IBM Flashsystems 7300
IBM Flashsystems 7300
IBM Flashsystems 7300
Redpaper
IBM FlashSystem 7300 Family Product Guide
This IBM® Redpaper Product Guide describes the IBM FlashSystem® 7300 solution, which
is a next-generation IBM FlashSystem control enclosure. It combines the performance of
flash and a Non-Volatile Memory Express (NVMe)-optimized architecture with the reliability
and innovation of IBM FlashCore® technology and the rich feature set and high availability
(HA) of IBM Spectrum® Virtualize.
However, for many organizations, staff resources, and expertise are limited, and
cost-efficiency is a top priority. These organizations have important investments in existing
infrastructure that they want to maximize. They need enterprise-grade solutions that optimize
cost-efficiency while simplifying the pathway to modernization.
IBM FlashSystem 7300 is designed specifically for these requirements and use cases. It also
delivers a cyber resilience without compromising application performance.
IBM FlashSystem 7300 provides a rich set of software-defined storage (SDS) features that
are delivered by IBM Spectrum Virtualize, including the following examples:
Data reduction and deduplication
Dynamic tiering
Thin-provisioning
Snapshots
Cloning
Replication and data copy services
Cyber resilience
Transparent Cloud Tiering (TCT)
IBM HyperSwap® including 3-site replication for high availability
Scale-out and scale-up configurations further enhance capacity and throughput for better
availability
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system with IBM FlashCore Modules features built-in hardware
data compression, and this data reduction is always on. This compression is implemented in
hardware by using field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) within each module and uses a
modified dynamic GZIP algorithm. With this approach, the solution can deliver the level of
performance that you expect without compression, with the added benefit of better use of the
physical storage.
In addition, IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure supports data reduction pool
compression and deduplication that can increase the effective capacity of your flash memory
up to 5x, which decreases the cost of storing data up to 80%. Data reduction pools support
active data, unlike other data reduction solutions.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure offers several features for data reduction pool
compression workloads. These features include two 10 Intel core processors with up to
768 TB of memory per node, and a built-in compression accelerator for hardware-assisted
compression. In addition, the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system with IBM FlashCore Modules
NVMe-type drives applies compression to any data that is not already compressed.
Agile integration
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system includes the following agile characteristics:
Fully integrated system management.
Application-aware data services.
Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), data-at-rest encryption with all NVMe type drives,
and IBM FlashCore Modules drives with FIPS 140-3.
In-line hardware compression with IBM FlashCore Module.
Tiering or mirroring to existing and Public Cloud storage.
Mixed workload consolidation.
Nondisruptive data migrations.
Concurrent code load.
AI-empowered
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system includes the following AI characteristics:
AI-based data placement for optimal data center performance and zero-downtime data
migration.
IBM Storage Insights: AI-empowered predictive analytics, storage resource management,
and a support platform delivered over the cloud.
Multicloud enabled
IBM Spectrum Virtualize on-premises and IBM Spectrum Virtualize for Public Cloud together
support mirroring between on-premises and cloud data centers or between cloud data
centers. These functions can be used to perform the following tasks:
Migrate data between on-premises and public cloud data centers or between public cloud
data centers. Enjoy consistent data management between on-premises storage and the
public cloud.
Implement disaster recovery strategies between on-premises and public cloud data
centers.
Enable cloud-based DevOps with easy replication of data from on-premises sources.
Improve cyber resilience with copies on Amazon Web Services (AWS) by using air gap
snapshots to S3 and IBM Safeguarded Copy on Microsoft Azure.
Customers can create hybrid multicloud solutions for their traditional block data and
workloads by using built-in IP replication capabilities.
Deploy IBM Spectrum Virtualize for Public Cloud on AWS directly from AWS Marketplace
through a predefined Cloud Formation Template that automatically and securely installs the
software, and deploys a high availability two-node cluster on selected EC2 instances. Any
Amazon EBS block storage can be attached.
On Azure, deploy directly from the Azure Apps Marketplace through predefined Azure
Resource Manager templates that automatically and securely install the software, and deploy
an HA two-node cluster on selected Azure VMs. Attach shared Azure Managed Disk
solid-state drives (SSDs) to the cluster for HA.
On IBM Cloud®, automated installation scripts assist deployment of the software on bare
metal servers. IBM Performance or Endurance block storage is supported behind the cluster.
This setup enables clients to create clustered configurations (such as on-premises) while
bringing the optimization and virtualization capabilities of IBM Spectrum Virtualize to public
cloud infrastructures.
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IBM Spectrum Virtualize on-premises and IBM Spectrum Virtualize for Public Cloud together
enable a hybrid multicloud deployment with a single data management layer between
on-premises systems and the cloud across heterogeneous storage pools that might exist in
the data center.
For more information about IBM FlashSystem systems and Hybrid Multicloud, see Embracing
Hybrid Cloud: Storage Edition.
With Safeguarded Copy, the IBM FlashSystem 7300 adds a line of defense against
cyberthreats by protecting your valued data from cyberattacks with immutable and isolated
copies that are hidden, nonaddressable, and cannot be altered. If an attack occurs, these
copies can be quickly restored to support recovery. Customized to your specific application
mix, IBM FlashSystem Cyber Vault builds on IBM Safeguarded Copy to help reduce
cyberattack recovery times.
A Cyber Vault solution runs continuously and monitors snapshots as they are created
automatically by Safeguarded Copy. By using standard database tools and automation
software, Cyber Vault checks Safeguarded Copy snapshots for corruption. If Cyber Vault finds
such changes, that is an immediate sign that an attack might be occurring.
When preparing a response, knowing the last snapshots with no evidence of an attack
speeds determining which snapshot to use. Because Safeguarded Copy snapshots are on
the same FlashSystem storage as operational data, recovery is fast by using the same
snapshot technology. With these advantages, Cyber Vault is designed to help reduce
cyberattack recovery time from days to just hours.
Figure 1 shows the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure front view with an NVMe drive
partially removed.
Figure 1 IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure with one NVMe drive partially removed
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Control enclosures
Each control enclosure can have multiple attached expansion enclosures, which expand the
available capacity of the entire system. The IBM FlashSystem 7300 solution supports up to
four control enclosures and up to two chains of SAS expansion enclosures per control
enclosure.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure supports up to 24 NVMe-capable flash drives
in a 2U high form factor and consists of one machine type: 4657. The 4657 is available in two
models: 924 and U7D.
Note: The 4657-U7D model is an IBM FlashSystem 7300 solution with a 1-year warranty,
with optional Storage Expert Care service offerings, and is intended for the Storage Utility
Offering space. This model is physically and functionally identical to the IBM FlashSystem
4657-924 model, except for target configurations and variable capacity billing. The variable
capacity billing uses IBM Spectrum Control or IBM Storage Insights to monitor the system
usage, which allows allocated storage use that is greater than a base subscription rate to
be billed per terabyte per month. Allocated storage is identified as storage that is allocated
to a specific host (and unusable to other hosts), whether data is written. For
thin-provisioning, the data that is written is considered used; for thick-provisioning, the total
allocated volume space is considered used.
Expansion enclosures
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 expansion enclosures consist of one machine type and three
4657 models: 12G, 24G, and 92G.
The new SAS-based small form factor (SFF) and large form factor (LFF) expansion
enclosures support various flash and SSD MDisks in a storage pool, which can be used for
IBM Easy Tier.
Note: Attachment and intermixing of IBM Storwize® V7000 Expansion Enclosures Models
12F, 24F, and 92F with FlashSystem 7300 Expansion Enclosure Models 12G, 24G, and
92G is not supported.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure can be recognized by the nomenclature
“IBM FlashSystem 7300” on the left side of the bezel cover, which covers the rack-mounting
screws.
Figure 2 IBM FlashSystem 7300 bezel and IBM FlashCore Module description
Labeling on the NVMe drive provides the drive type, capacity, type of drive, and FRU number.
The example that is shown in Figure 2 is the IBM FlashCore Module NVMe 19.2 TB type.
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Data migration from IBM or non-IBM storage with IBM Spectrum Virtualize.
Hybrid cloud storage by:
– Enabling communication between an on-premises deployment of IBM Spectrum
Virtualize and IBM Spectrum Virtualize for Public Cloud.
– Deploying the Container Storage Interface (CSI) driver for Red Hat OpenShift
Container Platform to provide persistent storage for on-premises or cloud-based
containerized applications.
– Using TCT to convert data into an object store for back up to specific available cloud
instances.
Support and interoperability within the IBM Spectrum Storage Software Suite, including:
– IBM Spectrum Scale where the IBM FlashSystem 7300 can be used as the back-end
storage repository for metadata, primary data or in initial microprogram load (IML)
processing.
– IBM Spectrum Protect and IBM Spectrum Protect Plus where the IBM FlashSystem
7300 can be used as cache or data repository.
– IBM Copy Data Management where the IBM FlashSystem 7300 can be used as cache
or as a copy services target.
Figure 3 shows an IBM FlashSystem 7300 that is fully deployed in a hybrid multicloud
environment where it is also externally virtualizing various on-premises storage subsystems.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 can support multiple Open System hosts and interoperability with
all the software from the IBM Spectrum Suite of products.
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Support for 32 Gb FC and 10/25 GBE or 100 GbE iSCSI and NVMe RDMA connectivity.
The ability to intermix these port options also is supported.
Simplified connectivity by using portsets, which enable host connectivity ports to be
grouped for more effective zoning and management.
Easy access and compatibility with IBM Storage Insights, which offers advanced
performance monitoring for one or more IBM FlashSystem 7300s.
Extra access security through multi-factor authentication.
In addition to the base warranty, the IBM FlashSystem 7300 offers IBM Storage Expert Care
with three levels of support options. For more information, see “IBM Storage Expert Care” on
page 15.
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Three-site replication:
– Three-site replication provides enhanced disaster tolerance for IBM Spectrum
Virtualize systems, which allows coordination of data between three disparate sites for
failover and failback.
– At the time of this writing, three-site replication requires the submission of a request
through the SCORE system to help manage and ensure that the requirements and
configuration details are met.
Secure Drive Erase, which is the ability to completely erase any customer data from a
NVMe, SAS SSD, or HDD before it is removed from the control and expansion enclosure.
Highlights
IBM FlashSystem 7300, machine type 4657, offers IBM Storage Expert Care service and
support options in combination with IBM Spectrum Virtualize software, IBM FlashCore
Modules, IBM Storage Insights, and storage-class memory to deliver a NVMe accelerated,
hybrid cloud-enabled storage system.
IBM FlashCore Modules and the use of storage-class memory as a higher-level storage tier
enables IBM FlashSystem 7300 to deliver the highest available performance with the lowest
latencies in its class.
IBM FlashSystem 7300 is the replacement for IBM FlashSystem 7200. It is a 2U, 24 NVMe,
dual controller drawer that uses the second release from Intel of the Cascade Lake processor
for greater performance.
IBM FlashSystem 7300 utility model U7D delivers a variable capacity system, where billing is
based on provisioned space that is greater than the base. The base subscription is covered
by a three-year lease that entitles you to use the base capacity at no extra cost. If storage
needs increase beyond the base capacity, usage is billed based on the average daily
provisioned capacity per terabyte, per month, on a quarterly basis.
For more information about IBM FlashCore technology, see this IBM Documentation web
page.
The technology pricing sits between dynamic random access memory (DRAM) and traditional
NAND. Price is significantly more expensive than traditional NAND drives.
At the time of this writing, the following vendors are most prevalent in the marketplace:
Intel (3D Xpoint memory technology in Optane drives)
Samsung (zNAND memory technology in zSSD drives)
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system supports the new low-latency, high-speed SCM drives in
any of the slots of the control enclosure. The control enclosure can contain up to 12 SCM
drives.
Note: SCM and other NVMe drive types can be installed in any drive slot. However, the
highest capacity drives must be installed in the lowest available drive slots.
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SCM with Easy Tier
SCM with Easy Tier is measured to improve latency and in some cases, improve IOPS. If you
want to realize the full benefit of SCM across all of your capacity, Easy Tier continually and
automatically moves the hottest data onto the SCM tier and leaves the rest of the data on the
lower tiers. This autonomic tiering can also benefit DRPs where the metadata is moved to the
SCM drives.
If you have a specific workload that requires the best performance and lowest latency, and it
fits in the limited SCM capacity available, use SCM as a separate pool and decide which
workloads use that pool. Because of their faster speed, SCM drives are placed in a new top
tier of Easy Tier. This new tier is ranked higher than the existing tier0_flash that is used for
NVMe NAND drives that are supported today.
Hot data is placed in the SCM tier when Easy Tier is enabled. DRP and VG extent allocation
was tuned to use SCM drives, specially for metadata (directory volume lookups). This use
case is one of the main use cases for SCM drives with an IBM FlashSystem 7300 system.
SCM drive formats occur when one of the following conditions exists:
A drive is replaced.
An enclosure is managed.
An array or MDisk is removed.
Note: Intel Optane drives do not support UNMAPs because it is not beneficial for these
drives. Instead, the system writes zeros to deallocate drive sectors.
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Licensed Machine Code subscription and support
IBM Storage Expert Care services:
– Installation (physical installation is chargeable), usage, and configuration support line
– Predictive alerting
– Automated ticket management
Note: Technical Account Manager serves as the key client interface for in-scope hardware
and software. It delivers partnership and consultancy, and direct engagement on
high-priority support cases.
For more information about the IBM FlashWatch offering, see IBM Support’s IBM FlashWatch
FAQ.
The IBM FlashWatch offering is applicable across the IBM Spectrum Virtualize family, with the
Product Matrix in the FAQ detailing the elements that are applicable against which product.
IBM strongly recommends that all customers install and use this no-charge, cloud-based IBM
application because it provides a single dashboard that gives you a clear view of all your IBM
block storage. You can make better decisions by seeing trends in performance and capacity.
With storage health information, you can focus on areas that need attention, and when IBM
support is needed. IBM Storage Insights simplifies uploading logs, speeds resolution with
online configuration data, and provides an overview of open tickets all in one place.
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IBM Storage Insights includes the following features:
A unified view of IBM systems:
– Provides a single view to see all your system’s characteristics.
– Displays all of your IBM storage inventory.
– Provides a live event feed so that you know in real time what is going on with your
storage so that you can act fast.
IBM Storage Insights collects telemetry data and Call Home data and provides real-time
system reporting of capacity and performance
Overall storage monitoring, which provides the following information:
– The overall health of the system.
– Monitoring of the configuration to see whether it meets preferred practices.
– System resource management to determine which system is overtaxed and provides
proactive recommendations to fix it.
IBM Storage Insights provides advanced customer service with an event filter that you can
use to accomplish the following tasks:
– You and IBM Support can view, open, and close support tickets, and track trends.
– You can use the autolog collection capability to collect the logs and send them to IBM
before IBM Support looks into the problem. This capability can save as much as 50%
of the time to resolve the case.
In addition to the no-charge version of IBM Storage Insights, IBM offers IBM Storage
Insights Pro, which is a subscription service that provides longer historical views of data,
more reporting and optimization options, and supports IBM file and block storage with
EMC VNX and VMAX.
For more information about dashboard displays, see “IBM Storage Insights: Information and
registration” on page 19.
For more information about the architecture and design overview of IBM Storage Insights, see
Implementation Guide for IBM Spectrum Virtualize Version 8.5, SG24-8520.
IBM Spectrum Control Connect provides insight and awareness about the configuration
capabilities, storage health, and events of a storage system regarding VMware and vSphere.
With this capability, VMware administrators can independently and centrally manage their
storage resources on IBM storage systems.
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IBM FlashSystem 7300 GUI
Because IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures cluster to form a system, which is a
single management interface is used for IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures. Each
IBM FlashSystem 7300 node canister is an individual server in an IBM FlashSystem 7300
clustered system, on which the IBM FlashSystem 7300 software runs.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system includes an easy-to-use management GUI that runs on
the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure to help you monitor, manage, and configure
your system. You can access the GUI by opening any supported web browser and entering
the management IP addresses.
You can connect from any workstation that can communicate with the IBM FlashSystem 7300
system. The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure is delivered in a 2U 19 inch
rack-mount enclosure.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system includes a CLI, which is useful for scripting, and an
intuitive GUI for simple and familiar management of the product. The IBM FlashSystem 7300
system supports Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP), email forwarding that uses
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP), and syslog redirection for complete enterprise
management access.
