also, as we’ll see, can give you an even better return on your Fusion-io ioMemory module investments.

SANsymphony-V provides a complete “storage management stack” and gives you a centralized console that enables you to efficiently pool all your storage resources, mirror and replicate data for high availability, cache data near applications for higher performance, automatically allocate space, and direct traffic to the optimal tier.

Resource pooling has the most immediate impact, because you can aggregate all of your storage capacity, without regard for brand, model, or interface, and easily reclaim unused space. These pooled resources can be easily mirrored locally for high availability, or replicated remotely for disaster recovery. Thin provisioning gives you just-in-time storage allocation for highly efficient use of disk space, and RAM caching speeds up “spindle-based” storage dramatically to turbocharge native disk array performance. The fact that all of these advantages are available to every storage resource managed by SANsymphony-V means that older storage that formerly might have been shuffled off to the dinosaur’s graveyard remains useful longer, leading to a higher ROI for all your storage investments.

Fusion-io Fast Flash Memory and DataCore Auto-tiering Software

When it comes to Big Data, however, it’s probably auto-tiering that’s likely to be of most interest to customers who rely on Fusion-io technology. SANsymphony’s auto-tiering can dynamically direct workloads to the right storage resource based either on access frequency or business rules, so that the hottest data gets the most attention. Older storage can be moved down-tier as new hardware is installed, again prolonging its service life. SANsymphony-V also offers a “cloud gateway” to leverage cloud service providers for both disaster recovery and archival of virtually unlimited capacity—a necessity to keep from getting squashed by Big Data.

This enables SANsymphony-V to put Fusion-io’s server class memory tier at the very top of an agile, easily-managed storage hierarchy that offers unprecedented levels of performance and availability. You can easily balance data value and the need for speed against price/capacity constraints—something that Big Data is going to make ever more necessary—and make sure that you get the utmost benefit from ioMemory modules.

The fallout from Big Data is going to transform business computing at every level, so if you don’t want to end up a data dinosaur, now’s the time to transform your infrastructure with a storage hypervisor. A good place to start is Jon Toigo’s Storage Virtualization for Rock Stars series, starting with Hitting the Perfect Chord in Storage Efficiency, which will give you a good overview of how a storage hypervisor can help you increase engineering, operational, and financial efficiency.


Fusion-IO Continues Its Path to Dominance in Storage Market

July 9, 2012

Apple is expanding its use of Fusion-IO. Apple’s increasing use of the Fusion-IO storage platform may move the company ahead of Facebook as Fusion-IO’s biggest customer. If you aren’t familiar with Fusion-IO, you might be soon. Some analysts are saying the company’s technology may soon become “the” defacto standard for storage in the same way that Windows and Intel transformed and then dominated the computing market.

Fusion-IO has a fairly narrow focus in the storage market. It sells flash memory components that plug into servers and act as high-performance cache However, the narrow focus hasn’t limited Fusion-IO’s success. Founded in 2005, since the company’s IPO last summer Fusion-IO’s share price has steadily increased as investors confident in Fusion-IO’s ability to command the market snapped up the stock. Earlier this month, rumors spread that Dell might be attempting to acquire the startup. .Fusion-IO’s platform is used widely by both Apple and Facebook to deliver a speedy user experience.

Use of Fusion-IO’s technology isn’t the company’s only link to Apple. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has served as Fusion-IO’s Chief Scientist since 2008. Facebook accounts for 36 percent of Fusion-IO’s revenue, 24 percent come from Apple and 14 percent from Hewlett-Packard. Fusion-IO has also added Salesforce.com and Pandora as customers. However, not everyone is enamored with Fusion-IO. The CEO of EMC lashed out at Fusion-IO saying that the company’s attitude toward flash memory, “darn right foolish.” EMC started by using flash arrays, then took a page from Fusion-io’s playbook by announcing VFcache, a PCIE-based server-side product.

Fusion’s CEO still claims Emc is a bottleneck, arguing his firm’s technology goes beyond a standard pcie connection and provides direct memory access that eliminates the overheads of disk protocols.

Critics of Fusion’s direct memory access approach, known as its VSL technology, argue that this technique requires firms to rewrite applications to take advantage of the solution.

