Four signs your storage needs to move to Open Source Software from SUSE

Monday, 9 January, 2017

When it comes to data storage volumes, as soul singer Otis Clay said in 1980, ‘the only way is up’. A few years back enterprises were grappling with more and more transactional data, pretty much all of it structured RDBMS, you had growth, but it was steady and relatively simple. Not so today, as we have more and more data from more and more devices – its not just computers making data in the modern era. Far from it.

We have data from mobile devices, unstructured data like social analytics and video (with its ever increasing pixel density), and now, the imminent arrival of data from the IoT (Internet of Things) is likely to have a – literally- staggering impact:- IDC’s Digital Universe Study predicts a staggering 10x growth from now by 2020. If you’re struggling with volumes now, think ahead to what its going to be like in a few years’ time, and ask yourself this question: is your current architecture going to cope? Chances are you’re going to say ‘no’, and maybe ask also – ‘who the hell is going to cope?’. Now that’s a fair question to which relatively enterprises are confident of the answer.

Whilst all organisations have problems to some degree or other, some unarguably have it worse than others – the UK NHS for example does upwards of 40m MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) scans every year, each one a minimum of 2GB of data. Every year there are more scans, and data is held onto for longer for analytics that can – and will – improve diagnosis and patient outcomes. Companies storing CCTV footage regularly upgrade their cameras and so are forced to upgrade their storage. Utility companies have more and more data from sensors – even farms, which are now run by software acting on data from sensors are generating vast volumes of data (the self-driving tractor is a long way ahead of the self-driving car even if the law keeps the farmer in the cab!).

Whatever type of organisation you work for, there are four clear signs that you should be thinking about moving to an open source software defined storage platform like SUSE enterprise:

#1 MONEY: You’re experiencing problems with cost.  With many organisations finding 25% plus per annum a ‘normal’ growth rate, and many more about to find this is the case in the near future, paying the additional hardware, software and maintenance cost is an issue.

#2. END OF LIFE problems: ‘Forklift’ upgrades are increasing in frequency as you outgrow your existing appliances, thus generating downtime which in turn generates friction with the business (just like on London Transport even ‘planned upgrade works’ are an annoying interruption).

#3. SERVICE TO THE BUSINESS: it’s a struggle to meet your end user SLAs. You’re regularly breaking your agreement with the business – maybe you’re moving to digital and that is shortening your backup window as systems need to be permanently online – and generate data 24/7

#4 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: you’ve got lots of remote offices and replicating data across multiple sites is becoming a problem – often a problem you just have to fix because regulation gets tighter and tighter every year, and requirements for rapid retrieval are rendering your tape archive obsolete.

Cynics might note that the above four issues between them cover just about every large enterprise and a healthy chunk of SMEs. That’s no mistake: it’s just what the future looks like.

The good news is that help is at hand. You can make a huge dent in your software licensing costs by moving to open source software defined storage. You can slash hardware costs by moving to commodity x86 servers. You can avoid forklift upgrades altogether by using an approach that allows you to add as many nodes as you like – infinite scalability without downtime. You can kiss goodbye to missed backup windows by keeping more on disk, and you can distribute data all over the globe – anywhere you’ve got a footprint.

Alternatively, you could keep doing what Einstein defined as madness: the same thing, over and over again, expecting different results.

 

 

New Years Resolution…? Become a SUSE Expert!!

Wednesday, 4 January, 2017

2017, still fresh and new! Happy New Year, best wishes and new years resolutions go hand in hand. Yes, you can obviously choose one of the standard (and often boring) resolutions. But, wouldn’t it be so much more fun, beneficial and productive to just take it up one notch and set your goal to become a SUSE Expert?!

SUSE has put together an amazing event: the SUSE Expert Days. Held in a ton of cities across the globe SUSE offers you the opportunity to drop by and learn from SUSE Experts. These one-day roadshows in North America, Europe, Middle East, Africa and Asia Pacific are fully packed with interesting information about the current challenges within IT environments. During the SUSE Expert Days we’d like to teach you how SUSE ‘s open source solutions enable you and your business to define your digital future!

