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EMC VNXe1600 Review
EMC VNXe1600 Review
The VNXe1600 is powered by Intel Xeon E5 2.6Ghz dual-core CPUs in both of the array’s Storage Processor modules and, like the
VNXe3200, the VNXe1600 offers both Fibre Channel and 10GbE connectivity options. When we had the first had the opportunity to work
hands-on with the VNXe3200, it was the first and only VNX offering to utilize this 2U form factor that incorporated the controllers with the
storage. The VNXe1600 underscores EMC's intentions to bring VNX to a new market segment by streamlining the VNXe3200 into an offering
even more affordable to midmarket customers.
The VNXe1600 is available with in two different 2U chassis options: a 25-drive array with 2.5” bays and a 12-drive array with 3.5” bays. Both
options incorporate dual VNX Storage Processors (SPs). Each VNXe1600 SP includes two 6Gb/s x 4 SAS ports for expansion via EMC Disk
Array Enclosures (DAEs). Mirroring the VNXe1600 array chassis configurations, the available DAEs include a 12-drive enclosure with 3.5”
bays and a 25-drive enclosure with 2.5" bays. The VNXe1600 can manage up to 200 disks depending on the expansion enclosures used. DAE
types can be mixed within a deployment.
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When compared to the VNXe3200, the VNXe1600 array has lighter CPU and memory specifications along with some streamlining of the
available data services. One other key change made in scaling down the VNXe3200 is that the VNXe1600 supports block storage only rather
than the unified block and file services of the VNXe3200.
Like the VNXe3200, the VNXe1600 makes use of EMC’s MCx "Multicore Everything" architecture that provides CPU optimizations for VNX2
data services including multicore optimizations for hybrid storage performance such as FAST Cache. MCx also provides processor-level
optimizations to support virtualized workloads. On the VNXe1600, EMC's Multicore Cache, Multicore FAST Cache, and Multicore RAID are
able to take advantage of MCx. Multicore Cache optimizes each Storage Processor’s DRAM and core usage to increase write and read
performance. FAST Cache is a large secondary SLC SSD cache to serve applications with I/O spikes. Multicore RAID manages and maintains
RAID functionality.
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VNXe1600 Base Software Package: Standard integrated management and monitoring of all aspects of VNXe systems including the
Operating Environment 3.1.3, all protocols (as listed above), Unisphere Management with integrated support, FAST Cache, Block
Snapshots, Remote Protection- Native Asynchronous Block Replication, and Thin Provisioning.
Optional Software:
Virtual Storage Integrator (VSI)
PowerPath
Client Connectivity Facilities:
Block access by iSCSI and FC
Virtual LAN (IEEE 802.1q)
VMWare Integration:
VMware vStorage APIs for Array Integration (VAAI) for Block improves performance by leveraging more efficient, array-based
operations
vStorage APIs for Storage Awareness (VASA) provides storage awareness for VMware administrators
VNXe Physical Dimensions (Approximate):
VNXe1600 Processor Enclosure (3.5” Drives)
Dimensions (H/W/L): 3.40in x 17.5in x 20.0in/8.64cm x 44.45cm x 50.8cm
Weight (max): 61.8lb/28.1kg
VNXe1600 Processor Enclosure (2.5 Drives)
Dimensions (H/W/L): 3.40in x 17.5in x 17.0 in/8.64cm x 44.45cm x 43.18cm
Weight (max): 51.7lb/23.5 kg
VNXe1600 Expansion Enclosure (12 x 3.5” Drives)
Dimensions (H/W/L): 3.40in x 17.5in x 20.0 in/8.64cm x 44.45cm x 50.8cm
Weight (max): 52.0lb/23.6kg
VNXe1600 Expansion Enclosure (25 x 2.5” Drives)
Dimensions (H/W/L): 3.45in x 17.5in x 13in/8.64cm x 44.45cm x 33.02cm
Weight (max): 48.1lb/21.8kg
VNXe1600 drives use type, capacity, and speed labels to simplify visual identification. The first four drives in the VNXe1600 are system drives.
