it_user868257 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Architect at a tech services company with 11-50 employees
Real User
It has a lot of advanced functions for a reasonable price
Pros and Cons
  • "When we add storage behind it, the product is good for the customers because their customers do not notice that anything is happening due to the virtualization."
  • "The Storwize port is not so stable."
  • "The disk reliability is not that good."
  • "There are big arrays now, and if a customer wants add more disks to it, you have to have another array. Adding disks to existing arrays is one of the most demanded things from our customers."

What is our primary use case?

We have a lot of different customers, such as banks and retail customers. In banks, it is mainly used for open environment testing. We have some retail customers, and they use it mostly for their test environments. Retail customers also use the DS8000 for production, because it is a more robust platform.

It is performing well in most cases. The disk reliability is not that good, not as good as with some of these products.

Most of our customers run their solutions via on-premise instances.

How has it helped my organization?

The versatility is the main benefit. Since it virtualizes everything, they use it for so many different things. 

It is also good for them when we do upgrades, etc. When we add storage behind it, the product is also good for the customers because their customers do not notice that anything is happening due to the virtualization.

What is most valuable?

Its versatility, as it has a lot of advanced functions for a reasonable price.

What needs improvement?

We would like the right support and the ability to add disks concurrently to arrays. There are big arrays now, and if a customer wants add more disks to it, you have to have another array. Adding disks to existing arrays is one of the most demanded things from our customers.

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What do I think about the stability of the solution?

The SVC port (virtualized port) is very stable, but the Storwize port is not so stable.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

It is very scalable.

How are customer service and support?

In the past, the technical support has been very good. However, lately, it has not been so good as they are moving the support to Bulgaria. We are really unhappy about this.

How was the initial setup?

The initial setup is straightforward.

What other advice do I have?

I would recommend IBM Spectrum Virtualize.

Mainly, our customers are IBM friendly and have mostly IBM equipment.

Customers' most important criteria when selecting a vendor: cost.

Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer: Business Partner.
PeerSpot user
it_user694704 - PeerSpot reviewer
Principal Specialist and Solution Consultant at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees
Consultant
For me the most useful has been the virtualisation of back-end SAN disk systems
Pros and Cons
  • "Migration from configurations where servers have storage provisioned from older SAN disk systems to newer storage systems is almost seamless using image mode migration techniques, with only a short outage of the servers."
  • "Adding features for data deduplication is one area of improvement."

How has it helped my organization?

My view of how the product has aided my customers varies. The replication functions have assisted in the relocation of whole data centres from one site to another, the snapshotting is of value in providing several versioned recovery points for some other customers. The virtualisation of the back end storage gives performance improvements over the direct attachment of the back end storage, as storage pools spanning a large number of drives can be configured, along with the caching algorithms. The migration capability across back end storage appliances has been of particular importance to some of my customers.

What is most valuable?

There are several good features, many of which have similarities to that of competitive offerings from other vendors (replication, snapshot). Compression is quite useful, but for me the most useful has been the virtualisation of back-end SAN disk systems, from almost any vendor. This enables easy upgrading and updating of storage, across vendors, by moving the storage pools between the back end disk systems. Migration from configurations where servers have storage provisioned from older SAN disk systems to newer storage systems is almost seamless using image mode migration techniques, with only a short outage of the servers. The hybrid storage pools, with SSD and the hard-disk drives, together with the Easy Tier feature, give high IOPs performance for most loads, without the customer needing to purchase all flash storage solutions.

What needs improvement?

Adding features for data deduplication is one area of improvement.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

I have encountered stability issues in situations when the customer-provided AC power has defects. A newer version of the firmware resulted in storage nodes not updating or starting.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

No issues with scalability encountered.

How are customer service and technical support?

Currently, support is generally good, as there is an IBM support web interface to lodge calls. Once the call has been initiated, responsiveness depends on the support contract conditions. The technical expertise, once reaching level 2 or higher, is good.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Going back to the SVC edition of Spectrum Virtualize, I do not recall any comparable alternative storage virtualisation solution.

How was the initial setup?

Like any storage implementation, the details of the complete setup of this solution requires a good understanding of the customer requirements. The base setup of the product itself has varied over time, but has always been fairly straightforward.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

Generally the bundled licensing is more cost effective and gives flexibility to the solution. Linking into the Spectrum Suite can also be advantageous, but depends on the scale of the enterprise.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

Recently with the many storage virtualisation solutions now available, consideration of other products depends on the size of the customer and their requirements, and what vendor/technology provider may already exist in their organisation.

What other advice do I have?

Spectrum Virtualize has a long history, with the original SAN Volume Controllers (SVC) using early versions of the software. The software on these appliances has had several name changes over the years. I have worked on and been involved with pre-sales, design and implementation on the early SVCs from 2005, and more recently the Storwize implementation, V7000s, 5000s and 3700s. So, product 2145-xxx, 2076, 2077, 2072 and so on. These are all IBM appliances, with their Spectrum Virtualize software running on them.

