DataCore
today announced the results of its fifth annual State
of Software-Defined Storage (SDS) survey. The 2015 poll explored the
impact of SDS on organizations across the globe, and distills the
experiences of 477 IT professionals currently using or evaluating SDS to
solve critical data storage challenges. The results yield surprising
insights from a cross-section of industries over a wide range of
workloads.
The survey also probed for levels of spending on much-hyped topics,
including Big Data, Object Storage and OpenStack. Unexpectedly, the
findings showed that very little funding is being earmarked in 2015 for
these initiatives. Some of the pause may be explained by a number of
disillusionments that were disclosed in the findings.
On the other hand, this year’s report reveals several major business
drivers for implementing Software-Defined Storage. 52 percent of
respondents expect SDS will extend the life of existing storage assets
and future-proof their storage infrastructure, enabling them to easily
absorb new technologies. Close to half of respondents look to SDS to
avoid hardware lock-in from storage manufacturers, while lowering
hardware costs by allowing them to shop among several competing
suppliers. Operationally, they see SDS simplifying management of
different classes of storage by automating frequent or complex
operations. This is notable in comparison with earlier surveys, as these
results portray a sharp increase in the recognition of the economic
benefits generated by SDS (reduced CAPEX), complementing the OPEX
savings referenced in prior years.
Other surprises include: while flash technology penetration expanded it
is still absent in 28 percent of the cases and 16 percent reported that
it did not meet application acceleration expectations. Also interesting
is that 21 percent reported that highly touted hyper-converged systems
did not perform as required or did not integrate well within their
infrastructure. On the other hand, Software-Defined Storage and storage
virtualization are deemed very urgent now, with 63 percent of
organizations making important investments in these technologies
throughout 2015. 81 percent also expect similar levels of spending on
Software-Defined Storage technologies that will be incorporated within
server SANs / virtual SANs and converged storage solutions.
Additional highlights of DataCore’s 2015 State of Software-Defined
Storage survey include:
-
The ability to add storage capacity without business disruption is
identified as the primary reason for choosing storage virtualization
software (52 percent of respondents). Supporting synchronous mirroring
and metro clusters for high availability to ensure business continuity
and asynchronous data replication for remote site disaster recovery
are also high on the list.
-
More than half of the respondents (53 percent) say that they currently
have less than 10 percent of capacity assigned to flash storage. The
number of participants who answered that flash makes up higher than 40
percent of their storage capacity is only 9 percent.
-
More than 60 percent of respondents experienced performance
degradation or the inability to meet performance after virtualizing
server workloads. When asked what the typical causes of performance
problems are, 61 percent of participants blame slow applications, and
46 percent single out legacy storage devices as the culprit.
-
Human errors are driving the need for greater automation. It has
become increasingly clear that the complexity which accompanies data
growth and diversity is taking a big toll, as 61 percent of
respondents indicated that human error was behind application and data
center outages.
Software-Defined Storage Technology: Moving the Industry Forward
“This survey sheds new light on how IT professionals approach
storage-related innovations. The data reveals that many organizations
are moving away from storage functions tied to specific hardware and are
deriving real CAPEX and OPEX savings and additional purchasing power by
not being locked to particular hardware or being forced to go ‘all new
buys’ to modernize their storage infrastructure. It also points out that
heavily promoted technologies, such as Object Storage, are more often
found at the fringes in pilot programs, where IT is hoping to assess
their value,” said George Teixeira, president and CEO at DataCore.
“Software-Defined Storage and storage virtualization software, in
contrast, are providing the features that the market is demanding right
now, such as continuous availability, faster performance and higher
efficiency. These concrete benefits carry far more weight in 2015
spending than future promises from yet to be proven technologies and
startups.”
“Two major surprises jump out at you from the findings,” said Deni
Connor, founding analyst, SSG-NOW. “The absence of nearterm spending on
Big Data and Object Storage among the majority of respondents, and the
relatively small penetration of flash across these 477 organizations.
Not surprising are the rising levels of investments on Software-Defined
Storage initiatitives known to offer more immediate payoff.”
The respondents of DataCore’s State of Software-Defined
Storage survey come from a diverse set of organizations, both in
size and industry, providing statistically significant insights into the
similarity in needs for SDS over a wide range of IT environments.
Participants were located in North America, South America, Europe and
Asia, in a wide range of vertical market segments including financial
services, healthcare, government, manufacturing, education, IT services
and other related industries. 45 percent of respondents are from
organizations with less than 500 employees, 31 percent of respondents
from organizations with between 500 and 5,000 employees and 23 percent
from organizations with more than 5,000 employees.
DataCore’s 2015 State of Software-Defined Storage Survey was
conducted in April, 2015. To view the entire report, please visit: www.datacore.com/sds2015.