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Idc Marketscape: Worldwide Object-Based Storage 2019 Vendor Assessment

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IDC MarketScape

IDC MarketScape: Worldwide Object-Based Storage 2019


Vendor Assessment
Amita Potnis

THIS IDC MARKETSCAPE EXCERPT FEATURES HITACHI

IDC MARKETSCAPE FIGURE 1

IDC MarketScape Worldwide Object-Based Storage Vendor Assessment

Source: IDC, 2019

Please see the Appendix for detailed methodology, market definition, and scoring criteria.

December 2019, IDC #US45354219e


IN THIS EXCERPT

The content for this excerpt was taken directly from IDC MarketScape: Worldwide Object-Based
Storage 2019 Vendor Assessment (Doc # US45354219). All or parts of the following sections are
included in this excerpt: IDC Opinion, IDC MarketScape Vendor Inclusion Criteria, Essential Guidance,
Vendor Summary Profile, Appendix and Learn More. Also included is Figure 1.

IDC OPINION

The storage market has come a long way in terms of understanding object-based storage (OBS)
technology and actively adopting it. It is a common practice for OBS to be adopted for secondary and
cold storage needs at scale. Over the recent years, OBS has proven its ability to scale to tens and
hundreds of petabytes and is now maturing to support newer workloads such as unstructured data
analytics, IoT, AI/ML/DL, and so forth. As the price of flash declines and the data sets continue to
grow, the need for analyzing the data is on the rise. Moving data sets from an object store to a high-
performance tier for analysis is a thing of the past. Many vendors are enhancing their object offerings
to include a flash tier or are bringing all-flash array object storage offerings to the market today.

In this IDC MarketScape, IDC assesses the present commercial OBS supplier (suppliers that deliver
software-defined OBS solutions as software or appliances much like other storage platforms)
landscape. Cloud-based storage services based on OBS are not included in this IDC MarketScape.
This IDC MarketScape assesses 13 OBS suppliers that are "owners of intellectual property (IP)." IDC
analyzed the capabilities and business strategies of OBS suppliers that it considers to be
representative of the market. Key findings include:

▪ All-flash array OBS solutions. End users and suppliers are exploring the idea of all-flash array
OBS solutions that will cater to not just capacity needs but also performance requirements for
environments like Big Data and analytics, rich media, and technical computing
▪ Data management. Many solutions offer data visibility and management controls across on-
premises datacenters as well as private and public cloud. These metadata-based capabilities
enable customers to project application resource consumption and capacity growth and
implement policy-based data retention on appropriate tier.

©2019 IDC #US45354219e 2


IDC MARKETSCAPE VENDOR INCLUSION CRITERIA

This IDC study assesses the capabilities and business strategies of leading suppliers in the (scale out)
OBS market segment. This evaluation is based on a comprehensive framework and a set of
parameters that gauge the success of a supplier in delivering an OBS solution in the market. This
study includes an analysis of the most notable players in the commercial OBS market, with broad
portfolios and global scale.

To make this list, the suppliers need to have an OBS platform:

▪ Conforms to IDC's taxonomy. According to IDC's Worldwide SBS, SDS, and FOBS Storage
Solutions Taxonomy, 2018 (IDC #US43579118, March 2018), participating object storage
solutions leverage an OBS data organization scheme. Distributed file systems with object
interfaces are not included.
▪ Supplier the owner of IP. The participating supplier has developed the OBS solution in-house
or owned by the way of an acquisition and is the owner of intellectual property of that platform.
▪ Deployment model. The OBS solution is primarily sold as software, hardware (appliance or
gateway), and may, additionally, be available as a service.
▪ Generally available (GA) in 2019. The OBS solution was generally available as a current
offering at the time IDC undertook this study in 3Q19.
▪ Revenue. The product generated $10+ million in revenue in 2018.
▪ Capacity deployed. If revenue requirements were not met, the participant must have proven
customer deployments of 4PB or greater.

ADVICE FOR TECHNOLOGY BUYERS

It is imperative that OBS suppliers consider the following in developing their product road map and
addressing customer demand. In detail:

▪ Hybrid cloud strategy. It is imperative that OBS suppliers have a strategic offering in place to
enable customers to implement a hybrid and multicloud storage offering. Policy-based data
tiering to public cloud of choice and deployments on-premises or as a private cloud are
essential to a successful hybrid cloud strategy.
▪ Data management. Lack of data visibility and control are concerns for any organization with
petabyte-scale data sets. These concerns are aggravated with unaccounted data stored
across storage silos. Many OBS suppliers are addressing this immediate concern with
integrated or added solutions that allow end users to gain access to data sets across
deployment locations through a single pane of glass.
▪ Newer workloads. OBS use cases are no longer simply an archival play. Increasingly,
customers are looking at OBS as a dense, performant, and cost-effective alternative for newer
high-growth (in terms of revenue and capacity) workloads such as unstructured data analytics,
IoT, and artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML)/DL.

©2019 IDC #US45354219e 3


VENDOR SUMMARY PROFILE

This section briefly explains IDC's key observations resulting in a vendor's position in the IDC
MarketScape. While every vendor is evaluated against each of the criteria outlined in the Appendix,
the description here provides a summary of the vendor's strengths and challenges.

