Virtualization News Desk
Alameda County Medical Center Selects DataCore's Storage Virtualization
DataCore's SANmelody Software is Serving as the Foundation of a Replication and Disaster Recovery Plan at ACMC
Jul. 30, 2008 03:00 PM
DataCore Software announced that its SANmelody software is
serving as the foundation of a replication and disaster recovery (DR) plan at
Alameda County Medical Center (ACMC) that was orchestrated by DataCore partner
Entisys. The IT environment at ACMC was fundamentally based upon products from
Dell and EMC as well as virtual machines from VMware. ACMC is comprised of
multiple sites and as a county hospital the organization is under a number of
budget constraints. Entisys presented the Citrix XenServer and DataCore SANmelody DR
solution based upon XenServer, which provides great savings to the medical
center. "Instead of buying another EMC product to replicate the SAN, we
showed them what DataCore can do and ACMC was able to complete a replication
scenario for pennies on the dollar with XenServer and DataCore," said Thad
Morrow, Director of Sales, Entisys. "But it is not so much about the cost
savings as much as it is a case where ACMC could use DataCore to support a very
distributed environment where multiple vendors' products are deployed and make
a full-on disaster recovery solution possible."
Under constant budget constraints, ACMC has struggled to
maintain a disaster recovery or business continuity plan, and has had to use
what was available to them at the time – meaning an existing data center that
is thirteen miles away. ACMC had been a longstanding Citrix customer, so for
cost savings it was a natural choice to replace more costly VMware for
XenServers.
"We had been a Citrix shop, so I jumped at the
opportunity with XenServer," said Dave Bennett, Director of Technical
Support, Alameda County Medical
Center. "I liked the
product and I did not see any tangible difference between them and VMware. As
for DataCore, we started looking at SANmelody at the request of DataCore
partner Entisys. This was the best technology we saw for our needs, whereby we
could economically leverage iSCSI for the remote site SAN rather than spend a
lot more on a Fibre Channel SAN." ACMC is currently deploying the
solution. The initial data pool will start at 8TBs.
For the deployment, ACMC chose Dell hardware to run the SANmelody-XenServer
solution. From a software standpoint, the solution cost ACMC at least five
times less than a comparable, proprietary hardware SAN. The choice was more
than just money, however; it was about flexibility. With DataCore ACMC does not
have to worry about matching up machines, nor did they have any issue with the
replication software being able to "talk" between disparate hosts.
This ease of use and manageability was just as important as upfront cost
savings because the IT staff at ACMC is already spread thin, wherein eight IT
people support 2,600 users.
The mission of the medical center is to maintain and improve
the health of all County residents, regardless of ability to pay. There are six
campuses comprising ACMC, including the main hospital and trauma center in Oakland, California,
another hospital in San Leandro,
California, provides
rehabilitation and extended care, a psychiatric hospital in the same location
and three ambulatory clinics. In terms of the IT architecture, all of the campuses
are linked via a high speed ATM providing 65 MBs of bandwidth.
Two years ago ACMC purchased and deployed a SAN from EMC.
"That was the first step we took in order to consolidate storage rather
than using individual servers," explained Bennett. "As such it was
the first step down this path." Since then, Bennett and his team have
taken a different look at the way they store data as well as what is stored,
particularly in terms of putting a premium on both data and systems recovery.
The organization used VMware in conjunction with its EMC SAN. With DataCore,
both VMware and XenServers are in place currently – although longer-term the
plan is to standardize on XenServer. "The cost difference between VMware
and Xen is pretty substantial," added Bennett. "As for DataCore, I
could see some real advantages in using DataCore in our environment."
Chiefly, Bennett and his team were sold on SANmelody's
ability to first and foremost enable them to utilize existing server storage
that was not being used, thereby eliminating the need to go out and buy new
disk space. Performance was another key selling point. As for price, Bennett
comments, "The price was right. SANmelody just made sense when you put the
whole thing together – being able to use existing storage where possible and
the performance increases we saw firsthand."
The disaster recovery site at the secondary location in Fairmont will enable ACMC
to avoid going to tape back-ups. With the DR site, the IT team can pull data
right away and pull whole systems up if necessary when the ones at the primary
location go down. "Before this, our whole DR plan revolved around just how
fast we could get servers and software available to rebuild them," noted
Bennett. "With virtualization technology as it is today, it makes to be
able to bring systems and data over from another site when the situation
dictates that."
ACMC is taking the classic virtualization approach. They
have physical servers, which will be virtualized and then replicated on virtual
machines. The VMs with those changes will then be replicated to ACMC's Fairmont site and
available in the case of any calamity. "DataCore made this project very
achievable for a variety of reasons," summarized Morrow. "A real win
for DataCore was the simplicity of the technology. Sure SANmelody is
affordable, but more than anything DataCore technology is effective.
Additionally, the IT staff Alameda
County Medical
Center could implement
SANmelody quickly, as well own, manage and grow the solution very easily
without the need for professional support."
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