Spalding Virtualizes SAN to Improve Capacity, Redundancy

Spalding University has virtualized its storage infrastructure to support 22 TB of data. The university is now running 30 virtual machines on 15 physical IBM 3650 servers, each running DataCore's SANsymphony-V storage hypervisor for storage, as well as VMware for both server and desktop virtualization.

The university had been using an IBM fiber channel storage area network (SAN) with 4 TB of capacity but needed to increase its storage capacity to support the university's rapidly increasing volume of data.

"We needed to perform significant upgrades to our storage environment and infrastructure so that it could support our growing school," said Ezra Krumhansl, director of information technology at Spalding, in a prepared statement.

Spalding chose to upgrade its IBM hardware and install DataCore SANsymphony-V hypervisor for storage because the up-front costs were lower than the costs of the alternatives and the solution was device-independent. The solution also enabled the university to virtualize its storage infrastructure while increasing capacity and redundancy.

The new primary and secondary mirrored systems are housed at a co-location facility a mile and a half from the university campus, using fiber channel connectivity.

"The biggest benefit we have realized with the DataCore storage hypervisor is replication--meaning synchronous, real-time mirroring and the virtualization of the backend storage environment," said Krumhansl in a prepared statement. "The data protection features definitely hit home. We don't worry about losing a hard drive or data because there is redundancy built in, in so far as our having two nodes and even having redundancy within them. The device independence also enables us to install, mix and match any server combination we choose, allowing us to leverage, where needed, the best features that each brand has to offer."

Spalding University is located in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, and serves more than 2,400 undergraduate and graduate students.

Further information about DataCore SANsymphony-V is available on the DataCore site.

About the Author

Leila Meyer is a technology writer based in British Columbia. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • layered glass panels and light trails

    Stanford Online Launches Immersive Learning Studio

    Stanford Online recently marked its 30th anniversary with the announcement of a new immersive learning studio, according to a university news release. The studio takes advantage of AI-powered and immersive learning technologies to continue delivering personalized and faculty-led education.

  • Dana Brunson facilitates a roundtable discussion with research and higher education IT leaders

    Internet2: Closing the Access Gap for Research Cyberinfrastructure

    Internet2's Research Engagement Team brings CIOs and other campus technology leadership together with research computing and data facilitators, forming a community that enables research cyberinfrastructure at institutions of all types and sizes.

  • person typing on a touch screen schedule plan calendar

    DOJ Extends Deadline for ADA Title II Compliance

    Institutions working to meet the Americans with Disabilities Act Title II regulations for digital accessibility have received a temporary reprieve: The United States Department of Justice has published an interim final rule to push back the compliance deadline by one year.

  • abstract glowing circuit patterns

    Microsoft Reduces Copilot Integrations in Windows 11

    Microsoft is dialing back its aggressive Copilot push in Windows 11, promising a sweeping quality overhaul that puts performance and reliability ahead of AI feature expansion .