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Encryption key management worries loom 28 November, 2007 12:30:18
Encrypted storage will require storage admins to think through key managementAs long as IT managers encrypt data using only one vendor's products, the keys used to decrypt that data can be relatively easy to manage. But it will likely become much more complicated as more vendors build encryption into more and different types of storage devices, each with their own key management system, and as users need to move encrypted data among devices for disaster recovery, legal discovery or simply everyday business communications. - +
What's New: the latest products for the week commencing 12 December 2007 12 December, 2007 16:28:20
ARN reviews the latest products for the week commencing 12 December 2007 - +
Next-generation LANs, branches under consideration 25 October, 2007 08:45:02
Experts mull changing enterprise network environmentsThe next-generation LAN will be mobile, secure, intelligent and service- vs. speed-oriented, experts at the Interop New York conference said this week. - +
Michael Dell talks up EqualLogic and the new PS5000 array 05 February, 2008 08:10:54
The PS5000 series SAN offers provisioning on the fly through virtualization and thin provisioningDays after closing its acquisition of iSCSI storage vendor EqualLogic, Dell announced a new series of iSCSI-based storage-area network (SAN) arrays. The Dell EqualLogic PS5000 Series offers both virtualization and thin-provisioning capabilities, allowing storage administrators to grow capacity on the fly. - +
Engineers tackle big waits for big files 22 November, 2007 07:36:39
Wide-area network optimization system reduces delaysStoring large project files separately in its 20 offices worked fine for environmental engineering firm GEI Consultants until employees with different specialties had to start collaborating on jobs.
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Storage virtualization helps support the 5 million changes his global network of 100,000 vendors makes to his inventory database daily. The database's size and churn rate create a huge and dynamic demand for high-performance storage. "Our inventory database is the heart and soul of our business - the source of a competitive advantage as well as technical challenges," Schaffer says.
Today, Schaffer easily can allocate 100GB to one host or 1TB to another without worrying about the device-level details. "I do not know nor particularly care which drives are involved," he says.
The 3Par system, which includes a mix of Advanced Technology Attachment and fast Fibre Channel drives, moves data automatically among storage tiers, Schaffer says. "Without downtime, I can move data from Fibre Channel to near-line storage or from a RAID 5 to a RAID 10 set" - and this happens without detailed planning and LUN carving, he adds.
Data deduplication, another popular storage-virtualization offshoot, is on Schaffer's wish list for its space-saving capabilities. Deduplication removes similar blocks of data and replaces them with hash marks, a process that offers such benefits as an increase in the time archives can be on disk, and better backup performance. The technology, however, requires a fundamental change in the way enterprise IT managers think about storage, Forrester's Reichman says. "For years, they have used multiple copies of data to ensure protection and availability. This is a case of the pendulum swinging the other way and reducing the physical copies to create a smaller footprint overall," he says.
Experts say enterprise IT managers could ease virtualization with a popular technology used with physical storage: snapshots. "Often overlooked, this is a good feature for making virtual backup easy, enabling migration, and for development teams, which can have an endless number of identical copies of production to data test new revisions against," says Mark Peters, analyst at Enterprise Strategies Group (ESG).
Now, the bad news
IT executives are finding success with single-vendor approaches to storage virtualization, but they admit that lack of vendor interoperability and other issues continue to stymie their attempts at utility storage.
Interoperability - or lack thereof - recently factored into Mercury's latest storage virtualization plans. The company plans on deploying file-system virtualization to reduce the number of storage entry points via servers it has around its network. Again, to avoid possible support issues, Mercury is leaning toward IBM's implementation of file virtualization technology from Network Appliance.
"Even if another product's features are similar, we have to consider our decision from an interoperability standpoint," Kreisa says.
This fait accompli surrounding interoperability has Ted Ritter, research analyst at Nemertes Research Group, pessimistic about the chances of storage becoming a utility soon. "If virtualization is limited because you're so closely tied to a single vendor, then you can't get to a utility utopia," he says.
Support for the basic Fibre Channel protocol doesn't mean much here. Managing storage devices and doing things like mirroring and moving copy aren't always compatible across different vendors, he adds.
Forrester's Reichman concurs. "Today, if you have one vendor's storage behind another vendor's virtualization console, it's very difficult to troubleshoot problems. A lot of finger-pointing ensues. This problem could be solved by making the virtualization and physical storage infrastructure more standardized," he says.
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