
Workflow: Discover the Building Blocks of a Vail Solution
Building blocks of a Vail Solution:
A Vail node is a software package that can be deployed on a number of options:
- As a virtual machine or on a BlackPearl storage platform.
- Utilize existing storage
- Utilize cloud storage – AWS, GCP, Azure
- Utilize Spectra storage
- Create a local glacier* tier (tape behind BlackPearl)
Lifecycle Policies Drive Vail Solutions
A Lifecycle policy in a Vail solution consists of rules that dictate where objects are stored and the length of time they are stored in each storage location. Each lifecycle policy is created by the administrator to fit the de- sired workflow and retention periods. Users can determine the placement of objects in the bucket by specifying the number of copies the rule will keep and the specific storage pools to use. The available storage targets consist of public cloud storage tiers, and local storage under control of a Vail node that has been integrated into a Vail Sphere.
Hybrid Cloud Integrations
Glacier Storage for Long-Term Retention
Creating a local glacier repository is possible with the help of Vail. Glacier storage delivers substantial cost savings and infinite salability. The benefits of a Vail solution cannot be overstated. The fact that long-life object storage disk and literally unlimited tape capacity can be realized, makes your own glacier storage tier an easily attainable reality. The seamless combination of affordable disk and ultra-cost-efficient tape means that any company’s growing data universe can be organized and managed in a whole new way and without any cloud lock-in limitations.
Vail Policy Engine Management
For quite some time storage vendors have provided solutions that allow for setting time-based policies that drive migration of data to lower cost storage tiers. Vail lifecycle policies add additional dimensions to this by allowing for the specification of how many copies, the geographic locations of those copies and what storage tier those copies exist at a particular time. To highlight the power of this, consider a customer that has a main data center, multiple smaller remote data centers and employees working remotely that do not have access to any of these centers. For this example, the main data centers has a large amount of disk storage along with a tape system while, all the remote data centers have a small amount of flash storage. Additionally, the customer’s bucket lifecycle bucket may consist of three distinct phases; for the first 30 days users need immediate access to the data, for the next 60 days users can accept slower access to their data, but it still needs to be sub-second, and for anything older then 90 days users are willing to wait for a restoration of the data that could take multiple minutes.
Once an object has been in the system for 30 days the remote site and cloud copies of the object are deleted to make room for new objects entering the system. Users will still have immediate access to the object however that access will require a transfer of the data from the primary data center through the WAN.
A Lifecycle policy in a Vail solution consists of rules that dictate where objects are stored and the length of time they are stored in each storage location. Each lifecycle policy is created by the administrator to fit the desired workflow and retention periods. Users can determine the placement of objects in the bucket by specifying the number of copies the rule will keep and the specific storage pools to use. The available storage targets consist of public cloud storage tiers, and local storage under control of a Vail node that has been integrated into a Vail Sphere.
Spectra Logic Vail Software
This short fun animated video shows how Spectra’s Vail, a distributed multi-cloud software, unifies data to enable on-premises applications and cloud services — no matter where data is created or stored.
Watch How Vail Transforms Workflows
Resources
*Amazon Glacier® is a registered trademark of Amazon Technologies, Inc.