Community Manager at PeerSpot (formerly IT Central Station)
11
Published:Jun 10, 2015
Earlier this month at HP Discover two new 3PAR products and features were announced. Both versions are scalable to eight nodes:
20800 Converged Flash: 1920 HDDs and 1024 SSDs, 33.8TB of cache and 6PB capacity
20850 All-Flash: 1024 SSDs, 3.6TB of cache, and 4PB of capacity
These systems have a large amount of flash and connectivity from up to 160x 16Gb/s Fibre Channel ports.
The 20800 products are based on Gen5 “Thin Express” ASIC that includes support for SSD and implements improved (inline) data de-duplication and T10-PI for protection against data corruption issues. 20850 supports end-to-end T10 PI (Protection Information) from servers to backend storage drives.
Data replication will also be improved with these updates to data replication that makes use of asynchronous streaming mode. Streamed replication enables near-zero second RPO, compared to periodic replication that uses the shipping of snapshots to update the secondary array. Synchronous, asynchronous (snapshot) and asynchronous (streamed) modes are now all supported.
HI Avigail - spot on with the HP 3PAR StoreServ products. These are for data center consolidation and the emerging all-flash data center. There are so many blog posts that go into detail about the new HP 3PAR but this post that I did includes a ChalkTalk and is a good starting point. hpstorage.me/1J2mI3d
HPE Primera has many great features but one of the best is that it is very easy to deploy. From an overall perspective, it is reliable, easy to set up, stable, and offers quality block storage. All of the capabilities of the hardware (including snapshot, replication, and other specific features) come with it, so there is no need for an additional license. In addition, the AI advantages and anal...
HPE Primera has many great features but one of the best is that it is very easy to deploy. From an overall perspective, it is reliable, easy to set up, stable, and offers quality block storage. All of the capabilities of the hardware (including snapshot, replication, and other specific features) come with it, so there is no need for an additional license. In addition, the AI advantages and analytics with InfoSight are definitely powerful. With HPE Primera you are guaranteed great performance with excellent low latency. The AI driven interface is for hybrid cloud, and it also provides insights into any virtualized infrastructure such as proactive recommendations, performance issues, etc. Whatsmore, the dashboards are also great and user-friendly. And the customization capabilities HPE Primera gives you are excellent. From my experience using HPE Primera, there isn’t any real aspect of the solution that needs to be improved other than its high price point.
HPE 3par Storeserv is also easy to use and set up. The solution is robust and makes data performance much faster. The data replication feature of HPE 3par does a good job of replicating data cleanly over to a second site. HPE 3par Storeserv also makes it easy to make changes without it affecting your environment. In addition, it comes with a lot of screens with adjustable settings, which makes management easier. Moreover, it is easy to scale, it is very stable, has a very good interface, is reliable, and also allows you to have tiered storage. However, HPE 3par has limitations when it comes to the number of IOPS the system can do and has limited flexibility in regards to building replication solutions.
Conclusion: Ultimately, I chose HPE Primera because 3par Storeserv does not have integration with cloud services, which is something I need.
Manager at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees
Dec 17, 2021
@Janet Staver great summary, couldn't have said it better.
However, please note that HPE 3PAR has file support while Primera doesn't.
So, weigh that with your use case and requirements.
3PAR is SAS-based storage. The industry is already moving away from the 35-year-old SCSI-way, so it's not a good idea to buy any product with it.
I'm not sure about Hitachi, but as far as I know, they also have SAS backend, so, the obvious answer to the question "Which should I choose?" is "none of them".
My recommendation is - choose other vendors (or models) which provide end-to-end NVMe su...
Owner at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Jan 5, 2021
Both are great platforms, but if you are considering all flash solutions, I would recommend you to consider Pure Storage. It may be more expensive, but it should pay for itself for its functionalities.
Solution Architect at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Jan 5, 2021
3PAR is SAS-based storage. The industry is already moving away from the 35-year-old SCSI-way, so it's not a good idea to buy any product with it.
I'm not sure about Hitachi, but as far as I know, they also have SAS backend, so, the obvious answer to the question "Which should I choose?" is "none of them".
My recommendation is - choose other vendors (or models) which provide end-to-end NVMe support and make a choice between them.
HI Avigail - spot on with the HP 3PAR StoreServ products. These are for data center consolidation and the emerging all-flash data center. There are so many blog posts that go into detail about the new HP 3PAR but this post that I did includes a ChalkTalk and is a good starting point. hpstorage.me/1J2mI3d
Thanks for the article!