moving beyond traditional backup and archiving
DESCRIPTION
Moving beyond traditional storage backup and archiving: podcast presentation with David Scott, SVP and GM of HP Storage; Calvin Zito @HPStorageGuy, and Jason Buffington, Senior Analyst at ESG, @jbuffTRANSCRIPT
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice.
Changing Nothing Risks Everything. Moving beyond traditional backup & archiving
Hosted by @HPStorageGuy Calvin Zito
David Scott, SVP and GM, HP Storage
Jason Buffington, Sr Analyst, Enterprise Strategy Group
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 2
Listen to the audio of this webcast
Go to the Around the Storage Block podcast
• hpstorage.me/ATSB-podcasts
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• This webcast is #162
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 3
Today’s guests
David Scott SVP and GM, HP Storage
Calvin Zito Blogger & @HPStorageGuy
• Prior to HP, President and CEO of 3PAR
• Lead 3PAR from early-stage, through IPO, and acquisition
• 30 years experience in enterprise storage, software and servers
Jason Buffington Senior Analyst, ESG & @JBuff
• 23-year Backup Guy in channel, ISVs and Microsoft
• Blog: TechnicalOptimist.com
• Twitter: @JBUFF
• With HP since 1983
• In HP Storage since 1990
• Blog: www.hp.com/storage/blog
• Twitter: @HPStorageGuy
Over 80 years of IT experience!
© 2013 Enterprise Strategy Group
20%
20%
22%
22%
22%
24%
25%
26%
27%
29%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35%
Business continuity/disaster recovery programs*
Regulatory compliance initiatives*
Major application deployments or upgrades
Use cloud infrastructure services
Desktop virtualization
Data center consolidation
Manage data growth
Increased use of server virtualization
Improve data backup and recovery
Information security initiatives
Which of the following would you consider to be your organization’s most important IT priorities over the next 12 months?
(Percent of respondents, N=540, ten responses accepted)
* five way tie at 20%
Source: ESG Research Report, 2013 IT Spending Intentions Survey, January 2013.
4
© 2013 by The Enterprise Strategy Group, Inc. 5
20%
20%
21%
21%
21%
22%
24%
25%
25%
31%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35%
Bring-your-own-device(BYOD) policy
Desktop virtualization
Increased use of server virtualization
Deploying applications on or for new mobile …
Mobile workforce enablement
Improve collaboration capabilities
Information security initiatives
Use cloud infrastructure services
Business continuity/disaster recovery programs
Improve data backup and recovery
Which of the following would you consider to be your organization’s most important IT priorities over the next 12 months? (Percent of respondents, N=155,
ten responses accepted)
The “Status Quo” for Backups Today
6 © 2013 by The Enterprise Strategy Group, Inc.
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2D2T), 31%
Data is backed up to on-site disk storage with no off-site
copy (D2D), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site tape storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2T2T), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent over the WAN to off-site disk (D2D2WAN),
15%
Data is backed up to on-site tape storage with no off-site
copy (D2T), 10%
Data is backed up over the WAN directly to a secondary
corporate site such as a headquarters location or
other corporate data center (no on-site storage of backup
data) (D2WAN), 7%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is then sent to a third-party cloud storage service
provider (D2D2C), 5%
Data is backed up over the WAN to a third-party backup SaaS/cloud service provider
(no on-site storage of backup data) (D2C), 2%
The “Status Quo” for Backups Today
7 © 2013 by The Enterprise Strategy Group, Inc.
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2D2T), 31%
Data is backed up to on-site disk storage with no off-site
copy (D2D), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site tape storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2T2T), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent over the WAN to off-site disk (D2D2WAN),
15%
Data is backed up to on-site tape storage with no off-site
copy (D2T), 10%
Data is backed up over the WAN directly to a secondary
corporate site such as a headquarters location or
other corporate data center (no on-site storage of backup
data) (D2WAN), 7%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is then sent to a third-party cloud storage service
provider (D2D2C), 5%
Data is backed up over the WAN to a third-party backup SaaS/cloud service provider
(no on-site storage of backup data) (D2C), 2%
Tape (56%)
The “Status Quo” for Backups Today
8 © 2013 by The Enterprise Strategy Group, Inc.
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2D2T), 31%
Data is backed up to on-site disk storage with no off-site
copy (D2D), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site tape storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2T2T), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent over the WAN to off-site disk (D2D2WAN),
15%
Data is backed up to on-site tape storage with no off-site
copy (D2T), 10%
Data is backed up over the WAN directly to a secondary
corporate site such as a headquarters location or
other corporate data center (no on-site storage of backup
data) (D2WAN), 7%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is then sent to a third-party cloud storage service
provider (D2D2C), 5%
Data is backed up over the WAN to a third-party backup SaaS/cloud service provider
(no on-site storage of backup data) (D2C), 2%
Cloud (7%)
The “Status Quo” for Backups Today
9 © 2013 by The Enterprise Strategy Group, Inc.