The 12-drive 3.5” form factor uses a single LED for power and status, while the 25-drive 2.5” array uses separate LEDs for this function.
VNXe1600 drive caddies include both metal and plastic components and are secured via a carrier with a handle and a latch and spring
assembly.
The VNXe1600 incorporates two VNX2 Storage Processors (SP), the macro-level component that provides compute and I/O for the array.
Each VNXe1600 SP consists of a CPU module with an Intel Xeon Dual Core 2.6-GHz processor and one DDR slot with 8GB of memory per
SP. These storage processors are redundant along with the array's power supplies, fans.
The VNXe1600 offers dynamic failover and failback and is designed to allow software and hardware upgrades and component replacement
while operational. Storage Processors can be removed individually from the Disk Processor Enclosure (DPE). Each SP has three fan modules
above it; at least two of the three fans on each SP must be active or the system will save the cache and shut down.
Each Disk Processor Enclosure (DPE) has two power supply modules. A 3-cell Lithium-Ion Battery Backup Unit (BBU) is located in each SP to
provide enough power flush the VNXe1600’s SP cache contents to internal mSATA storage in the case of a power failure or SP removal from
the chassis. This typed of attention to detail is a clear differentiation point between EMC's SMB equipment and most of the other platforms
currently competing in the space. The 32GB mSATA drive is located underneath each SP and contains a partition that holds the boot image
that is read upon initial boot up as well as storage for cached data. If one mSATA drive becomes corrupted it can be recovered from the peer
SP.
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On the rear of the VNXe1600, two integrated Converged Network Adapter (CNA) ports can be configured at the factory for 10GbE Optical
iSCSI or 8- or 16-Gb/s Fibre Channel. The CNA supports 10G optical SFP and 10G Active/Passive TwinAX cables and the Fibre Channel CNA
module supports either 8- or 16Gb/s SFPs.
The VNXe1600 can also be deployed with additional interface modules to increase connectivity options. Both of the VNXe1600’s Storage
Processors must have the same variety of I/O personality module installed, however. Three I/O personality modules are currently available for
the VNXe1600:
The rear of the array incorporates two, four-lane 6Gb/s mini-SAS HD ports for expansion. The VNXe1600 includes one LAN management port
and a serial over LAN service port. The rear also provides access to one mini-USB port, an NMI debut port, indicator LEDs, and access to a
power supply module and three cooling fans.
The VNX family of products use EMC’s Unisphere management software which we find offers a rewarding combination of accessibility and
depth. Unisphere is streamlined enough to configure and manage at the scale of an individual array and is also designed for managing many
machines at the datacenter and multi-site enterprise scale. Access to EMC's management ecology is one of the selling points of this solution
and the Unisphere interface is clean and had a straightforward learning curve for someone familiar with other storage array operating and
management systems.
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VNX software included with all VNXe1600 arrays include the VNXe Operating Environment, Unisphere Web Management Interface, EMC’s
Integrated Online Support Ecosystem, Block Protocols: iSCSI (IPv4/6) or FC, Unisphere Central (multi-system, multi-site), SSD FAST Cache,
Block-based Snapshots, Remote Protection-Native asynchronous block replication, and Thin Provisioning. The VNXe1600 features some of
recent enhancements to the VNX2 platform including expanded RAID options, dynamic/automatic hot sparing, drive mobility, and Snapshots.
This snapshot technology is designed for quick copies of production data with support for automated scheduling and deleting of snapshots
within configurable parameters such as available storage space. The VNXe1600 builds its native asynchronous replication support for LUNs,
LUN Groups, and VMware VMFS Datastores on top of the VNX2 snapshot technology in order to provide automatic and manual
synchronization. These snapshots use "redirect-on-write" technology with writes sent to a new location within the same pool, and support for
hierarchical snaps ("snap of a snap").
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The VNXe1600 uses pool-based provisioning for Flash, SAS, and NL-SAS drives with no support for classic RAID groups. For the VNXe1600,
all storage pools have to be composed of drives from the same storage tier: Flash, SAS or NL-SAS. Multiple storage pools may be created,
each with a specific drive technology. The VNXe1600 does not support multitier pools or EMC's FAST VP.
