Data Storage Leaders Introduce New Wares 29
louismg writes "Data storage giant EMC announced upgrades to their storage hardware family this morning, and claimed performance increases of 25% to 100%, with increased capacity and disk speeds. This comes two weeks after competitor BlueArc announced Titan, the world's biggest ever NAS box, which claims throughput of 5 Gbps and 256 terabytes in a single hardware file system.
How much is enough, and as IT administrators, what is the answer to today's issues - improved hardware, or software?"
I have some predictions too... (Score:3, Insightful)
Something revolutionary is coming soon [revivio.com] though.
Re:I have some predictions too... (Score:3, Insightful)
Some of this work is happening in the academic community (OceanStore, et al) and some is happening in the commercial sector (Avamar, Connected, etc etc).
It seems to me that the storage industry is advancing on two main fronts.
First, hardware is getting better and
Re:I have some predictions too... (Score:3, Insightful)
There have long been snapshoting solutions too, the key diference here is that you can go back to any point in time, and that is truly new. With other version control systems you can only go back to where you manually told it to checkpoint.
As for revolutions in indexing and searching storage, I have yet to see something that's not a new take on an old concept. There a
Re:I have some predictions too... (Score:2)
More info [raidn.com]
Re:I have some predictions too... (Score:1)
Oh, and those 8 years of development you get to hear about when reading the link on their website titled "RAIDn"? I pity their shareholders' nerves.
Seagate, too! (Score:4, Informative)
And yet, strangely, 100% speed increase of broken (Score:1, Informative)
Improved backups.. (Score:4, Insightful)
sri
Re:Improved backups.. (Score:2)
Instead of better backup, we need intelligent agents that figure out whats duplicates or unneeded old versions and deletes it. That makes better use of the storage you have, and makes it easier to find what you need amidst the clutter.
Re:Improved backups.. (Score:2)
Its also a clever way of getting you to spend twice
Re:Improved backups.. (Score:1)
My understanding of snapshots may be a bit out of date (latest employer doesn't have storage with this feature) but snapsh
The price (Score:3, Informative)
BS (Score:1)
All this claim of speed, in theory, and I get speeds that wouldn't even max out usb2.
Re:BS (Score:3, Informative)
Re:BS (Score:2)
All the "max bandwidth" figures you see are for streaming reads, where the disk heads move (relatively) smoothly along logically continguous chunks of disk.
Compare that to copying from one part of the disk to another. Your 100Mbyte file will be copied in chunks. The sequence of events will go something like this at a low level:
while( data left to copy )
{
move disk heads to offset in file to be read
read a chunk
move disk heads to offset in file to be wr
Re:BS (Score:2)
Re: Copying one file to another (Score:2)
Things like that also contribute to the performance penalty.
Thought..... (Score:1)