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NetApp customers can now de-duplicate primary storage from other vendors such as EMC, Hitachi and HP, NetApp is announcing Wednesday.
NetApp for the past year has been trumpeting its ability to de-duplicate primary storage, as opposed to backup storage, the more common target. But previously NetApp only de-duplicated primary storage on its own hardware. With Wednesday’s announcement, NetApp is adding this ability to its V-Series line of storage virtualization products, which work with systems from third-party vendors. (Compare storage products)
“None of these guys have de-duplication for primary storage,” says Chris Cummings, senior director of data protection solutions at NetApp. “If you want de-duplication for EMC primary disk, NetApp’s the only game in town.”
EMC’s de-duplication strategy centers around its Avamar backup and recovery product line.
De-duplication, which eliminates redundant or duplicate data, is taking on increased importance as enterprises deal with vastly increasing amounts of digital information. The ability to reduce data storage needs can help keep power and cooling costs under control, Cummings notes.
“Certain data center operators are now being given a kilowatt budget,” he says. “If that’s the case, the efficiency of storage is going to come under greater scrutiny.”
NetApp began adding de-duplication to enterprise products such as the FAS6000 series last year, and the capability is now in all NetApp systems except some technology targeted at small and midsize businesses, Cummings says.
De-duplication of primary storage is proving particularly attractive to customers running virtualized servers, he says. “We can de-duplicate storage that is sitting underneath a virtualized server implementation. For NetApp, we’ve seen an average of 70 % to 90% de-duplication in virtual servers,” he says. If you’re running up to 16 virtual machines on a single physical box, as many customers do, “that’s a huge amount of space savings,” he adds.
NetApp’s de-duplication is part of its Data ONTAP operating system, which comes with NetApp storage at no extra cost. NetApp storage ranges broadly in price. While a NetApp FAS2000 box starts at about $15,000, Cummings says, a large enterprise deploying lots of high-end storage might spend more than a million dollars.
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Comments (1)
But....its post-processingBy Anonymous on July 30, 2008, 8:40 amBig deal...whats the difference between a Netapp NAS filer doing nightly de-dupe for direct connected disks, vs a Netapp NAS Gateway doing the same. The only...
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