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IBM Scale Out Network Attached Storage (SONAS) was the IBM enterprise x86-based storage platform based on GPFS technology, and released in 2010 [31] as hardware product. This system implements NAS based protocols over a large-scale global name space.
The IBM 2145 SAN Volume Controller (SVC) is an inline virtualization or "gateway" device. It logically sits between hosts and storage arrays, presenting itself to hosts as the storage provider (target) and presenting itself to storage arrays as one big host.
The IBM 2841 Storage Control Unit [3] [15] was a Direct Access Storage Device (DASD) control unit introduced with System/360, first shipped in 1965 and offered until at least 1975. The 2841 was a microprogrammed [ 16 ] control unit "intended for use in controlling access to a disk or strip file or a slow-speed drum storage unit."
IBM Storwize systems were virtualizing RAID computer data storage systems with raw storage capacities up to 32 PB. [2] Storwize is based on the same software as IBM SAN Volume Controller (SVC). Formerly Storwize was an independent data storage organisation.
There are twelve models of the IBM 3380 family: six A-units, five B-units and one C-unit. A-units (heads of string) contain additional logic to perform string controller functions and connect to IBM storage control units (3880 or 3990). The C-units connect directly to an IBM channel. B-units connects to A-units or C-units.
IBM FlashSystem A9000 is a 8U rackmount unit with up to 300 TB [37] of usable storage capacity provided by FlashSystem 900 modules, managed by IBM Spectrum Accelerate software. It's scalable sibling, the FlashSystem A9000R, consists of a minimum of two units, scaling to 6 units or 1.8 PB [ 38 ] usable in a 42U rack.
IBM 2395 Processor Storage; IBM 3310; IBM 3330; IBM 3340; IBM 3350; IBM 3370; IBM 3375; ... IBM SAN Volume Controller; Serial Storage Architecture; T. IBM 7-track; 9 ...
Products, services, and subsidiaries have been offered from International Business Machines (IBM) Corporation and its predecessor corporations since the 1890s. [1] This list comprises those offerings and is eclectic; it includes, for example, the AN/FSQ-7, which was not a product in the sense of offered for sale, but was a product in the sense of manufactured—produced by the labor of IBM.