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EqualLogic PS300E

Verdict

iSCSI comes of age with an appliance that delivers a huge storage capacity, easy expansion, top performance, plus total fault tolerance, and all at a price that compares extremely well with Fibre Channel products.

Review Date: 17 Feb 2006

Price when reviewed: exc VAT; Warranty 2yrs on-site NBD

Overall Rating
5 stars out of 6

PCPRO Recommended

It may have been announced at the beginning of 2005, but 4Gb/sec Fibre Channel (FC) technology hasn't exactly set the storage world alight. Most products have languished in relative obscurity. The same can't be said for iSCSI (Internet SCSI). PC Pro Enterprise has brought you hands-on reviews of a raft of compliant storage products that show clearly how this technology is maturing. And now we bring you EqualLogic's PS300E, which moves iSCSI up another gear. The PS300E delivers a range of impressive features, stunning performance and all at a price point that similar FC products can't hope to compete with.

Storage capacity is first on the agenda, as this compact 3U chassis delivers 14 hot-swap bays and comes fully populated with the latest 500GB Hitachi 3Gb/sec SATA 2 drives for a total of 7TB. Fault tolerance is in abundance too. The PS300E comes with a pair of hot-swap power supplies and primary and secondary hot-swap controller units. These deliver support for RAID10 and 50 arrays, and RAID functions are synchronised across both controllers so you can lose one without any impact on operations. Three Gigabit Ethernet network ports are available for use on the primary controller, and you can use either copper or fibre connections, although you'll need to source the fibre SFPs separately. A smart feature is that as you bring more ports online, the controller automatically implements load balancing for a theoretical maximum throughput of 3Gb/sec. The ports on the secondary controller are available for creating redundant network paths.

In EqualLogic's world, all physical arrays, or members, are gathered together and presented to the network as logical storage pools, or groups. The appliance manages its own local RAID arrays, but storage on all members is made available as a single entity. You can use this space to create volumes and present them as iSCSI targets, but data within each volume is spread across all disks and members. The big advantage is that new arrays can quickly be added to the group, allowing storage to be increased easily with demand.

EqualLogic claims a PS300E can be up and running within 20 minutes from unpacking, and we can confirm this to be the case. You start with a CLI session into the primary controller, where you define it as a member and decide whether to add it to an existing group or create a new one. RAID10 or 50 are supported, both with hot-standby, and a single array is automatically created from all available disks simply by selecting either the Performance or Capacity options from the CLI. We'd like to see support for RAID6 and 60 in the near future, though.

Further management is via the Java-based web console, which is far better designed than that offered by Reldata. There's not so much as a whiff of the underlying Linux kernel. All group members can be viewed from the same console, which provides full access to all further configuration and provides plenty of operational information about all hardware components. With another PS300E on the bench, we found it easy enough to add a second member to our group. Removing it will cause all data to be moved to existing members before it's released. As you'd expect, volume snapshots offer good backup facilities, but EqualLogic's replication techniques provide excellent fault tolerance and disaster-recovery capabilities. Essentially, this takes snapshots of selected volumes and stores them within other groups called replication partners. Again, this is simple to set up and you can opt for one-way replication to another group, bidirectional replication between groups, or you designate one group as a central location to which multiple groups can be replicated. If a volume is lost or damaged, you just clone a copy of the replicated volume or promote it as a new volume.

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