This dispatch covers Microsoft Exchange Solution Review Program (ESRP)[1] performance results for the over 1000 to 5000 mailboxes results category.  Prior reports discussed the over 5000 mailboxes and 1000 and under 1000 mailboxes result categories[2].

ESRP was never intended to compare subsystem performance but rather as a proof of concept for Microsoft and storage vendors to depict a configuration supporting a given workload.  Hence, any comparisons necessarily come with some caveats and may not be real.  Nonetheless, SCI feels comparisons can well serve both the vendor and end-user storage community and thus, worth noting.

Latest ESRP V2.1 results

Our first chart is new to this analysis and shows aggregate database transfers per second per physical spindle.  An astute reader requested we include performance per spindle.  This metric doesn’t correlate well to any other ESRP performance parameter.  Note, some of these subsystems use only 4 spindles (e.g., both AX4-5i) while #1 Netapp FAS2040 used 12 and #5 Dell MD1000 used 20.

(SCIESRP100128-001) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP100128-001) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

The nice thing about transfers per spindle is the wide range of subsystems that perform well on it, e.g., 5 of these subsystems are iSCSI attached, 3 are SAS attached and the remainder are FC.  In addition, the number of mailboxes supported spans almost the whole range from 1400 to 5000.  We do not show the speed of the drives (15 or 10Krpm) or their interfaces.  Nonetheless, if you want to attain the most from a set of spindles one would do well by going with either the FAS2040 or AX4-5i.

(SCIESRP100128-002) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP100128-002) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Figure 2 shows the total number of database operations per second done by each subsystem.  This is mostly correlated to the number of mailboxes but the HP MSA60 seems to do quite well for only having 2500 mailboxes.  Even so the Dell and HP MSA70 dominate these top 10 results.  HP MSA2000sa G2 and Fujitsu ETERNUS DX80 were the only new additions to this chart.

(SCIESRP100128-003) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP100128-003) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Figure 3 is similar to Figure 2 except we have normalized subsystem database transfers/second performance by number of mailboxes (actual 1000 mailboxes).  If it weren’t for the Dell MD1120, the top 5 would all be HP MSA storage.  New entries to this chart are the HP MSA2000sa G2, Fujitsu ETERNUS DX80 and the EMC Celerra NS-480.  As discussed in prior reports, normalized results may or may not scale up beyond their actual mailbox counts reported.  For example, the subsystem results for 2KMbx may not hold up when pushed to support 5KMbx.

(SCIESRP100128-004) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP100128-004) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Next, we show the Top 10 database backup throughput results.  Both Dell’s MD1120 and MD1000 did well in this category.  Once again the two new subsystems on this chart were the Fujitsu DX80 and the HP MSA2000sa G2.   We like this chart because it’s a good surrogate for raw subsystem read throughput (although it’s database reads). For subsystems in this mid-range category to break 1GB/second seems very impressive.

(SCIESRP100128-005) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP100128-005) (c) 2010 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Figure 5 Top 10 normalized log write/second

Finally, we show the aggregate log writes per second chart.  This view of subsystem performance shows the write IOPs that each subsystem can perform.  The new subsystems on this chart include HP MSA2000sa G2, NetApp FAS2040, Fujitsu ETERNUS DX80, and the EMC Celerra NS-480.  We have a normalized view of this activity but it looks almost the same and does not show the top end nearly as well.

Conclusions

From our perspective, ESRP results in this mid range category seem to be getting more competitive.  There were 6 new ESRP results in this category over the last 9 months, and at least 2 over the last quarter.  In almost every chart one can see at least 2 and in most cases 3 or more new results showing up in the top 10.

We have always liked ESRP results because they show a real worldview of subsystem performance.  Additionally, there seems to be much more willingness on the part of vendors to submit results to ESRP than some of the other, standard benchmarks. Also, iSCSI, FC and SAS attached storage results are available.  Given all that, it’s a great way to compare subsystem performance.

ESRP/Jetstress results are inherently difficult to compare but are worth the effort in our view.  Our next ESRP/Jetstress report will return to the 1K mailbox and under tier.  We added a new database transfers per spindle chart based on feedback we received and continue to welcome any feedback on how to do better.  As such, feel free to contact us with any ideas, our contact information can be found below.

