Network Appliance announced June 12 that it has broken a standard network file system performance record using the first version of its new operating system for clustered NAS.
Going up against the industrys SPEC (Standard Performance Evaluation Corp.) SFS97_R1 benchmark, 24 nodes of NetApps new Data ONTAP GX high-performance operating system worked together under a single namespace to deliver 1,032,461 SPECsfs97_R1.v3 operations per second, with a corresponding overall response time of 1.53 milliseconds, a NetApp spokesperson said.
That more than tripled the previous performance record in linear scaling for the NFS benchmark, the spokesperson said.
The Data ONTAP GX operating system, which was in R&D for nearly three years after being acquired in the Spinnaker acquisition, is finally now available.
It is targeted for high-performance computing enterprises in the areas of energy, entertainment, and electronic design automation, said Rich Clifton, general manager of Sunnyvale, Calif.-based NetApps network storage business unit.
“This is a place where people continue to push the leading edge of what you can accomplish,” Clifton said.
Global namespace lets NAS systems scale to petabytes, and users can access data while it is moving between controllers and arrays. GXs file striping lets volumes scale across nodes for a performance improvement.
Data ONTAP GX delivers massive levels of scalability and NFS performance in a simple, reliable system that is ideal for HPC, Clifton said.
Data ONTAP GX is available immediately for customers in HPC environments. Pricing starts at $212,000 for a configuration of two FAS3050 nodes, Data Ontap GX, and 7TB of storage.