Data recovery rules at storage show
By
Deni Connor
,
Network World
, 04/12/2004
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PHOENIX - The problem isn't really about backing up data, it has more to do with recovering it.
That was the word from last week's Storage Networking World conference in Phoenix, which show organizers said 2,500 people
attended.
To address the need for faster data recovery, users said they increasingly are shifting from tape to disk. Although disk remains
more expensive, the variety of disk-based systems is exploding, and prices are dropping.
Vendors introduced a host of disk-based recovery systems. Announcements included:
• EMC's Clariion Disk Library, which enables disk-based backup and recovery but looks to back-up software as if it were tape-based. A 500G-byte DL300 system
starting at $109,000 still costs about 50% more than a comparable tape system - but the company says the product can back
up and recover data in a fraction of the time.
• Ciena's CN 2000 Storage Extension Platform, which speeds backup, recovery, mirroring and clustering across distances by enabling multiplexing of applications across
separate physical channels within the same SONET/synchronous digital hierarchy or dense wavelength division multiplexing circuit.
• Storactive's LiveServ for Exchange, continuous back-up software that like EMC's Disk Library, backs up data to disk.
• HP's Fiber-Attached Technology Adapted drive technology, which it developed with Seagate Technology and uses disk for data backup
and archiving.
According to Enterprise Storage Group (ESG), products such as these are in sync with customer needs. The firm's recent study
found that 53% of customers in the near future plan to back up all their data to disk at some point in its life cycle.
"Seventy-five percent of those individuals will still use tape for archival purposes," says Tony Asaro, an analyst at ESG.
"They will use disk for their immediate recovery needs and then put everything else to tape.
"Using disk instead of tape will give you performance increases on both backup and recovery," Asaro says. "On the recovery
side, you get a lot of performance improvements just from the fact that if you need to recover a single file from a tape library,
you need to physically find the tape that contains the file." Other benefits he cites are increased data integrity and the
elimination of media management issues.
Lari Sue Taylor, senior vice president and director for enterprise information security and recovery at FleetBoston Financial
in Boston, is a convert from tape to disk for backup and recovery. The financial firm uses a disk-based system supported by
EMC's Symmetrix Remote Data Facility in adaptive copy mode that boasts recovery of business-critical systems in less than
one hour and full recovery of all systems in four to eight hours.
That's a far cry from earlier tape-based systems, including a remote vaulting service. "We found that just recovering tape
to disk and moving all the data we had would take a full 24 hours," she says.
JetBlue Airways uses ADIC's Pathlight VX, which includes tape and disk drives in one library, for backing up 3T bytes of data.
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