Obtain a well-qualified technical specialist/architect to review the design and setup if many features such as replication, snapshotting and compression are part of the solution.

Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.
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it_user672342 - PeerSpot reviewer
Team Lead for Storage and Backup at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees
Consultant
We can use different storage products in the back-end and one code base for mirroring.

What is most valuable?

  • The ability to use different storage products in the back-end
  • Having only one code base for mirroring and all other enterprise features

How has it helped my organization?

When you use different storage vendors, you may not get what you want. With this solution, you can put these solutions under Spectrum Visualize and use them, because they will look the same in IBM storage.

What needs improvement?

I would like to see data obligation which I think is already on the road map.

For how long have I used the solution?

We have been using this product for eight years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Stability on our side is very good.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Scalability is also good. It could be improved, but we will see if they will improve it.

How are customer service and technical support?

Technical support is sometimes good and sometimes it is low.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Eight years ago, we had a different product that was not very well designed. It is no longer on the market. It was LSI Storage, but we switched.

How was the initial setup?

We had a business partner doing the setup for us, but it is complex. This is a special product. It's not a standard storage product, so you have to know a lot about your environment.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

We evaluated FalconStor and DataCore. This was based on installing software somewhere on the server. This was software for storage from a very early version in 2008/2009. We don't trust them, so that's why we chose an appliance level from IBM.

When looking at vendors, we look at their ability to perform and give good support.

What other advice do I have?

Difficult question. You have to look at your environment and what you need to do there. I think Spectrum Visualize is a very good product to address a lot of problems.

Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.
PeerSpot user
it_user672405 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Architect at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Consultant
It works across different technologies such as flash and regular drives.

What is most valuable?

It is easy to deploy and use. It's very calm. The GUI goes right across the entire platform.

What needs improvement?

I would like to see more information about the heat map. That would give us an easier view from an architect's standpoint in terms of:

  • A better idea of where we have to put data
  • What we have to build-in with virtualization
  • The ability to grow it
  • The ability to make it more scalable.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Stability has been good. Stability has been high, actually. We've had some minor issues, and IBM has been quick to fix those. I don't have any issues with the stability.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Scalability is good. And of course, it works across multiple, different technologies including flash and regular drives. Scalability is definitely good.

How are customer service and technical support?

Technical support at IBM is actually not as great as it used to be. It seems like IBM has decreased the number of people who can support this environment. We find that locating someone who knows the product line, or more of that product line, is becoming limited.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

I'm not the one who invested in this solution, but multiple clients have invested in it. There were business requirements from a technology standpoint, there was performance that they needed, and there were different degrees of availability that they needed.

How was the initial setup?

The initial setup was straightforward. It was easy.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

We deal with multiple vendors. We go from Cisco, to IBM, to EMC when we talk about clients. But I don't know how to answer this question from the perspective you are asking about. It is from a different point of view.

What other advice do I have?

I'd recommend it, for sure. It offers supportability, reliability, and some scalability. The vendor is there as a partner.

Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.
PeerSpot user
it_user674247 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Administrator at a healthcare company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Vendor
We can move data where we need it to be and stick storage solutions on the back-end.

What is most valuable?

The most valuable feature for sure is the abstraction of the storage. In this way, we can basically stick any storage solution that we want on the back-end. Then we've got a rich feature set above that. We can basically move the data where we need it to be. We have a lot of control. It's a good product.

How has it helped my organization?

We're a fairly small shop, as far as the number of IT people that we have. The tool allows us to basically multiply our staff to be able to get our work done. We don't have to rely on consultants. The feature sets are usually ahead of where we need to be.

What needs improvement?

There's always room for improvement. A little lower price would always be nice. Otherwise, nothing major.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Stability has been very good. We're more on the conservative side, in that we are not going out and downloading the latest and greatest code. We are a couple of releases behind, but it's been very stable.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Scalability has been really great. We've done refresh cycles every three years and the technology is usually ahead of where we need it to be, as far as scaling up is concerned.

How is customer service and technical support?

Technical support has been pretty good. Maybe sometimes we don't get responses back as fast as we would like, but they have always been very professional and they follow through. No major issues. It's been good.

How was the initial setup?

The initial setup was very easy.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

For one, there are very few vendors that actually offer this product on the market. And nobody has the quality feature set that IBM has.

We were looking for quality, support, and service. These are all the normal things most companies look for.

What other advice do I have?

I'm not sure. I'd ask them why they haven't done it already.

Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.
PeerSpot user
PeerSpot user
Manager of Infrastructure at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
The simplicity of the product makes IBM Spectrum Visualize a pleasure to use
Pros and Cons
  • "Although the GUI from the XIV was used (in my view), IBM has polished and refined the GUI providing a pleasant and easy to navigate GUI experience."
  • "GUI should be developed in HTML5 as opposed to Java."

How has it helped my organization?

