HPCwire

Leading HPC
Solution Providers


























HPCwire >> Features

Panasas Gives Parallel NFS a Boost


This week HPC storage vendor Panasas announced that they are making their parallel file system client software, called DirectFLOW, publicly available via open source. Their goal is to accelerate the adoption of the Parallel Network File System (pNFS) standard, which is to be released as an extension to the Network File System version 4 protocol, and will be technically known as NSF version 4.1.

HPCwire spoke with Larry Jones, Vice President of Marketing for Panasas, to get the details of the announcement.

According to Jones, pNFS is the first performance upgrade to NFS in two decades, since the protocol was developed by Sun Microsystems. Jones explained that with NFS, you have a tier of servers between the clients and the storage systems and all of your data is read in or read out through those servers. With pNFS, the servers get pulled off to the side; they still control access to the storage systems to make sure that the data is properly protected, but the clients get both direct and parellel access to that storage system -- that's what accounts for performance boost.

There exists a huge imbalance between the compute side and the I/O architectures that pNFS resolves as it allows for parallel and direct access from the client to the storage device.

Jones explained that "NFS with its serial one-lane-in, one-late-out architecture doesn't meet the needs of the HPC community and increasingly the enterprise market" and the solution is pNFS.

Increased use of parallelism from cluster and multi-core processor deployments is driving the need for parallel storage to improve application performance. pNFS offers increased scalability, performance and manageability. In addition, users will have the comfort of not being locked in a by a single vendor.

Jones explained that the increased manageability is especially a boon for HPC customers. pNFS allows a single global namespace instead of having a mount table with 25 NFS servers on it. A single mount point allows for very scalable storage system, making it easier to maintain performance without all the load-balancing issues.

Although the same advantages are currently available in proprietary parallel systems like IBM's GPFS, IBRIX's Fusion Parallel File System, and Panasas' own PanFS, these systems are incompatible with each other. pNFS offers a single standard that should encourage customer deployments of parallel storage solutions.

Panasas has taken a three-step strategy to promote adoption of parallel storage: to create great products that show the potential for parallel storage, work those into standards so the industry can evolve, and, for the end users to benefit, work with the ISV community so that they can develop their software accordingly.

Panasas believes that in order for there to be a big market for parallel storage there needs to be a standard. They hope the company's efforts will energize the market. Jones said that Panasas would "like to see the whole market evolve, so that we can move from that single-lane NFS to parallel NFS and do it across the entire industry."

To help accomplish this goal, Panasas has fostered dedicated development resources. They have recently opened an R&D center in TelAviv, Israel, where they have engineers specifically working on the Linux implementation of pNFS, i.e., inserting pNFS into the Linux kernel. There is also a group at the University of Michigan, called The Center for Information Technology Integration (CITI), working towards the same goal. Jones expressed confidence that the pNSF standard will be included in future Linux distributions, perhaps by next year sometime.

Panasas' founder and CTO, Dr. Garth Gibson, a couple of their engineers, and Peter Corbett of Network Appliance wrote the first draft of the pNFS spec back in 2004. They based the architecture on Panasas' DirectFlow protocol. Since then, Panasas has been evolving their software in concert with the standard. Other vendors working on the pNFS standard include Network Appliance, IBM, EMC and Sun.

The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) NFSv4 subcommittee is reviewing pNFS as part of NFS version 4.1 and is expected to be finished in September. As soon as that happens, Panasas customers will be able to upgrade their software to the standard. Support is expected on Linux, Windows, and leading Unix versions such as AIX and Solaris. Ultimately, Jones hopes that users will be able to get the technology from their Linux distribution (SUSE, Red Hat, etc.).

Jones concluded by saying: "We think that parallel is the wave of the future. NFS hasn't had a performance kicker in twenty years and it's about time it got one. We believe that parallel is the way to go and we've been leaders in that."


Article Tools

  • Print This Article

Share & Save Options

Discussion

There are 0 discussion items posted.  

Sponsored Links

Cray at SC08 – Celebrating Innovation
Visit us at booth #532 and see the latest technology from Cray, including the new Cray XT5 system with ECOphlex technology and the recently introduced Cray CX1 desk side supercomputer.

Visit IBM at SC08 - Experience the latest breakthroughs in High Performance Computing
As the world's leading provider of high performance computing solutions, IBM will showcase Exascale Stream Processing, Cloud Computing, Blue Brain, Interactive Ray Tracing along with many other exciting demos.

Harness the power of Sun to solve your most complex problems
Beat your competition by getting to market first, running more simulations, and solving complex problems with Sun HPC Systems. Sun HPC: Open, Simple, Reliable.



Top Headlines

Hazy Computing

Oct 15 | Linux Magazine | Today machines manage what we cannot. Are we dependent upon results or processes we do not understand? Read more...

Reaching For the Exa-Scale

Oct 15 | International Science Grid This Week | Exa-scale computing is probably years away. But GPUs and volunteer grids may provide a shortcut. Read more...

New Visualization Laboratory Debuts on UT Austin's Main Campus

Oct 14 | Texas Advanced Computing Center | TACC has unveiled a new visualization laboratory capable of reproducing terascale data sets with exceptional clarity and resolution. Read more...

High-Performance Nonsense

Oct 13 | Computerworld | Microsoft will have to overcome Windows' historical baggage if its new HPC Server 2008 offering is to be acceptable to users. Read more...

ORNL's Breakthroughs in Cray Machines Make it Hard to Beat

Oct 13 | Knoxville News Sentinel | Oak Ridge National Laboratory has petaflop computing in sight as it upgrades its 'Jaguar' supercomputer. Read more...

Featured Whitepapers

Panasas® Tiered Parity™ Architecture

Sep 04 | | Disk drives are approximately 250 times denser today than a decade ago. This is good news for users who are creating, manipulating and storing more data than ever before. It gives them an opportunity to derive more value from their stored data and lowers the capital acquisition and operating expense associated with that data.

SUSE® Linux Enterprise Server for High Performance Computing

Sep 05 | | The excellent scalability features of Linux, in addition to robust security and performance makes it an excellent choice for server systems, especially in the high performance computing area.

Multimedia

Video White Paper: Architecting a Better Network Storage Solution

BlueArc's Titan architecture represents an evolutionary step in file servers by creating a hardware-based file system that can scale bandwidth, IOPS, and overall data capacity well beyond conventional software-based devices. With its ability to virtualize a massive storage pool of up to four usable petabytes of tiered storage, Titan can scale with growing data requirements, offering a competitive advantage for businesses, researchers, or other enterprises seeking to better manage data growth while still ensuring optimal performance.

High Performance on Wall Street

Newsletters

Stay informed! Subscribe to HPCWire email Newsletters.

Get updates and insights on the High Productivity Computing industry delivered driectly to your inbox.





HPC Job Bank

Featured Events

SIFMA
HP-CAST
2008 Virtualization Conference & Expo
World Summit of Cloud Computing
Symposium 2009