This performance dispatch was sent out to our newsletter subscribers in January of 2010.  If you would like to receive this information via email please consider signing up for our free monthly newsletter (see subscription request, above right) or subscribe by email and we will send our current issue along with download instructions for this and other reports.  Also, if you need an even more in-depth analysis of SAN storage system features and performance please take the time to examine our SAN Storage Briefing available for purchase from our website.

A PDF version of this can be found at

SCI 2010 January 28 Analysis on recent ESRP results (PDF 773.6 KiB)

Silverton Consulting, Inc. is a Storage, Strategy & Systems consulting services company, based in the USA offering products and services to the data storage community.


[1] ESRP results from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/bb412164.aspx, as of 28 January 2010

 

[2] All prior SCI ESRP Dispatches can be found at http://silvertonconsulting.com/cms1/dispatches/

 

This dispatch restarts SCI’s series on Microsoft Exchange Solution Review Program (ESRP)[1] performance results and reports on the over 5000 mailboxes results category.  Prior reports discussed the over 1000 to 5000 mailboxes and the under 1000 mailboxes result categories[2].  As such, to better compare ESRP/Jetstress results SCI reports on both normalized and un-normalized results.  For normalized results in this highest-tier category we use operations per 5000 mailbox (5Kmbx). Un-normalized results are in the appendix.

ESRP was never intended to compare subsystem performance but rather as a proof of concept for Microsoft and storage vendors to depict a configuration supporting a given workload.  Hence, any comparisons necessarily come with some caveats and may not be real.  Nonetheless, SCI feels comparisons can well serve both the vendor and end-user storage community and thus, worth noting.

Latest ESRP V2.0 results

We have added a new ranking for this analysis, which depicts the average database backup throughput across all storage groups.  This value correlates moderately to aggregate database transfers per second.  (See figure 1).

(SCIESRP090127-001) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP090127-001) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

As can be seen from the above chart, the new report on HP XP24000 dominates this category.  Partly HP’s commanding result is due to the overall number of mailboxes being serviced.  However, Dell’s Equal Logic iSCSI result for 90K mailboxes only came in at number four.  Also the number ten result, for HP EVA4400 supports only 8K mailboxes and stands almost as well as the other results supporting many more mailboxes.  A couple of caveats worth noting here database backup performance can be impacted by

  • Number of disk drives in a configuration
  • How message store databases are split across those spindles
  • Subsystem RAID level
(SCIESRP090127-002) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP090127-002) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

We add another new chart for this analysis showing the ESRP reported database latencies for read, write and log write operations.  SCI and others feel the read latency metric best shows what an end-user experience would be from a subsystem configuration.  The list is sorted by read latency.  A couple of considerations to note:

  • While read latency is unaffected by replication mode, write and log write latency can be seriously impacted by how the Exchange database is replicated.  For example if one examines the EMC SRDF/S in the number two position, its write latency is pretty high.  However if one considers that SRDF/S was active this means the data has to be written to the secondary subsystem in parallel to being written to the primary subsystem and as such its write latency does not look that bad.
  • There are a couple of ways to impact or game this value. One easy way is to reduce the overall load on the storage.  As ESRP reports are intended to show a viable performing solution to handle a simulated user workload we assume that these products are all optimizing cost and performance, so believe this is not an issue here.
  • For an ESRP benchmark to be accepted, read latency must be under 20 msecs.  Some vendors may try to push read latency out closer to 20msecs in order to support more mailboxes with less hardware.  As such, those vendors may not show up well on this top 10 chart.
(SCIESRP090127-003) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP090127-003) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Another new chart for this report is the log playback ranking.  This is a rather complex workload which encompasses log reading and database reading and updating (or writing).  The timings are reported as the average time in seconds it takes to playback or process a 1 MB log.  The top 3 systems LSI 399x, Lefthand SANIQ, and IBM DS4800 would all be considered mid range storage subsystems although Lefthand was supporting a heavy workload at 50K mailboxes and was configured accordingly.   The range for the top ten subsystems is fairly large over 2X from lowest to highest.  It’s unclear how one succeeds in this metric other than having fast disk and low latency database operations.  Similar to the backup discussions above, some caveats would include:

  • Playback performance can significantly be impacted by the number of disk drives.
  • How message store databases are split across those spindles also can impact this
  • Subsystem RAID level may also impact playback performance
  • Replication type may also impact log playback performance
(SCIESRP090127-004) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP090127-004) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Finally, we now turn to overall database transfer results and the Top 3 normalized ESRP/Jetstress results belong to HP MSA70, Sun StorageTex 6540 and EMC Symmetrix DMX-4 4500. A few considerations are warranted on normalized results:

