Hewlett-Packard is growing its scalable storage capabilities through the acquisition of storage software maker Ibrix.
The deal was announced July 17. Financial terms were not disclosed.
HP officials said the acquisition will bolster the company's ability to offer scalable storage solutions to enterprises with large-scale, data-intensive application environments, where the task of storing huge amounts of user-generated data often can slow things down.
Adding the nine-year-old Ibrix to its storage mix will help HP address those concerns, according to Jeff Hausman, vice president of unified storage in HP's StorageWorks Division.
"Customers need highly scalable storage solutions that efficiently and cost-effectively manage massive amounts of information," Hausman said in a statement.
See how DreamWorks is using storage from HP, Ibrix and NetApp to make its magic.
The Ibrix purchase will expand HP's storage capabilities in scale-out and high-performance computing environments, as well as in cloud computing and fixed content archiving.
That area of the storage business is growing at 20 percent a year, which is faster than the NAS (network-attached storage) and total external storage markets, according to HP.
Ibrix's Fusion storage software can scale to tens of petabytes, and the management capabilities within the solution enables IT administrators to dynamically add capacity as needed.
HP already offers Ibrix's software on its StorageWorks SANs (storage area networks), as well as on its ProLiant servers, BladeSystem blade servers and ProCurve Ethernet networking switches and management software.
HP expects to close the deal within 30 days. Ibrix currently has 53 employees and more than 175 enterprise customers.
Given the current state of the economy, storage consolidation is now a high priority for every IT organization. But for IT organizations running performance-sensitive applications, storage consolidation can be a major challenge.
Data storage needs are on the rise. But beyond simply providing more raw capacity, today¿s storage solutions must also be easy to provision and manage, energy-efficient, and highly scalable in performance and capacity. Download this white paper to learn about HP NAS clustering solutions that help meet today¿s rapidly changing storage requirements.
Organizations that deploy Microsoft Windows file servers receive many useful services. Traditional file servers, however, lack scalability, so organizations must add file servers as their data storage needs grow. This results in server sprawl, which leads to low utilization of the file servers and sub-optimal availability of storage. Learn how organizations benefit from consolidating their Windows file serving environments using HP Scalable NAS, a highly scalable, manageable and available storage solution.
Storage administrators are being challenged to manage enterprise data growth and maintain increasing service level commitments while keeping within budgets. This study examines the total cost of ownership of the new HP StorageWorks 9100 Extreme Data Storage System (ExDS9100) and compares it to three competitive approaches. Learn how the HP ExDS9100 is well positioned to deliver massive scalability in both capacity and performance, yet offers considerable cost advantages to meet today¿s storage challenges.
In this IT Link podcast hosted by Mike Vizard, Scott Campbell, HP manager of solutions architects, explains why HP is taking a different approach to managing storage using a new XDS architecture specifically designed to handle the requirements of rapidly growing unstructured data storage.
In this IT Link podcast hosted by Mike Vizard, Efren Molina, PolyServe technical specialist for HP, explains how NAS cluster technology is being used to help customers keep costs in line even as their storage requirements continue to balloon.
In this IT Link podcast hosted by Mike Vizard, Logicalis vice president of consulting Eric Linxweiler explains why storage management software is becoming a strategic issue as the amount and types of data that needs to be managed continues to explode.
NAS has always been simple, unless IT managers wanted to grow their NAS storage significantly. For the first time, storage administrators are thinking in terms of managing petabytes of storage, making massive storage build-outs a necessity. Learn how companies can affordably meet these demands with a simply managed, highly scalable NAS environment.
This solution brief explores HP’s next generation of Scalable NAS and how it caters to every business continuity need by being highly available and easy to deploy while adding levels of affordable, fault tolerant data protection and availability.
When IT administrators are looking for networked storage solutions, they often look to NAS because they can use the Ethernet infrastructure they are familiar with to build pools of storage for significantly less money than SAN with equivalent capacity. Unfortunately, traditional NAS doesn't scale and administrators find themselves having to add NAS platforms to keep up with growing storage demands. As a result, many administrators have started looking for alternative solutions.
Learn how HP's Scalable NAS solution offers central management and administration, scalable capacity and improved utilization, with a lower total cost of ownership (TCO)
Watch this demo and learn how HP's next generation of Scalable NAS is well suited for streaming media serving solutions.
When Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI) needed to remain on the front line of research and to continue providing high-quality care for patients, they chose a comprehensive HP storage solution and improved storage capacity, performance and scalability.
When Crest Animation looked to take on an increased workload and handle High Definition and 2K film animations, the company chose a comprehensive HP storage solution that has given the company a unified, highly reliable storage infrastructure.
Oracle Database and the Oracle E-Business Suite are at the heart of most commercial data centers. HP's Scalable NAS solution Create a scalable infrastructure for Oracle consolidation and file serving.
The new Web 2.0 business model, where the data is the business, utilizes the Internet to disseminate information in many different ways.
NAS has been rapidly evolving as a storage alternative for Oracle databases, and for good reason: NAS is often the simplest, most cost-effective storage approach for Oracle.
Windows File Server and Storage Consolidation using HP EVA File Services.
For several years NAS has been evolving as a storage alternative for Oracle databases, and for good reason