Storage UPDATE Survey Results, Part 2
In this column, Barrie Sosinsky offers more results from the recent Storage UPDATE survey, focusing on the figures for Storage Area Networks (SANs).
April 29, 2001
In this week's column, I offer more results from the recent Storage UPDATE survey, focusing on the figures for Storage Area Networks (SANs). The results measure some significant changes since Storage UPDATE's June 2000 survey. Part 1 of the survey results is available.
SAN Deployments
The past 10 months have seen a major increase in the number of SANs that you've deployed in your enterprise. You answered the question, "Do you have a Storage Area Network (SAN) installed at your company?" as follows (for comparison, the June 2000 results appear in parentheses):
We currently use a SAN—33.1 percent (14.7 percent)
Within 1 year—22.1 percent (29.3 percent)
In 2 to 3 years—16.0 percent (19.8 percent)
No SANs or plans for SANs—2.5 percent (32.8 percent)
Don't know—26.4 percent (3.4 percent)
About twice as many of you answered this question as answered it in the previous survey. Note a nearly 20-point increase in SAN deployment, with a significant decrease in the number who have no plans to deploy SANs. Also note, however, the increase in the number who don't know whether they will deploy SANs. With Y2K concerns behind us, apparently those of you who wanted SANs got them; those who didn't, did not. About 64 percent of you don't have SANs; 15 percent have one; about 21 percent have two or more.
You tell us that 76 percent of you have fewer than 20 servers or storage servers on your SANs. Almost 28 percent have between 20 and 100 servers or storage servers on your SAN. The size of SANs is distributed as follows:
Less than 500GB—27.5 percent
500GB to 1TB—26.1 percent
1TB to 3TB—27.5 percent
3TB to 10TB—13.0 percent
10TB to 50TB—2.9 percent
More than 50TB—2.9 percent
Clearly SANs are diverse, but if you break the numbers into general categories, 54 percent use small RAID arrays; 28 percent use midsized or collated storage assets on their SANs; and 19 percent probably use consolidated storage (large arrays). Apparently, Windows is still primarily a distributed storage market, and most SANs on Windows-based networks are relatively small.
When asked "What issues are driving you to install SANs? (Check all that apply)," you listed the issues as follows:
Improved storage management—100.0 percent
Savings through storage consolidation—96.8 percent
Require high availability (HA)—96.8 percent
Scalability—75.5 percent
Better system architecture—54.3 percent
Data sharing—47.9 percent
Multi-OS—44.7 percent
Reduce network traffic—37.2 percent
Other—6.4 percent
To the question "What issues have either prevented you from installing a SAN or made this task difficult? (Check all that apply)," you answered as follows:
High cost of deployment—100.0 percent
Technology not quite ready—56.5 percent
Lack of standards—42.4 percent
Need not determined—38.8 percent
Required IT staff—36.0 percent
Products don't interoperate—34.1 percent
Management software not sufficient—22.4 percent
Don't know—18.8 percent
Integrators difficult to find or unqualified—12.9 percent
No issues that prevent deployment—8.2 percent
Other—7.1 percent
To the question "What applications have you deployed or are you planning to deploy on your SAN? (Check all that apply)," you answered as follows:
Backup and recovery—100.0 percent
File services—98.8 percent
Database/data warehouse—93.0 percent
Enterprise messaging—55.8 percent
Internet applications—43.0 percent
Electronic commerce—31.4 percent
Enterprise resource planning (ERP)—31.4 percent
Don't know—29.1 percent
Customer relationship management (CRM)—22.1 percent
Streaming media—17.4 percent
Supply chain—10.5 percent
Other—9.3 percent
I was a little surprised that backup and recovery came in first, but that result underscores just how important LANless or serverless backup is likely to be in the SAN marketplace.
In next week's column, I'll present Part 3 of the survey results—covering Network Attached Storage (NAS), Storage-over-IP (SoIP), and Storage Service Provider (SSP) use.
Several of these questions have been plotted.
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