There's a tape solution for every organization.Those who have been reading this column for the past year or so know that digital tape provides reliable, cost-effective storage for a wide range of applications. What we haven't covered is the range of solutions offered by the tape vendor community. Given the wide array of choices available, there are two conclusions that are evident: first, innovation in the tape industry is alive and well; and second, there truly is a solution available to fit any size organization, from the home user to the smallest office to the largest enterprise data center. Tape drive and media vendors have tailored their individual products and formats to address the very diverse needs of each type of organization. Likewise, there are automation products at the entry level, midrange midrange Epidemiology The halfway point or midpoint in a set of observations; for most data, MR is calculated as the sum of the smallest observation and the largest observation, divided by 2; for age data, one is added to the numerator; a midrange is usually and enterprise with appropriate scale and management features to meet the specific requirements of each user category and their needs. [GRAPHIC OMITTED] Customers looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. a tape solution have a great number of choices available, both in terms of drive technology and in automation (autoloaders and libraries). It should be the particular storage and data protection requirements (from the following variables) that determine the right or best choices. Capacity: For backup applications, the capacity of a single tape cartridge See cartridge. , including compression, should exceed the capacity of the source disk to help manage the complexity of data recovery operations Operations conducted to search for, locate, identify, rescue, and return personnel, sensitive equipment, or items critical to national security. . On the other hand, the tape shouldn't be so large that most of its capacity is wasted on incremental backups See backup types. (operating system) incremental backup - A kind of backup that copies all files which have changed since the date of the previous backup. The first backup of a file system should include all files - a "full backup". Call this level 0. . Many formats support multiple size (or length) tapes to address this issue. Those formats with active development roadmaps will continue to see a periodic doubling of their capacity, usually every 2 years or so, to keep up with the capacity increases in hard-disk systems and the growing thirst thirst, sensation indicating the body's need for water. Dry or salty food and dry, dusty air may induce such a sensation by depleting moisture in the mucous membranes of the mouth and throat. for affordable storage options among customers. In evaluating a drive's capacity, it is important to look at both the native and compressed specifications. All tape drives support on-board On board usually means to be traveling on some vehicle. For example, Baby On Board. Compare with overboard. Metaphorically, the term on-board is often used to refer to some piece of technology that is integrated in a moving vehicle, for example: Data Transfer Rate: Tape drives operate most efficiently when data is streamed to and from them at their maximum data transfer speed; the faster this rate, the shorter the backup windows will need to be, assuming the servers feeding the tape drive can supply data at that rate. Faster data transfer rates also mean faster full restore operations (less downtime The time during which a computer is not functioning due to hardware, operating system or application program failure. when something bad happens). Data Access Speed (Time to Data): In general, it takes longer to load a single-reel tape cartridge than one with dual reels, and then seek to a given point on the tape for data retrieval operations. On single-reel tapes, the tape leader must be engaged by the drive, fed through the drive's internal tape path, and then wound around the internal hub. This doesn't have much impact in streaming applications such as backup, but can be a big issue in random-access applications such as near-line archival and ILM. Of those listed above, DAT (1) (Dynamic Address Translator) A hardware circuit that converts a virtual memory address into a real address. See also DAT file. (2) (Digital Audio Tape) A magnetic tape technology used for backing up data. 72, 9840C and AIT-4 have dual-reel tape cartridges and offer excellent time-to-data performance. Library Support: In larger organizations, it will be important to find 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. library products that support the chosen drive technology. There are many choices for libraries at many different capacity points, with varying support for one or more drive types, sometimes allowing combinations of different drives within a single library. Be sure to account for anticipated growth during the life cycle of the system: but given that drive and media technologies may improve