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Storage and Backup

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George Carlin . . . All you need in life is a little place for your stuff . . . Information ... How long should the files of a user that has left the company be kept? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Storage and Backup


1
Storage and Backup
  • Chapter 16

2
Areas of Discussion
  • Managing the Data
  • Disk Storage Technology
  • Tape Storage and Backup
  • Information Lifecycle Management
  • Additional Resources

3
George Carlin
  • . . . All you need in life is a little place for
    your stuff . . .

4
Information
  • Heart of information is data
  • Entire field is Information Technology
  • Exponential rate of the amount of data growth

5
Managing the Data
  • Data retention
  • User education
  • Shared data storage
  • Quotas

6
Managing the Data continued
  • Data retention establish data-retention
    policies
  • Age of data analysis
  • How long should the files of a user that has left
    the company be kept?
  • How long should backup tapes be kept?
  • What happens to files in shared areas of the
    network?

7
Managing the Data continued
  • Remember
  • Users owners of data
  • IT custodian of data
  • While all sales data may look the same to you,
    all hardware looks the same to them.

8
Managing the Data continued
  • User Education
  • Network is the place to backup rather than on
    local desktops.
  • Travelers can store on network as well as on
    laptop.
  • Avoid saving large files from e-mails due to huge
    space requirements
  • Users can use CD or DVD as backup options rather
    than workstations.

9
Managing the Data continued
  • Storage space grows
  • Backup procedures grow
  • Recovery procedures take longer to complete

10
Managing the Data continued
  • Items that frequently need to be removed
  • Temporary files
  • Copies of software installation images
  • Games
  • Music
  • Personal photos and videos
  • Backups of workstations

11
Managing the Data continued
  • Shared Data Storage
  • Requests should be made to IT
  • Identify which users can access a certain area of
    shared storage
  • Request identifies who is responsible for
    managing that shared storage
  • The days of limitless access and almost limitless
    disk space are over.

12
Managing the Data continued
  • Quotas
  • A users mailbox
  • A network directory
  • The total amount of space available to an
    individual user in all locations

13
Disk Storage Technology
  • Disk drives are the nuts and bolts of data
    storage.
  • Direct Attached Storage
  • DAS is part of the server
  • Considered an inefficient use of hardware due to
    the investment made in the server, and its
    capacity often goes under-utilized.

14
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Network attached storage
  • NAS combines traditional disk array technology
    with intelligence. Intelligence comes from a
    processor and small operating system, embedded in
    the NAS unit. (could be considered a server)
  • The entire unit is optimized for storage and ease
    of use.
  • Can take right out of box and use with very small
    amount of configuration.

15
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Based on file-level access rather than
    block-level access on storage area networks.
  • Storage Area Network
  • SAN block-level access
  • Server issues a request for specific blocks of
    data from the disks method block storage
  • Fibre channel network vs. TCP/IP and Ethernet

16
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Just a bunch of disks (JBOD)
  • Lower level storage solutions vs. SAN and NAS
  • Some say JBOD is synonymous with DAS
  • Others say JBOD is unprotected storage (no RAID
    or mirror-imaging)

17
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Storage Network Connectivity (Fibre Channel and
    iSCSI)
  • Fibre Channel SAN environments have used Fibre
    Channel (FC) for connectivity
  • Provides gigabit speeds and most common
    connection method for SANs.
  • Can be implemented on copper cabling as well as
    fiber-optic cables.

18
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • FC is considerably faster and often used as an
    alternative to SCSI for connecting servers with
    storage devices.
  • Requires specialized hardware FC host-bus
    adapter (HBA) to allow it to connect to an FC
    switch (traditional network switch)
  • Combination of FC cabling, HBAs, and switches is
    commonly referred to as the Fibre Channel, or
    SAN, Fabric.

19
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Can provide speeds of 2 Gbps
  • Variation is Fibre Channel over IP (FCIP)
  • iSCSI
  • Overcomes many limitations of traditional Small
    Computer Systems Interface (SCSI)
  • Distance limitations
  • Number of devices
  • Allows you an almost limitless numbers of devices
    and extends the geography dramatically
    essentially to any device on the LAN or WAN

20
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Can use existing Ethernet infrastructure for your
    SAN solution
  • Trade off Provides half speed of FC technology
  • Disk drive types
  • ATA (also known as IDE) most used type of drive
    in desktop and laptops, uses 16-bit parallel
    interface, supports transfer rates 133 MB/sec.