  • Normalized results do not often scale well.  Although four of these results were for 20,000 mailboxes or over, (Sun 6540 at 20KMbx, EMC Symmetrix at 60KMbx, HDS AMS1000 at 25KMbx, and IBM DS8100 at 24KMbx) the top result from HP supported only 6000 mailboxes and may not scale much beyond that quantity of mailboxes.
  • One surprise here is the close running of everyone behind the top result and may be an artifact of the ESRP benchmark striving to generate equivalent workloads per user mailbox.  However, the over 5K mailbox tier is the only category that shows results this close to one another. (see prior ESRP StorInt Dispatchen for more information).

Conclusions

From our perspective, ESRP results in this over 5K mailbox tier are getting more competitive.  There were a number of new ESRP results in this category over the last 9 months, and at least 4 over the last quarter.  Seeing HP (an OEM version of HDS’s top product), EMC Symmetrix and IBM DS8300 running the same performance tests is a good indicator of their willingness to show their products in the best light as well as high customer interest in Exchange solutions.  Probably these vendors don’t see their individual results as entirely comparable and arguably they may have a point, but we would differ with them on this assessment.  Moreover, seeing SAS and iSCSI results compete in this top-tier at least on various metrics indicates these interfaces can provide some competition to FC storage in mission critical applications.

ESRP/Jetstress results are inherently difficult to compare.  Nonetheless we believe Exchange results provide a unique real world benchmark and deserve some comparison so that the public can make properly informed storage purchases.  Our next ESRP/Jetstress report will return to the 1K to 5K mailbox tier.  We continue to welcome any feedback on how to do better.

This performance dispatch was sent out to our newsletter subscribers in January of 2009.  If you would like to receive this information via email please consider signing up for our free monthly newsletter (see subscription request, above right) or subscribe by email and we will send our current issue along with download instructions for this and other reports.  Also, if you need an even more in-depth analysis of SAN storage system features and performance please take the time to examine our SAN Storage Briefing available for purchase from our website.

A PDF version of this can be found at

SCI 2009 January 27 Update to ESRP/Jetstress benchmark performance results (PDF 1.4 MiB)

Silverton Consulting, Inc. is a Storage, Strategy & Systems consulting services company, based in the USA offering products and services to the data storage community

Appendix

(SCIESRP090127-005) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCIESRP090127-005) (c) 2009 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Aggregate or un-normalized database transfer results are highly correlated to number of mailboxes in service and as such, are relatively less useful metrics in our opinion.  Nonetheless, it’s probably no surprise that the top results belong to HP, EMC and IBM.  Aside from the iSCSI results, this ranking is similar to one ranked purely on number of mailboxes.


[1] ESRP results from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/bb412164.aspx, as of 27 January 2009

 

[2] All of prior SCI ESRP Dispatches can be found at ofhttp://www.silvertonconsulting.com/page2/page2d/storage_int_dispatch.html

 

This is SCI’s second report on Microsoft Exchange Solution Review Program (ESRP)[1] performance results.  This report focuses on 1000 to 5000 mailboxes category and our previous report discussed the over 5000 mailbox category.

Latest ESRP V2.0 results

(SCI080722-001) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCI080722-001) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

ESRP uses a Jetstress benchmark together with a formalized reporting framework to publish results.  Jetstress benchmark variables are many, involving not only mail store database and log layouts, but also the number of Exchange servers and numerous other storage, host and software configuration options.

In order to better compare Jetstress results we report on both normalized and un-normalized results.  For normalized results in this mid-tier category we use operations per 1000 mailboxes (1Kmbx).  As an example, HP reports MSA70 results for 4000 mailboxes at ~6350 (see Figure 2), but normalized to 1Kmbx their results are ~1590 database transfers/sec/1Kmbx (see Figure 1).

Both the normalized and un-normalized results are for database transfer activity only and do not include log file transfers or other reported characteristics.   Also ‘DB wt/sec/1Kmbx’ is database write transfers per second per 1000 mailboxes and similarly, ‘DB rd/sec/1Kmbx’ is database read transfers per second per 1000 mailboxes.

For this dispatch we are adding a section on database backup results.  ESRP results also report on aggregate and storage group database backups and in this dispatch we publish our first analysis of these results.