through several generations during the life of the library, the potential capacity of the library should grow substantially over time. For small office environments, a single tape drive perhaps networked through a backup or application server, might be sufficient for all data protection and archival programs. In slightly larger operations, an autoloader is often used, which typically shuffles up to 7 tape cartridges to a single drive. The next larger range of tape automation is sometimes referred to as an entry-level or mini-library. These boxes contain between 10 and 25 tape cartridges and either one or two drives. Some vendors enable stacking of multiple mini-libraries, with a mechanism to move media between them, to create larger, scalable systems. Next up are the mid-range libraries, holding anywhere between 30 and 1,000 tape cartridges, and from one to several dozen drives. These units are often highly configurable and field expandable, and may come with specialized spe·cial·ize v. spe·cial·ized, spe·cial·iz·ing, spe·cial·iz·es v.intr. 1. To pursue a special activity, occupation, or field of study. 2. management software. Some models even allow partitioning To divide a resource or application into smaller pieces. See partition, application partitioning and PDQ. of the drives and media into logically separate devices to support diverse applications (such as backup or archive) that cannot natively share tape storage resources. The high end of the automation market, supporting large enterprise data centers, includes a selection of devices that can scale to over 6,000 media cartridges
Hardware Virtualization Partitioning the computer's memory into separate and isolated "virtual machines" simulates multiple machines within one physical computer. software, and have high-availability capabilities to support the most demanding customer applications. The Chart, in a logarithmic scale Noun 1. logarithmic scale - scale on which actual distances from the origin are proportional to the logarithms of the corresponding scale numbers graduated table, ordered series, scale, scale of measurement - an ordered reference standard; "judging on a scale of 1 , describes the breadth of capacity options that customers have for tape solutions, ranging from a 36GB single drive to multi-petabyte enterprise systems. Again, this uses native drive and media capacities. Multiply mul·ti·ply v. 1. To increase the amount, number, or degree of. 2. To breed or propagate. accordingly. Reliability: As with all computer and electronics equipment, there are ranges of durability du·ra·ble adj. 1. Capable of withstanding wear and tear or decay: a durable fabric. 2. designed into each tape drive and library product. Be sure to choose products that meet your intended usage patterns. Data Retention: If you need to retain the data stored on tape for a mandated period of time, be sure that the tape manufacturer certifies data retention for at least that long. Many of today's professional tape technologies can retain data for at least 15 years, meeting most government agency mandates. For applications that require or recommend storage on write-protected media, several formats today offer Write-Once, Read-Many (WORM) tape alternatives, including AIT, S-AIT, S-DLT and 3592. The recently released specification for LTO (Linear Tape Open) A family of open magnetic tape standards developed by HP, IBM and Quantum (formerly the Certance subsidiary of Seagate) that are licensed to third-party vendors. LTO cartridges contain a memory that stores historical usage data. Ultrium Gen 3 also includes a WORM capability. Cost: Once all of the operational requirements (programming) operational requirements - Qualitative and quantitative parameters that specify the desired capabilities of a system and serve as a basis for determining the operational effectiveness and suitability of a system prior to deployment. have been met, the cost of the combined tape drive, media and automation alternatives should be the last variable evaluated to come to a final decision. There is obviously a lot that goes into making the right choice in a tape storage solution. The good news is that, given the broad range of options available, there is bound to be a perfect solution for almost every situation. Going forward, you can be assured that the tape drive, media and library vendor community is continuing to work hard to meet the current and future data storage and protection needs of each and every data owner. Drive & Media Drive Native Transfer Format Manufacturers Capacity Rate Compression DAT72 (DDS-5) HP, IBM 36 GB 3 MB/sec 2:1 9840C StorageTek 40 GB 30 MB/sec 2:1 3590 IBM 60 GB 14 MB/sec 2:1 9940B StorageTek 200 GB 30 MB/sec 2:1 AIT-4 Sony 200 GB 24 MB/sec 2.6:1 LTO Ultrium Gen 2 HP, IBM 200 GB 35 MB/sec 2:1 3592 IBM 300 GB 40 MB/sec 2:1 SDLT-600 Quantum 300 GB 36 MB/sec 2:1 S-AIT Sony 500 GB 30 MB/sec 2.6:1 Rich Harada is president of the Tape Technology Council. www.tapecouncil.org Opening shots in continuing stories ... |
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