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2D2T), 31%
Data is backed up to on-site disk storage with no off-site
copy (D2D), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site tape storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2T2T), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent over the WAN to off-site disk (D2D2WAN),
15%
Data is backed up to on-site tape storage with no off-site
copy (D2T), 10%
Data is backed up over the WAN directly to a secondary
corporate site such as a headquarters location or
other corporate data center (no on-site storage of backup
data) (D2WAN), 7%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is then sent to a third-party cloud storage service
provider (D2D2C), 5%
Data is backed up over the WAN to a third-party backup SaaS/cloud service provider
(no on-site storage of backup data) (D2C), 2%
Disk-only (37%)
The “Status Quo” for Backups Today
10 © 2013 by The Enterprise Strategy Group, Inc.
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2D2T), 31%
Data is backed up to on-site disk storage with no off-site
copy (D2D), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site tape storage and a
copy is sent off-site via removable media (i.e., tape)
(D2T2T), 15%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is sent over the WAN to off-site disk (D2D2WAN),
15%
Data is backed up to on-site tape storage with no off-site
copy (D2T), 10%
Data is backed up over the WAN directly to a secondary
corporate site such as a headquarters location or
other corporate data center (no on-site storage of backup
data) (D2WAN), 7%
Data is initially backed up to on-site disk storage and a
copy is then sent to a third-party cloud storage service
provider (D2D2C), 5%
Data is backed up over the WAN to a third-party backup SaaS/cloud service provider
(no on-site storage of backup data) (D2C), 2%
Disk-first (73%)
Commitment to Current Backup Process
11 © 2013 Enterprise Strategy Group
Use a new backup solution, 44%
Use the same backup solution, 32%
Use a third-party cloud backup service
instead of an in-house solution, 16%
Don’t know, 8%
If provided the opportunity to completely re-architect its backup process(es) from scratch, do you believe your organization would: (Percent of respondents, N=323)
Source: ESG Research Report, Trends in Data Protection Modernization, August 2012.
Ba
ck
up
s
Sn
ap
sho
ts
Re
plic
atio
n
[----------------------- Deduplication -------------------------- ]
Arch
ivin
g
Disaste
r R
ecove
ry
Bu
sin
ess C
on
tin
uity
Hig
h A
vaila
bility
The Spectrum of Data Protection
To be agile, consider where data must be throughout its protection lifespan:
The Data Protection Solution Architecture (DPSA)
© 2013 by The Enterprise Strategy Group, Inc.
Primary Storage (snapshots)
Secondary Storage (deduplicated)
Software (backup & archive)
Tertiary Storage (retention)
Servers (availability)
Service & Expertise
BC/DR
Direct & Channel
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 14
RPO/RTO continuum
SECONDS - DAYS 30-DAYS 90-DAYS 1+ YRS ∞
Critical Data Operational Data Legacy Data
Data Management Software
Replication/Snaps
Backup/deduplication
Performance or capacity optimized archive
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 15
Backup and archive is not adapting fast enough
Cloud
Big Data
40ZB 2005 2010 2012 2015
Volume
Variety
Velocity
*Source : IDC Digital Universe in 2020
Mobility
Human information, machine generated, structured databases
90% of data is less than 2yrs. old.
2020*
50X increase
450B Internet transactions per day by 2020
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 16
Fragmented complexity is unsustainable
Complex
Inefficient
Rigid
10+ Primary Storage
Information Retention & Analytics
Information Protection
Diverged Storage Architectures
Tier 1
VMAX
Midrange
VNX
SSD
XtremIO
Data Domain
Virt.
VPLEX
Entry
VNXe
Object storage
Atmos
Scale-out NAS
Isilon
Archive
Centera
Source backup
Avamar
Target backup
3rd party tape
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 17
Why is HP Converged Storage transformational?
Store HP 3PAR StoreServ Apps, Virtualization, & Cloud
Protect & Retain HP StoreOnce + StoreAll Backup, Recovery, & Archive
• One Primary storage system architecture
• One Protection and Retention system architecture
• One Approach to block, object and file
• One Architecture for both HDD and SSD/Flash
• Common data services low-to-high
• Extensible to software-defined delivery
HP StoreVirtual VSA & StoreOnce VSA
Our vision: Polymorphic Simplicity Adj. Existence in several forms, shapes, & sizes
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 18
SECONDS - DAYS
HP Storage Approach to Business Continuity & Availability
30-DAYS 90-DAYS 1+ YRS ∞
Critical Data Operational Data Legacy Data
HP - Data Protector / Consolidated Archive
3PAR StoreServ Recovery Manager
StoreOnce Federated Deduplication StoreEver LTO6 Tape Solutions
StoreAll Intelligent Archive StoreEver LTO6 Tape Solutions
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice.
