| By Mike Maxey | Article Rating: |
|
| October 14, 2008 07:15 AM EDT | Reads: |
16,023 |
Cloud storage is a relatively new concept that is becoming a more recognizable term in industry vernacular. Originally delivered as a service, it gained early popularity with Web 2.0 startups looking to outsource storage administration. As the concept spread and offerings expanded, the industry has now embraced two flavors of cloud storage: public and private. This article reviews the choices a user faces when choosing a private versus public cloud storage offering. It describes data types and identifies scenarios where cloud storage is a good solution and where it is a poor fit. This article also covers usage patterns, security, performance and cost implications to educate the reader on differences between public and private cloud storage.
Public Versus Private, What Is the Difference?
The difference between private and public storage clouds is simple. Where is the cloud deployed? A public cloud is offered as a service, usually over an Internet connection. Private clouds are deployed inside the firewall and managed by the user organization. Locality is a simple difference that drives very unique experiences and capabilities to the end user.
Public clouds typically charge a monthly usage fee per GB combined with bandwidth transfer charges. Users can scale the storage on-demand and will never need to purchase storage hardware. Service providers manage the infrastructure and pool resources into capacity that any customer can claim.
Private clouds are built from software running on customer-supplied commodity hardware. The storage is typically not shared outside the enterprise and full control is retained by the organization. Scaling the cloud is as simple as adding another server to the pool and the self-managing architecture expands the cloud by adding performance and capacity.
Cloud Storage Is Not for All Types of Data
Storage clouds are designed to support unstructured or file data types. Yet not all file data is the same and not all files are a fit for cloud storage. (Block-based clouds are starting to emerge but leveraging these clouds requires a unique locality of resources and is beyond the scope of this article.) For example, a highly transactional file like an NFS-mounted database requires a class of storage that is beyond either private or public cloud storage offerings. High-speed access to this file would be limited by a public cloud Internet connection. Private clouds are designed for scale and performance of many files on many nodes and would also struggle to support a database. Instead, users should consider files with the following attributes as candidates for cloud storage:
- Larger files with lots of read access: Digital content, streaming media, video, music, etc.
- Parallel streaming writes: Video surveillance (private clouds)
- Long-term storage files: Backup and archival files (private clouds)
- Geographically shared files: Access from different geographies (public clouds)
These all have several aspects in common, including huge data sets and file systems, parallel file serving requirements, longevity of file access, and the need for low-cost deployments.
Published October 14, 2008 Reads 16,023
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Mike Maxey
Mike Maxey is director of product management for ParaScale, a Silicon Valley startup focused on addressing the exploding bulk storage requirements for digital content and archival data.
![]() |
Drug Rehab 03/13/10 12:44:00 PM EST | |||
Nice read mate! I have a problem though, I can't seem to get your RSS feed to work right in google chrome, is it on my end? |
||||
- Acquia Announces Two New Board Members
- CollabNet Adds Board Member and Senior Executives to Fuel Continued Growth in Agile ALM and Enterprise Cloud Development
- Learn Open Source Database Tools from Stanford for Free
- Research and Markets: Global Mobile Device Management Enterprise Software Market 2010-2014 Includes a Discussion of the Key Vendors Operating in This Market
- Alternative Search Engines for the Contemporary User
- FORTUNE Magazine Names Rackspace Among “100 Best Companies to Work For”
- New York City : Blueprint for Cloud-enabled economic transformation
- EnterpriseDB Announces Availability of Postgres Plus Cloud Database
- Connectria Hosting Achieves "Off the Chart" Operational Efficiency With Cloud-Based Storage Solution From Nexsan and CommVault
- eXo Platform 3.5 Now Available: First Cloud-Ready Enterprise Portal and User Experience Platform-as-a-Service (UXPaaS)
- Research and Markets: WordPress 24-Hour Trainer, 2nd Edition
- ICOS and Joyent Announce Strategic Partnership to Deliver Joyent's Cloud Infrastructure Solution to Channel Partners and Service Providers
- Five Years Waiting for JRE 7: Is It Justified? (Part 1)
- Book Review: The CERT Oracle Secure Coding Standard for Java
- Acquia Announces Two New Board Members
- CollabNet Adds Board Member and Senior Executives to Fuel Continued Growth in Agile ALM and Enterprise Cloud Development
- Learn Open Source Database Tools from Stanford for Free
- Research and Markets: Global Mobile Device Management Enterprise Software Market 2010-2014 Includes a Discussion of the Key Vendors Operating in This Market
- Government Big Data Solutions Award Nominee: Wayne Wheeles (Sherpa Surfing)
- Alternative Search Engines for the Contemporary User
- FORTUNE Magazine Names Rackspace Among “100 Best Companies to Work For”
- New York City : Blueprint for Cloud-enabled economic transformation
- EnterpriseDB Announces Availability of Postgres Plus Cloud Database
- Load testing the post office
- Java Developer's Journal Exclusive: 2006 "JDJ Editors' Choice" Awards
- The i-Technology Right Stuff
- Creating Web Applications with the Eclipse Web Tools Project
- Eclipse Special: Remote Debugging Tomcat & JBoss Apps with Eclipse
- The Next Programming Models, RIAs and Composite Applications
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- SYS-CON Webcast: Eclipse IDE for Students, Useful Eclipse Tips & Tricks
- How to Bring Eclipse 3.1, J2SE 5.0, and Tomcat 5.0 Together
- Eclipse: The Story of Web Tools Platform 0.7
- "Eclipse 3.0 is a Great Leap Forward," Says JDJ's Dudney
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Developing an Eclipse BIRT Report Item Extension