The simplicity of the product makes IBM Spectrum Virtualize a pleasure to use. With numerous islands of storage arrays, this allowed the company to effectively "pool" all the numerous storage arrays and encouraged a tiered storage approach. The speed at which snapshots can be created are impressive with clones copies taking longer due to the nature of a clone (VM) vs snapshot (copy of VM disk file). Google it. With all flash becoming the new standard, the IBM Spectrum Virtualize nodes boast an array (pardon the pun) of flash technology providing the performance where and when it is needed.

What is most valuable?

Where does one begin? Although the GUI from the XIV was used (in my view), IBM has polished and refined the GUI providing a pleasant and easy to navigate GUI experience. The IBM Spectrum Virtualize has gone from strength to strength but at the same time setting the bar for what's possible in the storage virtualization market. IBM have just recently released the new SV1 nodes which boasts integrated flash and processor power, thus providing far better response times overall.

What needs improvement?

Cheaper pricing and GUI should be developed in HTML5 as opposed to Java.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

No issues at all.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

IBM Spectrum Virtualize loves scalability.

How are customer service and technical support?

Customer Service:

IBM service is good with no language challenges when speaking to call center agents from different countries and cultures.

Technical Support:

On a scale of one to five (one: terrible to five: excellent): four.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

No previous competing products. The challenge was to consolidate islands of storage arrays.

How was the initial setup?

The most challenging parts of the implementation were the initial cabling configuration. With many storage arrays needing cabling and multiple paths needing to be cabled using fibre optic LC cables, zoning also proved to add significant effort but this is to be expected and is a once-off exercise. Although regular commissioning/decommissioning of server/backup infrastructure is part of storage administration duties, the initial setup was far more intensive as an entire storage infrastructure needed to be redesigned. Once the hardware infrastructure was in place and the software configured to best practice (IBM implemented in order to ensure best practice was adhered to).

What about the implementation team?

Combination of onsite and vendor team.

Vendor team was professional and well-skilled.

What was our ROI?

Not applicable.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

Liaise with both the vendor and their partners. You'd be amazed at how much you can score.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

No. Competitor products just did not offer the features we required.

What other advice do I have?

HTML5, please.

Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.
PeerSpot user
it_user672411 - PeerSpot reviewer
Storage Engineer at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees
Vendor
We use the tool to manage our storage.

What is most valuable?

It gives us a lot of flexibility and ease of management. We have all the tools in one place. We pretty much do all our storage using the Spectrum Virtualize. It makes it really easy for us to manage all our storage.

How has it helped my organization?

We have a lot of different tiers of storage. We have enterprise all the way down to applications that don't need that much performance. It gives us the flexibility to move things in between these. I think a lot of the benefit is just the ease of use of the tool itself.

What needs improvement?

We are pretty happy with the roadmap that we've seen with the stuff that is coming.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

In more recent years, we've been very happy with stability. We went through a lot of bumps with the earlier releases of code.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

We've also been very happy with the scalability.

How are customer service and technical support?

We are not happy with the technical support.

In the last seven or eight years, I honestly think that IBM's technical support has gotten way worse. It's so hard to get hold of someone. There's no more live troubleshooting. In the old days, we used to have live troubleshooting. Now it is a matter of sending them logs and "we'll get back to you. Send us logs and we'll get back to you". It gets pretty frustrating, especially when you're supporting applications that are 24/7.

All they can do is say "send us logs and we'll get back to you". So we are not happy with the support at all.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

This solution was actually chosen before I got there. I wasn't a part of the decision making. I was a part of the implementation, but not the decision making.

How was the initial setup?

I was involved with the initial setup. It was pretty straightforward.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

We've compared it to other platforms like EMC. This product is really intuitive. It is really easy to use. So from that point of view, it's really good.

What other advice do I have?

I would say, definitely give this a look.

In the past, we've also looked at other solutions. So far, especially from the management point of view, being the administrator for the systems, it can't be beat. I think the tool itself is really intuitive. It's really easy and has a lot of features. Ease of management is the biggest thing. We've been pretty happy with the performance.

Probably the biggest hit, though, is the support.

Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.
PeerSpot user
it_user672327 - PeerSpot reviewer
Storage Admin at a university with 1,001-5,000 employees
Vendor
The most valuable feature is its ease of use.

What is most valuable?

The most valuable feature for is its ease of use.

What needs improvement?

I have nothing to suggest regarding improvements. It's fine.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Stability is pretty good.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Scalability is good.

How is customer service and technical support?

Technical support is sometimes good and sometimes okay.

What other advice do I have?

Give it a try.

Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.
PeerSpot user
Buyer's Guide
Download our free Software Defined Storage (SDS) Report and find out what your peers are saying about IBM, DataCore, Dell Technologies, and more!
Updated: April 2024
Buyer's Guide
Download our free Software Defined Storage (SDS) Report and find out what your peers are saying about IBM, DataCore, Dell Technologies, and more!