With the GUI, you can quickly deploy storage and manage it efficiently. The GUI runs on the
IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure, so a separate console is not needed. Point your
web browser to the system IP address and then, you can manage all of the expansion
enclosures from one place.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure node canisters are configured for active-active
redundancy. The node canisters run a highly customized Linux-based operating system that
coordinates and monitors all significant functions in the system.
The node canisters provide a web interface, Secure Shell (SSH) access, and SNMP
connectivity through external Ethernet interfaces. With the web and SSH interfaces,
administrators can monitor system performance and health metrics, configure storage, and
collect support data, among other features.
The storage configuration includes defining logical units with capacities, access policies, and
other parameters. No software must be installed on host computers to administer the
IBM FlashSystem 7300 system beyond a web browser or a standard SSH client.
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Supported platforms
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system features extensive interoperability with support for a wide
range of operating systems (including Microsoft Windows Server, Linux, and IBM AIX® and
IBM i), hardware platforms (IBM Power Systems, and x86 & x86_64 servers), host bus
adapters (HBAs), and SAN fabrics. For more information, see this IBM Support web page and
the IBM System Storage Interoperation Center.
Control enclosure
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure is a 2U rack-mounted NVMe flash memory
enclosure that is based on IBM flash technology and provides the primary management
interface (GUI) and the host interface configuration. The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control
enclosures support FC Protocol (FCP and NVMeOF on FC) and iSCSI interfaces. RoCE and
iWARP protocols are supported by iSCSI and NVMe RDMA.
Note: The U7D utility-based model uses fixed configurations because they are
Capacity on Demand (CoD)-based offerings.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure includes the following features:
Full internal redundancy:
– Redundant and hot-swappable node canisters
– Redundant and hot-swappable batteries within each node canister
– Hot-swappable PCIe adapters
– Redundant and hot-swappable power supplies, DIMMs, and fans
The control enclosure support up to 24 NVMe 2.5-inch drives, which can be the
IBM FlashCore Module NVMe type drives or the industry-standard NVMe drives:
– The following 2.5-inch (SFF) IBM FlashCore Module NVMe types are supported in IBM
FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures:
• 4.8 TB 2.5-inch NVMe FlashCore Module
• 9.6 TB 2.5-inch NVMe FlashCore Module
• 19.2 TB 2.5-inch NVMe FlashCore Module
• 38.4 TB 2.5-inch NVMe FlashCore Module
Distributed RAID 6 (recommended), Distributed RAID 1(supported).
– The following 2.5-inch (SFF) NVMe industry-standard drives are supported in IBM
FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures:
• 1.92 TB 2.5-inch NVMe flash drive
• 3.84 TB 2.5-inch NVMe flash drive
• 7.68 TB 2.5-inch NVMe flash drive
• 15.36 TB 2.5-inch NVMe flash drive
Distributed RAID 6 (recommended), Distributed RAID 1 (supported).
– It also supports up to 12 1.6 TB NVMe Storage Class Memory Drives.
Distributed RAID 6, or DRAID 1 with fewer than 4 drives.
– All drives are dual-port and hot-swappable. Drives of the same form factor and
connector type can be intermixed within an enclosure.
– All flash modules must be the same type and capacity within the same DRAID6 array.
Some other considerations for DRAID:
– Distributed RAID 1 is recommended for array configurations of three drives.
– Distributed RAID 1 is recommended for array configurations of four or five drives
depending on capacity and performance requirements, with Distributed RAID 5 as an
alternative.
– Distributed RAID 1 and 6 are recommended for array configurations of 6 drives
depending on capacity and performance requirements.
– Distributed RAID 6 is recommended for array configurations with seven or more drives.
– Distributed RAID 5 is available through a SCORE request for array configurations of
three to eight drives.
Each IBM flash memory module contains IBM enhanced flash chips, FPGA chips, an IBM
PowerPC® processor, and dynamic random access memory (DRAM) devices that are
connected to the flash controllers and processor.
Total 40 cores (Two node canisters, each with two 10-core processors).
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Cache options from 256 GB (128 GB per canister) to 1.5 TB (768 GB per canister).
Eight on-board 10 Gb Ethernet ports standard for iSCSI connectivity.
32 Gb FC, 10/25 Gb Ethernet, and 100 Gb Ethernet ports for FC and iSCSI connectivity.
12 Gb SAS ports for expansion enclosure attachment (by way of a PCIe adapter card).
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure supports FCP with point to point (FC-P2P),
arbitrated loop (FC-AL), and switched fabric (FC-SW) topologies. FC interfaces can be
configured as N_port or NL_port types.
The FC ports are configured in NPIV mode; therefore, the user must check that this
configuration is preferred for their installation. If not, this configuration must be changed from
the default when you set up the SAN infrastructure.
Full active-active multipathing across all interfaces is supported, although host software
support for this function can vary.
Figure 9 shows the front view of the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure also includes the following expansion features:
Capability for adding into clustered systems with more IBM FlashSystem 7300 control
enclosures.
Note: Machine type 4657 FlashSystem 7300 systems can be clustered with other
FlashSystem 7300 systems only. Clustering with machine types 2076, 4664, 4666,
9846, or 9848 is not supported.
Up to 20 SAS attached expansion enclosures are supported per IBM FlashSystem 7300
control enclosure pair, which provides up to 240 SAS HDD type drives with expansion
Model 12G and up to 480 SSD/SAS type drives with expansion Model 24G.
Up to eight LFF High Density (HD) 92G expansion controllers are supported per IBM
FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure pair, which provides up to 736 SSD or HDD SAS
flash drives of Tier 1 capacity.
Note: The upper node canister is mounted upside down in the expansion enclosure.
Therefore, the port numbering must be read right to left.
The variable capacity billing uses IBM Spectrum Control Storage Insights to monitor the
system usage, which allows allocated storage usage that is greater than a base subscription
rate to be billed per TB, per month. Allocated storage is identified as storage that is allocated
to a specific host (and unusable to other hosts), whether data is written.
For thin-provisioning, the data that is written is considered used; for thick provisioning, the
total allocated volume space is considered used.
IBM FlashSystem 7300 Utility Models U7D provide a variable capacity storage offering.
These models offer a fixed capacity, with a base subscription of approximately 35% of the
total capacity.
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IBM Storage Insights is used to monitor system usage, and capacity that is used. This usage
is billed on a capacity-used basis. With this billing structure, you can grow or shrink usage,
and pay for the configured capacity only.
IBM FlashSystem utility models are provided for customers who can benefit from a variable
capacity system, where billing is based only on provisioned space. The hardware is leased
through IBM Global Finance on a three-year lease, which entitles the customer to use
approximately 30 - 40% of the total system capacity at no extra cost (customer individual
contract dependent). If storage needs increase beyond that initial capacity, usage is billed
based on the average daily provisioned capacity per terabyte per month, on a quarterly basis.
The system monitors daily provisioned capacity and averages those daily usage rates over
the month. The result is the average daily usage for the month.
If a customer uses 45 TB, 42.5 TB, and 50 TB in three consecutive months, IBM Storage
Insights calculates the overage as listed in Table 1 (rounding to the nearest terabyte).
45 TB 40.25 TB 4.75 TB 5 TB
50 TB 40.25 TB 9.75 TB 10 TB
The total capacity that is billed at the end of the quarter is 17 TB per month in this example.
Flash drive expansions can be ordered with the system in all supported configurations.
Table 2 lists the feature codes that are associated with the U7D utility model billing.
These features are used to purchase the variable capacity that is used in the utility models.
The features (#AE00, #AE01, and #AE02) provide terabytes of capacity beyond the base
subscription on the system. Usage is based on the average capacity that is used per month.
The total of the prior three months’ usage should be totaled, and the corresponding number of
#AE00, #AE01, and #AE02 features ordered quarterly.
Billing
The local project office compiles the usage information from IBM Storage Insights on a
quarterly basis. This data is compared to the base system capacity subscription. Any
provisioned capacity beyond that base subscription is billed per terabyte per month on a
quarterly basis.
Multiple expansion enclosures are supported per IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure,
which provides:
– Up to 120 drives with expansion enclosure 4657 Model 12G
– Up to 240 drives with expansion enclosure 4657 Model 24G
– Up to 368 drives with expansion enclosure 4657 Model 92G
On each SAS chain, the systems can support up to a SAS chain weight of 10:
Each 4657-12G or 4657-24G expansion enclosure adds a value of 1 to the SAS chain
weight.
Each 4657-92G expansion enclosure adds a value of 2.5 to the SAS chain weight.
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For example, each of the following expansion enclosure configurations has a total SAS weight
of 10:
Four 4657-92G enclosures per SAS chain
Two 4657-92G enclosures and five 4657-24G enclosures per SAS chain
Figure 11 shows the front view of the IBM FlashSystem 7000 Expansion Enclosure Model
12G.
Figure 11 Front view of the IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF Expansion Enclosure Model 12G
The 12G model of IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF expansion enclosure includes the following
features:
Two expansion canisters
12 Gb SAS ports for attachment to the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures
2U 19 inch rack-mount enclosure with AC power supplies
Figure 12 shows the rear view of IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF Expansion Enclosure Model
12G.
Figure 12 Rear view of IBM FlashSystem 7000 Expansion Enclosure Model 12G
Figure 13 shows the front view of the IBM FlashSystem 7000 Expansion Enclosure Model
24G.
Figure 13 Front view of the IBM FlashSystem 7000 SFF Expansion Enclosure Model 24G
The 24G model of IBM FlashSystem 7000 SFF Expansion Enclosure includes the following
features:
Two expansion canisters
12 Gb SAS ports for attachment to the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures
2U 19 inch rack-mount enclosure with AC power supplies
Figure 14 Rear view of IBM FlashSystem 7000 Expansion Enclosure Model 24G
IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF HD Expansion Enclosure Model 92G delivers the following
features:
Up to 92 drives are top-loaded into drive slots of the expansion enclosure
5U 19 inch rack-mount enclosure with slide rail and cable management assembly
Redundant 200 - 240 V AC power supplies (new C19/C20 PDU power cord required)
Figure 15 shows the front view of IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF HD Model 92G Expansion
Enclosure.
Figure 15 Front view of IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF Model 92G Expansion Enclosure
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Figure 16 shows the rear view of IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF model 92G Expansion
Enclosure.
Canister 1 & 2
Figure 16 Rear view of IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF model 92G Expansion Enclosure
Advanced functions
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system provides the following advanced functions:
HyperSwap for IBM FlashSystem 7300
Safeguarded copy
IBM FlashSystem Cyber Vault
Increased security features
NVMe over Fabrics
Portsets
IP quorum base support
Data reduction tools
Important: Because remote mirroring is used to support the HyperSwap capability, remote
mirroring licensing is required for HyperSwap. For more information, see “Software and
licensing” on page 57.
IBM Spectrum Virtualize software V8.5.0 or higher includes remote mirroring of control
enclosures and expansion enclosures. IBM Spectrum Virtualize is used to provide functions
for externally virtualized storage.
The HyperSwap function uses a HyperSwap topology to spread the nodes of the system
across two sites, with storage at a third site that acts as a tie-breaking quorum device.
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Figure 17 shows how the HyperSwap function works.
Each primary volume (“p” in Figure 17) has a secondary volume (“s” in Figure 17) on the
opposite I/O group. The secondary volumes are not mapped to the hosts. The dual-write to
the secondary volumes is handled by the IBM FlashSystem 7300 HyperSwap function, and is
transparent to the hosts.
Safeguarded Copy
IBM Safeguarded Copy regularly creates isolated (separated from servers) immutable
(unable to be changed) snapshots of data to help protect against cyberattacks, malware, acts
of disgruntled employees, and other data corruption. Because Safeguarded Copy snapshots
are on the same FlashSystem storage as operational data, recovery is faster than restoring
from copies stored separately.
The system integrates with IBM Copy Services Manager to provide automated backup copies
and data recovery.
The Safeguarded child-pool capability on the IBM Spectrum Virtualize family of products (IBM
FlashSystems, IBM SAN Volume Controller, and IBM Spectrum Virtualize for Public Cloud)
was introduced in version 8.4.2.0.
HA configurations mitigate against physical component failure and provide small Recovery
Point Objective (RPO) and Recover Time Objective (RTO). Continuous protection and
operation occur if a component fails. IBM Spectrum Virtualize HA configurations, such as
HyperSwap and Stretch Cluster, provide such protection.
However, because DR solutions at the storage layer are replicating only data, any logical
corruption eventually is replicated to the DR site as well.
One way to provide adequate protection against logical data corruption is to take periodic
snapshots of the data and to have that data stored in a nonmodifiable state that is
inaccessible to administrators, servers, and applications. These Safeguarded copies can then
serve as recovery points from which the data can be restored to a pre-corruption state,
whether that corruption occurred as a result of an errant batch job, a disgruntled employee, or
a ransomware attack.
For more information about Safeguarded Copy, see IBM FlashSystem Safeguarded Copy
Implementation Guide, REDP-5654.
Armed with this information, customers are positioned to more quickly identify that an attack
is underway and more rapidly identify and recover a clean copy of their data.
33
IBM FlashSystem Cyber Vault features the following highlights:
Detect cyberattacks early to minimize damage
Speed recovery from an attack
Reduce recovery time from days or weeks to just hours
Enable forensic analysis of attack
The IBM FlashSystem Cyber Vault solution is a blueprint that is implemented by IBM Lab
Services or IBM Business Partners that is designed to help speed cyberattack detection and
recovery.
For more information about IBM FlashSystem Cyber Vault, contact your IBM representative or
IBM Business Partner.
Multifactor authentication requires users to provide multiple pieces of information when they
log in to the system to prove their identity. Multifactor authentication uses any combination of
two or more methods, called factors, to authenticate users to your resources and protect
those resources from unauthorized access. The system integrates with IBM Security Verify to
provide multifactor authentication for system users.
Also, available with IBM Spectrum Virtualize software V8.5.0 and newer is single-sign on
(SSO). With SSO, users must provide their credentials only once when they sign in to more
systems, rather than repeatedly providing the credentials for every individual system. The
system supports Microsoft Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) to provide single
sign-on.
For more information, see IBM Spectrum Virtualize, IBM FlashSystem, and IBM SAN Volume
Controller Security Feature Checklist, REDP-5678.
This section describes the NVMe protocol and interface as it relates particularly to
flash-based architectures.
The NVMe protocol is an interface specification for communicating with storage devices and it
is functionally the same as other protocols, such as SATA and SAS. However, the NVMe
interface was designed from the ground up for fast storage media, such as flash-based SSDs
and low-latency nonvolatile storage technologies.
This design was implemented in the IBM FlashSystem 7300, with its dual ported PCIe-based
NVMe drives.
However, the PCIe bus has a limit to the number of NVMe drives that can be attached to a
host over the bus to a few tens of devices. Because the maximum length of PCIe cabling is
also only a few meters, the flexibility of deploying PCIe NVMe drives outside the host server is
severely limited and data center level scalability is not feasible.
NVMe over Fabrics (NVMe-oF) overcomes the limitations of the SCSI protocol and the limited
number of concurrent queues by extending the benefits of low latency and high efficiency of
the NVMe technology across network fabrics. This feature supports sharing of NVMe storage
at a large scale (100s or 1000s of devices) and over distance.
Figure 18 shows that the NVMe architecture supports many different network fabric
technologies.
The NVMe transport layer can be mapped to different network fabric technologies.
As of this writing, the NVMe transport layer supports the NVMe over Fabrics by using Fibre
Channel (referred to as FC-NVMe of NVMeFC) main fabric transport.
FC-NVMe uses Fibre Channel Protocol (FCP) as its transport mechanism, which places the
data transfer in control of the target and transfers data direct from host memory, which is
similar to RDMA. In addition, FC-NVMe allows for a host to send commands and data
together (first burst), which eliminates the first data “read” by the target and provides better
performance at distances.
The NVMe over Fabrics interface uses the same model of submission and completion queues
as PCIe NVMe. As such, it maintains the same asynchronous submission and completion
model and achieves similar benefits in terms of latency, efficiency, and scalability as the
NVMe technology because of the shortened code paths and lockless concurrency in
multi-core environments.
35
IBM FlashSystem 7300 supports NVMe protocols by way of the various PCIe adapters that
can be ordered and installed in the control enclosure. For more information about these
options, see “Host I/O connectivity and expansion enclosure adapters” on page 50.
For more information about NVMeoF protocols and architecture, see IBM Storage and the
NVM Express Revolution, REDP-5437.
