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==[[Case Study: Mining company turns to Data Domain for backup]]==
==[[Case Study: Mining company turns to Data Domain for backup]]==
<p style="color: #666;">A data center within [http://www.phmining.com/ P&H Mining Equipment] (P&H) had a problem recovering from a tape library that was too small. Recovery of files and emails was taking up to 72 hours, and IT was increasingly concerned that it would not be possible to recover from a [[Disaster recovery strategy for storage|major disaster]]. Rather than increase the capacity of the tape library from 500 to 1,000 tapes, P&H choose an innovative solution of a ten terabyte data [[Data de-duplication: Greasing the rails of the backup window|de-duplication]] system from [http://www.datadomain.com/ Data Domain]. Importantly, the installation required no changes to the [[Disk and Tape: Buddies in Perpetuity with Tivoli Storage Manager (TSM)|Tivoli Storage Management]] (TSM) procedures and virtually no education for storage administrators.</p>
<p style="color: #666;">A data center within [http://www.phmining.com/ P&H Mining Equipment] (P&H) had a problem recovering from a tape library that was too small. Recovery of files and emails was taking up to 72 hours, and IT was increasingly concerned that it would not be possible to recover from a [[Disaster recovery strategy for storage|major disaster]]. Rather than increase the capacity of the tape library from 500 to 1,000 tapes, P&H choose an innovative solution of a ten terabyte data [[Data de-duplication: Greasing the rails of the backup window|de-duplication]] system from [http://www.datadomain.com/ Data Domain]. Importantly, the installation required no changes to the [[Disk and Tape: Buddies in Perpetuity with Tivoli Storage Manager (TSM)|Tivoli Storage Management]] (TSM) procedures and virtually no education for storage administrators.</p>
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[[Financial giant goes green | read more...]]
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[[Case Study: Mining company turns to Data Domain for backup | read more...]]
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{{Storage professional alerts 2}}
{{Storage professional alerts 2}}

Revision as of 17:41, 3 July 2009

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Wikitip

Thoughts on Cloud Performance Monitoring

Cloud computing is taking over the IT world, there is no doubt about it. IDC predicts that over the next five years spending on public IT cloud services will increase from $21.5 billion in 2010 to $72.9 billion in 2015. This translates into one of every seven dollars spent on packaged software, servers and storage in 2015 to be related to the public cloud.

This proves that the cloud is serious business. And the cloud is all about leveraging resources, to ensure their best possible distribution and use, which brings about those well-known advantages: cost, efficiency, and flexibility. But in order to make sure all resources are put to best use, the ability to monitor cloud computing systems and services is essential.

There are two aspects of cloud performance monitoring:

  • Cloud performance monitoring for users,
  • Cloud performance monitoring for development.

Recognizing their importance for businesses, technologies for the monitoring of IT cloud resources for enterprises have started to emerge since 2009. The well publicized cloud services outages and disruptions this year have further highlighted the necessity for effective cloud monitoring solutions that need to be focused on business needs, proactive and in real time.

For development teams, effective cloud performance monitoring of the cloud systems is equally important, allowing them to solve critical problems before they impact service delivery. A good cloud monitoring product for developers should:

  • Be easy and rapid to install,
  • Provide in depth performance details,
  • Provide actionable analytics in real time (seconds, or less),
  • Leverage rapid deployment,
  • Provide speed and scalability,
  • Support real-time visualization with in-depth analytics and alerting,
  • Support all types of cloud environments,
  • Provide a wholistic view of the system.

To use the words of Scott Johnson, CEO of CopperEgg and someone who knows quite a bit about building solutions for developers, ”The key is providing easy-to-use products that enable development teams to focus on building valuable applications in the cloud instead of having to spend large amounts of time worrying about the infrastructure being used to support them.”

And I would like to add the extensive use of cloud performance monitoring solutions to the other changes in the software industry I explored in previous articles like Why is Coding for Cloud Important for Software Development? Because as the environment is becoming more complex, development teams need access to more comprehensive products in order to control it.

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Featured Case Study

Case Study: Mining company turns to Data Domain for backup

A data center within P&H Mining Equipment (P&H) had a problem recovering from a tape library that was too small. Recovery of files and emails was taking up to 72 hours, and IT was increasingly concerned that it would not be possible to recover from a major disaster. Rather than increase the capacity of the tape library from 500 to 1,000 tapes, P&H choose an innovative solution of a ten terabyte data de-duplication system from Data Domain. Importantly, the installation required no changes to the Tivoli Storage Management (TSM) procedures and virtually no education for storage administrators.

read more...

Storage Professional Alerts


Featured How-To Note

Planning a Green Storage Initiative

Fluctuating energy prices have heightened electricity and energy consumption as a major issue within the technology community. IT is a significant consumer of energy and IT energy costs have been rising disproportionately because of continued investment in denser IT equipment. Estimates from the EPA and others indicate that IT will account for 3% of energy consumption by 2012.

read more...

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