ATABOY2 IN A HIGH PERFORMANCE ENVIRONMENT
Transcription
ATABOY2 IN A HIGH PERFORMANCE ENVIRONMENT
ATABOY2 IN A HIGH PERFORMANCE ENVIRONMENT STARGATE FILMS MIGRATION TO ATABOY2 TECHNOLOGY A NEXSAN CASE STUDY H I G H L I G H T S COMPANY Stargate Films INDUSTRY Entertainment Technology APPLICATION HDTV Visual Effects Postproduction CHALLENGE To streamline workflow and keep multiple HD projects online by increasing the storage capacity of their Avid DS / HD system far beyond the 1.8TB limitation of the delivered SCSI system without sacrificing performance. The solution needed be scaleable without necessarily modifying the Avid configured hardware, have a lower cost per GB and provide redundancy. SOLUTION Nexsan ATAboy2. A single 5.3TB volume was created across multiple ATAboy2 ATA RAID systems, aggregating performance and capacity. This scalable volume sustained throughput rates exceeding the stock SCSI solution and enabling seamless HDTV editing. BENEFITS Improved workflow through the ability to keep multiple HD projects online and readily accessible to editors and visual effects artists. Added scalability, performance and data protection at a lower TCO. OVERVIEW The digital video industry is actively seeking reliable, high performance, high capacity, and low cost storage solutions. Until now high capacity has also been very costly, the integration of ATA drives enables the manufacturing of such storage with a lower cost. As a result more companies are migrating to this technology from both high end SCSI and low end SCSI, such as in this case. TESTIMONY - STARGATE FILMS "We are a visual effects postproduction facility working in both feature films and primarily High Definition television. Platform-wise, our facility is a homogenous one; we have standardized on Windows 2000 (W2K Pro SP2 for the workstations, and W2K Server). We have a Gigabit Ethernet based shared storage model with approximately. 10TB of network accessible storage. We use a Cisco Catalyst switch as the network aggregation device, and run a mix of Cat-6 copper and multi-mode fiber cabling. Our backup solution is a Mamoth2 Exabyte autoloader library. As an adjunct to the film side of the business, we have an ARRI Laser 35mm Digital Film Recorder. We have approximately 30 hi-end workstations, the bulk of them being Dell 530 dual 2.2 Xeon systems to support our digital compositing, matte painting and 3D animation departments. Our editorial centerpiece is our Avid DS|HD non-linear editor that works in uncompressed HD at a resolution of 1920x1080 pixels. This real-time editorial system is the hub of our workflow. While Stargate is highly enthusiastic about the power of the Avid DS system, we had become frustrated by the technological barriers that prevented the use of more that 1.8 TB of storage (equating to 3.5 hours of uncompressed HD video). We therefore embarked upon an R & D project to extend the range of this workhorse, and discovered the Nexsan product line. The Avid DS system requires a very high performance storage solution to maintain the high-sustained data rates of HD. The system ships with Avid's branded JBOD SCSI racks. Each containing 8x73GB 10k SCSI Disks. These disks are striped in Windows 2000 as software striped RAID 0. Each volume is comprised of 8 disks, they are striped with 4 disks from SCSI Channel A and 4 from SCSI Channel B to maximize SCSI throughput. The end result is a maximum storage configuration of 3 x 584 GB volumes. This is a hardware limitation due to the available SCSI Ids, since the JBOD SCSI disks use a single ID per individual 73GB disk. This configuration provides ample performance for the system but requires a 2 NEXSAN TECHNOLOGIES high risk RAID 0 setup coupled with the high cost of the Avid SCSI disk arrays. The down side is the current cap on available storage. This 1.8TB maximum storage provides approximately 3.5 hrs of uncompressed HD footage to exist on-line at any one time. This amount is enough to do an on-line editorial session for a single fulllength feature. However, this would not be enough to offline that show, since all the dailies could not be captured uncompressed. The system works extremely well as it ships. We believe with this current technology, the real possibility of changing this system into a true online/offline system capable of handling the entire set of uncompressed dailies for project, much as the standard definition Avid evolved from a compressed standard definition off-line system into a dual purpose as technology supported it. However, we wanted to be able to increase the storage capacity above the 1.8TB limit with the delivered SCSI solution. We realized that Avid may at some point offer a storage solution in the future to eclipse this current limitation. We felt we should be able to solve it ourselves. Our brief was to find a storage option that would match or exceed the JBOD SCSI Avid drives performance. We