List of Participating Vendors


Table 1 shows the list of vendors and their classifications.

TABLE 1

List of Suppliers and Their Classifications

IDC MarketScape Category Supplier Name Product Evaluated (Older-Generation Product)

Leaders Dell EMC ECS

Hitachi Vantara Hitachi Content Platform (HCP)

IBM Cloud Object Storage

NetApp StorageGRID

Scality RING

Major Players Caringo Swarm

Cloudian HyperStore

Red Hat Red Hat Ceph Storage

SUSE SUSE Enterprise Storage

SwiftStack Multi-Cloud Data Management

Western Digital ActiveScale

Contenders OpenIO OpenIO

StorageCraft OneBlox

Notes:
Vendors are listed in alphabetical order per category.
Revenue from products evaluated impacts bubble size.

Revenue from other portfolio products is not evaluated and does not impact bubble size.

Source: IDC, 2019

©2019 IDC #US45354219e 4


Hitachi Vantara
Hitachi Vantara is positioned as a Leader in this IDC MarketScape for object-based storage.

Hitachi Vantara's object storage offering, Hitachi Content Platform (HCP), is a part of the HCP
portfolio. Through the HCP Portfolio, Hitachi Vantara aims to offer its customers a stairwell to value
and monetization by providing infrastructure agility and tools to enrich and protect data. The HCP
portfolio includes object storage called Hitachi Content Platform, HCP Anywhere (file sync and share),
HCP Anywhere Edge (cloud file gateway), Hitachi Content Intelligence (data search and analytics),
and Hitachi Content Monitor (advanced performance monitoring).

In early 2019, Hitachi Vantara released the all-flash HCP access nodes (G10) configuration, along with
flash-enabled HCP storage nodes (S11 and S31) for greater throughput to address low-latency and
high-performance use cases. Based on data life-cycle policies, HCP can tier data across any storage
media including flash, disk, tape, optical, or public cloud storage services. The company also released
HCP for Cloud Scale, a containerized and software-defined version of HCP, with orchestration
technologies from Meso and Marathon, based on a composable microservices framework that enables
linear scale for both performance and capacity. The road map for HCP for Cloud Scale is expected to
include integration with Kubernetes and feature parity with the existing HCP appliance. HCP for Cloud
Scale is also expected to integrate with Hitachi Vantara's Hitachi Cloud Accelerated Platform, which
provides automated deployment workflow services to create standardized and self-service installation
capabilities for customers that choose to deploy HCP for Cloud Scale in hosted and public cloud
environments.

Strengths
Hitachi Vantara's HCP portfolio offers the company's customers flexibility to pick and choose offerings
that best meet the requirements of the organization in a scalable, customizable, and comprehensive
manner. Together, the HCP appliance offering and HCP for Cloud Scale will target multiple traditional
and next-generation workloads such as IoT, media management, AI, and machine learning as well as
content repositories.

Challenges
Hitachi's challenge is twofold. First, while the company boasts 14+ years of experience in the object
storage market and supporting offerings, customers largely remain unaware of the capabilities of the
HCP portfolio. Second, HCP remains one of the few object storage offerings without distributed file
system support, which is an inhibitor for some customers.

Consider Hitachi Vantara When


Customers in need of a scalable and cloud-compatible object store with management and governance
capabilities as well as integrated solutions for data mobility, analytics, and data access for their current
and future business requirements should consider Hitachi Vantara's HCP.

©2019 IDC #US45354219e 5


APPENDIX

Reading an IDC MarketScape Graph


For the purposes of this analysis, IDC divided potential key measures for success into two primary
categories: capabilities and strategies.

Positioning on the y-axis reflects the vendor's current capabilities and menu of services and how well
aligned the vendor is to customer needs. The capabilities category focuses on the capabilities of the
company and product today, here and now. Under this category, IDC analysts will look at how well a
vendor is building/delivering capabilities that enable it to execute its chosen strategy in the market.

Positioning on the x-axis, or strategies axis, indicates how well the vendor's future strategy aligns with
what customers will require in three to five years. The strategies category focuses on high-level
decisions and underlying assumptions about offerings, customer segments, and business and go-to-
market plans for the next three to five years.

The size of the individual vendor markers in the IDC MarketScape represents the market share of each
individual vendor within the specific market segment being assessed.

In the case of a supplier with multiple products in the same market segment, IDC has worked with the
supplier to select the product that most closely resembles the tactical strengths (capabilities) and
strategic directions (strategies) of the supplier, and the one that can be used as the lens through which
the supplier's position in the market can be ascertained, provided the product meets the inclusion
criteria for the IDC MarketScape. This can impact the size of the bubble, as only the revenue for the
evaluated product is included and not the supplier's overall revenue for that market segment.

Therefore, while certain suppliers are at an advantage given their size and broader portfolio offerings,
IDC recognizes that smaller suppliers with a single product, and whose primary focus in the object-
based storage market may be limited to specific verticals, also play an important role by bringing to the
market potentially disruptive technologies.

