Industry News Desk
Storage Virtualization in Action: Gwinnett County Improves Storage Flexibility Through IBM Solution
Local Georgia Government Adds IBM's Storage Virtualization Solution
Feb. 15, 2008 01:00 PM
IBM announced that Georgia's Gwinnett County is using a
virtualized information infrastructure that is enabling them to reduce overall
storage costs, respond quicker to increased storage needs, and improve the
speed of data migration processes by up to four times.
Gwinnett
County stores critical
tax information and government records on their systems, which have recently
become accessible to the public online. Storage is needed 24 hours a day so
negotiating outage windows with internal users can be painful and with no
visibility into scheduled downtime, users outside the organization expect
information to be available on demand, as needed. With a continuous increase in
traffic to the Web site and new applications available online, it became
crucial for Gwinnett
County to have a reliable
information infrastructure that targeted zero downtime, strong data protection,
easy migration and that can operate around the clock.
"Incorporating virtualization into our storage
infrastructure was exactly what we needed," said Phillip Wilson, Gwinnett County contract IT architect. "If
someone needs more storage, I simply open the SAN Volume Controller console and
increase their storage allocation. Storage management with the IBM SAN Volume
Controller is a storage administrator's dream come true."
Knowing their needs had shifted towards a more flexible
solution, Gwinnett
County turned to IBM and
IBM Business Partner Cpak to provide a consistent and dependable information
infrastructure that is easily upgraded with no disruption to applications. Gwinnett County implemented the IBM System
Storage SAN Volume Controller (SVC) as the keystone of their storage
virtualization environment, along with the IBM System Storage DS4800 and DS4700
disk arrays as the backbone of their tiered storage infrastructure. Both Intel
architecture-based servers and IBM System p 570 and System p 690 servers, which
host the county's SAP applications, were attached to the virtualized
information infrastructure.
IBM's storage virtualization solution is a key tool in
allowing customers to improve the energy efficiency of their data centers:
- SVC is designed to migrate data from older to newer disk
systems without disruption to applications, so it helps customer start that migration
immediately and disconnect their older, less efficient storage much more
quickly;
- SVC is designed to simplify implementation of a tiered
storage infrastructure and improve performance of lower tier storage, moving
data without disruption -- which makes it easy to match data types with the right
storage, and to move data when requirements change. Together, these abilities
of SVC make it easy to blend different types of storage for a lower overall
energy footprint; and
- SVC helps increase the utilization of storage and reduce
requirements for additional storage in the future. SVC is designed to pool
storage volumes from IBM and non-IBM storage systems into a single reservoir of
capacity for centralized management, helping to improve storage utilization and
reduce storage growth rates. This ability can reduce the total amount of
storage hardware required, which helps reduce the energy usage of the storage
configuration.
Storage Virtualization in Action is an ongoing IBM Storage
campaign to showcase some of the cross-industry examples of how customers are
using IBM's storage virtualization solution in real-world environments.
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