What are you looking for ?
Advertise with us
Advertise with us

Start-Up Kaminario Out of Stealth Mode

Extremely fast SAN, based on DRAM with backup on HDDs

Kaminario, Inc. introduced the Kaminario K2, a high-performance enterprise data appliance capable of providing millions of IOPS for applications that require ultra-fast and reliable access to data.

kaminario_k2

Kaminario K2 is a blade appliance, which is based on an innovative scale-out architecture. Kaminario K2 works with any application, it is extremely easy and quick to implement, and it is completely scalable. Initial installations in applications such as financial transactions, telecommunications operations, and a wide range of web-based SaaS scenarios have delivered immediate application performance improvements of 2- to 100-fold. By simply moving application data or databases to Kaminario K2, organizations achieve an immediate performance boost, and capital and operational costs are reduced.

Kaminario K2 is architected for enterprise environments, it delivers performance improvements immediately, and it is easy to implement and operate.

With the proliferation of online operations and increased dependence on applications, businesses today frequently underperform; applications running on powerful and expensive servers sit idle waiting for data. The Kaminario K2 eliminates this data access bottleneck, enabling organizations to realize a 2- to 100-fold improvement in business performance.

"Just as the impact of incorporating SSDs into arrays was (barely) becoming understood by IT out comes a highly innovative solution from Kaminario," said Arun Taneja Founder and Consulting Analyst, Taneja Group. "This DRAM-based storage array blows the doors off any SSD solution, hybrid or pure. Solutions like these enable IT to do things they could not do before. I guess that is what is called paradigm shifting. If the numbers I saw hold out this will enable IT to solve problems that were only solved by ganging up massive numbers of computers and storage at unaffordable costs, may be not even then."

Kaminario K2 – Key Features and benefits:

  • Scalable – simply by adding hardware components, one may scale performance, capacity or both.
  • Application agnostic – utilizes existing computing and data storage investments and supports any application and data type with no process change.
  • Simple and fast to implement and manage – Kaminario K2 deploys in less than a day and no tuning is required. Its blade architecture makes it very easy to manage.
  • Performance and ROI – by eliminating I/O bottlenecks Kaminario K2 improves performance of data-intensive applications and price-performance by orders of magnitude.

"The operational and financial performance of businesses often depend on how quickly data-intensive business-process applications can access large, server-based data sets," said Dani Golan, CEO of Kaminario. "Kaminario K2 delivers the highest IOPS available today, matching the fastest application performance requirements, and immediately affects business results."

How the Kaminario K2 Works
The Kaminario K2 hardware is a grid of blade servers, interconnected in a redundant and fast network. The system is managed by Kaminario’s unique kOS operating system. Kaminario K2 presents itself externally as a set of standard block devices. The entire main copy of data is stored on DRAM to ensure ultra high performance. The kOS operating system automatically allocates space among multiple blades. Distribution of the LUs reduces contention and contributes to the extremely high performance of Kaminario K2. The standard block devices allow Kaminario K2 to boost applications with no need to change data structures or to do remodeling.

As an enterprise-grade appliance which maintains operational status and data availability, K2 boasts full N+1 hardware redundancy on blades, internal network and Uninterrupted Power Supply (UPS). The data is backed up on mirrored HDDs to support recovery and protection during power loss. In case of blade failure, kOS automatically replaces it and recovers all associated data. During failure and recovery, service is maintained at all times. The N+1 power system ensures proper shutdown with no data loss during main power failure.

Pricing and Availability
Kaminario K2 is available now, with pricing starting at $200,000.

Comments

Kaminario was founded in 2008 and is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, with R&D division in Yoqneam, Israel. The start-up is funded by Sequoia Capital and Pitango Venture Capital.

The three co-founders are:

  • Dani Golan, CEO, previously president and GM of Performix Technologies, acquired by NICE Systems in 2006, and prior to that executive responsible for leading new ventures at EMC.
  • Moshe Selfin, VP marketing and products, formerly executive at EMC and IBM, leading business and technology activities with internal and external organizations (but he disappears recently among the executives on the Kaminario' web site).
  • Ofir Dubovi, VP and COO, previously COO at NICE Systems.
Other executives are:
  • VP engineering Bartal Vindzberg, former director, product line development at Symantec and previously at Veritas, Precise Software Solutions, and the Israeli Defense Forces,
  • VP sales Phil Harrell who spent nearly 10 years at Akamai Technologies,
  • VP engineering Shachar Fienblit who was responsible for architecture, definition, design and development of several enterprise storage products in IBM Haifa storage development lab.
High-priced Kaminario K2 is announced at 300,000 to 1,500,000 IO/s and 3.2 to 16GB/s throughput thanks to DRAM (not flash) with batteries and low-performance HDDs as backup media. The system consists of several data nodes with up to 288GB of DRAM and IO directors in front of them including 10GbE connection between the nodes and 8Gb FC to the host.

Texas Memory Systems is another company using RAM on its RamSan with the same kind of speed and price.

Who needs this extremely fast SANs? Not HPC that prefer IB rather than FC interfaces, only big companies needing high speed SAN in front of their more conventional storage subsystems. But which ones is going to buy directly these expansive products to a small start-up that needs absolutely to find an OEM, a solid distributor or a buyer?

Articles_bottom
ExaGrid
AIC
ATTOtarget="_blank"
OPEN-E
RAIDON