Excelero, a disruptor in software-defined block storage for
AI/ML/deep learning and GPU computing, said that
DigitalFilm Tree (DFT), a creative powerhouse to the world's
leading media, tech and entertainment companies, has empowered its creatives
through better storage by using Excelero's NVMesh software as the centerpiece
of a new storage architecture. In a business that is constantly asked for
insane turnaround times, DFT found that using Elastic NVMe from Excelero
afforded its team and their clients more time for quality editorial, and numerous
time- and hassle-saving storage performance improvements over its previous
traditional solution.
"The first
time I saw Excelero's software, it was so different it was shocking," said
Thomas Galyon, CTO at DFT. "After testing and deploying it, I've learned it's
even better. Excelero will let us store any file format we throw at it, and run
on any server, with 10x faster render processing and at least 100x greater
total aggregate bandwidth than our previous software. The added bandwidth lets
us send project content out to clients far faster. NVMesh has become the
backbone of our facilities."
"There's
simply nothing we've asked of our Excelero-based storage system that it hasn't
been able to handle," Galyon continued. "With its elastic NVMe capabilities on
board, I'm looking forward to a world where frankly I never have to think about
storage speeds again."
Storage can
never run fast enough with the colorization and visual effects work done by DFT
and its clients, and at its extreme volumes, seemingly routine tasks can become
bottlenecks. When a planned infrastructure upgrade brought an evaluation of its
storage and networking approaches, DFT knew a change was in order to the
superior performance and cost-effectiveness of NVMe Flash. It also decided
against using Fibre Channel where an upgrade meant sizable cost increases, for
minimal if any performance gain.
"With
Excelero storage software behind an 8K DPX sequence, we got close to line speed
- something I don't even expect - and playback that was buttery smooth. That
was the "Aha!" moment," DFT's CTO Galyon said. "There's currently no file
format Excelero couldn't handle efficiently and deliver to our workstations.
And that was just in phase one!"
NVMesh's
software-defined distributed block storage for high performance computing
workloads empowers users through better storage. Customers benefit from shared
NVMe resources across the network, access to remove NVMe at local speed - and
performance that exceeds the capacity limit of local flash on servers.
For
example, in work for team producing Prime Rewind: Inside The Boys,
a before show for season 2 of Amazon Prime Video's superhero and vigilante
series The Boys, DFT's system faced a test to its new
Excelero-powered storage solution. The production team needed to process 40
hours of client-uploaded dailies, back them up, make proxies for rapid editing,
process and deliver them to their editorial department - in just 10 hours.
"That's
where we saw the real performance difference in Excelero's system," said
Galyon. "It was amazing how easily we handled this exceptionally demanding
project with Excelero. By turning it around quickly, we afforded everyone more
time for quality editorial, on an already tight time frame." Galyon also
appreciated NVMesh's time-savings with load balancing, which is required by
traditional SANs and that NVMesh makes virtually non-existent.