Tiered Storage Review

Working with several enterprise clients of late, it's become apparent that there is a not-so-subtle shift of emphasis or prioritization taking place regarding the tiering of storage. To understand this, it's helpful to review the recent history and drivers related tiered storage.

By Jim Damoulakis, ComputerWorld.com,

Working with several enterprise clients of late, it's become apparent that there is a not-so-subtle shift of emphasis or prioritization taking place regarding the tiering of storage. To understand this, it's helpful to review the recent history and drivers related tiered storage.

Fundamentally, the reason we even consider tiering is simple: cost - the opportunity for savings by placing less "valuable" information on lower-cost storage. Without diving down the whole ILM/data classification rabbit hole, let's suffice to say that generally the three primary metrics influencing storage tiering strategy have been performance, availability, and recoverability. In recent years, performance has come to rank behind the other two largely because most business computing performance requirements tended to fall into a band that could be satisfied by a wide range of available storage platforms. The factor that correlated most closely with increased storage spending was the need for advanced functionality, such as replication. However, changes in both business demands and technology capabilities are causing a shift in priority.

From a business perspective, replication functionality, once reserved for only the most critical applications, has become a default requirement for a wider range of applications. Storage vendors have responded by adding or improving replication functionality across their product lines, in some cases even offering essentially the same capabilities across their product lines. While there is not yet 100% parity, it's safe to say that replication is no longer exclusively in the domain of high-end storage systems.

Consider an environment where, from a service level requirements perspective, the majority of applications are deemed to require sub-24 hour recovery. Does this mean that a tiered storage strategy isn't applicable, and all data must land on expensive tier-1 storage? In such a situation, the key differentiator among application requirements is most likely to be performance. Vendors have spotted this trend and are addressing it in several ways, including "within the box" tiered storage. By offering choices ranging from slower, high-capacity SATA storage to high-IO solid-state devices and several options in between, it's possible to provide comparable recoverability services across the board while still enabling cost differentiation based on performance. Of course, deploying multiple tiers within a frame isn't the only way to differentiate performance-based service tiers. For example, performance is also influenced by factors such as aggregation and allocation of bandwidth.

The demand for high application availability and recoverability is not limited to the enterprise. Increased disaster-recovery awareness has caused organizations of all sizes to reassess their capabilities and needs. Likewise, performance profiles are changing with broader adoption of newer classes of applications (e.g. streaming video) and newer application designs (e.g. service-oriented architectures).

Twenty years ago, storage needs were primarily determined based on capacity and performance. Data protection and availability distinctions grew with the rise of network-based storage systems. With data protection functionality now becoming ubiquitous, it looks like performance is once more back on top.

Jim Damoulakis is chief technology officer of GlassHouse Technologies Inc. , a leading provider of independent storage services. He can be reached at jimd@glasshouse.com.

Copyright © 2008 IDG. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Regional Articles
- Tiered Storage Review Alabama
- Tiered Storage Review Alaska
- Tiered Storage Review Arizona
- Tiered Storage Review Arkansas
- Tiered Storage Review California
- Tiered Storage Review Colorado
- Tiered Storage Review Connecticut
- Tiered Storage Review DC
- Tiered Storage Review Delaware
- Tiered Storage Review Florida
- Tiered Storage Review Georgia
- Tiered Storage Review Hawaii
- Tiered Storage Review Idaho
- Tiered Storage Review Illinois
- Tiered Storage Review Indiana
- Tiered Storage Review Iowa
- Tiered Storage Review Kansas
- Tiered Storage Review Kentucky
- Tiered Storage Review Louisiana
- Tiered Storage Review Maine
- Tiered Storage Review Maryland
- Tiered Storage Review Massachusetts
- Tiered Storage Review Michigan
- Tiered Storage Review Minnesota
- Tiered Storage Review Mississippi
- Tiered Storage Review Missouri
- Tiered Storage Review Montana
- Tiered Storage Review Nebraska
- Tiered Storage Review Nevada
- Tiered Storage Review New Hampshire
- Tiered Storage Review New Jersey
- Tiered Storage Review New Mexico
- Tiered Storage Review New York
- Tiered Storage Review North Carolina
- Tiered Storage Review North Dakota
- Tiered Storage Review Ohio
- Tiered Storage Review Oklahoma
- Tiered Storage Review Oregon
- Tiered Storage Review Pennsylvania
- Tiered Storage Review Rhode Island
- Tiered Storage Review South Carolina
- Tiered Storage Review South Dakota
- Tiered Storage Review Tennessee
- Tiered Storage Review Texas
- Tiered Storage Review Utah
- Tiered Storage Review Vermont
- Tiered Storage Review Virginia
- Tiered Storage Review Washington
- Tiered Storage Review West Virginia
- Tiered Storage Review Wisconsin
- Tiered Storage Review Wyoming
Related Articles

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History