SP Cache optimizes the VNXe1600’s Storage Processor DRAM to increase host write and read performance. Instead of flushing a “dirty”
cache page to disk, the page is copied to the disk but still kept in memory for near-term reuse before ultimately being removed from the cache.
Multicore FAST Cache can be considered as a secondary cache that is built from SSDs, and enhances I/O activity between the VNXe1600
DRAM-based Multicore Cache and non-Flash storage pools managed by the array. Note that the initial VNXe1600 release only supports FAST
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Cache configurations with a total of two cache drives: EMC intimates that future releases may not feature this limitation.
Free downloadable plug-ins are available for VMware vCenter and Microsoft System Manager that can handle basic element management and
provisioning of an array from within those management systems. EMC Virtual Storage Integrator (VSI) for VMware is also available to allow
administrators to map virtual machines to storage and to self-provision storage from VMware vCenter. EMC Storage Integrator for Windows
Suite (ESI) for Microsoft environments provisions applications and provides storage topology views scripting libraries. ESI also includes
System Center integrations such as SCOM, SC O, and SCVMM.
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EMC’s VASA, VAAI, and VMware Aware Integration are available to integrate with VMware vCenter and ESXi hosts. These integrations include
storage monitoring from VMware interfaces and the creation of datastores from Unisphere. VMware Site Recovery Manager (SRM) is available
for disaster recovery.
We publish an inventory of our lab environment, an overview of the lab's networking capabilities, and other details about our testing protocols
so that administrators and those responsible for equipment acquisition can fairly gauge the conditions under which we have achieved the
published results. To maintain our independence, none of our reviews are paid for or managed by the manufacturer of equipment we are
testing.
Our benchmarks of the VNXe1600 will utilize several configurations that might be seen in actual deployments. Performance will be examined
using a 100GB RAID6 storage pool, a 1000GB RAID6 pool, a 100GB RAID10 pool, and a 1000GB RAID10 pools. Each of these pools will be
be accessed via Fibre Channel.
The 100GB test size is specifically chosen to shown in-FAST Cache performance performance, whereas the 1000GB tests spill
outside of the 183GB of usable FAST Cache and show what the backend storage pool is capable of.
This array was benchmarked with our Dell PowerEdge R730 Testbed:
Prior to initiating each of the fio synthetic benchmarks, our lab preconditions the device into steady-state under a heavy load of 16 threads with
an outstanding queue of 16 per thread. Then the storage is tested in set intervals with multiple thread/queue depth profiles to show random
performance under light and heavy usage.
This synthetic analysis incorporates four profiles which are widely used in manufacturer specifications and benchmarks:
During the 4k transfer benchmark, the VNXe1600 scored its highest throughputs with a 100GB RAID6 volume at 55,147IOPS on read
operations and 27,340IOPS for write operations. The 100GB RAID10 volume was a close second in 4k throughput. Among the 1000GB pools,
the RAID6 volume was superior in terms of read throughput, while the RAID10 volume outperformed with 4k write operations.
The average latency results for 4k random transfers again show the RAID6 and RAID10 volumes to be competitive when configured with a
100GB storage pool. The average write latency results for the 1000GB RAID6 volume were very disproportionate to its equivalent 1000GB
RAID10 volume, however.
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The 1000GB RAID6 volume also experienced by far the largest latency value in the 4k random benchmark. The 100GB RAID10 share
achieved the lowest 4k random maximum latency for read and write operations.
Standard deviation calculations for the 4k random show that the 100GB RAID10 volume sustained the most consistent latencies during this
benchmark protocol. The 100GB RAID6 volume was also very consistent for read operation latencies, with a standard deviation of 4.44ms.
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Shifting the benchmark to utilize 8k transfers in purely read and purely write transfers resulted in more competitive performance across the
various configurations deployed to the VNXe1600. The best performance in read and write performance came from the 1000GB RAID6 pool,
which achieved 150,705IOPS for read transfers and 60,344IOPS for write transfers.
