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Re: [ARSCLIST] Network storage best practices
Hi, Kevin,
A few random points to consider--not exactly what you asked for, but
based on experience in my former life on a few large-scale projects.
(1) Developing your own IT infrastructure will be costly, risk-prone,
and an overall time sink. If you already have competent IT
professionals on staff, then an alliance with them would seem to be
in order. I have seen issues in a large corporation where there was a
business IT department and a media IT department. One strong,
encompassing department would have been more efficient.
(2) If I recall correctly, you are in California, so you need to plan
the offsite backup with wider separation than other places due to
fire/flood/earthquake risks, as well as what all of us face regarding
fire/vandalism/theft.
(3) An ideal system IMHO, would be two identical storage systems with
RAID arrays separated by 100 miles and preferably a major geographic
feature. Do not propagate deletes. Backup the RAID arrays on LTO
tape. If you're doing archiving (i.e. taking it off the discs) to LTO
tape, make two copies at each site, stored separately. Others have
addressed the administrative issues with references. I know of one
major archive that was going to rely on one LTO copy of some items.
They knew it was a risk. They didn't have any additional budget.
(4) On a total shoestring, you can see how I'm managing mirrored 1000
GB stores (to be enlarged this year)
for my one-person shop/family of four plus brother-in-law who uses
the system at http://www.richardhess.net/data_storage/
Hope this helps a little.
Cheers,
Richard
Richard L. Hess email: richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Vignettes Media web: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/
Aurora, Ontario, Canada (905) 713 6733 1-877-TAPE-FIX
Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm