Largest Ever Survey on I/O Performance Reveals 77% of Organizations Experienced I/O Problems Since Virtualizing
The Largest Ever Survey on I/O Performance Reveals Results From 2,654 Global IT Professionals Providing Insight to I/O Performance Issues and Remediation Plans
/EINPresswire.com/ --
BURBANK, CA--(Marketwired - January 13, 2016) - Condusiv
Key findings in the survey include:
- 77% of organizations report I/O performance issues since virtualizing
- More than 1/3
rd of respondents (36%) are currently experiencing staff or customer complaints regarding sluggish applications running on MS SQL or Oracle
- Nearly 1/3
rd of respondents (28%) are so limited by I/O bottlenecks that they have reached an "I/O ceiling" and are unable to scale their virtualized infrastructure
- To improve I/O performance since virtualizing, 51% purchased a new SAN, 8% purchased PCIe flash cards, 17% purchased server-side SSDs, 27% purchased storage-side SSDs, 16% purchased more SAS spindles, 6% purchased a hyper-converged appliance
- In the coming year, to remediate I/O bottlenecks, 25% plan to purchase a new SAN, 8% plan to purchase a hyper-converged appliance, 10% will purchase SAS spindles, 16% will purchases server-side SSDs, 8% will purchase PCIe flash cards, 27% will purchase storage-side SSDs, 35% will purchase nothing in the coming year
- Over 1,000 applications were named when asked to identify the top two most challenging applications to support from a systems performance standpoint. Everything in the top 10 was an application running on top of a database
- 71% agree that improving the performance of one or two applications via inexpensive I/O reduction software to avoid a forklift upgrade is either important or urgent for their environment
More than 70% of the responding IT Professionals had virtualized more than 50% of their environment. Respondents from companies with employee sizes under 100 employees were excluded from the results, so results would not be skewed by the low end of the SMB market. Many more results from other probing I/O performance questions and environment details are found in the full page report.
"It is clear that the unintended consequence of virtualization has been a tsunami of random I/O that has choked underlying storage subsystems, leaving organizations in a game of catch-up with no other choice but to spend their way out of the problem," said Brian Morin, SVP, Global Marketing, Condusiv Technologies. "This is due to the added complexity that virtualization introduces to the data path via the "I/O blender" effect that randomizes I/O from disparate VMs and also due to amplification of Windows write inefficiencies at the logical disk layer, which erodes the relationship between I/O and data. The result is small, fractured I/O that reduces throughput and inflates IOPS by 50% on heavy workloads. Since native virtualization out-of-the-box does nothing to optimize the I/O stream, organizations must respond with either a brute-force approach of overbuying and overprovisioning with more flash hardware than necessary, or turn to 3rd party software solutions like Condusiv's V-locity I/O reduction software that can solve the root cause performance problems in virtualized environments for 50-300% faster application performance on existing infrastructure."
For a complete copy of results from the Condusiv survey, please visit http://learn.condusiv.com/2016_IO-Performance-Survey-Report_IO-Performance-Survey-Report.html.
For more information, visit www.condusiv.com
Follow us on Twitter and Like Us on Facebook
About Condusiv
Condusiv
Image Available: http://www.marketwire.com/library/MwGo/2016/1/12/11G078544/Images/IO-Survey-Pg1-0c9c9dacdc199b8ba3342b33e99e6e21.jpg
Media contacts:
Condusiv Technologies
Dawn Richcreek
drichcreek@condusiv.com
818.252.5596
The Ventana Group for Condusiv
Sabrina Sanchez
ssanchez@theventanagroup.com
925.785.3014
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.