Business data storage needs are rocketing. The average workstation ships with a 300GB or higher hard drive, and everyone saves everything forever.
In both 2007 and 2008, Forrester Research found that more than 35 percent of small and midsize business IT departments were increasing spending on servers and storage, and a lot of analysts have weighed in on increasing data storage needs, estimating the annual rate of increase as somewhere between 33 and 100 percent.
Hewlett-Packard is introducing into this environment the ProLiant DL185 G5 Storage Server, a versatile 2U (3.5-inch) rack-mounted device that can be configured as an NAS (network-attached storage) device or as an iSCSI SAN (storage area network) device.
The DL185 G5 is based on the venerable ProLiant line of servers, and G5s are, in fact, ProLiant servers configured for storage and preloaded with Windows Storage Server 2003 R2 and HP’s installation wizards and management tools. Models start with the smaller 1U (1.75-inch) DL160 G5 Storage Server and are available in a variety of rack-mounted or tower form factors. All have the high availability and management features that you’d expect from a server.
HP has done a major update to the management software and these products now share the same ASM (All-in-One Storage Manager) as the AiO Storage line. This is a significant upgrade in terms of usability from the prior HP Storage Server Management Console, with very clear step-by-step instructions and a clean GUI with sensible organisation. Whether an administrator is managing one or 100, he or she will appreciate the ease of installation, configuration and management.
Installation was a breeze. It took longer to get the box into the lab, rack-mount the unit and connect power, KVM and network than to set up the first RAID 5 volume and the first share, bring it into my test domain, assign users and groups the proper privileges through my existing Active Directory PDC, and enable disk-to-disk snapshots. From power-up to live took a mere 19 minutes; this degree of consumer-friendliness in an enterprise-class NAS box is uncommon. The first time the unit booted, a wizard walked me through configuration, which pretty much amounted to giving the server a name, then rebooting and logging in using the default user name and password (which I was not forced to change, but should have been in order to make it more secure).
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