Portsets
IBM FlashSystem 7300 is designed for multi tenancy where multiple clients can share storage
resources. In multitenancy environments, it might be a requirement that clients use storage
ports that are connected to different networks to isolate traffic from other clients.
Portsets are groupings of logical addresses that are associated with the specific traffic types.
The system supports IP portsets for host attachment, back-end storage connectivity, and IP
replication traffic. In addition, FC portsets can be configured for host attachment.
After you create portsets and assign IP addresses, you can assign hosts, host clusters, and
IP partnerships to the portset for those traffic types.
A quorum device is also used to store a backup copy of important system configuration data.
Just over 256 MB is reserved for this purpose on each quorum device.
A system can have only one active quorum device that is used for a tie-break situation.
However, the system uses up to three quorum devices to record a backup of system
configuration data to be used if a disaster occurs. The system automatically selects one
quorum device to be the active quorum device.
For more information about configuring quorums disks within two or three sites, see this IBM
Documentation web page.
Note: Fibre Channel over IP (FCIP) connectivity is not supported between nodes when a
HyperSwap system is configured without the use of inter-switch links (ISLs).
Choose your data reduction approach and use the tools to estimate the amount of usable
storage that is required by reviewing the following tools.
Figure 19 shows how to start the Estimate Compression Saving option from the GUI.
From the main menu, click Volumes → Volumes and select one volume. Then, right-click to
open get the pop-up menu. From this menu, select Capacity Savings → Estimate
Compression Saving.
The following methods can be used to estimate compression and savings on FCM and DRP
approaches:
IBM FlashCore Module - IBM FlashCore Module Compression:
– Use the FCM option.
– Do not use the Estimate Compression Saving option in the GUI to calculate the
IBM FlashCore Module savings.
Data Reduction Pool compression:
– Use the DRP option.
– Workloads that are on any IBM Spectrum Virtualize platforms can use the Estimate
Compression Saving option in the GUI.
Data Reduction Pool compression and deduplication:
– IBM Comprestimator and Data Reduction Estimator Tool shows the savings for
thin-provisioning, compression, and deduplication.
– IBM Comprestimator and Data Reduction Estimator Tool reads entire volumes to
identify de-duplicated data, so it takes longer to run.
For more information about data reduction pool compression and setup, see Introduction and
Implementation of Data Reduction Pools and Deduplication, SG24-8430.
37
N-Port ID virtualization support
IBM Spectrum Virtualize software offers NPIV support. Use NPIV to virtualize WWPNs, which
increases redundancy during firmware updates and scheduled maintenance where WWPNs
transparently move to the controller that is not being maintained. As a consequence,
FC-attached hosts experience zero path reduction during controller outages.
Important: The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system has NPIV enabled by default; therefore, if
the customer does not want to use it, they must turn it off before configuring FC ports for
host communications.
VMware integration
IBM Spectrum Virtualize software V8.5.0 and higher includes the following features, which
enable tight integration with VMware:
vCenter plug-in: Enables monitoring and self-service provisioning of the system from
within VMware vCenter.
vStorage APIs for Array Integration (VAAI) support: This function supports
hardware-accelerated virtual machine (VM) copy and migration and hardware-accelerated
VM initiation, and accelerates VMware Virtual Machine File System (VMFS).
Microsoft Windows System Resource Manager (SRM) for VMware Site Recovery
Manager: Supports automated storage and host failover, failover testing, and failback.
VVOL integration for better usability: The migration of space-efficient volumes between
storage containers maintains the space efficiency of volumes. Cloning a VM achieves a
full independent set of VVOLs. Resiliency also is improved for VMs if volumes start
running out of space.
The VMDK file was placed in a file system that is called VMFS, which is hosted by a standard
volume (LUN). For example, it can be implemented on an external storage system, such as
the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system. With the availability of the VVOL technology, each VM
disk can now be mapped to an external storage volume (for example, an IBM FlashSystem
7300 volume).
With VVOL, the IBM FlashSystem 7300 solution recognizes individual VMDK files. Therefore,
data operations, such as snapshot and replication, can be performed directly by the IBM
FlashSystem 7300 system at the VMDK level rather than the entire VMFS data store.
Note: The integration of VVOL with the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system is based on the
VMware APIs for Storage Awareness (VASA). IBM support for VASA is delivered as part of
IBM Spectrum Connect. VASA V2 is required to use the VVOL capability.
For more information about WMware integration, see IBM FlashSystem and VMware
Implementation and Best Practices Guide.
You can use the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system to manage the capacity of other disk systems
with external storage virtualization. When the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system virtualizes a
storage system, its capacity becomes part of the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system and is
managed in the same manner as the capacity on internal flash modules within the
IBM FlashSystem 7300 system. Capacity in external storage systems inherits all the rich
functions and ease of use of the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system.
You can use IBM FlashSystem 7300 to preserve your investments in storage, centralize
management, and make storage migrations easier with storage virtualization and Easy Tier.
IBM FlashSystem 7300 system provides nondisruptive operations because of storage
virtualization. Virtualization helps insulate applications from changes that are made to the
physical storage infrastructure. For example, when you add storage capacity or a new tier of
storage, the changes are transparent to applications, which results in minimal downtime.
Any externally virtualized storage needs extra licenses to be purchased and are charged on a
capacity basis of the storage added.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system has the following flexible scalability configuration options:
Base configuration
Scale up: Add capacity
Scale out: Add control enclosures and capacity
Each IBM FlashSystem 7300 has two canisters (sometimes also known as nodes or
controllers). Each canister contains the CPUs, cache memory, PCIe adapters, and other
hardware to communicate to the NVMe drives and connected hosts systems. These canisters
are housed in a chassis that is known as a control enclosure.
39
Table 3 lists the values of the CPUs, cache memory, raw NVMe drive size, and PCIe adapters
for each number of control enclosures.
The clustered IBM FlashSystem 7300 system can include dedicated internal FC switches for
internal communications. However, other methods are available to configure the switches and
ports to provide performance improvements.
For more information about how to restrict the FC ports for control enclosure inter-node
connections and host connections, see this IBM Documentation web page.
With the scalable IBM FlashSystem 7300 configurations, you can add up to three IBM
FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures to the storage system.
A single IBM FlashSystem 7300 enclosure can provide up to 663 TiB in usable capacity while
leveraging all recommended settings (DRAID6 and a 10+P+Q stripe layout). These default
settings are used when an array is set up by using the GUI wizard.
The following RAID types are available on the IBM FlashSystem 7300:
DRAID-1
DRAID-5
DRAID6
All RAID types are now distributed RAID, which was developed to support larger arrays and
especially arrays of larger drive modules. The technology significantly shortens the rebuild
time by distributing data, parity, and spare capacity over all member drives of an array. DRAID
arrays allow the dynamically expansion with newly added drives to the system.
IBM FlashCore Modules provide a hardware compression at no extra cost. It is integrated into
the drive module and is always enabled. The compression effectiveness depends on the type
and structure of user data. Overall, IBM expects a compression ratio up to 3:1, which
achieves an effective capacity in a single enclosure of 1989 TiB.
When incorporating DRPs with deduplication and compression, potentially an even higher
data reduction ration is achievable; that is, up to 5:1 depending on the data structure.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system is expandable to 32 PB by using SSDs and HDDs in
expansion enclosures as tiered capacity. More FlashSystem expansion enclosures are
attached through the optional SAS Expansion Enclosure Attach card (FC# ADBA).
Note: IBM FlashCore Module inline compression is hardware-based and operates at line
speed, having no effect on the performance.
The list of available drive module options to be installed in expansion enclosures can be found
in “IBM FlashSystem 7300 hardware component overview” on page 22.
High-density (HD) Enclosure Model 92G accepts SAS SSDs and HDDs. With these tiering
options, you can have eight enclosures per control enclosure, with a maximum capacity of
1996 TB each leveraging 30.72 TB flash drives.
41
Figure 20 shows the maximum enclosure configuration with 92G expansions.
IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF Expansion Enclosure Model 12G offers new tiering options with
HDDs. Each LFF expansion enclosure supports up to 12 3.5-inch HDDs.
IBM FlashSystem 7000 SFF Expansion Enclosure Model 24G offers new tiering options with
HDD or SSD flash drives. Each SFF expansion enclosure supports up to 24 2.5-inch flash
SSD or HDDs.
