Exablox Isn’t Just Pretty Hardware

Disclaimer: I recently attended Storage Field Day 10.  My flights, accommodation and other expenses were paid for by Tech Field Day. There is no requirement for me to blog about any of the content presented and I am not compensated in any way for my time at the event.  Some materials presented were discussed under NDA and don’t form part of my blog posts, but could influence future discussions.

exablox-logo-black

Before I get started, you can find a link to my raw notes on Exablox‘s presentation here. You can also see videos of the presentation here.  You can find a preview post from Chris M. Evans here.

 

It’s Not Just the Hardware

I waxed lyrical about the Exablox hardware platform after seeing it at Storage Field Day 7. But while the OneBlox hardware is indeed pretty cool (you can see the specifications here), the cloud-based monitoring platform, OneSystem, is really the interesting bit.

According to Exablox, the “OneSystem application is used to combine OneBlox appliances into Rings as well as configuring shares, user access, and remote replication”. It’s the mechanism used for configuration, as well as monitoring, alerting and reporting.

OneSystem is built on a cloud-based, multi-tenant architecture. There’s nothing to install for organisations, VARs, and MSPs. Although if you feel a bit special about how your data is treated, there is an optional, private OneSystem deployment available for on-premises management. Exablox pride themselves on the “world-class” support they provide to customers, with a customer-first culture being one of the dominant themes when talking to them about support capability. Some of the other benefits of the OneSystem approach is:

  • The ability to globally manage OneBlox anywhere; and
  • Deliver seamless OneBlox software upgrades.

Exablox also provide 24×7 proactive monitoring, providing insight into, amongst other things:

  • Storage utilisation and analysis;
  • Storage health and alerts; and
  • OneBlox drive health.

The cool thing about this platform is that it offers the ability to configure custom storage policies and simple scaling for individual applications. In this manner you can configure the following data services on a “per application” basis:

  • Variable or fixed-length deduplication;
  • Compression on/off;
  • Continuous data protection on/off and retention; and
  • Remote replication on/off.

 

I Want My Data Everywhere

While the OneBlox ring is currently limited to 7 systems per cluster, you can have two or more (up to 10) clusters operating in a mesh for replication. You can then conceivably have a whole bunch of different data protection schemes in place depending on what you need to protect and where you need it protected. The great thing is that, with the latest version of OneSystem, you can have a one-to-many replication relationship between directories as well. This kind of flexibility is really neat in my opinion. Note that replication is asynchronous.

SFD10_Exablox_Mutli-siteReplication

 

Further Reading and Final Thoughts

If you’ve read any of my recent posts on the likes of Pure, Nimble and Tintri, it would feel like everyone and their dog is into cloud-based monitoring and analytics systems for storage platforms. This is in no way a bad thing, and something that I’m glad we’re seeing become a prevalent feature with these “modern” storage architectures. We store a whole bunch of data on these things. And sometimes it’s even data that is vital to the success of the various business endeavours we undertake on a daily basis. So it’s great to see vendors are taking this requirement seriously. It also helps somewhat that people are a little more comfortable with the concept of keeping information in “the cloud”. This certainly helps the vendors control the end user experience form a support viewpoint, rather than relyin on arcane systems deployed across multiple VMs that invariably fail at the time you need to dig into the data to find out what’s really going on in the environment.

Exablox have come up with a fairly unique approach to scale-out NAS, and I’m keen to see where they take it from here. Features such as remote replication and the continuing maturity of the OneSystem platform make me think that they’re gearing up to push things a little beyond the BYO drives SMB space. I’ll be interested to see just how that plays out.

Ray Lucchesi did a thorough write-up on Exablox that you can read here, while Francesco Bonetti did a great write-up here. Exablox has also published a technical overview of OneBlox and OneSystem that is worth checking out.

 

Storage Field Day 7 – Day 3 – Exablox

Disclaimer: I recently attended Storage Field Day 7.  My flights, accommodation and other expenses were paid for by Tech Field Day. There is no requirement for me to blog about any of the content presented and I am not compensated in any way for my time at the event.  Some materials presented were discussed under NDA and don’t form part of my blog posts, but could influence future discussions.