You’ll learn during the day:

  • Digital Transformation
    All you need for your specific environment: innovative SUSE technologies that help to meet challenges, truly Open with no vendor lock-in, flexible and hardened for the enterprise to deliver the RAS that you’d need.
  • Software-defined Infrastructure
    How to Reduce costs, Maintain control of infrastructure and Improve IT efficiency! Our Experts teach you how to Transform your data center with a software-defined infrastructure using SUSE OpenStack, Kubernetes, Docker, Ceph and Cloud Foundry
  • DevOps
    Deliver new services faster, increase responsiveness with better quality! By adopting a DevOps model using SUSE solutions you can redefine how to bring new services to market!

Check out when the SUSE Expert Days are in a City Near you so that you can become the SUSE Expert!

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Future-proofing Retail Point of Service Through 64-bit Image Support

Monday, 19 December, 2016

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In today’s fast-paced retail industry, it’s imperative to keep up with the latest evolving hardware.  Not being able to keep up with the pace of change translates into lost business.  As more retail Point of Service (POS) solutions are being built using SUSE Linux Enterprise Point of Service as a base, being able to future-proof your business from the ground up becomes the ultimate goal.  This is what the new SUSE Linux Enterprise POS Image Server component provides – the ability to create 64-bit images in support of the latest hardware.  In a nutshell, the new SUSE Linux Enterprise Point of Service 12 Client is:

  • Based on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP2
  • Supported on 64-bit hardware only
  • Providing support for the latest Intel desktop platforms
  • Providing an extended lifecycle with minimal changes during the full lifecycle of deployed hardware.

Here is a fresh look at the retail environment and SUSE architecture:

So, for the 64-bit POS clients, the new SLEPOS Image Server 12 component needs to be used to generate 64-bit images.  For the 32-bit POS clients, you would continue to use the SLEPOS Image Server 11 (based on SLES 11 SP3 or SP4) to build the 32-bit images.

On the server side, the SLEPOS stack remains based on SLES 11 SP3 or SP4.  But in the future, we intend to enhance the server-side functionality by replacing the current server-side components (Admin Server and Branch Server) with SUSE Manager’s enhancements for Admin and Branch.

The 64-bit imaging support based on SLES 12 SP2 is a vital next step towards the next generation POS system, and is available now for download.  SUSE Linux Enterprise Point of Service Image Server 12 can be installed during installation of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP2 (or newer) or after the system has been installed.  In both cases, you will be asked to confirm the EULA and enter the registration code.  To install SUSE Linux Enterprise Point of Service Image Server 12 during installation, only select it in the list of extensions.  To install SUSE Linux Enterprise Point of Service in an installed system, start the YaST module for registration and select to install additional extensions.  Then, you will be able to select the extension from the list.

Full documentation is available here: https://www.suse.com/documentation/slepos11/index.html

Direct link to the relevant chapter: https://www.suse.com/documentation/slepos11/book_slepos/data/cha_slepos_buildingimages_sle12.html

Direct link to standalone documentation for SLE12 images: https://www.suse.com/documentation/slepos-12-image/

Release notes are available here: https://www.suse.com/releasenotes/x86_64/SLE-POS/12-SP2/

And learn more about SUSE Linux Enterprise Point of Service at https://www.suse.com/products/linux-point-of-service .

YEP – That’s Another Win for SUSE OpenStack Cloud!

Tuesday, 13 December, 2016

The SVC Awards are always a great way to round out the year.  At an event hosted at the Royal Garden Hotel, Kensington in London, the SVC Awards recognize and reward the outstanding products, companies and teams involved in the Storage, Virtualization and Cloud sectors.

We are delighted to say that SUSE won the Cloud Storage Product of the Year award at this year’s event for SUSE OpenStack Cloud.

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That makes ten (yes 10!) awards that SUSE OpenStack Cloud has picked up in a little over 2 years.  A great endorsement for SUSE OpenStack Cloud as the open source private cloud solution of choice for enterprise business.

Jason Holloway, Director of IT Publishing at Angel Business Communications said “All finalists did well in reaching the high standard shortlist but SUSE was the clear winner”. Amazingly, SUSE was also runner up in the “IaaS Solution of the year” category.

