Think your Backup is Your Archive? Think Again!

The challenges of archiving structured and unstructured data

Traditionally, organizations had two electronic storage technologies: disk and tape. Whilst disk became the primary storage media, tape offered a cost-effective media to store infrequently accessed contents.

This led organizations to consider tape as not just a backup media but as the organization’s archive which then resulted in using monthly full system backups over extended durations to support archiving requirements. 

Over time, legislative and regulatory bodies began to accept extended time delays for inquiries and investigations caused by tape restore limitations.

Since the beginning of this century, the following trends have impacted the IT industry:

  • Single disk drive capacity has grown exponentially to multi-TB delivering cost effective performance levels.
  • The exponential growth of unstructured data due to the introduction of social media networks, Internet of Things, etc. have exceeded all planned growth.
  • The introduction of cloud storage (storage as a service) that offer an easy way to acquire storage services with incremental investment that fits any organization’s financial planning at virtually infinite scalability.
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Take the 2017 Archive Requirements Survey!

 

by Samuel A. Fineberg, Co-chair, SNIA LTR TWG

Ten years ago, a SNIA Task Force undertook a 100 Year Archive Requirements Survey with a goal to determine requirements for long-term digital retention in the data center.  The Task Force hypothesized that the practitioner survey respondents would have experiences with terabyte archive systems that would be adequate to define business and operating system requirements for petabyte-sized information repositories in the data center. Read More