What is our primary use case?
In my company, we use HPE SimpliVity. Our company has four HPE SimpliVity nodes working in pairs because it works in the stretched cluster mode, and ensures the replication between data centers. Every virtual machine is replicated in the cluster. When Our company has some issues, some problem in one of the data centers or one of the hosts, the other can resume or move the workload and can start after five minutes, more or less the automation again. Our company can have some kind of high availability in our on-premises equipment.
What is most valuable?
The most important advantage that I can share about the tool is the high availability feature, along with the continuous and synchronous replication between nodes in a stretcher cluster.
What needs improvement?
The main issue with HPE SimpliVity is that you are very attached to VMware or VMware dependencies because the tool works with VMware technology. HPE SimpliVity is an add-on from VMware. Nowadays, my company has a lot of concerns about VMware's licensing policy. Another big concern of the tool is related to security because one has to continuously update patch vulnerabilities that are appearing continuously in VMware's different versions. Actually, the foundation of all the architecture is VMware and that is one of the main issues with the tool. My company is analyzing our virtual infrastructure strategy to see if we can move to Nutanix because maybe it may work better and might have another approach. Nutanix is absolutely independent of VMware.
I could add that since HPE SimpliVity is very precisely dependent on VMware, it is not open to containers unlike Nutanix, for example. The aforementioned area is a concern that needs to be resolved by HPE.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using HPE SimpliVity for four years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
It is a very stable solution. Stability-wise, I rate the solution a nine out of ten.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
The tool is not very good when it comes to the scalability part, and it doesn't work like Nutanix alternatives that work in active stretcher clusters and nodes, as both work in pairs. If you need to scale up and increase the workloads, the fact is that we have to deploy a new pair of security nodes, and they don't work smoothly and transparently. There are many things that are not very well resolved in HPE SimpliVity.
Scalability-wise, I rate the solution a five out of ten.
There are four admins working with the tool.
My company is unsure about increasing the use of the product since we are still analyzing certain areas of the solution.
Our company may use HPE SimpliVity, and it means purchasing new pairs of the product, or maybe we may go for a change and go for an alternative like Nutanix.
How are customer service and support?
For customer support, you need to go to HPE's support center, where you can open a ticket, and they are very, very quick in responding and managing issues. I rate the technical support an eight out of ten.
How would you rate customer service and support?
How was the initial setup?
On a scale of one to ten, where ten means the setup process was easy, I rate the product's initial setup phase as six. You need to work with HPE engineers, as they have to come to your house and deploy by following their practices, and they can only do that because the tool has a very controlled and certified portfolio that doesn't allow you to do the setup by yourself. You need the participation of certified engineers from the manufacturer.
The product's deployment phase is straightforward if everything goes well. In the initial deployment in 2019, I remember that the process was not so straightforward, and we experienced a few problems. Our company's recent experiences with the tool were good.
The solution is deployed on an on-premises model.
The solution can be deployed in four hours.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
HPE SimpliVity is much more affordable than Nutanix or VMware vSAN, which are HPE's typical competitors. I don't have updated or up-to-date news about the tool's prices. Two years ago, the tool was less expensive. The first pair of servers was about 90,000 EUR, including three years of warranty. It is 30,000 EUR per year.
What other advice do I have?
To streamline our data center operations, I would say that the vast majority of our company's servers are posted on HPE SimpliVity nodes, which ensures that our infrastructure or on-premises infrastructure is running and working properly.
The built-in data protection of HPR SimpliVity has been beneficial and it is another good feature of the tool. The tool has something similar to internal backups, which allows it to perform a scheduled backup policy inside HPE SimpliVity's cluster. When you have some kind of need to recover from backups, then you don't need to recover from an external source. You can also use HPE SimpliVity as the backup source, and it is a very good feature because you don't need to go to a third party like Veeam or things like that. You can use HPE SimpliVity as a first level of backup. HPE SimpliVity should not be the only tool, but it shouldn't be the only one that gets considered as the first one in a company.
The tool offers VMware vCenter's interface, so you won't notice anything special. You just have a little extra feature that appears in the contextual menus.
I would say that there is no particular positive influence of the tool's user interface on management. It has the same interface that we have been working on for the last six years we are working.
People should be sure about the product and must get direct assistance from HPE since it is very critical during the deployment process
The general impression is that the technology is good, and the solution is useful to get rid of our issues. My feedback about the tool is good.
I rate the tool a seven out of ten.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
On-premises