We considered reporting on Log write/second but there is a very high correlation between log writes and database transactions per second so find they add little discrimination to performance comparisons.  There are other performance results that are reported in ESRP results and perhaps we will discuss them in a future dispatch on ESRP performance.

The Top 3 normalized Jetstress results for the 1000 to 5000 mailbox category were IBM DS3300 in Clustered Continuous Replication(CCR), HP MSA70 with the P800 controller in CCR and the HPMSA60 with the E500 controller in CCR (see Figure 1).  A few considerations on normalized results:

  • Normalized results can’t always scale well.  For example, although the IBM DS3300 may do well at 1000 mbx it may or may not scale much beyond that.
  • Surprisingly, most subsystems in the top 10 use SAS connections between the Exchange server and storage.  However, the top and bottom results (IBM DS3300 and EMC NS40 respectively) use iSCSI.  There is no FC storage in the top 10 and the top FC result would show up as number 13 in this chart.
  • Another surprise is that the normalized results span a such a large range.  The top 10 normalized results range from over 1800 down to around 570 per 1Kmbx.  This is much larger than the top category of 5000 mailboxes and over.  Not sure why this is more prominent in this category, probably worth some more study but here we just report results.
(SCI080722-002) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCI080722-002) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

We were afraid this chart would show a direct correlation to the number of mailboxes under test. However this is not the case, as top result and the number 4 result (HPMSA70 and Sun StorageTek 2530) report on 4000 mailboxes, while both the Dell and NetApp results in the top 5 were for 5000 mailboxes.  For this category there does not seem to be a direct correlation between mailbox count and database transfers.

The top 3 subsystems in this category are HP MSA70 with P800 controller CCR, HP MSA60 with E500 controller CCR and Dell PowerVault MD3000i with 4000, 2500, and 5000 mailboxes respectively.  A few considerations about un-normalized results:

  • One can easily see significant performance advantages here where the top result is over 2X the nearest competition.  Furthermore any of the other results in the top 5 were over 2X the bottom of the top 10.
  • Here there are a few more iSCSI results three out of the top 10 and two of which were in the top 5.
  • The database transfers to number of mailboxes doesn’t correlate well in this category at all.
(SCI080722-003) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCI080722-003) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

Once again HP seems to dominate this category at the number one and number two slots.  IBM DS3200 with Local Continuous Replication (LCR) comes in third using 2000 mailboxes.  The storage group level backup results have little correlation with the aggregate (total) database backup results.  This may be hinting at one potential advantage to having many storage groups in these benchmarks.

Conclusions

From our view on ESRP results we would conclude that competition is heating up in this category.  There have been a number of recent benchmark results reported and HP seems to have dialed up the performance of their products, over 2X above the nearest competition.  The only one to come close was IBM DS3300 and only in normalized performance.

SAS storage seems to do well in this category for ESRP and seems to be the interface of choice for both un-normalized and normalized performance results.  iSCSI shows up infrequently at best and FC not at all.

This is our second ESRP report we welcome any feedback on how to do better.  Jetstress results are inherently uncomparable.  Hopefully our approach will prove to have merit and if so, look to future ESRP SCI StorInt™ Performance Result Dispatches to follow this lead.

This performance dispatch was sent out to our newsletter subscribers in July of 2008.  If you would like to receive this information via email please consider signing up for our free monthly newsletter (see subscription request, above right) or subscribe by email and we will send our current issue along with download instructions for this and other reports.  Also, if you need an even more in-depth analysis of SAN storage system features and performance please take the time to examine our SAN Storage Briefing available for purchase from our website.

A PDF version of this can be found at:

SCI 2008 July 22 ESRP performance report update (PDF 743.6 KiB)

Silverton Consulting, Inc. is a Storage, Strategy & Systems consulting services company, based in the USA offering products and services to the data storage community.


[1] ESRP results from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/bb412164.aspx, as of 17 July 2008

 

 

This is SCI’s first report on Microsoft Exchange Solution Review Program (ESRP)[1] performance results.  SCI found ESRP reports as a group inconsistent and somewhat difficult to compare.   However, upon further examination, we came to a clear understanding of the results and discuss our comparisons below.

Latest ESRP V2.0 results

(SCI080423-001) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCI080423-001) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

ESRP uses a Jetstress benchmark together with a formalized reporting framework to publish results.  Jetstress benchmark variables are many, involving not only mail store database and log layouts, but also the number of Exchange servers and numerous other storage, host and software configuration options.  We have chosen to ignore most of these variables in our analysis and only use those few we deem important for comparing subsystems.