Up to 20 expansion enclosures are supported per IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure,
which provides up to 480 drives of SAS SSD and HDD capacity.
RAID types
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system supports the following main DRAID types (traditional
RAID is not supported).
For more information about the types of supported RAID configurations, see this IBM
Documentation web page.
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Manageability and security
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system offers many improvements on the manageability and
security features as compared to previous models.
In general, the manageability and security of the new range of systems and latest version of
the software were greatly improved. The changes that were implemented in this code and on
these systems include the following examples:
Safeguarded copy, which a technology that is derived from the technology that is used in
the IBM DS8000® line. It consists of a copy that cannot be changed or deleted after it is
created. Also, storing sensitive copies in immutable storage, cloud environments, or offline
write-once read many (WORM) tape devices is an option to provide physical air-gap
protection.
Advanced security for data at rest with hardware-accelerated AES-XTS 256 encryption.
IBM obtained FIPS 140-3 Level 1 certification for IBM FlashCore Modules generation 3 in
the IBM FlashSystem 7300. This level of certification is fully supported by the FCM-3
cards in the system.
A GUI and a CLI are available to manage the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosures
and the IBM FlashSystem 7000 expansion enclosures.
The GUI is supported in any supported browser.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 CLI supports a collection of commands that you can use to
manage the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system.
In the 7300 system, the GUI and the command-line support MFA for increased security.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 system running IBM Spectrum Virtualize 8.5.0 software
supports the Representational State Transfer (REST) model API. The REST API consists
of command targets that are used to retrieve system information and to create, modify,
and delete system resources.
Secure Remote Access (SRA) provides secure connection for IBM Remote Support,
which can perform remote troubleshooting and code load, and obtain diagnostic logs.
Email and SNMP alerts are part of the standard alerting options.
Syslog redirect to send system log messages to another host.
Combined password and SSH key authentication is now supported as a first factor for
local users.
Methods of access to the system are restricted at a user group level. GUI, CLI, and REST
API access can now be restricted (Role Based Access Control).
The log in grace time and session timeout duration can now be configured according to
the customer’s policies.
The following MFA options can be used:
– Cloud based IBM Security Verify Integration. This option supports a wide range of
secondary authentication factors because it uses an industry-standard protocol
OpenID Connect. It also aligns with other products that support this solution, such as
IBM Spectrum Scale.
– Single sign-on support by using Microsoft’s Active Directory Federation Services
(on-premises). The advantage of this technology is that it supports access cards, dark
sites, and various other security features in the future.
Encryption
Like its predecessors, IBM FlashSystem 7300 data encryption is based on the industry
standard AES-XTS 256 encryption, as defined in the IEEE 1619-2007 standard and NIST
Special Publication 800-38E as XTS-AES-256.
The data encryption key is protected by a 256-bit AES key wrap of a key that is derived from
the access key that is stored on the USB flash drive. The wrapped key is stored in the system
in nonvolatile form.
Encryption on the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system requires the following feature codes:
Encryption Enablement (#ACE8)
This feature enables the encryption function. A single instance of this feature enables the
function on the entire IBM FlashSystem 7300 system (IBM FlashSystem 7300 control
enclosure and all attached IBM FlashSystem 7300 expansion enclosures) and on
externally virtualized storage subsystems.
USB flash drives (#ACEA)
IBM Security Guardium Key Lifecycle Manager or Gemalto Safenet Keysecure are
required for encryption key management.
45
Encryption USB Flash Drives (Four Pack) Optional (#ACEA)
This feature provides four USB flash drives for storing the encryption master access key.
Unless IBM Security Guardium Key Lifecycle Manager or Gemalto Safenet Keysecure is
used for encryption keys management, a total of three USB flash drives are required per
IBM FlashSystem 7300 cluster when encryption is enabled in the cluster, regardless of the
number of systems in the cluster. If encryption is used in a cluster, this feature should be
ordered on one IBM FlashSystem 7300 system, which results in a shipment of four USB
flash drives.
Encryption can be applied to virtualized storage arrays, even if the virtualized array does not
include encryption capabilities. In this scenario, the encryption is done by using IBM
Spectrum Virtualize software. Encrypted volumes are transparent to applications, which
eases implementation and operation.
In addition, the IBM FlashSystem 7300 system features the following functions:
Encryption Activation: Adding an encryption license to a system is not concurrent and
must be done at array initialization time.
Encryption Deactivation: Removing encryption is not concurrent and destroys any data
that is on the array.
Encryption Rekey: Changing the encryption key on a previously initialized system is
concurrent and can be done while array is in use.
These operations require that you purchase Encryption Enablement Pack (#ACE9).
Self-encrypting drives
The IBM FlashCore Modules and NVMe drives, including the SCMs, in the IBM FlashSystem
7300 control enclosure are self-encrypting drives (SEDs). With SEDs, you can encrypt the
data on the drive within the hardware.
In addition, the system supports automatic locks of encrypted drives when the system or drive
is powered down. When the drive or system restarts, a master key is required to unlock the
drive and continue I/O operations.
Because the encryption of data is done in the electrical circuit of the drive, it is not affected by
any potential performance issues from software encryption.
If SEDs are encrypting the data, why do you need to enable system encryption in
IBM Spectrum Virtualize?: You can use SEDs without enabling encryption on the system,
but SEDs are unlocked by default at start time, unless configured with extra protection.
System level encryption in IBM Spectrum Virtualize allows you to use USB flash drives or IBM
Security Guardium Key Lifecycle Manager to manage access to encrypted objects on the
system. This feature ensures that when a system is powered, this extra encryption key is
required to read the data on the drives.
Therefore, the best solution is to use the SEDs with the Encryption Enablement Pack and
USB or IBM Security Guardium Key Lifecycle Manager type encryption, or a mixture of both.
This configuration ensures the maximum level of encrypting for your data that is on the
system.
With TCT, administrators can move older data to cloud storage to free up capacity on the
system. Point-in-time snapshots of data can be created on the system and then copied and
stored on cloud storage.
An external cloud service provider manages the cloud storage, which reduces storage costs
for the system. At the time of this writing, IBM supports the OpenStack Swift and Amazon S3
cloud service providers.
47
The following considerations apply to TCT and encryption:
When a cloud account is created, it must continue to use the same encryption type
throughout the life of the data in that cloud account. Even if the cloud account object is
removed and remade on the system, the encryption type for that cloud account might not
be changed while back up data for that system exists in the cloud provider.
When performing rekeying operations on a system that has an encryption-enabled cloud
account, perform the commit operation immediately after the prepare operation. Retain
the previous system master key (on a USB or in the keyserver) because this key might be
needed to retrieve your cloud backup data when performing a T4 recovery or an import.
The restore_uid option is not used when the backup is imported to a new cluster.
Importing TCT data is supported from only systems whose backup data was created at
V7.8.0.1 or later.
TCT uses Sig V2 when connecting to Amazon regions, and does not currently support
regions that require Sig V4.
Secure data deletion effectively erases or overwrites all traces of data from a data storage
device. The original data on that device becomes inaccessible and cannot be reconstructed.
You can securely delete data on individual drives and on a boot drive of a control enclosure.
The methods and commands that are used to securely delete data enable the system to be
used in compliance with European Regulation EU2019/424.
The methods that the system uses to securely delete data from the drives varies according to
the CLI commands that each type of drive can support. The completion time for the erase
procedure also varies, depending on the amount of data and the method that is used to delete
the data. In each case, when the operation completes, the result is that the data on the drive
effectively becomes impossible to access.
Table 5 lists the types of erasure, methods used, and time taken to securely delete data from
drives.
2 Block erase Quickly raises and lowers the voltage level Fast
of the storage element. Physical blocks are
altered with a vendor-specific value.
If a drive supports more than one data deletion method, the system uses the highest-priority
method.
For more information about the CLI commands that are used to run this secure erase
function, see this IBM Documentation web page.
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Options and feature codes
This section describes the options and feature codes of the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control
enclosure.
Memory options
Table 6 lists the various memory option feature codes.
Note: A quantity of one ACGJ must be ordered with this feature if not already fitted.
The IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure can be configured with three I/O adapter
features to provide up to 24 x 32 Gb FC ports or up to 12 x 10/25 Gb or 12 x100 Gb Ethernet
ports. The control enclosure also includes eight 10 Gb Ethernet ports as standard for iSCSI
connectivity and two 1 Gb Ethernet ports for system management. A feature code also is
available to include the SAS expansion adapter if the user wants to implement the optional
expansion enclosures.