21
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Serial ATA (SATA) transfer rates of 150MB/sec
  • Future iterations of transfer rates will be 300
    and 600 MB/sec.
  • These devices draw less power and are easier to
    install.

22
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • SCSI latest is SCSI Ultra/320)
  • Transfer rate 320 MB/sec
  • SCSI environment consists of a controller and a
    cable, with all the disk drives connected to the
    same cable.
  • Common to have multiple controllers and multiple
    cables to ensure redundancy and eliminate single
    points of failure.

23
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Factors that Impact Disk Drive Performance
  • Rotation speed range 5,400 to 15,000 rpm
  • The higher the speed, the more often data is in
    the right place to be read
  • Average access time
  • Average time to position the heads so data can be
    read
  • Cache size
  • The bigger the better
  • Internal transfer rate
  • Speed that data can be transferred within the
    drive

24
Disk Storage Technology continued
  • Redundant array of inexpensive/independent disks
    (RAID)
  • Defines different levels of protection with
    tradeoffs of performance and costs
  • Table 16.1 page 441

25
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Preferred method for backup solutions
  • Pros
  • Inexpensive
  • Transportable
  • Cons
  • Much slower than disk
  • Sequential medium
  • More fragile medium than disk and susceptible to
    deterioration over time

26
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Tape and Tape-Drive technologies
  • Table 16.3 on p. 444

27
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Variations on Backup
  • Disk-to-disk-to-tape
  • Tape is slow medium so first backup goes to disk
    as a snapshot, and second backup is from that
    disk to tape
  • Benefits
  • Disk-to-disk backup is fast so impact to
    production environment is minimized
  • Performance hit to production environment is also
    reduced

28
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Backup of the snapshot image happens faster since
    cont competing with any other processes or users
    for performance
  • If user needs file from snapshot, it can be
    retrieved quickly
  • Disadvantage
  • Cost of the device that holds the snapshot image

29
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Disk-to-Disk
  • Factors of consideration in eliminating tape
  • Disk may be prohibitively expensive
  • Isnt portable and could impact flexibility of
    disaster recover plans
  • Live and backup at same location so may have
    backup sent across WAN. Cost of sufficient
    bandwidth could be expensive
  • Restores across Wan may take significant amounts
    of time

30
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Data Encryption
  • Decru and Neoscale Systems are two companies that
    offer solutions for encrypting a backup
  • A Key up to 256-bits in length is commonly used
  • Must store key so can decrypt backup tapes
  • Dedicated network
  • Performs faster
  • Eliminates any impact it may have on users and
    production environment.

31
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Backup Schedule
  • Full captures everything
  • Differential captures only files changed since
    last full backup
  • Incremental captures only files changed since
    backup of any kind.

32
Tape Storage and Backup
  • Backup Storage
  • Store tapes offsite
  • When to take offsite and return to onsite
  • Two copies of backup tapesone onsite and one
    offsite

33
Information Lifecycle Management
  • ILM reflects the fact that the value and use of
    data information change over time.
  • Age data files that havent been modified in
    some time
  • Static data files that generally dont change

34
Information Lifecycle Management
  • With ILM an organization has to define different
    use classes of data critical, static, archival,
    transactional and needs of data over time
    (high-speed access, real-time replication)
  • Once items have been defined, backup storage
    solutions can be determined.
  • IT can then easily manage data and seamlessly
    migrate it to different storage solutions during
    the datas lifetime.

35
Information Lifecycle Management
  • ILM versus Hierarchical Storage Management (HSM)
  • Both have common elements in data movement to
    storage forms
  • Key difference HSM primarily relies on the
    measure of access frequency and/or age to
    determine when a file should be moved

36
Information Lifecycle Management
  • HSM is primarily one-directional (primary to
    secondary and secondary to tertiary)
  • ILM move data based on a number of policies (in
    addition to age and access frequency) and to/from
    any storage solutions.

37
Summary Slide
  • Managing the Data
  • Disk Storage Technology
  • Tape Storage and Backup
  • Information Lifecycle Management
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