IBM plans open-source storage strategy

By Stephen Shankland
23 December 2002 11:50 AM
Tags: java, storage, server, ibm, servers, source, open, open source

Use of pools


The use of the pools in conjunction with preset policies will let administrators automate tasks such as data backup, Menon said. The system also means the same files can be accessed directly by different operating systems.

Currently, because most operating systems have their own ways of storing files, that's difficult to do without using file system software from a company such as Veritas Software.

But for servers with multiple operating systems to tap into Storage Tank, a piece of software called an agent must be running to communicate with the metadata server. IBM plans to release a sample agent program as open-source software, Pease said.

Releasing the example software will permit others to write agents to tap into Storage Tank, Pease said. In addition, IBM will describe the protocols the agents use to communicate with the metadata servers, allowing others to build their own metadata servers if they wish, he said.

IBM hopes its strategy will make Storage Tank widely used. "Our goal for Storage Tank is nothing short of world domination," Pease said, only partly joking.

IBM's Almaden labs are working on several technologies besides Storage Tank, showing off several products in a recent media tour of the facility.

IBM expects only about 60 percent to 65 percent of its research lab projects to reach the product stage, Menon said. "We don't want to be more successful, because if we're not being crazy enough, we're not being challenged enough," he said.

IBM has several other projects stewing at the lab:

  • A project code-named SledRunner is designed to give priority access to the programs that need a fast response time from hard drive arrays. Often low-priority jobs take up a storage system's time when those jobs could be postponed a few fractions of a second. The SledRunner name stems from the acronym SLE (service level enforcement).

  • IBM is taking a crack at a technology that it acknowledges has flopped in the past--arranging blocks of data on a hard drive in the order it will be needed, which minimises the time the hard drive has to spend moving mechanical components to grab the next tidbit of information. This project, called Automatic Locality Improving Storage (ALIS), relies on arranging data after monitoring the order in which it's actually used as a computing process runs.

  • For a future version of Storage Tank, IBM plans a front-end "gateway" so that remote computers can tap into a tank over a network. It's similar in concept to EMC's Celerra product or Network Appliance's products in a deal with Hitachi Data Systems.

  • IBM is working on a "semantic file system," software to make it easier to find a specific file. Current file systems store files in an ever-more-complex cascade of directories, but a better method than indexed contents of files, for example, could help people find what they need faster--"a sort of Google for enterprise file systems," Menon said.

  • "Differential remote copy" is a technology to speed up the process of copying data on one storage system to a distant site with the identical data that protects against disasters such as earthquakes. The technique sends only the data that has changed since the last update, Menon said.

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