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Understanding Blades with MSAs
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HP StorageWorks 2000sa Modular Smart Array

Business Value


Bring the latest in efficient consolidated storage array technology to the entry-level segment with 3 Gb SAS direct attach, external array storage solutions matched with the newest SAS and SATA drives
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Questions

1. What are the benefits of consolidating storage with a SAN?
2. What does dual "Active/Active" controllers mean?
3. Why are Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) drives considered enterprise class drives?
4. Do the HP MSA2000 arrays support multiple operating systems simultaneously?
5. What is RAID 6 and how does it benefit the customers?
6. What are RAID Levels 10 & 50 and what are the benefits?
7. What is RAID Level 3 and does it have its' advantages?
8. Can I use HP MSA2000sa with c-class BladeSystem servers?
9. What is the part number for this bundle?
10. What are the components of this bundle?

Answers

Q1. What are the benefits of consolidating storage with a SAN?
A1. Shared storage solution offers:
  1. Better utilization of overall disk space. No more "stranded" storage
  2. Reduced IT and storage management costs
  3. Fewer number of management tools to learn
  4. Increased data availability by implementing consolidation
Q2. What does dual "Active/Active" controllers mean?
A2. It means both controllers are ready to process I/Os and provide redundancy. If a controller fails the second controller can handle the I/O requests until the failed controller is brought back online.
Q3. Why are Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) drives considered enterprise class drives?
A3. SAS drives are built on proven SCSI technology and have similar internal components (heads, bearings) as Fibre Channel drives. MTBF is the same as Fibre Channel and they are designed to operate in a heavy use, 24x7 computing environment.
Q4. Do the HP MSA2000 arrays support multiple operating systems simultaneously?
A4. Yes. Customers can attach ProLiant servers running Microsoft Windows and Linux operating systems to a single MSA2000 array. This feature is also known as Heterogeneous OS support.
Q5. What is RAID 6 and how does it benefit the customers?
A5. RAID 6 provides the best fault tolerance because any two drives can fail without affecting data integrity. RAID 6 uses the equivalent of two drive's capacities for parity but stripes the parity information on all drives. RAID6 requires at least four drives and n-2 drives are used for parity.
Q6. What are RAID Levels 10 & 50 and what are the benefits?
A6. RAID Level 10 (1+0): Mirroring and striping without parity. : The most popular of the multiple RAID levels, RAID 10 combines the best features of striping and mirroring to yield large arrays with high performance in most uses and superior fault tolerance. RAID 10 is a stripe across a number of mirrored sets. RAID 10 has been increasing dramatically in popularity as hard disks become cheaper and the four-drive minimum is legitimately seen as much less of an obstacle. RAID 10 provides better fault tolerance. It provides very good to excellent overall performance by combining the speed of RAID 0 with the redundancy of RAID 1 without requiring parity calculations.

RAID Level 50 forms a large array by combining the block striping and parity of RAID 5 with the straight block striping of RAID 0. RAID 50 improves upon the performance of RAID 5 through the addition of RAID 0, particularly during writes. It also provides better fault tolerance than the single RAID level does.

Q7. What is RAID Level 3 and does it have its' advantages?
A7. RAID Level 3 combines striping and parity, but it puts all the parity information on a separate parity disk. It faster than RAID-5 on sequential reads and writes, and nearly as fast as RAID-0 (striping), with the advantage of data protection. RAID 3 is not optimized at random writes and only mediocre on random reads. It is excellent at handling large files that require high transfer performance with redundancy, especially serving or editing large files for multimedia and publishing.
Q8. Can I use HP MSA2000sa with c-class BladeSystem servers?
A8. Yes! HP provides a bundled solution for c-class BladeSystem customers who need shared storage but don’t need cost and/or complexity of a SAN.
Q9. What is the part number for this bundle?
A9. The part number for HP MSA2000sa 3Gb SAS BL Switch Bundle is AP716A.
Q10. What are the components of this bundle?
A10. The HP MSA2000sa 3Gb SAS BL Switch Bundle contains:

- HP MSA2012sa DC Modular Smart Array (Qty 1)
- HP 3Gb SAS BL Switches (Qty 2)
- HP mini-SAS 2M Cable (Qty 4)
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