Cisco Announces New Storage Building Blocks — UCS S3260

Today, Cisco made some storage-related announcements that may have sounded confusing. On a first read, you might think that Cisco is attempting to re-enter the storage market. Personally, I view their announcement as wanting to ensure that they become — and remain — “storage adjacent”…

I’ll walk through things and hopefully clear up any confusion below.

Some Background

Those of you who follow the industry will likely remember that Cisco actually attempted to enter the storage market a while back.

The timing was particularly interesting. Pretty much right after VMware announced NSX, their network virtualization product, Cisco announced a storage acquisition. From the outside, it looked like it might have been intended as a warning shot across the bow of the EMC/VMware ship — a sort of “you’re going to enter the networking market? Fine. We’ll enter the storage market.”

The acquisition was the all-Flash storage startup, WhipTail.

To me, WhipTail was yet another dual-controller, scale-up storage solution that handled all-Flash by substituting SSD for HDD. I didn’t really see anything in WhipTail that differentiated it from other Flash solutions available at the time.

Cisco said they weren’t actually planning to sell the storage platform, but were looking to use the intellectual property to produce their own Flash-based performance acceleration for their UCS server line.

WhipTail was re-branded as “Invicta” (which I always thought sounded too close to “Invista” — another failed storage product). Despite anything Cisco had said, their first Invicta offerings were bundles consisting of Cisco UCS servers plus an Invicta array.

Soon afterwards, some troubles began to surface. Cisco suspended sales of new Invicta units over “scaling issues”. It seems that growing the array to full capacity didn’t work exactly as advertised, and Cisco felt it was better to stop sales of the product until they could fix the issues.

Eventually, sales resumed  without my being sure that the scaling issues had been fully resolved. Not too long after sales of Invicta resumed, Cisco decided to take a step back and give up on Invicta. The product line was discontinued and (almost) everyone in the Invicta product division was laid off.

All that is a long way of saying: “When Cisco makes a storage-related announcement, I’m simultaneously listening closely because I’m curious, and scratching my head wondering why…”

What It Sounds Like Cisco Announced

If you skim through the announcement materials, it really does seem like Cisco may be entering the storage market. You’ll pick up on some particular key points in the announcement, like:

I’ll address the other points below, but let me expand on the last one first. With this announcement, Cisco offers customers choices around how they’d prefer to purchase their storage:

What Cisco Actually Announced

At the core of today’s Cisco announcement is the upgrades to the UCS S3260 server line, and new messaging and market opportunity for it.

The UCS S3260 is now available with bigger and faster drives. It now works with a wider variety of I/O modules and Flash-based NVMe PCI add-on cards.

And, lastly, the UCS S3260 is now (finally!) fully supported by UCS Manager, allowing administrator to manage several servers from a single interface, to speed configuration and provisioning through the use of customer-defined storage profiles, and multiple servers to be easily connected through Cisco fabric layer.

You’ll notice that nowhere in the three paragraphs above where the words “storage solution” mentioned even once.

What Cisco is actually proposing is that the newly-upgraded UCS S3260 is the ideal hardware platform for customers to use with the software-defined storage (SDS) offering of their choice. Those SDS licenses are not included, and would need to be purchased separately from the Cisco hardware.

Specs

In this section, I’ll go through the UCS S3260 hardware and other specifications. I’ll divide them up by:

Qualified OS List

The table below shows the current list of operating systems that have been qualified to run on the UCS S3260.

There are three caveats with this table:

  1. VMware vSphere and vSAN (yes, that’s the new correct way to capitalize that) are not supported with the 512e or 4K HDD or SSDs. (See Drive Options below)
  2. Microsoft Storage Spaces are not currently qualified.
  3. MS Windows Server 2016 qualification is expected to be on target with Microsoft’s GA of that version.

Drive Options

The table below shows the supported HDD options for the UCS S3260.

The table below shows the supported SSD options for the UCS S3260.

DWPD stands for Drive Writes Per Day, a common endurance rating that manufacturers of Flash provide to their customers. A higher rating means a longer-lasting drive.

There are currently no Self-Encrypting Drive (SED) options supported for the UCS S3260.

Data Protection Options

Unless you’re running other software to manage the storage, your options for data protection are all RAID-based and include RAID 0, 1, 10, 5, 6, 50, 60, and 00.

I’d never heard of that last one before, but if you understand that RAID 10 is really RAID 1+0, i.e.: data striped (RAID 0) across multiple pairs of mirrored drives (RAID 1), you’ll get the idea.

RAID 00 means you set up some RAID 0 sets of drives, then stripe data (RAID 0 style) across those sets, hence 0+0.

Obviously, the RAID 0 and 00 options provide no protection against drive failure.

I/O Module Options

I/O options for the UCS S3260 include:

Additional options may be made available in the future, based on add-on PCIe cards.

General Configuration Options

The UCS S3260 can be purchased in the number of configurations including:

Availability

The Cisco UCS S3260 is orderable today.

General Availability of the UCS S3260 begins 7 November

GeekFluent’s Thoughts

I’m all over the place on this one. My thoughts, in no particular order, are:

What are your thoughts on the announcement? Let me know in the Comments below.