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Rubrik: World-wide News/Products & News Sun's
Open Storage Platform with New Services in OpenSolaris Operating System Sun
Signals New Stage in Open Storage Revolution with New Developer Tools and Expanded
Open Storage Services (15.05.08)
- Sun Microsystems announced the addition of powerful developer tools and
expanded professional service capabilities to help developers better leverage
the growing open source communities that are fast changing the economics of
the storage IT landscape. Over 3,000 members and 30+ projects within an
active and growing OpenSolaris storage community demonstrate a groundswell
within the storage industry for developers and enterprise companies to use
open source alternatives to expensive proprietary storage offerings.
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Today's
storage industry is still largely closed and proprietary, with most customers
locked-in to one particular vendor. Sun has opened up the storage platform to
deliver dramatic increases in performance and price-performance for customers
and, at the same time, created a whole new world for developers to build new
applications and innovation in the storage world. The use of open platforms
allows developers to re-purpose and re-use hardware through the simple
addition of new software - something not offered by proprietary solutions. "The
storage industry is undergoing a radical transformation that parallels what
servers went through a decade ago," said John Fowler, executive vice
president, Systems Group, Sun Microsystems. "Solaris OS, ZFS and the
work of the OpenSolaris storage community provide rock-solid, enterprise
class scalability and value, giving customers a low-cost way to leverage
these open architectures without sacrificing quality or reliability." Sun has
provided the foundation for this industry shift through the creation of the
OpenSolaris storage community. Existing products like the popular Sun Fire
x4500 server "Thumper" system - the world's first hybrid
server/storage data server - and the Solaris ZFS file system capabilities
within the Solaris OS help customers reduce costs by up to 90% through the
use of open source software on industry standard systems. New Tools from Sun Help Enable
Developers to Build Storage Servers in 10 Minutes or Less Sun
introduced new developer tools, recipes and how-to guides that provide
insight on a wide variety of developmental issues. These new tools,
easy-to-use videos and accompanying online guides provide developers the
tools needed to build rock-solid storage systems quickly and efficiently: Build a OpenSolaris operating system storage server in 10 minutes
or less: this how-to recipe is intended to familiarize developers with the
simple commands in Solaris for performing data management tasks, i.e. ZFS,
NFS, CIFS, Comstar. Simple
Steps to building a network-attached storage (NAS) appliance: this how-to recipe
describes the steps required to build a NAS device with OpenSolaris operating
system quickly and easily. In
addition, expanded Sun service capabilities were released to speed open
storage application development and help customers safely make the transition
to an open storage infrastructure. Whether it is an open storage
architectural design from a proprietary system or data migration need, Sun
services brings technical expertise into the growing open storage arena and
will continue to expand open storage capabilities to address community needs.
Sun Customers Save Money Through
Open Storage Gracenote,
SearchForce, DigiTar, Joyent and other industry leaders leverage Sun open
storage solutions like the Sun Fire x4500 server system and Solaris ZFS technology
to break through the economic stranglehold of closed systems. By leveraging
Sun services, advanced developer tools and the community approach to creating
and upgrading storage software and other applications, DigiTar CTO Jason
Williams saves time and, more importantly, significantly cuts costs in his
datacenter - read his blog here: Jason's Blog "Sun
has provided a platform for the democratization of the storage industry,"
said Jason Williams, CTO of DigiTar. "We have found the appropriate
level of operating system support we need to run our business through the
OpenSolaris storage community, which saves significant time and money. I
participate in the community daily and see real business value in the
projects that are being created by some of the industry's most important
players." "We've
scaled clients up to over one billion page views a month using Joyent
Accelerators built on OpenSolaris," said Rod Boothby, vice-president,
Platform Evangelism at Joyent. Thousands Join Open Storage
Community Comprised
of over 3000 members and spanning many significant projects (such as SVM,
UFS, NFS, ZFS etc.), the Open Storage movement led by Sun has established one
of the fastest growing open source communities in the world. Storage industry
leaders like Hitachi Data Systems, Qlogic and Emulex have contributed their
software to the OpenSolaris community. Other community participants include
storage solutions vendors like Nexenta, which leverages OpenSolaris OS and
ZFS innovation to deliver a NAS software solution. In addition,
instructor-training provider LiveAmmo uses the OpenSolaris OS innovation of
Project COMSTAR to provide its customers with a low cost fibre channel SAN
infrastructure. Companies across the IT landscape are also using OpenSolaris
storage technologies within their product offerings, for example database
leader MySQL; content management companies Drupal; Confluence and Alfresco;
and CRM provider SugarCRM and others. "The
enterprise shift to open storage solutions is now. As a participating member
of the OpenSolaris community since 2006, we've leveraged the strengths of the
Solaris kernel and the innovation provided by ZFS to offer NexentaStor, a
software solution that, for the first time, makes enterprise class storage
available to everyone," said Even Powell, CEO of Nexenta. "In
combination with industry standard high performance and high density storage
servers, NexentaStor is saving customers time and money over legacy storage
systems at a time when data is growing faster than legacy solution architectures
and our enterprise customers budgets can address." (Sun: ma) |
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