WRAL-TV Eliminates Disk Media with IP SANs for Blade Servers and New Applications
In 2006, when WRAL’s data storage requirements outpaced existing direct-attached storage (DAS) resources, the company found itself in the market for an entirely new approach to data management. WRAL’s most pressing storage challenges came to light when the company embarked upon a plan to implement a new e-mail archiving system. His experience with IP SANs gave him the confidence to recognize that the technology – which offers centralized storage management and leverages an organization’s existing IP infrastructure — would be more than sufficient for the company.
CBC’s rich history began in 1937 when A.J. Fletcher, a Raleigh lawyer and businessman, applied for a 250-watt AM radio station. WRAL-AM went on the air in 1939 as only the second radio station in Raleigh. Over the years, Fletcher, along with his sons and his grandson, worked alongside other dedicated employees to make CBC and WRAL household names in central North Carolina. His grandson, Jim Goodmon, now heads the company as president and CEO, with his own sons rising up the ranks to help guide CBC’s ongoing leadership in the community.
Challenge
Today, CBC continues its pioneering ways. WRAL-TV was the first station in the nation to transmit public broadcasting in high-definition television (HDTV) and the first station in the world to air an entire news broadcast using HDTV. In addition, WRAL.com is the largest news web site on the East Coast.
The company’s IT department thrives on innovation as well. In 2006, when WRAL’s data storage requirements outpaced existing direct-attached storage (DAS) resources, the company found itself in the market for an entirely new approach to data management. WRAL’s most pressing storage challenges came to light when the company embarked upon a plan to implement a new e-mail archiving system.
“With DAS, we chewed through a 250GB local disk for e-mail archiving alone in less than two months,” said Christopher Welty, systems engineer for WRAL. “My options were to either throw more disks into the fray, or go the SAN route, which would allow me to take storage and allocate it across several systems.”
According to Welty, while e-mail archiving was the catalyst to move beyond DAS, other looming IT challenges were also driving the need for more robust storage, including an IBM BladeCenter initiative, and the desire to upgrade to a more effective backup system.
Welty, who had relied upon big Fibre Channel SANs in the past, knew that they represented more than CBC needed. He also knew that adding disk after disk was not an efficient answer, especially for the long term. However, his experience with IP SANs, although somewhat limited, gave him the confidence to recognize that the technology – which offers centralized storage management and leverages an organization’s existing IP infrastructure — would be more than sufficient for the company. In addition, the price was right, at thousands of dollars less than Fibre Channel.
With a go-ahead from upper management, Welty began surveying the IP SAN landscape. He looked at NetApp’s IP SAN offerings, which he found to be prohibitively expensive. He also evaluated solutions from other leading market players, such as StoneFly, Inc. and LeftHand Networks. In the end, Welty determined that StoneFly’s all-inclusive solutions offered the most SAN for the money, with built-in Snapshot and replication capabilities to prevent against the loss of critical data, as well as centralized storage management, control and monitoring of logical storage volumes.
Welty turned to Jim Addlesberger, CEO of NavigateStorage LLC, for support with his decision. A veteran storage VAR and national solutions provider, NavigateStorage has deployed IP SANs for applications as diverse as e-mail archiving, disk-to-disk backup, managed services, document management and disaster recovery. In addition, Addlesberger had been instrumental in the past with other storage projects that Welty had been involved with at his prior company.
“I called Jim right away because I trust his opinion and expertise, and I knew he would recommend the best overall storage solution for CBC,” said Welty. “We both came to the conclusion that the StoneFly IP SAN was the best choice for supporting our needs over time, with options that will allow us to cost-effectively add a terabyte here and a terabyte there as our storage demands grow.”
Solution
CBC chose dual StoneFly Integrated Storage Concentrators (ISC) to support its wide-ranging storage endeavors. Configured for CBC as an active-active cluster for load balancing and complete redundancy, the ISC systems offer all the scalability needed for the company’s expanding IT requirements. As the cornerstone of StoneFly’s IP SAN product family, which has been shipping since June 2002, all StoneFly ISC systems are designed from the ground up to support next-generation storage technologies including SAS, 4Gb Fibre Channel and 10Gb iSCSI, as well as large-scale IP SAN deployments. In addition, they are capable of reutilizing direct attached storage resources, and they work in conjunction with StoneFly’s StoneFusion Storage Virtualization Technology. StoneFusion incorporates Snapshot capabilities for instantaneous data recovery; block-level virtualization for increased storage utilization and capacity provisioning; and a comprehensive range of storage services such as clustering, storage consolidation, access control, volume management, and synchronous and asynchronous mirroring.
Prior to installation, Addlesberger consulted with Welty on key design factors, such as how he wanted the Logical Unit Numbers (LUNs) for the SAN set up. He then shipped the pre-configured system directly to CBC. Welty handled the installation himself, quickly and without a challenge.
“The StoneFly ISC was extremely easy to install,” he said. “We simply put it in a rack, gave it an IP address, and we were ready to go.”
Benefits
Welty immediately went to work to set up the SAN to support CBC’s business-critical e-mail archiving system, which is designed to meet important FCC regulations. Said Welty, “The performance of the IP SAN has been outstanding from the start. We are not only able to retrieved archived items quickly and easily, but we are resting much more easily knowing that the reliability of the IP SAN is now behind this extremely important endeavor.”
At the same time, the StoneFly SAN has also made a dramatic impact on CBC’s demanding backup requirements. Once required to perform tedious local backups across the enterprise, Welty and the CBC IT team now implement backups to disk using the SAN. The organization has experienced a 100 percent increase in backup performance through use of this new streamlined process, cutting CBC’s backup window in half. With six TBs of data to manage overall, Welty has designed a routine that entails full e-mail backups on a nightly basis, and differential backups at regular intervals for other aspects of the enterprise.
CBC was able to further leverage the new SAN to support WRAL’s main file server, which failed in the midst of the new e-mail archiving project. Welty assigned another volume to the SAN and hooked it up to a new server, eliminating the need for a hard drive.
With its e-mail archiving and backup challenges behind it, CBC began implementing a long-awaited plan to build a new IBM BladeCenter to accommodate a critical new document management system. The high-density Blades, which consume less power and require less cooling than traditional servers, were installed in a 14-server chassis. Because IBM offers BladeCenter systems with or without built-in storage resources, WRAL chose to consolidate storage resources efficiently by ordering the Blades without disks. The company was then able to centralize storage to the SAN, while using it as the operating system hard drive for the Blade- Center. This allowed CBC to implement a scenario in which the diskless Blades boot directly from the SAN using a QLogic iSCSI HBA.
With the StoneFly IP SAN supporting the BladeCenter, CBC was able to eliminate costly disk expenditures for the servers, while also gaining an added measure of redundancy. The flexibility of the SAN is such that, if one blade self-destructs, a replacement blade can be installed easily — without data loss.
“With the SAN in place, it takes less than a few minutes to replace a blade server,” said Welty. “We simply point the server at the SAN, and we’re up and running on the new server almost instantly.”
According to Welty, the IP SAN is ready and waiting to support additional requirements at a moment’s notice, including a plan for a centralized CBC-wide email system.
“The StoneFly IP SAN allows us to expand our storage on the fly, enabling us to keep pace with the ever-changing storage demands of this dynamic organization,” he said.
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