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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. - +
Box reduction: Picking the low-hanging green datacentre fruit 06 September, 2007 10:40:30
Picking the easier-to-pick, low-hanging green fruit from your datacentre is not a trivial exercise.In another article we saw that making any changes to the air-conditioning, the electricity supply or the cooling arrangements were not trivial undertakings. Datacentre infrastructure changes are significant exercises. What about making changes to the IT kit inside the datacentre? - +
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. - +
Backup technology key to protecting virtual machines 05 September, 2007 10:36:54
As virtual machines proliferate, IT administrators have to be careful to choose a backup method that doesn’t bog down network performance or send licensing costs skyrocketingAs the number of servers being virtualized grows, backing up and protecting them becomes more of a problem. It's not enough for IT administrators to simply back up each virtual server and its data. Protection also is needed for the virtual server's image -- its operating system, configuration and settings -- and the metadata on the physical server that identifies the virtual server's relationship to networked storage.
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SRM, which provides the means of collecting information on heterogeneous resources, would benefit from standardization, too. SRM suffers from its inability to span virtualized environments from multiple vendors. This poses severe challenges for IT teams trying to troubleshoot performance issues. "You need deeper SRM integration to track application-performance problems back to specific spindle bottlenecks," ESG's Peters says.
SRM tools coupled with a virtualized environment create a roadblock to compliance, Nemertes' Ritter adds. When a company couples storage-resource and path-management tools with virtualization, "there is a lack of visibility into exactly what application data resides on which specific disk," he says.
This is a problem for organizations held to government and private-sector mandates. "If you can't tell where patient records are physically located [because they've been virtualized], then you're not [compliant with the US Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act]. The need to account for data is fundamental," he says.
The abstraction of the physical layer also affects disaster recovery and business continuity efforts. "When you remove the physical connection to where a given piece of data is and introduce virtualization that remaps the location of the data, breaks it up into components, fakes out the server, etc., you wind up relying on metadata and virtualization mechanisms to retain access to critical data," Forrester's Reichman says.
To counterbalance this, IT teams should develop policies about which data can be stored where and should use monitoring technology to generate virtualization-aware audits on that data, Reichman advises.
Thin provisioning can be a great benefit, but it can lull IT executives into a false sense of security. And this can result in disaster, Nemertes' Ritter warns. "There is a potential for underprovisioning your storage network to support system failures," he says.
As they wait for these virtualization industry growing pains to subside, Mercury and other companies continue to pine for a utility future. "For Mercury to consider storage a utility, we'd have to have an environment that is fully integrated between the operating system, the file system and the block level. That way, when an application needs more storage, the virtualized environment would automatically increase the resources and send a message back to the server," Kreisa says. "That's the endgame, and it's still a ways out."
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