Tuesday, June 9th 2015

HGST Delivers World's First 10TB Enterprise HDD for Active Archive Applications

Helping the world harness the power of data, HGST, a Western Digital company (NASDAQ: WDC) today announced the first enterprise-class 10TB (terabyte) hard disk drive (HDD) for next-generation active archive applications. The host-managed Ultrastar Archive Ha10 SMR HDD sets a new standard in enabling the world's densest server and storage systems with unprecedented TCO levels. This industry-defining product is the result of combining two complementary technologies - HGST's second generation, field-proven HelioSeal platform and shingled magnetic recording (SMR) - to deliver unmatched storage density and power efficiency, without compromising reliability and performance predictability. With an industry-leading 10TB capacity, the Ultrastar Archive Ha10 gives customers a time-to-market capacity advantage for archival environments and applications where data is sequentially written and randomly read, such as social media, cloud storage, online backup, life sciences as well as media and entertainment.

HGST recognizes SMR as core technology necessary in driving areal density increases. By overlapping or "shingling" the data tracks on top of each other, higher areal density can be achieved within the same physical footprint. Based on feedback from customers whose data center environments demand predictable performance and control of how data is handled, HGST has implemented a host-managed SMR solution. The sequential write behavior of host-managed SMR complements active archive workloads.
Today, many hyperscale cloud providers are discovering that most of their active archive applications are already sequential, creating the ideal environment for SMR HDDs to thrive. The capacity enterprise HDD market is adapting to this shift, creating demand for purpose built drives, making the Ha10 an ideal solution due to its capacity, data integrity and desired predictable performance. Currently, HGST estimates that active archive/deep archive applications are generating 20-35 percent of the data being stored today. Based on current customer data, HGST is projecting that this statistic will grow to more than 50 percent in the next five years.

Extending Leadership
The Ultrastar Archive Ha10 is the third of HGST's helium-based HDDs launched in less than two years. It underscores the sustainability, applicability, and success of its HelioSeal technology with well over one million units deployed to date. HGST continues to address data growth and long-term data retention by investing in a multi-generational path of SMR-based HDDs with HelioSeal. The Ultrastar Archive Ha10 and its subsequent SMR-based successors will consistently deliver the highest capacity with the lowest TCO.

Based on the proven HelioSeal platform, the Ultrastar Archive Ha10 leads the market in reliability and data integrity for active archive applications. The drive is rated at two million hours mean time between failure (MTBF), offers a five-year limited warranty, a 10-15 unrecoverable reduced bit error rate, rotational vibration safeguards, and 600K load/unload cycles, making it the optimal enterprise-class solution for active archive workloads. Customers who are driven by the capacity, performance and low TCO are already capitalizing on value of the Ha10 HDD.

"We are in the era of data explosion, which has brought huge challenges to massive data management with increasing data storage costs and demand for instant access to all data," said Yuan Yuan, Vice President, IT Storage Product Line, Huawei. "Huawei is pleased to see the launch of HGST Ultrastar Archive Ha10 with 10TB single drive capacity and its application in Huawei's OceanStor storage system. Huawei will continue cooperating with its partners in innovative technology development and applications so as to help customers tackle various challenges posed by massive data management."

"As Europe's leading cloud service provider, our growth has been unprecedented. Our ability to scale efficiently, quickly, and smartly is premised on innovative products and technologies that are right-sized for a compute and storage-rich environment," said Miroslaw Klaba, vice president of research and development, OVH. "We have identified both HelioSeal and host-managed SMR as two cornerstone recording technologies that provide a transformational means to our datacenter deployment and service offerings. We continue to partner with HGST on solutions that put us on an accelerated path for PB-scale deployment at low TCO."

The New Era of Capacity Enterprise Storage
The Ultrastar Archive Ha10 underscores HGST's overall strategy to motivate the market with innovative solutions that enrich the partner ecosystem and better elevate software solutions in the storage stack.

"HGST's helium-filled drives boast industry-leading storage density, low power consumption and proven reliability with 2.5M hours MTBF. By layering SMR on top of helium, we are enabling massively-scalable, TCO-driven storage solutions with the performance and durability necessary for the long term retention of archived data," said Brendan Collins, vice president of product marketing, HGST. "Making SMR design investments today minimizes incremental efforts for future SMR solutions, and gives our customers a time-to-market advantage for all current and future high capacity HDDs in the market."

Initial rollout of the 10TB HDD is focused on cloud and OEM storage customers who have the in-house capability to develop the software required. To benefit from the value proposition of Ultrastar Archive Ha10, host applications need to be first sequentialized, which requires adjustments in the software stack to take advantage of the areal density gain, and consequently, the sequential write behavior of host-managed SMR. This not only ensures the predictable performance that enterprise and cloud customers have come to expect, but also provides maximum control and arbitration at the host system level, which customers prefer.


