Friday, October 2nd 2015

OCZ Storage Solutions Z-Drive 4500 Achieves VMware Ready Status

OCZ Storage Solutions, a Toshiba Group Company, today announced that its enterprise Z-Drive 4500 SSDs has achieved VMware Ready status. This designation indicates that after a detailed validation process, Z-Drive 4500 SSDs has achieved VMware's highest level of endorsement, and can be found on the VMware Solution Exchange (VSX) here.

"Driven by our Virtualized Controller Architecture Technology, the Z-Drive 4500 utilizes the full processing bandwidth of eight controllers working in unison which enables the storage subsystem to run more efficiently while delivering dominant small block / large block performance and low latency," said Bert Mauricio, director of Strategic Alliances, OCZ Storage Solutions. "By using Z-Drive 4500 SSDs with vSphere 5.x or 6.x, enterprises can deliver virtualized applications that can be accelerated while delivering fast and reliable access to data without burdening host CPU and memory resources."
"We are pleased that OCZ Storage Solutions' Z-Drive 4500 qualifies for the VMware Ready logo, signifying to customers that it has met specific VMware integration and interoperability standards and works effectively with VMware infrastructure, which can speed time to value within customer environments," said Howard Hall, senior director, Alliances, VMware.

The VMware Ready program is a co-branding benefit of the Technology Alliance Partner (TAP) program that makes it easy for customers to identify partner products certified to work with VMware infrastructure. Customers can use these products and solutions to lower project risks and realize cost savings over custom-built solutions. With thousands of members worldwide, the VMware TAP program includes best-of-breed technology partners with the shared commitment to bring the best expertise and business solution for each unique customer need.
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6 Comments on OCZ Storage Solutions Z-Drive 4500 Achieves VMware Ready Status

#2
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
DeathtoGnomesneed numbers!
  • sustained read performance up to 2,900 MB/s
  • sustained write performance up to 2,200 MB/s
  • random 4K block read throughput up to 252,000 IOPS
  • random 4K block write throughput up to 76,000 IOPS
800GB - $2,945 MSRP
1.6TB - $4,755 MSRP
3.2TB - $8,165 MSRP
Posted on Reply
#3
happita
With those prices, oh yea, definitely server-grade.
Posted on Reply
#4
t_ski
Former Staff
Not as fast as the new models Intel released a few weeks back. And personally, I think these are targeted at smaller businesses that would be more interested in taking advantage of vSAN.
Posted on Reply
#6
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
DeathtoGnomesWhy are those random read/write slower then regular SSD?
Not sure what you mean by a regular SSD. I don't know many regular SSDs that can do 250,000+ IOPs, most don't even break 100,000. The writes is on part with a regular SSD, and that is probably that way because of how the LSI controller is tuned. It likely uses write-through caching.
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