Note: The SAS Expansion adapter does not support SAS hosts.
For more information about the limits and rules for adapter placement to ensure correct best
practices, see IBM Spectrum Virtualize FAQ: IBM Spectrum Virtualize with the IBM
FlashSystemfamily and IBM SAN Volume Controller.
Table 7 lists the maximum host port count per building block configuration (1, 2, 3, or 4 control
enclosures.)
One 24 8 12 12 12
Two 48 16 24 24 24
Three 72 24 36 36 36
Four 96 32 48 48 48
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Table 8 lists the current features for host connectivity for the IBM FlashSystem 7300 control
enclosure 4657-924 and 4657-U7D machine types.
Table 8 Supported expansion enclosure and interface components MTMs 4657-924 and 4657-U7D
Item Feature Description Ports
code
32 Gb FC 4 Port Adapter #ADBE This feature provides two I/O Each adapter has four 32 Gb FC
(Pair) adapters. It is used to add 32 Gb FC ports and shortwave SFP
connectivity. transceivers.
25 GbE (RoCE) Adapter #ADBB This feature provides two I/O Each adapter has two 25 Gb
(Pair) adapters. It is used to add 25 Gb Ethernet ports without SFP28
Ethernet connectivity. Supports transceivers.
RoCE V2.
25 GbE (iWARP) #ADBC This feature provides two I/O Each adapter has two 25 Gb
Adapter (Pair) adapters. It is used to add 25 Gb Ethernet ports without SFP28
Ethernet connectivity. Supports transceivers.
RDMA with iWARP.
100GbE (RoCE) Adapter #ADB8 This feature provides two I/O adapter Each Adapter has two 100 Gb
Cards (Pair) cards, each with two 100 Gb Ethernet Ethernet Ports. Supplied without
ports. It is used to add 100 Gb optics or cables.
Ethernet connectivity to the
FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure
and are designed to support RDMA
with RoCE 2.
SAS Expansion #ADBA This feature provides two 4-port Each adapter has two active out of
Enclosure Attach Card 12 Gb SAS expansion enclosure the four SAS ports.
(Pair) attachment adapters. This feature is
used to attach up to 20 expansion
enclosures.
25 GbE SW SFP28 #ACHP This feature provides four 25 Gb Requires feature ADBB, or ADBC.
Transceivers (Four) shortwave SFP28 transceivers to
populate a pair of 25/10 GbE host
interface cards. These transceivers
are used to set the card ports to 25
Gb.
10 GbE SW SFP+ #ACHQ This feature provides four 10 Gb Requires feature ADBB or ADBC.
Transceivers (Four) shortwave SFP+ transceivers to
populate a pair of 25/10 GbE host
interface cards. These transceivers
are used to set the card ports to 10
Gb.
100 GbE QSFP28 SR4 #ACHX This feature provides four 100GbE Requires feature ADB8.
Transceivers (Four) QSFP28 SR4 transceivers; enough
for 1 pair of 100 GbE cards.
10 GbE SFP+ RJ45 #ACJ2 This feature provides four 10Gbe Requires feature ADBB or ADBC.
Transceivers (Four) SFP+ to RJ45 transceivers; enough
for 1 pair of GbE cards.
For improved flexibility, IBM FlashSystem 7300 systems also support various
industry-standard self-encrypting NVMe flash drives.
The available NVMe flash drive uses the following feature codes:
(#ADSA): 4.8 TB NVMe FlashCore Module
(#ADSB): 9.6 TB NVMe FlashCore Module
(#ADSC): 19.2 TB NVMe FlashCore Module
(#ADSD): 38.4 TB NVMe FlashCore Module
(#ADT2): 1.92 TB NVMe Flash Drive
(#ADT3): 3.84 TB NVMe Flash Drive
(#ADT4): 7.68 TB NVMe Flash Drive
(#ADT5): 15.36 TB NVMe Flash Drive
(#ADT6): 30.72 TB NVMe Flash Drive
(#ADTC): 1.6 TB NVMe Storage Class Memory Drive
53
– Distributed RAID 1 (minimum 2, maximum 16)
– Industry-standard NVMe drives in the same RAID array must be of the same capacity
SCM NVMe drives:
– Two drive minimum (varies by RAID type), 12 drives maximum
– Distributed RAID 6 (minimum 6, maximum 12)
– Distributed RAID 5 (minimum 4, maximum 12) RPQ only
– Distributed RAID 0 (minimum 2, maximum 12)
– SCM NVMe drives in the same RAID array must be of the same capacity
IBM FlashSystem 7000 Expansion Enclosure options (Models 12G, 24G, and
92G)
The following SAS flash SSD and HDD drive feature codes are available:
Supported on Model 12G only (maximum of 12):
– (#AHD4): 6 TB 7.2 K 3.5-inch HDD
– (#AHD5): 8 TB 7.2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AHD6): 10 TB 7.2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AHD7): 12 TB 7.2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AHD8): 14 TB 7,2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AHD9): 16 TB 7,2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AHDA): 18 TB 7,2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
Supported on Model 24G only (maximum of 24):
– (#AHF3): 1.2 TB 10K 2.5-inch HDD
– (#AHF4): 1.8 TB 10K 2.5-inch HDD
– (#AHF5): 2.4 TB 10K 2.5-inch HDD
– (#AHH9): 800 GB 3DWPD 12 Gb SAS 2.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AHHG): 1.92 TB 12 Gb SAS 2.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AHHH): 3.84 TB 12 Gb SAS 2.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AHHJ): 7.68 TB 12 Gb SAS 2.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AHHK): 15.36 TB 12 Gb SAS 2.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AHHL): 30.72 TB 12 Gb SAS 2.5-inch Flash Drive
Supported on Model 92G only (maximum of 92):
– (#AH73): 1.2 TB 10K 3.5-inch HDD
– (#AH74): 1.8 TB 10K 3.5-inch HDD
– (#AH75): 2.4 TB 10K 3.5-inch HDD
– (#AH77): 6 TB 7.2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AH78): 8 TB 7.2 K 3.5 NL HDD
– (#AH79): 10 TB 7.2 K 3.5 NL HDD
– (#AH7A): 12 TB 7.2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AH7B): 14 TB 7,2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AH7C): 16 TB 7,2 K 3.5-inch NL HDD
– (#AH7J): 1.92 TB 12 Gb SAS 3.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AH7K) 3.84TB 12 Gb SAS 3.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AH7L): 7.68 TB 12 Gb SAS 3.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AH7M): 15.36 TB 12 Gb SAS 3.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AH7N): 30.72 TB 12 Gb SAS 3.5-inch Flash Drive
– (#AH7X): 18 TB 7.2k 12 Gb SAS NL 3.5-inch Flash Drive
Note: For more information about Expert Care Features, see the IBM Sales Manual for the
IBM FlashSystem 7300 under Sales Manual FS7300.
IBM FlashSystem 7000 LFF and SFF Expansion Enclosure (4657 Model 12G
and 4657 Model 24G)
The IBM FlashSystem 7000 Expansion Enclosure 12G/24G features the following
specifications:
Physical:
– Height: 8.7 cm (3.4 in.)
– Width: 48.3 cm (19.0 in.)
– Depth: 55.6 cm (21.9 in.)
– Approximate weight:
• Empty: 16.7 kg (36.8 lb)
• Fully configured: 25.0 kg (55.1 lb)
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Air temperature:
– Operating: 5 - 35° C (41 - 95° F) 0 - 3048 m (0 - 10,000 ft). Greater than 900 m, de-rate
maximum air temperature 1° per 175 m
– Nonoperating: 1 - 50° C (34 - 122° F)
Relative humidity:
– Operating: 8 - 80% noncondensing
– Nonoperating: 8 - 80% noncondensing
Electrical power:
– Voltage range: 100 - 240 V AC
– Frequency: 50 - 60 Hz
– Power: 800 W
– Heat dissipation (BTU per hour): 1,037
– Acoustical noise emission: 6.2 bels (idling), 6.2 bels (operating)
IBM FlashSystem 7000 High Density LFF Expansion Enclosure (4657 Model
92G)
The IBM FlashSystem 7000 High Density Expansion Enclosure 92G has the following
specifications:
Physical specifications:
– Height: 22.2 cm (8.75 in.)