needed it to be scaleable far beyond 1.8TB without necessarily modifying the Avid configured hardware. We wanted to accomplish this at a lower cost per GB, and also attempt to add redundancy to the solution; obviously, as the data storage increases, so does the pain when a single drive failure causes the loss of the entire data set. We first decided that the only way to make the capacity scaleable would be to turn to an ATA-SCSI hybrid. The benefit here is that all of those solutions consolidate a large amount of disk down to a single SCSI ID. Another advantage is that these systems of a variety of RAID levels and performance options. Also typically these solutions are vastly cheaper than pure SCSI solutions. We have worked with JBOD ATA SCSI solutions for several years. Unfortunately, we had suffered the consequences of what was new technology. Our difficulties centered on a hard disk failure problem, due to a particular batch of hard drives that had an abnormally high failure rate. This was problem with the hard drive itself, not with the ATASCSI solution. The Stargate Films team, composed of Victor Scalise (head of Editorial Department), Adam Ealovega (System Architect), and Joseph Meier (head of the IT Department) and Jeff Ho (part of the IT staff) began by beta testing a variety of drive brands. We decided that the price/performance ratio coupled with the most impressive build quality we'd seen was superior in the Nexsan drive arrays. Although many manufacturers offer similar specifications in this capacity range, we felt the feature list to be the most extensive in the Nexsan product line. Particularly noteworthy for us in the ATABoy2 is its single RAID controller, which can be configured internally as 14 x 120 GB drives at RAID 4 or 5. This allows an available 1.34TB (usable) array to be reduced to a single SCSI ID, and have it appear to the Windows operating system as a single SCSI disk. Many competitors' products offer only a dual controller unit, which manages only half the available storage on a single SCSI ID. Depending upon the application, there are uses for a dual vs. a single controller. Because we were looking for the greatest capacity per SCSI ID, the single controller version was most compatible with our ultimate goal. Starting conservatively, we built a storage volume out of only 4 Nexsan ATAboy2 chassis. Working with Lighthouse and Nexsan, we devised a solution that would not require any hardware reconfiguration in the Avid host; specifically, this was done by 'daisy chaining' 2 Nexsan chassis off each of the channels of the Avid's stock Adaptec 39160 SCSI controller. A software stripe was created in Windows across all four chassis, thus creating a single 5.3TB volume. This volume was able to sustain and in some cases, surpass the data rates of the stock SCSI solution. We were able to reach sustained reads of 340MB per sec and sustained writes of 218 MB/sec with this configuration. In this case, our solution met all of the initial requirements we had set. We thus had our scaleable solution. Furthermore, in this case we only used 4 of the 30 available SCSI IDs on the Adaptec controller. The 1.8TB Avid solution used 24 or 30 ID's and was therefore at capacity. Although we haven't tested this theory, we feel the possibility exists that we could host a total of 30 Nexsan chassis on a single Adaptec 39160. If true, it would provide 40.2TB of useable space, which could be as much as 78 hrs of uncompressed HD footage. In the case of our 4 chassis test, we had 5.3 TB of useable space, which is over 10 hours of uncompressed HD, over 3.5 times the maximum using the stock SCSI solution. The solution also offered redundancy that the SCSI JBOD's could not. This configuration is by definition a RAID 0 over 4. Since the individual 1.34TB (usable) chassis are all internally RAID 4 and they are all striped in Windows at RAID 0. This is an excellent blend of performance with the added gain of RAID protection. The price level was the big break. The Avid disks cost approximately $30/GB, the Nexsan ATAboy2 cost approximately $8/GB. The Nexsan solution comes in at less than 1/3rd the cost, PLUS offering the benefits of scalability and redundancy. WE ARE ON THE LEADING EDGE We migrated away from the SGI, Mac and Windows environment with all the compromises and shifted to a uniplatform Windows environment that allowed us to focus our energy on solutions that would affect every user in the facility at once. Networking is simplified, distributed processing in our render farms in simplified. We decided to leverage affordable Ethernet instead of moving up to more costly networking solutions and have managed to build a very efficient workflow around it. We adopted ATA-SCSI very early on as our primary storage solution and are now continuing to do so with the more advanced ATA-SCSI solutions. We had the business challenge of leveraging our very