Software-defined storage

Software-defined storage (SDS) is a new term (neologism) for computer data storage software to manage policy-based provisioning and management of data storage independent of the underlying hardware. Software-defined storage definitions typically include a form of storage virtualization to separate the storage hardware from the software that manages the storage infrastructure. The software enabling a software-defined storage environment may also provide policy management for feature options such as deduplication, replication, thin provisioning, snapshots and backup.

By consensus and early advocacy,[1] SDS software is separate from the hardware it is managing. That hardware may or may not also have abstraction, pooling, or automation software embedded. This philosophical span has made software-defined storage difficult to categorize. When implemented as software only in conjunction with commodity servers with internal disks, it may suggest software such as a virtual or global file system. If it is software layered over sophisticated large storage arrays, it suggests software such as storage virtualization or storage resource management, categories of products that address separate and different problems. If the policy and management functions within the software-defined storage solution also include a form of artificial intelligence to automate protection and recovery functions, it can be considered as intelligent abstraction.[2] Software-defined storage may be implemented via appliances over a traditional Storage Area Network (SAN), or implemented as part of a scale-out Network-Attached Storage (NAS) solution, or as the basis of an Object-based storage solution. In March 2014 SNIA began a Draft Technical Work available for public review on Software-Defined Storage.[3]

Based on similar concepts as software-defined networking (SDN),[4] interest in SDS rose after VMware acquired Nicira for over a billion dollars in 2012.

VMware used the marketing term "software-defined data center" (SDDC) for a broader concept wherein all the virtualized storage, server, networking and security resources required by an application can be defined by software and provisioned automatically.[5][6] Other smaller companies then adopted the term "software-defined storage", such as now defunct Coraid.

Data storage vendors used various definitions for software-defined storage depending on their product-line. Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA), a standards group, attempted a multi-vendor, negotiated definition with examples.[7]

Characteristics

Characteristics of software-defined storage may include the following features:[8]

See also

References

  1. Margaret Rouse. "Definition: software-defined storage". SearchSDN. Tech Target. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
  2. Chris Poelker (March 12, 2014). "The foundation of clouds: Intelligent abstraction".
  3. SNIA (March 2014). "Technical Whitepaper:Software Defined Storage" (PDF).
  4. Margaret Rouse. "Definition: software-defined storage". SearchSDN. Tech Target. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
  5. Archana Venkatraman. "Software-defined datacentres demystified". Computer Weekly. TechTarget. Retrieved November 7, 2013. The term software-defined datacentre (SDDC) rose to prominence this year during annual virtualisation conference VMworld 2012 [...] A software-defined datacentre is an IT facility where the elements of the infrastructure - networking, storage, CPU and security - are virtualised and delivered as a service. The provisioning and operation of the entire infrastructure is entirely automated by software.
  6. "The Software-Defined Data Center". company web site. VMware. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
  7. http://www.snia.org/sds
  8. Simon Robinson (March 12, 2013). "Software-defined storage: The reality beneath the hype". Computer Weekly. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
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