EMC Targets Servers With PCIe NAND Flash Card

EMC is looking to move into virgin territory with the launch of a new product 6 February.

Completing a promise it made at EMC world in May 2011, EMC unveiled its first PCIe NAND flash card that puts a measure of storage directly into any server connected to storage.

The VFCache contains software that controls the speedy new entry to storage-area networks while keeping the most-used data in high-speed single-level-cell (SLC) flash memory for most efficient use. In the newest EMC systems, VFCache hands off the data to the company’s Fully Automated Storage Tiering (FAST) software en route to its array home.

PCIe Trend

eWEEK identified PCIe as a major storage trend last August. Analyst Jim Handy of Objective Analysis said his firm is forecasting that the NAND flash-powered PCIe interface will become dominant in the enterprise solid-state disk market in 2012, with unit shipments greater than the combined shipments of its SAS and Fibre Channel counterparts.

The EMC news is more evidence of the increasing momentum in the PCIe card sector. PCIe card units, which contain a high amount of NAND flash, replace spinning disk drives in specific use cases to bring major performance increases into systems that process a high number of transactions per minute or per second.

Peripheral Component Interconnect Express, PCIe, was created by Intel and launched in 2004. It is a computer expansion-card standard based on point-to-point serial links rather than a shared parallel bus architecture, and is designed to replace the older PCI, PCI-X and AGP standards.

Latency Reduction

PCIe-based flash storage has the ability to bypass traditional storage overhead by reducing latencies, increasing throughput and enabling more efficient processing of massive quantities of data. For that reason, it is considered a prime tool for big data-type analytics workloads, which have been steadily increasing in numbers.

Most of the storage companies that deal in NAND flash are now providing a PCIe product of some kind, including Fusion i-o, STEC, Samsung, OCZ, Texas Memory, Unex, Schooner and others.

EMC’s customers have purchased a whopping 1.3 exabytes of EMC storage powered by FAST since the software was launched in January 2010. It is one of EMC’s fastest-growing storage software products, Mark Sorenson told eWEEK.

Other company metrics, Sorenson said, are that EMC shipped about 24PBs of flash drive capacity in 2011, which represents 8X growth, compared with 2009 – the first year EMC began shipping solid-state storage of any kind inside an array.

Originally published on eWeek.

Chris Preimesberger

Editor of eWEEK and repository of knowledge on storage, amongst other things

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