– Width: 48.3 cm (19.0 in.)
– Depth: 96.8 cm (38.1 in.)
– Approximate weight:
• Empty: 67.0 kg (147.7 lb)
• Fully configured: 135.0 kg (297.0 lb)
Air temperature:
– Operating: 5 - 35° C (41 - 95° F) 0 - 3048 m (0 - 10,000 ft). Greater than 900 m, de-rate
maximum air temperature 1° per 300 m
– Nonoperating: 1 - 50° C (34 - 122 degrees F)
Relative humidity:
– Operating: 8 - 80% noncondensing
– Nonoperating: 8 - 80% noncondensing
Electrical power:
– Voltage range: 180 - 264 V AC
– Frequency: 47 - 63 Hz
– Power: 2400 W
– Heat dissipation (BTU per hour): 8,189
– Acoustical noise emission: 8.5 bels (idling), 8.5 bels (operating)
Note: All noise emission levels that are stated are the declared (upper limit) sound power
level in bels, for a random sample of machines. All measurements are made in accordance
with ISO 7779 and reported in conformance with ISO 9296.
Any connected storage that is not an IBM FlashSystem 7300 control enclosure requires the
External Virtualization license per storage capacity unit (SCU) that is based on the tier of
storage that is available on the external storage system. In addition, if you use FlashCopy and
Remote Mirroring on an external storage system, you must purchase a per-tebibyte license to
use these functions.
To set these licenses, use the Licensed Function page in the System Setup wizard. If you are
adding these licenses to a system, select Settings → System → Licensed Function in the
management GUI. You can also use the chlicense CLI command to update current license
settings on the system.
For more information about IBM Spectrum Virtualize licensing, see this IBM Documentation
web page.
With other functions, such as remote mirroring and FlashCopy, the license grants a specific
number of terabytes of capacity for that function. Key-based licenses require an authorization
code and key to be downloaded to the system before the function can be used.
57
Note: SCUs are needed only for virtualized storage that does not have the 5641-VC8
license.
The SCU is defined in terms of the category of the storage capacity, as listed in Table 9.
SCM Storage Class Memory (SCM) devices SCU equates to 1.00 TB usable of
Category 1 storage
Flash All flash devices, other than SCM SCU equates to 1.18 TB usable of
drives Category 1 storage
Nearline Nearline Serial ATA (SATA) drives SCU equates to 4.00 TB usable of
Category 3 storage
Table 10 shows an example of calculating SCUs. The example is a customer who virtualizes
external disk arrays with 5 TB SCM devices, 30 TB SSD flash drives, 400 TB Enterprise
drives, and 800 TB Nearline capacity.
Category 1 SCM 5 /1 5
As shown in Table 10, 431SCUs are required for the example. When you calculate the
number of SCUs per category, fractions must be rounded up to the next higher integer
number.
For more information about IBM Spectrum Virtualize Differential Licensing, search for “7X00
licensed functions” at this IBM Documentation web page.
Ordering information
For more information about ordering IBM FlashSystem 7300 expansions, see “Scaling up and
scaling out” on page 39.
For more information about ordering hardware features, see “IBM FlashSystem 7300 GUI” on
page 20.
For more information about ordering software licenses, see “Software and licensing” on
page 57.
Related information
For more information, see the following resources:
Implementation Guide for IBM Spectrum Virtualize Version 8.5, SG24-8520:
http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/abstracts/sg248520.html
Introduction and Implementation of Data Reduction Pools and Deduplication, SG24-8430:
http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/abstracts/sg248430.html
IBM Documentation for IBM FlashSystem:
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/en/search/flashsystem
IBM FlashSystem 7300 product page:
https://www.ibm.com/products/flashsystem-7300
IBM Offering Information page (announcement letters and sales manuals):
http://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/index.wss?request_locale=en
IBM Spectrum Virtualize FAQ
Details about the IBM Spectrum Virtualize products, covering IBM FlashSystem family and
SAN Volume Controller:
https://www.ibm.com/downloads/cas/2DWAMWRB
IBM FlashSystem Family Overview FAQ
Overview of the IBM FlashSystem family with guidance on how to select the product that is
right for you:
https://www.ibm.com/downloads/cas/9OGKVW2R
IBM FlashWatch FAQ
Guidance about the IBM FlashWatch programs:
https://www.ibm.com/downloads/cas/YVMYPED
Sales Accelerator Tools Portal for IBM Storage (IBMers only):
https://w3.ibm.com/w3publisher/ibm-systems-storage-sales-accelerator-tools-port
al
59
Authors
Carsten Larsen is an IBM Certified Senior IT Specialist who works for the Technical Services
Support organization at IBM Denmark, where he delivers consultancy services to IBM clients
within the storage arena. Carsten joined IBM in 2007 when he left Hewlett Packard, where he
worked with storage arrays and UNIX for 10 years. While working for IBM, Carsten obtained
several Brocade and NetApp certifications. Carsten is the author of several IBM Redbooks®
publications.
Corne Lottering is a Storage Client Technical Specialist in the US, focusing on technical
sales in Texas and Louisiana within the Public Sector industry. He has been with IBM for more
than 20 years, and has experience in various storage technologies, including the IBM System
Storage DS5000, IBM DS8000, IBM Storwize, XIV®, IBM FlashSystems, IBM SAN switches,
IBM Tape Systems, and Software Defined Storage software. Since joining IBM, he has
fulfilled roles in support, implementation, and pre-sales support across various African and
Middle Eastern countries. Corne is the author of several IBM Redbooks publications that are
related to the midrange IBM System Storage DS Storage Manager range of products, and
FlashSystem products.
Douwe van Terwisga is an IBM Technical Advisor for Storage in the ESCC Project Office
based in Frankfurt, Germany. Before his current position, he held different positions at IBM
and an IBM Business Partner as Technical Pre-sales for IBM Power Systems. Currently, his
main focus is on Enterprise class storage systems as IBM DS8000, IBM Flash (9000 series)
and IBM SAN Volume Controller.
Hartmut Lonzer is the IBM Storwize Territory Account Manager for DACH. In addition, he
covers the SAN portfolio as Offering Manager DACH. Before this position, he was OEM
Alliance Manager for Lenovo in IBM Germany. His main focus belongs is on the IBM
FlashSystem Family and the IBM SAN Volume Controller. His experience with these products
goes back to the beginning of these products. Hartmut has been with IBM in various technical
and sales roles for 44 years.
Jon Herd is an IBM Executive Technical Advocate working for the European Storage
Competency Center (ESCC), Germany. He covers the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Europe,
and advises customers about a portfolio of IBM storage products, including IBM FlashSystem
products. He also leads special projects for senior and executive management and is the
SME lead for new product introduction in the ESCC. Jon has been with IBM for more than 47
years, and has held various technical roles, including Europe, Middle East, and Africa
(EMEA) level support on mainframe servers and technical education development. He has
written many IBM Redbooks publications about IBM FlashSystem products and is an IBM
Redbooks Platinum level author. He holds IBM certifications in Product Services at a Thought
Leader L3 level, and Technical Specialist at an experienced L1 level. He is also a certified
Chartered Member of the British Computer Society (MBCS - CITP), a Certified Member of the
Institution of Engineering and Technology (MIET), and a Certified Technical Specialist of the
Open Group (TOG).
Kendall Williams is a SME and Project Field Engineer working with the IBM Spectrum
Virtualize Storage Support Family. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Information
Technology, with a concentration in DB Management Systems and Architecture from Florida
State University. His areas of expertise include complex client performance analysis and copy
services support for production environments. Kendall joined IBM in 2012, and has since
become an advocate for some premier IBM clients.
Vasfi Gucer is works as the Storage Team Leader on the IBM Redbooks Team. He has more
than 30 years of experience in the areas of systems management, networking hardware, and
software. He writes extensively and teaches IBM classes worldwide about IBM products. His
focus has been primarily on storage, cloud computing, and cloud storage technologies for the
last 8 years. Vasfi is also an IBM Certified Senior IT Specialist, Project Management
Professional (PMP), IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL) V2 Manager, and ITIL V3 Expert.
Evelyn Perez
James Whitaker
Paul Edmonds
IBM UK
Luis F Lopez
Edgar Daniel Gutierrez Haro
IBM Mexico
61
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