HGST's activities with the Open Source community will also help accelerate adoption for channel customers and white-box system builders, based on Linux and other select open source OS. HGST is providing an Open Source Software Development Kit (SDK) known as "libzbc" to facilitate Linux application development and implementation of new SMR command sets.
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19 Comments on HGST Delivers World's First 10TB Enterprise HDD for Active Archive Applications

#1
Hood
Wow, we'll have plenty of room to store endless copies of funny cat videos, and other important stuff, too...
Posted on Reply
#2
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
HoodWow, we'll have plenty of room to store endless copies of funny cat videos, and other important stuff, too...
Assuming that most people have the funds to cough up for a 10TB 'Enterprise' drive...... I dont think we'll get that far.
Posted on Reply
#3
Katanai
10TB? I still remember when I had a 100MB HDD heh...
Posted on Reply
#4
yotano211
Katanai10TB? I still remember when I had a 100MB HDD heh...
I still remember having 8gb on a HD on my 1st computer. It was on Oct. 1999.
Posted on Reply
#5
Fx
At the moment, I haven't found it that easy to find their 8TB drives with 4K sectors in either the SATA or SAS versions.
Posted on Reply
#6
Ferrum Master
Katanai10TB? I still remember when I had a 100MB HDD heh...
I remember my Seagate 20MB drive...

Posted on Reply
#7
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
yotano211I still remember having 8gb on a HD on my 1st computer. It was on Oct. 1999.
I had 100mb hard drive - It ran windows 3.1 back in 92'
Posted on Reply
#8
xaira
this is getting rediculoius...in a good way
Posted on Reply
#9
yogurt_21
FreedomEclipseAssuming that most people have the funds to cough up for a 10TB 'Enterprise' drive...... I dont think we'll get that far.
you need the 10TB's out to be able to afford the 8TB drives. 2 of those will now cost less than 1 on these. That's pretty much how it's been since we hit 1TB.
Posted on Reply
#10
64K
Ferrum MasterI remember my Seagate 20MB drive...

I recall the day when that was considered great. My first experience with PC storage was punched tape.


Five-hole and eight-hole punched paper tape
Punched tape or perforated paper tape is a form of data storage, consisting of a long strip of paper in which holes are punched.
Posted on Reply
#11
bogami
10TB capacity is quite nice, but heliyum technology has no competition, and this piece of the gas which has specific operating conditions in the closed disk is paid€ 600 and more which is 100% over normal prices for such high quality disk.
Let us not forget that for a long time with special technology to read disk they developed 2.5 "disc with hev capacity of 52 Tb has shown that the main problem to use them is with OS. 10TB have long been offered for Sever's not forget that the fall inforecast endurance test! Well, too expensive this unrivaled product makes recently astronomical profits. For this piece of the gas that is not working at altitudes no more. Olso 16Tb you can buy for this muny or less..
Posted on Reply
#12
suraswami
This is exactly what I need, 2 mirrored would be perfect.:D
Posted on Reply
#13
thebluebumblebee
64KI recall the day when that was considered great. My first experience with PC storage was punched tape.


Five-hole and eight-hole punched paper tape
Punched tape or perforated paper tape is a form of data storage, consisting of a long strip of paper in which holes are punched.
I was going to mention my 32MB RLL (found a special WD controller on the BBS that allowed me to get ~750KBs(IIRC)) on my DFI 386-DX25 with 12 256KB SIMM's and a 1MB Tseng 4000 ISA VGA, but then you threw that down. You win!:respect:
Posted on Reply
#14
MikeMurphy
thebluebumblebeeI was going to mention my 32MB RLL (found a special WD controller on the BBS that allowed me to get ~750KBs(IIRC)) on my DFI 386-DX25 with 12 256KB SIMM's and a 1MB Tseng 4000 ISA VGA, but then you threw that down. You win!:respect:
Memories. My first was a 386sx33, 2mb of ram, 80mb hard drive and a 256kb Trident videocard on the ISA bus. I was seriously jealous of the math co-processor on the DX chips. Oh, and PC Speaker all the way :)

Next upgrade was to a 486slc40, then to a Pentium 90 with a Matrox Mystique 3D video card, then a TNT and TNT2 card, and on and on.

To put restrictive storage into perspective, I had to install large games like Doom through windows so that I could delete the source files as they were decompressing due to insufficient storage for the final binary and the sources at the same time. These days you can carry 128gb of solid-state storage in a USB key the side of your fingernail.

Amazing.
Posted on Reply
#15
Easo
I love science!
I still remember my school with 250 MB drives...
Posted on Reply
#16
AsRock
TPU addict
Katanai10TB? I still remember when I had a 100MB HDD heh...
I still have one LMAO.
Posted on Reply
#17
timta2
bogami10TB capacity is quite nice, but heliyum technology has no competition, and this piece of the gas which has specific operating conditions in the closed disk is paid€ 600 and more which is 100% over normal prices for such high quality disk.
Let us not forget that for a long time with special technology to read disk they developed 2.5 "disc with hev capacity of 52 Tb has shown that the main problem to use them is with OS. 10TB have long been offered for Sever's not forget that the fall inforecast endurance test! Well, too expensive this unrivaled product makes recently astronomical profits. For this piece of the gas that is not working at altitudes no more. Olso 16Tb you can buy for this muny or less..
What language is this? I'm going to try one of those online translators.
Posted on Reply
#18
Patriot
suraswamiThis is exactly what I need, 2 mirrored would be perfect.:D
Mirror with a hot spare. At those capacities... the likelihood of a second failure during rebuild...
Posted on Reply
#19
Steevo
Yep, my old Quantum Fireball drive was still the one I got most excited about. At the time it doubled my storage and bumped me up to a higher ATA speed as well.
Posted on Reply
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