Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning

Description:

Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning Best Practice Marc Farley President, Building Storage, Inc. Author, Building Storage Networks The Building Storage ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:70
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: smcc83
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning


1
Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning
  • Marc Farley
  • President, Building Storage, Inc.
  • Author, Building Storage Networks

2
The Building Storage Definition of Provisioning
  • The sequence of state changes in a storage
    network to achieve a different, optimal and
    desired operating state

3
Binding Versus Provisioning
  • Some vendors use provisioning to describe the
    process of matching an internal block address
    space with a specific subsystem port.
  • How about if we call this a bind?

Ports
Controller
Disks
4
Cross-Functional Scope of Provisioning
  • Provisioning should encompass all components
  • Wiring
  • HBAs, drivers, switches/routers/bridges/gateways,
    cabling, zoning, addressing/routing, flow
    control, naming services
  • Storing
  • Devices, subsystems, LUNs, volume managers,
    virtualization, SCSI drivers, data movers,
    mirroring
  • Filing
  • File systems, databases, volume managers, backup,
    replication, HSM

5
Cross-Product Scope of Provisioning
  • Provisioning encompasses all point-products
  • Storing Wiring Filing

Storage
Switches
Host Systems
6
Hypothetical Sequence of State Changes Add a
Volume to a Server
  • 1. Identify available switch port
  • 2. Create new zone in switch to isolate new
    storage volume
  • 3. Create new volume in disk subsystem
  • 4. Configure a disk subsystem port
  • 5. Bind the volume to the port
  • 6. Login bound-port to the fabric (isolated zone)
  • 7. Add server to port zone
  • 8. Allocate storage volume to server HBA driver
  • 9. Format volume with file system
  • 10. Copy data and/or install applications
  • Wiring
  • Storing
  • Wiring
  • Storing
  • Filing

7
Adding a Volume to a Server
10
8
4
5
9
ExistingServer
10
3
6
New Volume
1
2
Switch
7
8
Provisioning _at_ Work Changing Zones for Multi-use
Data
Storage Subsystem
Application 2Server
Application 1 Systems
Multi-use data
9
Provisioning for Minimal Interruption
  • Status of products should be verified
  • Cross-functional relationships need to be
    analyzed
  • The shortest sequence is not always the best
  • Spare resources can provide substitution
  • Especially useful for network operations

10
A Storage Network as a State Machine (hundreds to
thousands of variables)
11
This Looks Like a Job ForAutomation!
  • Automation begets accuracy
  • Reliability and safety are job 1
  • Storage communications must be solid
  • Machinery doesnt forget or overlook
  • Storage networks are sufficiently complicated
  • Duh! Apply automation and take out the human
    element

12
Automated Provisioning as a Storage Best Practice
... Part 1
  • Installation
  • Automated initialization of the storage network
  • Change management
  • Safe automation of changes to a live network
  • Identify service interruptions by analyzing state
    changes in advance

13
Automated Provisioning as a Storage Best Practice
Part2
  • Fault correction
  • Isolate the fault
  • Identify the new state
  • Determine sequence to a target state
  • Redundant/ equivalent state
  • Preferred/improved state
  • Degraded/prioritized state

14
Provisioning NAS
  • Application-orientation for file I/O
  • Multiple network mount points C\ D\ E\
    F\
  • File-level virtualization similar to HSM systems
    but with file links instead of migration
  • Client link segmentation, trucking,
    prioritization
  • network traffic management
  • Cross-functions may be contained in a single
    system

15
Provisioning SANs
  • Volume-orientation for block I/O
  • LUNs Devices, exported volumes
  • Storing virtualization Volume managers, RAID
    controllers, virtualization

16
Beyond SAN-NAS
  • Distributed file-system technology
  • Load balancing across file system nodes
  • File system node specialization
  • Matching file systems with volume characteristics
  • Block size definitions
  • Solid-state disk substitution

17
Pathing Zoning Considerations
  • Pathing Host software for HBA fail-over in a
    system
  • Zoning I/O segregation

x
18
Provisioning and Pathing
  • Automated provisioning should not effect standby
    paths and path resources
  • Pathing solutions manage fail-over within a
    system
  • Fast-path to resuming I/O operations
  • Pathing is a micro-provisioning system
  • Provisioning reacts to pathing changes as a
    network state change
  • A shift in resources may trigger other secondary
    changes

19
Provisioning and Zoning
  • Zoning changes are network state changes
  • Should be verified for impact on all
    relationships in the state
  • Zoning changes shouldnt interfere with higher
    priority paths and resources

20
Integrating Systems Management Tools and
Disciplines With Provisioning
  • Scripts
  • Schedulers
  • Policy engines
  • Process-workflow

21
Scripts
  • Job scripts automate point-product managers
  • Scripts may provide point-product state changes
  • Multiple scripts can be assembled as a
    provisioning sequence
  • Switch script 3 Subsystem script 1 Database
    script 5

Sw 3, SubS 1, DB 5


Sw 3
SubS 1
DB 5
22
Provisioning on Schedule
  • Provisioning sequences can be scheduled
  • Regular time, day, week, month
  • Run-once for single execution
  • Trial or partial runs

23
Policy engines
  • Measurable characteristics compliance ranges
  • Measure, collect, compare
  • Relationship impact projections against policies
  • Policy engine triggers
  • Non-compliance with administrator notification
  • Manual decision to invoke provisioning
  • Non-compliance with automated actions
  • Scripting for limited scope scenarios (redundant
    fail-over)

24
Examples of Policy Definitions
  • Disk capacity (percent free)
  • Latency (end-to-end maximums)
  • Link (standby)
  • Bandwidth utilization (between 15 and 25)
  • Error rates (less than 1x10-13)
  • Disk (hot spare)
  • Applications (grouped data)

25
Storage Process Workflow
  • Automated provisioning sequences can impact other
    systems and data access
  • Disruptive processes cannot go unchecked
  • IT process-disciplines may be required
  • Managers who need notification
  • Management approval review

26
Storage Process Automation Software
  • Storage management modules/scripts
  • Provisioning sequences
  • Notification, approval
  • Staff skills, certifications
  • Order processing
  • Maintenance schedules

27
Recommendations for Attendees
  • Start thinking about storage network management
    in terms of provisioning and management processes
  • Get experience with
  • Point management tools
  • Creating scripts for them
  • Assembling them into provisioning sequences
  • Check out companies with automation technologies
  • Invio Software, EMC, Veritas, BMC

28
Questions?
  • Marc Farley
  • Marc_at_BuildingStorage.com
  • www.buildingstorage.com
  • 408.210.7931
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com