With a fully-random 8K 70% read operations and 30% write synthetic workload, we look primarily at the performance advantage of in-FAST
Cache vs. out-of-FAST Cache performance of the VNXe1600 in RAID6 and RAID10 over FC. The 100GB RAID6 measurement slightly edged
out the 100GB RAID10 configuration, although both performed significantly higher than our 1000GB tests. Moving well outside of FAST Cache,
RAID10 offered more throughput than RAID6, which isn't entirely surprising.
Average latency results for the 8k 70/30 benchmarks also show the 1000GB RAID6 pool's performance at the bottom of the pack, compared to
in FAST Cache 100GB RAID6 and RAID10 measurements with the lowest response times.
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Maximum latencies recorded during the 8k 70/30 benchmark also reflect the struggles of the 1000GB RAID6 with deep queues. Maximum
latencies for the other configurations were more mixed, with the VNXe1600 100GB RAID10 having the best results overall.
Standard deviation calculations for the 8k 70/30 benchmark underscore the uneven latency performance of the 1000GB RAID6 pool under
incredible load, while also reflecting the buttery-smooth consistency of the 100GB RAID6 pool to the 100GB RAID10 pool in terms of latency.
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The final benchmark for this review uses 128k sequential transfers with both 100% read and then 100% write operations. The 1000GB RAID6
pool was able to sustain the highest read transfer in the test at 3.09GB/s althogh the 1000GB RAID10 pool was not far behind in read
operations. The 1000GB RAID10 pool, on the other hand, dramatically outscored the 1000GB RAID6 pool in write performance to come out in
the top position among the cofigurations tested.
Conclusion
The EMC VNXe1600 continues to advance VNX product family into the sub-$10k SMB market with a true enterprise-grade feature set and
price tag that will make it appealing for hub and spoke deployments, offsite replication, and other applications for SMB. Larger organizations
that may already have VNX infrastructure would find the VNXe1600 useful for internal departments and remote offices. With its low starting
price, EMC is looking to strike fear in the hearts of most entry-enterprise competitors that have generally felt safe and comfortable in this price
band. Generally speaking, features such as dual active-active controllers, 8/16Gb FC connectivity, replication support are only seem in more
upstream systems. Going as far as including onboard battery backup that can flush system DRAM to flash in the event of power failures almost
seems like overkill for what many customers might shop in this range, but this is the difference a vendor such as EMC brings to the table
compared to a tier-2 or tier-3 vendor that has generally only competed on price or a BYOD (Bring You Own Drives) model.
In terms of performance the EMC VNXe1600 offers quite a punch, although moreso with workloads capable of sitting inside its optional 200GB
FastCache. We saw strong fully-random results, with 4K measuring upwards of 55k IOPS read and 30k IOPS write depending on backend
storage pool configuration. 8k 70/30 performance peaked at over 35k IOPS, showing the dual-core CPU controllers still offered plenty of punch
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compared to the quad-core CPUs found in the VNXe3200. Sequential performance was also strong, measuring over 3GB/s read and 1.8GB/s
write over 16Gb FC.
There are hybrid arrays on the market that reach lower price points than the VNXe1600, but the VNXe is distinguished by its access to VNX2
functionality and interoperability which smaller customers may have felt priced out of in the past. The VNXe is one of the smaller segments of
the EMC business, but in terms of what's being accomlished in their respective price bands, the VNXe1600 and VNXe3200 are extrordinary
machines. Factoring in featue set, caching performance, and support infrastructure, the VNXe1600 is a clear leader when looking at arrays that
start out sub $10k. Quite frankly, the VNXe1600 is so well executed that it's difficult to make the case for other options in this category.
Pros
EMC VNX-grade storage at a price accessible to customers who may have been priced out in the past
Flexible hybrid drive configurations and connectivity options including iSCSI and Fibre Channel
Heavy emphasis on data integrity, including a battery-powered mSATA flash backup for system cache
Cons
EMC makes only a few compromises to bring the power and support of EMC's VNX2 family to a new market at an unprecedented price point in
the integrated 2U form factor of the VNXe1600.
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