Tegile Systems,
the leading provider of flash-driven storage arrays for databases,
virtualized server and virtual desktop environments, today announced
that Grass Valley, a leading provider of end-to-end television
production and content distribution workflow, has implemented a Tegile
HA2300 hybrid array to provide the speed, cost and year-to-year
investment protection for its growing VM environment.
Grass Valley deployed a FlexPod architecture that included NetApp
storage, the Cisco Unified Computing System and VMware at its Hillsboro,
Oregon engineering center to support its large virtual infrastructure.
The FlexPod system was used by Grass Valley for a variety of
mission-critical applications including software development, training,
customer service, documentation, build operations, VDI and Q&A
testing. Performance and latency issues resulting in the growth of VMs
on NFS led the company to seek out a new solution to replace its NetApp
FAS2240 data storage system.
With all of the Hillsboro operations except core IT running in its
virtual infrastructure, Grass Valley began an analysis of storage
offerings that would satisfy its demanding needs for speed, acquisition
price point and long-term investment costs to accommodate
year-after-year growth. The company evaluated options that included
purchasing a replacement NetApp FAS2240 data storage system as well as
offerings from EMC, Isilon and Hitachi before deciding to take a “leap
of faith” and adopt a Tegile hybrid storage array to meet its business
objectives.
“Tegile really does perform like you’ve never seen before,” said Tony
Combs, Solutions Architect at Grass Valley. “They’re more cost
effective than anyone in the industry right now. And Tegile does
something no one else does. Their dedupe is inline, which is very
impressive. It’s almost too good to be true.”
Tegile flash-driven arrays are designed to make the management of VDI
easier, faster, more reliable, more scalable and less expensive.
Whether used in conjunction with VMware View, Microsoft Terminal
Services, Citrix Xen or other solutions, Tegile hybrid arrays allow
organizations like Grass Valley to centralize operations, manage more
machines without sacrificing capacity, mitigate the disruption of IOPS
storms with seven times the performance at considerably lower latency,
protect data at a vastly reduced cost compared to other arrays, and
eliminate wear-leveling problems and data-integrity issues.
For the cost of the NetApp system, Grass Valley was able to implement
a Tegile HA2300 flash-driven array that proved to be 10 times faster
than the FAS2240. NFS latencies have been reduced to an “amazing” sub-1
millisecond with an “almost obscene” 40,000 IOP and 9.5GB/sec
throughput to the controller. Performance of the Tegile system easily
handles the 480 virtual machines, 50 VDIs and 42 SQL databases utilized
by the Grass Valley team. Additionally, the system went from running 90
percent CPU utilization to a 2 percent CPU load.
“We’re pleased that Grass Valley took that leap of faith and was able
to meet their cost and performance requirements with the implementation
of a Tegile hybrid storage array,” said Rob Commins, VP Marketing of
Tegile Systems. “Whether as a replacement for an overloaded storage
system or as part of a new storage architecture, Tegile maximizes
capacity with on-the-fly de-duplication and data compression to enable
more hosted virtual desktops for a lower investment in storage and
network infrastructure – all without compromising performance.”