1 / 28

Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning

Best Practice. Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning. Marc Farley President, Building Storage, Inc. Author , Building Storage Networks. Checklist. The Building Storage Definition of Provisioning.

nico
Download Presentation

Build Management Muscle with Storage Provisioning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


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

  2. Checklist 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. Key Features 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. Key Features Cross-Product Scope of Provisioning • Provisioning encompasses all point-products: • Storing Wiring Filing Storage Switches Host Systems

  6. Checklist 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. Checklist Adding a Volume to a Server 10 8 4 5 9 ExistingServer 10 3 6 New Volume 1 2 Switch 7

  8. Provisioning @ Work: Changing Zones for Multi-use Data Storage Subsystem Application 2Server Application 1 Systems Multi-use data

  9. Warning 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. Key Features A Storage Network as a State Machine (hundreds to thousands of variables)

  11. Tool This Looks Like a Job For…Automation! • Automation begets accuracy • Reliability and safety are job #1 • Storage communications must be solid • Machinery doesn’t forget or overlook • Storage networks are sufficiently complicated • Duh! Apply automation and take out the human element

  12. Best Practice 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. Best Practice 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. Tip 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. Tip Provisioning & SANs • Volume-orientation for block I/O • LUNs: Devices, exported volumes • Storing virtualization: Volume managers, RAID controllers, virtualization

  16. Tip 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. Tool Pathing & Zoning Considerations • Pathing = Host software for HBA fail-over in a system • Zoning = I/O segregation x

  18. Tip 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. Best Practice Provisioning and Zoning • Zoning changes are network state changes • Should be verified for impact on all relationships in the state • Zoning changes shouldn’t interfere with higher priority paths and resources

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

  21. Tool 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. Tool Provisioning on Schedule • Provisioning sequences can be scheduled • Regular time, day, week, month • Run-once for single execution • Trial or partial runs

  23. Tool 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. Checklist 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. Best Practice 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. Tool Storage Process Automation Software • Storage management modules/scripts • Provisioning sequences • Notification, approval • Staff skills, certifications • Order processing • Maintenance schedules

  27. Best Practice 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@BuildingStorage.com www.buildingstorage.com 408.210.7931

More Related