As a starting place this dispatch focuses on results for the 5000 mailboxes and over ESRP category.  This is the top and most challenging category in ESRP reports.  Future SCI performance reports will discuss the 1001 to 5000 mailbox and the 1000 and under mailbox result categories.

Moreover, Jetstress comparisons are confounded by the high correlation between database operations and the number of mailboxes tested.  In order to explore more fully this correlation effect, SCI reports on both normalized and un-normalized results.  For normalized results we use operations per 5000 mailboxes (5Kmbx) in this dispatch.  As an example, EMC Symmetrix originally reported results on 84,000 mailboxes (see Figure 2), but normalized they perform around 2800-database operations/second/5Kmbx. (see Figure 1).

Both the normalized and un-normalized results are for database transfer activity only and do not include log file transfers or other characteristics.   Also ‘DB wt/sec/5Kmbx’ is database write transfers per second per 5000 mailboxes and similarly, ‘DB rd/sec/5Kmbx’ is database read transfers per second per 5000 mailboxes.

The Top 3 normalized Jetstress results were Sun StorageTek 6540, IBM DS4800 and HDS AMS1000 storage subsystems reporting on 20-, 8-, and 25-Kmbx respectively (see Figure 1).  A few considerations on normalized results:

  • Normalized results can’t always scale all the way up to 50Kmbx.  For example while the HP MSA60 may do well at 6Kmbx it is unlikely to scale much beyond that.  On the other hand, the NetApp FAS3070 FC should scale well up to 26Kmbx.
  • Most subsystems in the top 10 use FC interfaces, the lone exception being number 4, HP MSA60 that is SAS attached.  The closest iSCSI attached subsystem came in at number 11, the DELL PowerVault MD3000i.
  • Overall the top 10 performance results span a small range, about 600-database transfers/second/5Kmbx.  The span for the top 10 un-normalized results is much larger.
(SCI080423-002) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

(SCI080423-002) (c) 2008 Silverton Consulting, All Rights Reserved

As shown in the above chart un-normalized results suffer somewhat from mailbox correlation – the more mailboxes under test the higher the database operations achieved.  Although not all rankings are a function of mailbox counts, certainly the top 3 ranked results show the impact of more mailboxes.

The top 3 subsystems in this category are EMC Symmetrix, DELL Equal Logic, and Lefthand SANIQ® at 84-, 65- and 50-Kmbx respectively.  A few considerations about un-normalized results:

  • There seems to be a performance clustering around 20Kmbx as shown in the last 7 of the top 10.  The performance range for this group of results narrows, only around 6000-database transfer difference from highest to lowest.  Also, the mailbox-database transfer correlation breaks down for this group.
  • Here iSCSI results compare well against FC subsystems (e.g., see both FAS3070 results above).
  • Equal Logic and Lefthand results are also iSCSI so for the top 10 un-normalized results, 7 are FC and the rest, iSCSI.
  • We might add that these iSCSI results were with Gige interfaces.  The closest 10Gbe iSCSI result came in at number 14 for the Intransa IP SAN subsystem.

Conclusions

It seemed like normalized results was the only valid comparison to use but total database results were also of interest, especially where the number of mailboxes are similar.  Also, ESRP reports on other activity, namely log writes, database backups, latencies, and log replays.  SCI chose to focus on database activity because it seemed most valid for comparing normal Exchange mailbox activity.  Perhaps future versions of this dispatch will report on some of these other reported results as well.

As this is our first ESRP report we welcome any feedback on how to do better.  Jetstress results are inherently difficult to compare.  Hopefully our approach will prove to have merit and if so, look to future ESRP SCI StorInt™ Performance Result Dispatches to follow this lead.

This performance dispatch was sent out to our newsletter subscribers in April of 2008.  If you would like to receive this information via email please consider signing up for our free monthly newsletter (see subscription request, above right) or subscribe by email and we will send our current issue along with download instructions for this and other reports.  Also, if you need an even more in-depth analysis of SAN storage system features and performance please take the time to examine our SAN Storage Briefing available for purchase from our website.A PDF version of this can be found at

SCI 2008 April 23 First performance results dispatch on ESRP results (PDF 711.6 KiB)

Silverton Consulting, Inc. is a Storage, Strategy & Systems consulting services company, based in the USA offering products and services to the data storage community


[1] ESRP results from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/bb412164.aspx, as of 23 April 2008

 

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