Increasing RTO and analytics leadership, cloud integration
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 20
New: Next generation HP StoreOnce Backup
2x recovery performance to get back up and running even faster1
The fastest backup in the market just got faster with new hardware and software
Simplify application backup to save administrative time StoreOnce Catalyst support to backup directly from Oracle RMAN and BridgeHead
Eliminate business risk by modernizing backup and recovery Autonomic restart, new deduplication integrity checking, and a guaranteed 95% capacity reduction2
Securely backup 120% more data for ITaaS/Cloud consolidation1
Higher capacity, data at rest encryption and secure erase, multi-tenant VLAN tagging
Get Protected Guarantee
40% faster backup to protect more data in your backup window1
ISV integrated performance increase with new StoreOnce Catalyst enhancements
1. StoreOnce 6500 compared to previous generation StoreOnce B6200 2. As compared to a fully-hydrated backup. Subject to compliance with the Get Protected Guarantee Terms and Conditions.
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 21
New: HP StoreOnce Backup Family
StoreOnce in HP Data Protector
4500
6500
Up to5.5TB
Up to 36TB
Up to 160TB VSA
Series
2700
4700
Up to 1.7PB
4900
Up to 432TB
Polymorphic simplicity ONE Architecture
• Small sites to Enterprise to Service Providers
• Backup and Replicate anywhere
StoreOnce Catalyst
Backup Application Integration & Source-side deduplication
34PB of backed up data
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 22
HP StoreOnce value blows EMC Data Domain away in the high-end data center
139TB/HR Backup Speed1
75TB/HR Restore Speed2
4.5x
31 TB/hr.
10x
7.5 TB/hr.
1.72 PB Usable Capacity
3x
570TB
Autonomic Restart
Yes
NO
57% Lower Cost per TB/hr.
EMC DD990 with Boost
vs. StoreOnce 6500 with Catalyst
10X Faster
RTO
1. EMC DD990 w/ EMC Boost vs. HP StoreOnce 6500 w/ StoreOnce Catalyst 2. EMC DD990 VTL vs. HP StoreOnce 6500 VTL. Based expert observations that, for many competitors, restore performance can be as slow as 50 percent of native ingest as cited by Evaluator Group.
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 23
Hyperscale storage to tame and mine explosive content growth
Enhanced: Next generation HP StoreAll Archive
Accelerate AND simplify business insight from unstructured content StoreAll Express Query informed reporting, simplified management, plus one-step multi-attribute queries
Extend technology lifecycle to match archive lifecycles 1.5PB scale per rack, 2x performance plus clustering across current and previous generations
Develop applications in public cloud, then deploy in-house for security and agility Native OpenStack Object (Swift) and Identity (Keystone) integration simplifies application portability
HP Cloud Cloud Applications
On-Premise
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 24
New: HP StoreAll Archive Family
Gateway
Active Archive Tiered Archive Deep Archive
Object and File in a converged, hyperscale, economic, ultra-dense appliance
+
StoreAll 8800 StoreAll 8200
Single 16PB Namespace with policy based data tiering
All-inclusive with integrated Express Query metadata database and native OpenStack Object
3PAR StoreServ
Integration: OpenStack, Citrix ShareFile, Signiant Media Shuttle, Autonomy ACA, Symantec Enterprise Vault, CommVault Simpana, iTernity iCAS, GE, Agfa
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice.
Extending Tier-1 leadership in virtual and ITaaS datacenters
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 26
Enhanced: HP 3PAR StoreServ 7450 All-Flash Array
900K IOPS Performance
1.6X
June 2013
vs. December 2013
220TB Capacity
2.3x
25% Lower Latency
More revenue generating transactions at half the cost Adding new latency optimizations and lower cost SSDs to existing hardware accelerated efficiency and fine-grained16KB compaction
50% Lower Cost/TB
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 27
Enhanced: HP 3PAR StoreServ Priority Optimization
Enable massive ITaaS consolidation while assuring absolute service level control
• Min/Max for IOPs, Bandwidth and Latency
• Set relative priority: High, Medium, Low
• Configured by Application and Tenant
App A App
B
App C
All Other Apps A
rray
Per
form
ance
Max Threshold
Min Goal
Enable Tiered Service Levels and protect Mission-Critical Applications
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 28
When value matters Starting at $25K
3PAR StoreServ was designed for a new style of IT
7450 All flash array
7200
When performance matters Over 900K IOPS @ <.7 ms latency
When scale matters Up to 3.2 PB
Polymorphic simplicity ONE Architecture
• Midrange. Flash. High-end
• Common Tier-1 Feature Set
• Interoperability end-to-end
7400
10400
10800
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. 29
How to connect with HP Storage
• Around the Storage Block blog: http://hpstorage.me/ATSB-blog • HP Storage Group on LinkedIn: http://hpstorage.me/HPStorageGroup • ChalkTalks on YouTube: http://hpstorage.me/HPChalkTalks • Podcasts or search iTunes for “ATSB”: http://hpstorage.me/ATSB-podcasts • HP Storage on Facebook: http://hpstorage.me/HPStorageOnFacebook
@HPStorageGuy
@HPStorage
www.hp.com/go/storage
© Copyright 2013 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice.
Thank you!