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The SNW Report: Lots Of Flash, Cache Is King: Page 2 of 2

Several vendors announced new caching products or significant enhancements to their existing caching appliances at or shortly before SNW.

DataRAM announced that they're doubling the size of their flash based XcelaSAN cache appliance from 256GB to 512GB.  XcelaSAN is the only external caching appliance for Fibre Channel SANs that I'm aware of.  Users with 2-3 year old SAN arrays can add a cache layer to their SANs a lot easier and cheaper than the fork lift upgrade many vendors would require to add an internal flash cache or tier.  DataRAM announced the XcelaSAN over a year ago and was quietly working to add high availability clustering, which most of their target customers would consider a must have, before making a real market push. Now that you can cluster a pair of XcelaSANs, it could be a good fit in a lot of data centers.

Like DataRAM, Avere announced new bigger, faster external NAS cache appliances at the show, on top of the even bigger announcement a few weeks before that they'd integrated a global name space into their systems. Unlike DataRAM, Avere's appliances support multiple tiers, including RAM and 15K RPM spinning disks as well as flash. In fact, the folks at Avere would rather I call them tiered storage appliances than caches.  The new FXT 2550 and 2750 use Nehalem processors and support more RAM than their predecessors.

Perhaps the most interesting new product at SNW was Marvell's Dragonfly virtual storage accelerator, a PCIe cache card for server side caching.  The card has on-board RAM and SAS/SATA ports for SSDs. It then uses the combined RAM and flash as a multilayer cache in front of any kind of storage the server may be using, including SAN and NAS.  The devil is in the details and I have lots of questions about how Marvel's software handles things like vMotion and snapshots provided by the back end storage system, but I'll take a wait and see attitude for now.