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Advanced storage roadmap.


A real density (or bit density), the amount of data that can be stored in one square inch of surface area of recording media, has become the most significant factor in the rapid evolution of magnetic storage technologies. Magnetic recording is clearly the dominant recording technology today and for the foreseeable future. Using magneto-resistive (MR) and Giant MR Heads (GMR (Giant Magnetoresistance) See magnetoresistance. ), magnetic disks surpassed the areal density The number of bits per square inch of storage surface. It typically refers to disk drives, where the number of bits per inch (bpi) times the number of tracks per inch (tpi) yields the areal density.  of optical disks in early 1995. Disk recording density in the laboratory jumped from 35.3 gigabits in 1999 and went over the 100 gigabit per-square-inch level in 2002. Long-range density projection approaches 1 terabit per-square-inch for magnetic disks.

Magnetic mass storage technology advances have enabled the migration of disk units to 3.5-inch and smaller diameter form factors. The 3.5-inch and 2.5-inch form factors are present in all segments of the market: server, desktop, and mobile. Recent introduction of a 1-inch form factor may point the way to future configurations of the disk drives. There are signs that 2.5-inch form factor disk drives may start to displace 3.5-inch drives for many applications due to the increasing areal recording density, unlimited data storage requirements for many applications, as well as constraints on available space in consumer electronics devices.

Magnetic recording for both tapes and disk encountered few real limits in the 1990s as witnessed by a 60-plus percent compounded annual areal density growth rate. Within the next five years, it is anticipated that magnetic disks may encounter a physical barrier known as the super-paramagnetic limit where magnetic particles are so close together that they interfere with each other. So far, this limit has not been reached and may be avoided by using new technologies.

It is likely that the rate of data storage areal density increase in magnetic recording will start to drop gradually due to the greater difficulty in making the new technology work. A particular technical challenge will be to make magnetic recording heads with track width dimensions that are smaller than the minimum feature size of the optical lithographic lith·o·graph  
n.
A print produced by lithography.

tr.v. lith·o·graphed, lith·o·graph·ing, lith·o·graphs
To produce by lithography.
 equipment used in the semiconductor industry.

Advanced Storage Architecture

Storage Networking requires successfully integrating many components that are evolving at different speeds but are all aiming at delivering the information utility class levels of service when they come together. Many of the technological barriers for storage networks, including performance and scaling, are falling. The optimal advanced storage architecture includes the fusion of large pools of storage subsystems The part of a computer system that provides the storage. It includes the controller and disk drives. See storage system.  with network-attached clients connected to heterogeneous servers. At the center of this architecture is the future version of today's network switches and directors, the Storage Domain Director. The advanced, fault-tolerant storage architecture enables centralized cen·tral·ize  
v. cen·tral·ized, cen·tral·iz·ing, cen·tral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To draw into or toward a center; consolidate.

2.
 management of distributed computer resources finally to become a reality.

As the 'brains of the SAN,' the Storage Domain Director, evolves it provides numerous long-overdue storage functions. These include controlling SAN traffic, centralized storage management, storage consolidation, and outboard Not built in. Outboard devices are external to the main unit. Contrast with inboard. See offboard.  data movement between disk and tape subsystems (server-less functions). In addition, heterogeneous data sharing The ability to share the same data resource with multiple applications or users. It implies that the data are stored in one or more servers in the network and that there is some software locking mechanism that prevents the same set of data from being changed by two people at the same time.  of a single unique instance of data, and non-disruptive scalability and configuration, enables the long-awaited capability for proactive and people-transparent storage management. The ability to perform block and file operations simultaneously and thus bridge the 'number and name' worlds within the same storage subsystem is also a most strategic and desired outcome of this advanced architecture. Emerging concepts such as IP storage, advanced SRM (1) (Storage Resource Management) The management of the storage resources in an organization in order to avoid duplication of files and to determine space utilization across all servers. , and in-band (symmetric) or out-of-band (asymmetric A difference between two opposing modes. It typically refers to a speed disparity. For example, in asymmetric operations, it takes longer to compress and encrypt data than to decompress and decrypt it. Contrast with symmetric. See asymmetric compression and public key cryptography. ) virtualization An umbrella term for enhancing a computer's ability to do work. Following are the ways virtualization is used.

Hardware Virtualization
Partitioning the computer's memory into separate and isolated "virtual machines" simulates multiple machines within one physical computer.
 appliances are providing valuable building blocks for advanced storage architectures. Many companies are delivering pieces of the complete information utility, but the complete vision path will take several years to arrive. Nonetheless, the path to the future for storage subsystems can be described using the components that are just now becoming visible.

www.horison.com

Reprinted from Storage Manifesto with permission from Fred Moore

For other people named Fred Moore, see Fred Moore (disambiguation).


Fred Moore (born September 7, 1911 in Los Angeles, California, USA; died November 23, 1952 in Burbank, California, USA in a road accident), was an American character
, president, Horison Information Strategies.
COPYRIGHT 2003 West World Productions, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Storage Management
Author:Moore, Fred
Publication:Computer Technology Review
Date:Sep 1, 2003
Words:635
Previous Article:The next evolution in storage: clustered storage architectures.(Storage Management)
Next Article:Ensuring fairness in the back-end of storage systems.(Connectivity)



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