The problem with today's storage optimization providing efficiency as well as a capacity savings is that it is very compartmentalized today. When data needs to move from one storage type to another it often has to be inflated or unoptimized, moved to the device and then potentially re-optimized. This means that the source storage has spent processing resources on reinflating the data, the network has to handle the full data load and the processors on the target storage has to re-optimize the data a second time.
To some extent as storage vendors continue to adopt primary storage deduplication some of the re-deduplication can be reduced and potentially efficiency between those systems can increase. A copy between tiers of storage, especially when connected to the same storage controller, should not require a re-inflation of data. This does mean that you would be locked into the same vendor for all your storage needs unless some sort of open standard is agreed to within the storage community. As it stands right now though, storage suppliers that have primary storage deduplication in their systems and have deduplicated target devices typically have to re-inflate data before it is moved.
However, as we discussed in our recent article "What is Real-Time Data Compression" some appliance like systems can operate inline between different vendor's storage systems and provide the functionality today across a variety of platforms. It can move across networks and storage tiers in an optimized state. We expect this functionality to increase and we expect traditional storage vendors to provide a common optimization engine across their storage offerings. This is also an excellent opportunity for the stand alone storage virtualization appliance and software vendors to add storage optimization to their technology.
As storage optimization becomes more universally available and controlled by a single optimization engine the ability to optimize once moves closer to reality. With optimize once networks can handle many times more traffic than they do today without a measurable loss in performance. What you need to decide is should you get your optimization technology from a single vendor and hope they integrate or do you select a single neutral appliance that can optimize across different types and manufacturers of storage?
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George Crump is lead analyst of Storage Switzerland, an IT analyst firm focused on the storage and virtualization segments. Find Storage Switzerland's disclosure statement here.