Remember this is data that was active for a short period of time but needs to be retained for one reason or another. Chances are extremely high that most of it will never be accessed again but chances are that some, maybe 1% of it might be, so you just can't delete it and you will need to be able to find some of it. That means that the data does not have to be made available instantly, the moment it is decided that it is needed again, but it does need to be instantly searchable and the retrieval needs to occur within a few minutes.
Modern tape is ideal for this use case. Tape has improved in its reliability, its performance and increased its lead in cost for capacity. Most tape libraries can select a tape cartridge, load it and position it to the right location in less than a minute. With tape we can get the data back and as we indicated in a recent briefing note, tape library vendors are adding off-line verification capabilities. The only missing component then is finding that data. The simplest solution for that is to never lose it or in the case of a file system make it look like it is still online.
Several file systems exist today that can combine disk and tape into a single entity that the users interact with as if it were any other file system. As files are first created and saved they are first stored on high speed storage, then as they age they are migrated off to slower storage, maybe a MAID device and then to a tape tier. With the performance of tape being what it is now, it could be possible to eliminate that middle tier. It depends on your comfort level.
You may be wondering if I just snuck an HSM (hierarchical storage management) or ILM (Integrated lifecycle management) design in on you here. To some extent I did. The difference is the level of integration that these file systems can perform and how seamless the movement back and forth between disk and tape is. The other difference is how early in the process you can move to tape now. In the past tape was the place to put data after it was really, really old. Now given its performance you may want to consider it the moment it becomes inactive.
The tape market is so vibrant that it now has its own event, "The Tape Summit", in which tape leaders will gather to further detail these architectures to advance tape's role in the enterprise. The goal is important not only to the tape suppliers but also to you the users. If the negatives that surround tape can be overcome and the clear economic advantages of tape be widened your capacity acquisition costs will go down and power efficiency will go up.
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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.