Check out the full list of winners at http://www.svcawards.com/winners2016.php

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Picture: SUSE’s Kevin Smith and Mark Smith receiving the award from Jason Holloway

openATTIC Wins OSBAR Award 2016

Thursday, 8 December, 2016

Blog by Lenz Grimmer

Since 2014 OSBAR, the innovation award of the Open Source Business Alliance (OSB Alliance), highlights open source projects that add real benefit to the IT-world. Submissions are assessed based on originality, innovation, practical relevance and maturity by a committee of six well-known German IT- and open source experts.

 

Photo Felix Kronlage: Volker Theile SUSE receives the OSBAR award from Peter Ganten

It is a great honor for us that the openATTIC project yesterday was granted an OSBAR award!

Congratulations to the openATTIC team and the other winners! And thank you very much for the award!

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20 open source projects applied for this year’s awards and one of them was the SUSE sponsored open source and storage management framework openATTIC.

 

The OSBAR winners were awarded during the OPEN! 2016 event of OSB Alliance on December 7 in Stuttgart, Germany.

SUSE acquired the openATTIC project in November from it-novum GmbH in Fulda and thus allows us to accelerate the use of openATTIC as the management framework for SUSE Enterprise Storage, which will help us to deliver simpler, more cost-effective enterprise storage management solutions.

See also the openATTIC blog for more information.

For more information on openATTIC see openAttic.org and SUSE Enterprise Storage suse.com/solutions/software-defined-storage/

Shift and Lift; Light or Heavy Duty?

Monday, 28 November, 2016

Rocket - Lift n Shift

Datacenter Transformation – The markets you or your customer operate in are demanding you to stretch your data center capabilities to the max. You have to be able to respond faster than ever before. You need to assure high quality levels. And you are required to flex instantly when required. Who said life was going to be easier with enhanced levels of technology?

When it comes to infrastructure you have to juggle your compute, storage and networking such that the allocation of each part is allocated at the right time and in the right place; physically, dedicated and virtually, on- and off-premise, hosted private and hosted public. In straight forward infrastructures this is already challenging let alone in complex ones.

This transformation also impacts the business, service and support models of service providers. MSP Mentor published a blog – Effectively Moving Customers to the SDDC – recently, that clearly maps out the areas Service Providers should keep on top of. An important takeaway here is that it’s not just about the technology. For IT pros to affect the results of their business, they need to work closely with the Lines of Business (LOB) in order to do that effectively. In fact they can play a key role to close the gap between IT and the LOBs.

From a technology standpoint you can start transforming your data center with a software defined infrastructure, with SUSE solutions as the foundation. It allows you to capitalize on your existing infrastructure, which helps you reduce costs. And it offers you the tools and automation you need to stay in control of infrastructure resources. This webinar outlines open source technologies available to do so, like OpenStack, Docker containers and Ceph.

Is it light or heavy duty? It depends. However all big things start small. To start small, just spend a couple of minutes to explore the path you could start following. Learn more here.

Best Practice for SAP NetWeaver High Availability

Monday, 21 November, 2016

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SAP NetWeaver is a common stack of middleware functionality used to support the SAP business applications. This guide describes a SAP NetWeaver installation on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications 12 with the included SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability Extension. We will also describe possible failure scenarios and methods for avoiding them. The described concept has shown its maturity during several years of productive operations for customers of different size and branches.

The described storage stack and SAP configuration can be used with or without a high availability cluster. It is possible to add high availability functionality to an already running system, if the installation complies with the described solution.

This guide will show you how to:

  • Plan a SUSE Linux Enterprise platform for SAP workload Set up a Linux high availability infrastructure for SAP
  • Perform a basic SAP NetWeaver installation on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications 12

It will also help you to install the following software components:

  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications 12, including the high availability extension
  • MaxDB (SAP HANA, SAP ASE, Oracle, and DB2 are supported as well) SAP NetWeaver 7.5 (other versions are supported, too)

For SAP HANA scenarios SUSE is publishing seperate best practices in the SAP Resource Library.

