Overland Storage Layers in Disk-Based Data Protection
In case no one has noticed lately, the number of ways in which companies can configure disk-based storage systems to protect their data has multiplied significantly. This fact was brought clearly into focus by a pre-recorded video lecture that I recently watched on Overland Storage's Tiered Data Protection (TDP) website. Though I think most users are well aware that disk is now a viable target for backup, it didn't really hit me until I watched this video by Overland Storage's VP of Worldwide Sales, Bob Farkaly, just how many configuration options are available when using disk as a backup target.
During the presentation, "Professor" Farkaly took the viewer (in this case, me) through the disk-based offerings that Overland Storage has for backup. These include:
It seems that with the incessant noise one hears about deduplication every time you read or hear about something storage related, it's easy to forget about the fact that using disk-as-disk is not necessarily a bad thing. Deduplication may incur a write penalty when backing up data, a read penalty when retrieving data and, more than likely, an up-front financial penalty when purchasing and licensing the deduplication technology. Though Overland Storage offers a deduplicating backup appliance (which I'll get to in a second), these versions of the REO peel away some of the complexity and cost and give users options to present the systems as either disk or virtual tape libraries (VTLs) through iSCSI and FC interfaces.The videos on Overland Storage's TDP website are definitely worth the time to watch for those who are looking to learn more about tiered data protection as well as those who also want a better understanding of what is the best type of disk system to introduce into your backup process. What you read in the press can sometimes leave one with the impression that deduplicating all of your backup data is the only way to go. Longer term it probably is, but for now the journey of introducing disk into the backup process has just begun and Overland Storage's strategy of "Walk, then run" when introducing disk into the backup process is one worth following.
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