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Is your RAID lying to your app? (I/O with Mark & Hal).


MARK: Have you noticed the 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.
 of the storage industry, especially when it comes to HDD (Hard Disk Drive) See hard disk and HDD caddy.

HDD - hard disk drive
 RAIDS?

HAL Hal: see Halle, Belgium.
hal

In Sufism, a state of mind reached from time to time by mystics during their journey toward God. The ahwal (plural of hal) are God-given graces that appear when a soul is purified of its attachments to the material world.
: What's "virtual" about a disk drive?

MARK: I'm talking I'm Talking was a 1980s Australian funk-pop rock band, noted for launching vocalist Kate Ceberano. History
After the break-up of the Melbourne-based experimental funk band Essendon Airport in 1983, members Robert Goodge (guitar), Ian Cox (saxophone) and Barbara Hogarth
 about making the most of storage resources-disk resources, that is.

HAL: Why? Is there a shortage of storage space? Drives are cheap.

MARK: Not a shortage. Quite the opposite. Many end-users are making use of only 30-40% of their RAID disk capacities.

HAL: There's no technical. reason for that, is there? I mean, unless managers are setting capacity aside for redundancy or automatic backups, and just never getting around to recording those sectors. Are they doing that?

MARK: In some cases, yeah, I guess they could be. But for the most part, it's bad. management.

HAL: Whoa! Don't scare off Verb 1. scare off - cause to lose courage; "dashed by the refusal"
daunt, frighten away, frighten off, scare away, pall, scare, dash

intimidate, restrain - to compel or deter by or as if by threats
 our readers! They don't want to hear that they might be bad managers.

MARK: I don't think that'll be news to a lot of them! Storage management is a growth area-

HAL: And they've got to grow with it.

MARK: We've talked before about the problems you run into when you over-specify products. Nothing exemplifies that better than HDD capacity. You've got managers ordering extra capacity when they're using only 3040% of what they already have.

HAL: I heard you give out those numbers before. Where did they come from?

MARK: Ed Broderick, one of the analysts at the Robert Frances Group, said that the cost of managing disk storage today is approximately four to 10 times the acquisition cost of a RAID subsystem A unit or device that is part of a larger system. For example, a disk subsystem is a part of a computer system. A bus is a part of the computer. A subsystem usually refers to hardware, but it may be used to describe software. , and that only 30-40% of that capacity is actually used.

HAL: Assuming that's true, what does that mean for storage managers?

MARK: At the StorageWorld conference, held in August, StorageTek unveiled its latest shared-virtual array product, which it claims will move utilization up to about 80%.

HAL: But I still don't see any underlying reason for anxiety. Efficiency is practically automated au·to·mate  
v. au·to·mat·ed, au·to·mat·ing, au·to·mates

v.tr.
1. To convert to automatic operation: automate a factory.

2.
, these days. When I check my own disk drives every couple of months I get rid of unnecessary files, I run optimization optimization

Field of applied mathematics whose principles and methods are used to solve quantitative problems in disciplines including physics, biology, engineering, and economics.
 utilities, like a defragmenter, and generally open up more capacity, There are plenty of equivalent tools for managing big RAIDS.

MARK: The tools are there. But are they being used?

HAL: Well, if not-why not?

MARK: A matter of limited time, I think. Does that manager really have the time to delete To remove an item of data from a file or to remove a file from the disk. See file wipe, trash and undelete.

1. (operating system) delete - (Or "erase") To make a file inaccessible.
 old email, defrag drives, and so on?

HAL: It's in the job description, I'm sure.

MARK: But he or she may not have final say over what gets saved and what doesn't. Would you delegate to someone else the responsibility for deciding which of your own emails was important and which wasn't?

HAL: Hmmm, you may be right, there. I don't think people in other departments want to give up the final say-so when it comes to files that they created or may want to refer to sometime in the future.

MARK: So they go to IT, and say, "We need X-amount of capacity." And that's where virtualization comes in. It lets managers maximize their existing disk utilization. It also eases the pressure on IT budgets, which will stretch further if managers don't have to keep buying new equipment.

HAL: I still don't see how it all works, though.

MARK: Okay. Let's say an application needs access to 2GB to run, but it may not need all of that capacity right away when it launches. So, a virtualization scheme tells the app: "You've got two gigs from the start," which isn't really true. You're sort-of lying to the app. As the app demands more storage, it gets more, but only in increments. That allows IT managers to pay as they go and not have to buy those extra 2GB just for that app.

HAL: I see. Virtualization gives an app what it needs at any given moment in time, rather than dedicating a big block of disk space to it, whether. it needs that space or not. Let's see Let's See was a Canadian television series broadcast on CBC Television between September 6, 1952 to July 4, 1953. The segment, which had a running time of 15 minutes, was a puppet show with a character named Uncle Chichimus (voice of John Conway), which presented each  if our readers- and they're all good managers, of course-

MARK: Of course! Let's see if they're using a virtualization strategy already. If you are, let me know, at mark_ferelli@wwpi.com.

HAL: And if you don't quite get the point of virtualization, or you think it's still just a buzzword A term that refers to the latest technology or a term that sounds catchy. If not a flash in the pan, new technologies become mainstream. For example, Java was a hot buzzword in the 1990s, but should remain a major topic for decades.  to scare managers into buying new software, email me at hal_glatzer@wwpi.com.
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Author:Glatzer, Hal
Publication:Computer Technology Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2002
Words:721
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