expensive AVID DS|HD seat. We needed a way to add a large amount of scaleable storage to our Avid to accommodate the multiple simultaneous shows we work on. Since we work on as many as 15 different shows at a time it's not always desired to purge on show one day only to need to bring it back on line a few days later. We wanted the ability to keep multiple shows on line for sustained periods without breaking the bank and also with matching performance to the stock Avid storage. Ideally meeting the aforementioned parameters of lower cost and greater redundancy. We are risk takers in the technology field. We certainly are perpetually motivated to up our performance in regards to our workflow in order to remain competitive and meet our clients' tight delivery schedules. Television and film is a very demanding arena. We have paid the price with our bleeding edge approaches in the past but always manage to come out stronger for it. Blending price and performance requirements together and with a unique The Nexsan solution comes in at less than 1/3rd the cost, PLUS offering the benefits of scalability and redundancy STARGATE FILMS CASE STUDY 3 problem solving approach we've been able to maximize our productivity and stay ahead of the game. The Nexsan products fit perfectly into that philosophy. We always try to sift through the lofty sales claims and find the products that can really leverage our existing hardware as opposed to making frequent core changes in approach. We try to avoid the solutions that limit the scale of our facility. Some high-end solutions are so cost prohibitive that it would be impossible to expand to meet our needs. We try to look at unconventional ways to apply the more cost-effective solutions in a highly productive way. Utilizing this approach, with this project we successfully added 5.3 TB [equating to 10 hours] of additional HD video, thus jumping from being able to keep only one project online to more than 3 or 4 projects. This increase not only greatly streamlines our workflow, but also allows us to serve our clients better." The SCSI channels are SCSI 3 with a throughput of 160MB/sec. Using 4 channels, this aggregates the throughput to 640MB/sec. Connecting a single SCSI ATAboy2 to the SCSI channel will provide us a sustained throughput of about 60MB/sec on sequential writes and 85MB sustained reads. THROUGHPUT In order to achieve the required throughput it is necessary to stripe the data across multiple ATAboy systems. Striping data across four ATAboys provides us with sustained writes of 218MB/Sec and sustained reads of 340MB/Sec. REDUNDANCY TECHNOLOGY OVERVIEW Workstation: · Compaq Evo Workstation W8000 featuring dual Intel Pentium 4 1.7 GHz processors · Two PCI controllers supporting 66MHz 64bits with a total throughput of 512MB/sec on each. · Two Adaptec 39160 SCSI host adaptor, each has two SCSI 3 channels that supports up to 160MB/Sec each. Storage: · Four ATABoy2 with 14 120GB drives striped with RAID 5 for a total capacity of about 1TB/1.5TB/2TB respectively. · Each unit holds a single SCSI position. · The maximum through put for the ATAboy2 storage unit is 160MB/Sec. · The throughput of each unit is 85MB/sec sustained read and 65MB/sec sustained write. ATAboy2 ATAboy2 ATAboy2 Avid/DS-HD ATAboy2 The solution utilizes the maximum throughput of the different components existing between the CPU and the actual storage media (disk device). The internal CPU bus is very fast and wide: 64Bit running on 400MHz; that means a throughput of about 3GB/sec. The PCI bus is a 64bit 66MHz and provides a throughput of 512MB/sec. 4 NEXSAN TECHNOLOGIES Each unit is configured with Raid 5 or Raid 4 that protects against data loss in case of drive failure. The data is striped across the four units and, using Windows 2000, is configured to halt any write to the array should any one of the units not be available. Halting any write to the units when one of the units is not available will keep the integrity of the data across the units. ABOUT STARGATE FILMS Stargate Films, is the leading pioneer in 2D, 3D, and High Definition visual effects for feature films, broadcast television, commercials, interactive video games, station ID's, promos, logos and music videos. Stargate achieves this by utilizing the latest technologies in high definition video, digital color correction, and computer graphics including a revolutionary "digital intermediate" process of finishing films - a completely new method of finishing motion pictures that vastly expands the creative toolbox of feature film and television producers, while saving both time and money. Credits: Over 200 projects including projects for HBO, TNT, Miramax, 20th Century Fox, Warner Brothers, ABC, and CBS, including the hit shows ER and CSI. 21700 OXNARD STREET, SUITE 1850 WOODLAND HILLS, CALIFORNIA 91367 TELEPHONE: 886.4.NEXSAN | 818.715.9111 FACSIMILE: 818.715.9175 WEBSITE: WWW.NEXSAN.COM