Note that certain suppliers (e.g., Scality, Red Hat) are pure-play software vendors, while the other
suppliers sell a mix of hardware and software, mostly as hardware appliances. Pure-play software
typically represents 25–50% of the total revenue, so the associated server revenue is added to
compare the size of the bubbles directly to the appliance vendors.

IDC MarketScape Methodology


IDC MarketScape criteria selection, weightings, and vendor scores represent well-researched IDC
judgment about the market and specific vendors. IDC analysts tailor the range of standard
characteristics by which vendors are measured through structured discussions, surveys, and
interviews with market leaders, participants, and end users. Market weightings are based on user
interviews, buyer surveys, and the input of a review board of IDC experts in each market. IDC analysts
base individual vendor scores, and ultimately vendor positions on the IDC MarketScape, on detailed
surveys and interviews with the vendors, publicly available information, and end-user experiences in
an effort to provide an accurate and consistent assessment of each vendor's characteristics, behavior,
and capability.

©2019 IDC #US45354219e 6


Market Definition
IDC classifies OBS platforms as part of the scale-out file- and OBS (FOBS) market segment. IDC uses
the classification scheme to classify newer software-based file- and object-based storage platforms.

Object-based storage includes appliances and software-only delivery models. Software-only delivery
models include commercial, commercialized open source, and open source software offerings.
Hardware costs associated with software-only delivery models are included in this subsegment. Self-
built OBS platforms that are delivered as cloud-based storage services are also included in this
segment. An important (and mandatory) distinction between this and the aforementioned scale-out
OBS category is the fact that self-built platforms are never sold as packaged products but only used to
deliver value-added services.

The main attributes of OBS are:

▪ These solutions have flat tenant-account-container-object namespace designed for


multipetabyte environments. Such structures are higher-level structures in which data is often
organized using an "account, container, object" approach, wherein "objects" are analogous to
"files" in FBS solutions.
▪ Accounts, containers, and objects are referenced by a metadata repository that stores and
manages attributes of data stored in that structure. Many OBS solutions operate on a per-
object level (i.e., allow each object to be treated independently as far as policy management is
concerned), whereas others operate at a container or account level (i.e., allow policies to be
applied at a container or an account level).
▪ Several OBS solutions also leverage NoSQL databases as metadata repositories and
persistent data stores (instead of storing chunks in the file systems).
▪ These solutions support HTTP/REST, Amazon S3, and other object-specific interfaces.

©2019 IDC #US45354219e 7


LEARN MORE

Related Research
▪ Worldwide File-Based Storage Forecast, 2018-2022: Storage by Deployment Location (IDC
#US44457018, December 2018)
▪ Enterprises to Adopt Cloud-Native Applications in Next 12 Months: Drivers Include Security,
Costs, Big Data AI/ML Initiatives (IDC #US44448818, November 2018)
▪ Data Management: Success with a Method to the Madness (IDC #US44415618, November
2018)
▪ Red Hat Acquires NooBaa - Makes a Shift from Storage to Hybrid Cloud Data Management
(IDC #lcUS44484218, November 2018)
▪ Worldwide Composite Media Workloads (Compute and Storage) Infrastructure Forecast,
2018-2022 (IDC #US44281818, October 2018)
▪ Micro Focus Sells SUSE Business to Private Equity Backer (IDC #lcUS44101118, July 2018)
▪ Growth of File Storage Services in the Public Cloud (IDC #US44002318, June 2018)

Synopsis
This IDC study represents a vendor assessment model called the IDC MarketScape. This study is a
quantitative and qualitative assessment of the characteristics that assess a vendor's current and future
success in the said market or market segment and provide a measure of the vendor's ascendancy to
become a leader or maintain leadership. IDC MarketScape assessments are particularly helpful in
emerging markets that are often fragmented, have several players, and lack clear leaders.

The (scale out) OBS market subsegment, which is part of the file and OBS market, is an example of a
maturing and expanding market. In this IDC MarketScape, IDC attempts to assess the capabilities and
strategies of key vendors of OBS solutions. IDC expects that market forces such as fierce competition
and buyer demand will accelerate the metamorphosis of this market into a mature market with a few
dominant vendors and some disruptive start-ups.

"A new digitized world demands an infrastructure that is extremely scalable and flexible in terms of
delivery models and supports new high-performant use cases such as analytics and content delivery,"
said Amita Potnis, research manager in IDC's Storage team. "OBS platforms hold the promise and the
potential to support end users along this path of digitization. In this competitive market, vendors
offering OBS platforms with the most compelling value proposition via a long-term strategy, research
and development plan, and flexible delivery models will survive."

©2019 IDC #US45354219e 8


About IDC
International Data Corporation (IDC) is the premier global provider of market intelligence, advisory
services, and events for the information technology, telecommunications and consumer technology
markets. IDC helps IT professionals, business executives, and the investment community make fact-
based decisions on technology purchases and business strategy. More than 1,100 IDC analysts
provide global, regional, and local expertise on technology and industry opportunities and trends in
over 110 countries worldwide. For 50 years, IDC has provided strategic insights to help our clients
achieve their key business objectives. IDC is a subsidiary of IDG, the world's leading technology
media, research, and events company.

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