IBM is
developing software that will allow organisations to use multiple cloud
storage services interchangeably, reducing dependence on any single
cloud vendor and ensuring that data remains available even during
service outages.
Although the software, called InterCloud Storage (ICStore), is still
in development, IBM is inviting its customers to test it. Over time, the
company will fold the software into its enterprise storage portfolio,
where it can back up data to the cloud. The current test iteration
requires an IBM Storewize storage system to operate.
ICStore was developed in response to customer inquiries, said Thomas
Weigold, who leads the IBM storage systems research team in IBM's
Zurich, Switzerland, research facility, where the software was created.
Customers are interested in cloud storage services but are worried about
trusting data with third party providers, both in terms of security and
the reliability of the service, he said.
The software provides a single interface that administrators can use
to spread data across multiple cloud vendors. Administrators can specify
which cloud providers to use through a point-and-click interface. Both
file and block storage is supported, though not object storage. The
software contains mechanisms for encrypting data so that it remains
secure as it crosses the network and resides on the external storage
services.
A number of software vendors currently offer similar cloud storage
broker capabilities, all in various stages of completion, notably Red
Hat's DeltaCloud and Hewlett Packard's Public Cloud.
ICStore is more "flexible," than other approaches, said Alessandro
Sorniotti, an IBM security and cloud system researcher who also worked
on the project. "We give customers the ability to select what goes
where, depending on the sensitivity and relevance of data," he said.
Customers can store one copy of their data on one provider and a backup
copy on another provider.
ICStore supports a number of cloud storage providers, including IBM's
SoftLayer, Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service), Rackspace, Microsoft
Windows Azure and private instances of the OpenStack Swift storage
service. More storage providers will be added as the software goes into
production mode.
"Say, you are using SoftLayer and Amazon, and if Amazon suffers an
outage, then the backup cloud provider kicks in and allows you to
retrieve data," from SoftLayer, Sorniotti said.
ICStore will also allow multiple copies of the software to work together within an enterprise, using a set of IBM patent-pending algorithms
developed for data sharing. This ensures that the organisation will not
run into any upper limits on how much data can be stored.
IBM has about 1,400 patents that relate to cloud computing, according to the company.
By: Joab Jackson
Link: http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/cloud-computing/3492700/ibm-lays-plans-to-be-a-cloud-storage-broker/
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