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sponsored by Fusion-IO
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Posted:
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18 Mar 2009
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Published:
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18 Mar 2009
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Format:
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PDF
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Length:
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4
Page(s)
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Type:
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White Paper
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Language:
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English
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ABSTRACT:
Flash storage, fueled by dramatic price drops and density increases, is now a top contender for new enterprise storage applications. And not a moment too soon: the I/O randomization caused by widespread virtual machine adoption demands higher I/O performance. Faster than disks, cheaper than DRAM, flash is occupying a new layer in the storage pyramid.
Flash's low-latency, high IOPS, non-volatility and rapidly falling price make it a natural to replace costly enterprise disk drives. But should it be packaged as a disk drive? Disk interfaces add latency and reduce bandwidth. Flash performs best close to the CPU on a very fast bus. Flash can't be a replacement for DRAM: it isn't fast enough. But it can augment DRAM and improve system utilization and performance where its low latency and high bandwidth can be fully realized.
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Author
Robin Harris
Senior Analyst, Data Mobility Group
Robin Harris is a storage market advisor and senior analyst with the Data Mobility Group, an independent consulting firm.
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BROWSE RELATED
RESOURCES
Disk Backups | Disk Storage Systems | Flash Memory | Storage Architectures | Storage Capacity | Storage Replication | Storage Security | Storage Virtualization
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View All Resources
sponsored by Fusion-IO
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