Analysts tell SiliconAngle that this is the land grab that is going on. New cloud-based apps require new approaches to development, and a key to Fusion’s success will be its ability to get ISV’s and application developers to code to its API.

No matter what your opinion is on Fusion-IO’s strategy, clearly the company is doing something right. Almost all of the company’s customers report dramatic improvements in performance after adopting Fusion-IO’s platform. Fusion-IO’s revenue are projected to climb 82 percent over the next two years. This is the faster growth than any of the company’s competitors. Fusion-IO is a pioneer in the flash-based storage market and that gamble is paying off.


BrainPad Accelerates Multiple Web Analytics Systems on Less Hardware : fusion-io

July 6, 2012

BrainPad, Inc. provides Web-based data mining, business analytics, operational research, and mathematical solutions for businesses. Its L2Mixer service provides business intelligence on end-user pay-per-click behavior, allowing companies to optimize product pricing. BrainPad’s Rtoaster service provides end-users product recommendations based on a behavioral analysis of their browsing patterns.

As both customer base and product line expanded, so did the load on both systems’ databases, which threatened to slow performance. BrainPad needed to increase processing speeds of its L2Mixer solution, increase analysis times of its Rtoaster system, and do both with reduced costs and maintenance. Tsuyoshi Inoue, BrainPad’s Chief Engineering Architect, was impressed with the way Fusion ioDrives resolved all three problems.

Tsuyoshi said, “One batch job [on the PostgreSQL system], which used to take over four hours to complete, ran in less than 30 minutes. The ioDrives also doubled the number of threads we could run in parallel. Performance is high enough that we can now meet the most demanding customer SLAs.”

Shifting the L2Mixer databases from hard disks to the ioDrives cut I/O wait time by more than half, resulting in 29 time faster aggregate data calculation and 10 times faster summary data reports. Moving the Rtoaster’s PostgreSQL database from disks to ioDrives sped batch job processing by 30 times.

“Before adding Fusion-io,” Tsuyoshi explained, “we had to run database maintenance tasks once a week or more just to avoid a serious performance degradation. Now, we can eliminate these tasks altogether, which is quite significant. Our new system is more simpler, more flexible, and easier to modify and improve.”

Want to see more astounding results BrainPad achieved with its Fusion Powered system? Read the BrainPad case study.


TechValidated: Fusion-io Enhances Server Virtualization

June 26, 2012

More than ever, companies all over the world are virtualizing their servers to battle server sprawl, improve productivity and maximize system resources. In doing so, many of these companies have discovered that implementing Fusion ioMemory boosts the efficiency of virtualized systems with astounding results. Below are TechValidate survey results displaying just how much improvement companies have experienced with Fusion Powered server virtualization solutions.

Performance Improvement: In this survey, 95 percent of IT organizations using server virtualization achieved three to five times or more performance improvement in application throughput when using ioMemory.

Latency: In addition, 77 percent of companies using server virtualization reported that they decreased average latency by 50 to 74 percent or more by deploying one Fusion ioDrive.

More Virtualized Servers Per Card: One customer at a small business computer software company reported achieving 10 virtualized servers per card. “Fusion offered exactly what we needed — appearance as a block level device to the host OS while providing dramatically faster I/O calls, allowing us to fully virtualize 10 servers per card.”

To see complete TechValidate results, click here.


Fusion-io SDK gives developers native memory access, keys to the NAND realm

June 1, 2012

Fusion-io SDK gives developers native memory access, keys to the NAND realm

Thought your SATA SSD chugged along real nice? Think again. Fusion-io has just released an SDK that will allow developers to bypass all the speed draining bottlenecks that rob NAND memory of its true potential (i.e. the kernel block I/O layer,) and tap directly into the memory itself. In fact, Fusion-io is so confident of its products abilities, it prefers to call them ioMemory Application Accelerators, rather than SSDs. The SDK allows developers native access to the ioMemory, meaning applications can benefit from the kind of hardware integration you might get from a proprietary platform. The principle has already been demonstrated earlier this year, when Fusion-io delivered one billion IOPS using this native access. The libraries and APIs are available now to registered members of its developer program, hit the more coverage link to sign up.


Fusion-io Announces One-Billion IOPS at DEMO Enterprise 2012

May 16, 2012

Great video reference innovation and game changing technology. The fusion io guys are taking things to the next level.


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