Extending open-source to data storage

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This was published 18 years ago

Extending open-source to data storage

Pushing the "open source" idea deeper into computing, several companies led by IBM are teaming up to develop programs for letting big businesses uniformly manage their increasingly vast warehouses of data.

The companies are forming a group known as Aperi, which will attempt to free up the bottlenecks that can occur when a business has bought tape and disk storage systems from a variety of vendors.

Generally, each storage vendor supplies its own data-management software, sometimes making it hard for companies to seamlessly move the information around and integrate it with their businesses.

"It can turn into a real nightmare," said analyst Charles King of Pund-IT Research.

Aperi's roster aincludes such leading hardware and software companies as Cisco Systems, Computer Associates, Brocade Communications Systems, Network Appliance, McData, Fujitsu and Engenio Information Technologies.

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But just as notable is the list of companies that are missing, among them EMC, Sun, Hewlett-Packard and Symantec.

Data storage has a standards-setting organisation with wide participation, the Storage Networking Industry Association.

But until now the field has not had a true open-source initiative. The launch is a sign that the traditionally bland sector will be an important battleground in an age churning out mind-bending amounts of online transaction records, databases and assorted other digital detritus.

For IBM, the project is one of several in which the company has opened up a technology system in hopes outside collaborators will help drive a market forward. Big Blue's open-source efforts stretch from Linux-based computer servers to certain aspects of its Power microprocessors and WebSphere business software.

Jim Stallings, IBM's vice president for intellectual property and standards, said Aperi was not meant to be a shot across the bow of storage leader EMC or other vendors, which he said were approached about joining.

Because Aperi would build on the work of the Storage Networking Industry Association to develop new data-management programs, he said he expected Aperi's membership to grow.

EMC spokesman Michael Gallant said he could not comment.

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