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ALL TOOLS, TRENDS & ANALYSIS
NOV '04 TABLE OF CONTENTS

Additional Tools, Trends & Analysis
First Look: Asigra Televaulting for Enterprises
Hands-On Review: Softek Performance Tuner
Accommodating arrays
Cheap SANs--Hype or Hot?
Synthetic Full Backup Catching On
  >> SEE ALL TOOLS, TRENDS & ANALYSIS

Features
IBM's new arrays
Tiered storage has arrived
How to design a core/edge SAN
The search for cost-effective disaster recovery
4Gb--ready or not, here it comes
  >> SEE ALL FEATURES

Columns
Editorial: Common sense triumphs: Common sense triumphs
Behind the firewall: Low-cost drives not created equal ... Microsoft checks out PolyServe ... Regulation rouses interest in data encryption.
Hot Spots: Bring disaster recovery home: Disaster recovery services offer convenience and economy, but they may not protect your company's data sufficiently--maybe it's time to bring DR back in-house.
Best Practices: Backup operations redux: Readers comments on July's column on 10 steps for better backups raise some new issues.
Storage bin: A business with a heart:
  >> SEE ALL COLUMNS

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Girding for Grids

Issue: Nov 2004


The storage industry is hot for grids, but will users find their way through the hype? "People are definitely trying to hitch their wagon to this fancy marketing term," says John Joseph, vice president of marketing at EqualLogic, which makes the PeerStorage IP SAN.

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A grid is a cluster that connects in a mesh rather than a star topology, says Clive Surfleet, chief strategy officer at Exanet, which makes high-performance network attached storage (NAS) software. In a star cluster, he says, every node is connected to the other via a single switch. In a grid, there are multiple paths between nodes through smaller switches.

From a technical perspective, the term grid is well understood, but tack on the word "storage" and you immediately get confusion. "I've heard people use the term grid with storage in two ways," says Surfleet. "There's storage for grid computing, and then there's a storage system architected as a grid."

Examples of storage systems targeted at grid computing include 3PAR's InServ, whose block virtualization technology may make it easier to provision storage. Grid-architected storage systems, on the other hand, include Exanet's ExaStore, HP's StorageWorks Reference Information Storage System (RISS) with its "smart cells," and NetApp's forthcoming Storage Grid.

Storage for grid computing usually also implies a global namespace, via NAS or shared SAN file system software. A grid-connected storage system, however, doesn't necessarily offer a global namespace. For example, EqualLogic's PeerStorage arrays connect in a grid fashion but, as block devices, do not provide a single file system or namespace.

"Grid is an old and relatively loose term," says Brendon Howe, vice president of marketing and business development at Acopia, Lowell, MA, whose ARX switches aggregate back-end file servers and NAS boxes. For his customers, grid is more about generic concepts of scalability and reusing existing infrastructure. "People aren't looking for large-scale, everything new kinds of infrastructure anymore," he says. With grids, "they're looking for more of a utility computing model."





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