This guide is aimed at IT professionals with skills in:

  • SAP basis
  • Data center system concepts and configuration
  • Linux knowledge at LPIC-1 or SCA (SUSE Certified Administrator) level

You will need access to the following resources:

  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications 12 installation media. To update the systems you must have either Internet access, or a local software management solution, such as SUSE Manager or SMT (Subscription Management Tool).
  • SAP NetWeaver 7.5 Installation Media
  • Appropriate hardware

The new Best Practice is available for download here.

Software Defined Infrastructure – Ein Ueberblick

Thursday, 17 November, 2016

Für viele Unternehmen steht die Flexibilisierung und Agilität der IT-Infrastruktur ganz oben im Pflichtenheft. Denn die schnelle Verfügbarkeit von digitalen Informationen und Daten entscheidet immer häufiger über die Wettbewerbsfähigkeit von Unternehmen. Die digitale Transformation hat Fahrt aufgenommen. Industrien und Business Modelle wandeln sich in einer nie dagewesenen Geschwindigkeit und stellen jeden IT vor neue Herausforderung.

Mit starren IT-Ressourcen lässt sich die digitale Tranformation der Unternehmen nur bedingt umsetzen. Immer mehr Geschäftsprozesse auf Kundenseite erfolgen online und in Real Time. Für die IT bedeutet das einerseits die Bereitstellung skalierbarer und agiler Ressourcen für cloud- und web-basierte Services sowie native Cloud-Workloads, andererseits Unterstützung und Modernisierung der vorhandenen und teils historisch gewachsenen Infrastruktur im Backend. Ein Ansatz ist hier Software Defined Infrastructure für die erforderlich Elastizität der IT-Ressourcen.

Software Defined Infrastructure

Die Bandbreite möglicher neuer Anwendungen ist groß. Sie reicht von intelligenter Gebäudetechnik mit automatisiertem Beleuchtungs- oder Energie-Management über optimierte Lösungen für Inventarisierung, Logistik und Supply Chain Management bis hin intelligenten Fertigungssystemen.

Lesen Sie mehr zu diesem Thema in dem White Paper von IDC „Software Defined Infrastructure in Deutschland 2016 – Agile IT-Infrastrukturen als Basis für die digital Transformation“.

Day 3 at SUSECON 2016

Thursday, 10 November, 2016

Down with the end of SUSECON

Day 3 started with Michael talking about the theme ‘Down with Downtime’, “In a world where we always seem to want MORE and MORE of everything, we can all agree that ZERO downtime is best”.

He then welcomed Vice President, IBM Power Systems Ecosystem Enablement, Kathy Bennett to discuss how many customers have chosen to run HANA on Power Systems for its resiliency and IBM PowerVM which can predict how a system is running for business continuity.

Michael’s next guest, Senior VP of Data Management SAP, Brian Vink, talked about what this long term partnership is focusing on now. “SAP is enabling the Digital Transformation and one of the challenges we see in customers taking on this transformation is the constant balance between stability and agility. One of the design features of HANA is to build business continuity and other “stability” features like security and scalability into the platform so customers can focus more of their efforts into innovation and being agile” said Brian.

Thomas di Giacomo and Ralf Flaxa, President of Engineeringrounded off the keynote session with Michael to give some insights into SUSE’s approach to solving the Downtime issues.

Everyone then parted to join their sessions and reconvene later in the day for the Demopalooza.

Sadly, after that (and a cocktail), most people will leave today (though some will stay for additional hands-on sessions and to take Certification Exams tomorrow) and that will end another momentous SUSECON

See you next year!

Featured IT Hero Video

Biological E

Featured Product

SUSE Enterprise Storage 4 

5 New Features:

  • Truly unified block, object and file storage solution with the addition of production CephFS
  • Support for 64-bit ARM
  • Advanced graphical management interface with openATTIC
  • Long-distance replication for block storage and multisite object storage replication
  • Improved cluster orchestration using Salt

Read the SUSE Enterprise Storage 4 blog, When Traditional Storage is not Good Enough blog and the Large Data blog for more info.

The SUSECON Team