Recently HP has announced new portfolio for their trademark 3PAR storage arrays with improvement in specification and performance. Based on this latest additions, this storage is setting the benchmark for other vendors and planning to hit the number one position. This new series named 8000 and 20000 will replace the existing 7000 and 10000 series respectively and HP has already started shipping the new StoreServ models to their customers.
in this article, we will try to do a technology comparison and do a supported maximums study of these models.According to the tech specification, the Storeserv 8000 and 20000 series are supported by the latest Gen5 ASIC and that basically enhanced the overall array performance. As per the white paper released by HP, the StoreServ arrays helps to reduce performance bottlenecks with flash-optimized hardware and software for greater than 3 million IOPS at sub-millisecond latencies, which is quite impressive and promising.
The 5th generation of HP 3PAR ASIC is known as Thin Express and it Supports mixed workloads and enables thin technologies including inline de-duplication with high performance levels to lighten legacy storage performance concerns.
Let's see the array specification and supported maximums. we have captured the relevant fields from 3par quick spec and data sheets and consolidated everything in to a chart for easy understanding.
Below mentioned chart shows you the supported maximums on SroreServ 8200, 8400, 8440 and 8450 All-Flash storage arrays.
Below mentioned chart shows you the supported maximums on SroreServ 8200, 8400, 8440 and 8450 All-Flash storage arrays.
Below mentioned chart will give you an idea about specification comparison between 8000 and 20000 models.
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