For each of the presentations I attended at SFD7, there are a few things I want to include in the post. Firstly, you can see video footage of the Exablox presentation here. You can also download my raw notes from the presentation here. Finally, here’s a link to the Exablox website that covers some of what they presented.

Brief Overview

Exablox was founded in 2010 and launched publicly in April 2013. There are two key elements to their solution:

  • OneBlox – scale-out storage for the enterprise, offering converged storage for primary and backup / archival data; and
  • OneSystem – manage on-premises storage exclusively from anywhere, providing visibility, control, and security without cost / complexity of traditional management

Here’s a photo of Tad Hunt (CTO and Co-founder) showing us the internals of the Exablox appliance.

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Architecture

Exablox started the presentation by talking about what we want from storage re-imagined (my words, not theirs):

  • Scale out;
  • Deduplication;
  • Snapshots;
  • Replication;
  • Be simple yet powerful; and
  • Be managed from everywhere.

The Exablox approach is not your father’s standard storage presentation play. Instead of providing block storage via SMB / NFS, or object storage via APIs, it instead presents file protocols via the front-end and services these with object storage on the back-end.

exablox-architecture-diagram

Technology Vision

Exablox’s approach revolves around software-defined storage (SDS) and storage management, with the following goals:

  • Manage the policy, not the technology;
  • SDS “wrapped in tin” for the mid market;
  • Eliminate complexity;
  • Plug-and-play; and
  • Next generation features.

They deliver NAS features atop object storage:

  • Without metadata servers;
  • Without bolt-on NAS gateways;
  • Without separate data and metadata servers; and
  • To scale capacity, performance, or resilience: just add a node.

 

Technology Benefits

Exablox say they can create scale-out NAS and object clusters atop mixed media – HDD, SSD, Shingled drives. This approach delivers the benefits of object storage technology to traditional applications:

  • By using standard file protocols; and
  • eliminating forklift upgrades – single namespace across the scale of the cluster.

They also use “RAID-free” data protection:

  • Self-healing from multiple drive and node failures;
  • Rebalancing time proportional to the quantity of objects on the failed drive;
  • Mix and match drive types, capacities, technologies; and
  • Introduce next generation drives without long validation cycles.

This provides the ability to scale capacity from TB to PB easily, whilst also offering:

  • Zero configuration expansion; and
  • Manage from anywhere capability.

Exablox say they are able to support all NAS workloads well. Whereas other object stores are designed primarily for large files, a OneBlox 3308 can handle 1B objects. All nodes perform all functions: storage, control, NAS interface, with a node being a single failure domain.

 

Hardware Notes and Thoughts

For the purposes of this post, I wanted to focus on the OneBlox appliance. While the OneSystem architecture is super neat, I still get a bit of a nerd tingle when I see some nice hardware. (BTW if Exablox want me test one long-term I’d be happy to oblige).

Exablox claims to be the sole provider of the following features in a single storage solution:

  • Scale-out deduplication;
  • Scale-out, continuous snapshots;
  • Scale-out, RAID-less capacity;
  • Scale-out, site-to-site disaster recovery; and
  • Bring any drive – one at a time at retail pricing.

They also support auto-clustering, with each node adding:

  • Capacity;
  • Performance; and
  • Resiliency.

The Exablox 3308 appliance:

  • Is seriously bloody quiet;
  • Uses 100W under peak load;
  • Has 8 * 3.5” drive bays, supporting up to 48 raw TB; and
  • Can use a mix of SATA & SAS drives.

Here is a picture of some appliances on a rack.

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Further Reading

I was impressed with the strategy presented to me by Exablox, and the apparent ease of deployment and overall design of the appliance seemed great on the surface. I’d like to be clear that I haven’t used these in the wild, nor have I had any view of any benchmark data, so I can’t comment as to the effective performance of these devices. Like most things in storage, your mileage might vary. But I will say they seem quite inexpensive for what they do, and I recommend taking a more detailed look at them.

I also recommend you check out Keith’s preview post on Exablox.  For a different perspective on the hardware, have a look at Storage Review’s take on things as well.