Monday, November 6, 2017

Word of the Day: secondary storage

Word of the Day WhatIs.com
Daily updates on the latest technology terms |November 6, 2017
secondary storage

Secondary storage is used to protect inactive data written from a primary storage array to a nonvolatile tier of disk, flash or tape. Secondary storage is synonymous with the terms secondary memory, auxiliary storage and external storage.

Secondary storage is a trade-off between high performance and economical long-term archiving. Because it is accessed less frequently, data can be migrated to secondary storage devices with lower performance and costs.

Companies are increasingly placing a second class of storage between primary storage and archival storage as the foundation for a tiered storage environment.

Secondary storage vs. primary storage

Secondary storage commonly refers to nonvolatile storage devices, such as hard disk drives (HDDs) and solid-state drives (SSDs), that protect data for disaster recovery or long-term retention. Optical media, backup tapes and remote archives are common secondary storage technologies.

Secondary storage sits below a company's primary storage tier, and is not under the direct control of a computer's central processing unit (CPU). Secondary storage devices do not interact directly with an application.

The purpose of secondary storage is to provide a high-capacity tier, although the data stored is not immediately accessible. For example, a backup server is capable of storing a vast amount of data, but getting access to it requires dedicated backup software. Similarly, optical disks and backup tapes must first be mounted before they can be read.

A backup storage device is a type of secondary storage. Organizations often install multiple physical backup appliances in at least two locations to ensure data is redundant. The emergence of the public cloud as a storage tier has allowed some companies to reduce, if not eliminate, the need for such backup hardware.

Primary storage refers to local disks installed inside a server's chassis, or to disks in an external storage array. Primary storage typically refers to random access memory (RAM) located near a computer's CPU. This placement reduces the time needed to move data between storage and the CPU.

Because RAM is volatile, it holds active data sets as long as the computer is connected to a power source. Secondary storage, by contrast, uses nonvolatile storage devices, such as HDDs and SSDs, which retain their contents even without power. Nonvolatile storage media is also less expensive than RAM on a cost-per-gigabyte basis. Read more...

Quote of the Day

"A secondary storage system should restore data quickly and not be impacted by delivering other services at the same time." - Chris Evans

 

Trending Terms

primary storage
nonvolatile storage
data migration
tiered storage
SSD
storage snapshot

 
Learning Center

Secondary data storage: A massively scalable transformation
Interactive, online secondary data storage is making more data directly available to end users and maximizing flash investments.

Navigate the secondary storage system market with these five factors
Data recovery and performance are among the secondary storage system areas you'll need to analyze when selecting a provider in this new technology market.

A cure for secondary data storage services blues
Secondary data storage vendors need to evolve their products to provide granular data management within converged secondary storage.

Hyper-converged platforms grow to include secondary storage space
Storage vendors are leveraging existing technologies to build products to help hyper-converged systems tackle secondary storage.

Cohesity converged secondary storage adds automation
Cohesity software for converged secondary storage includes an automated policy engine for cloud archiving, data encryption and multisite replication.

Writing for Business

Servers equipped with flash storage are increasingly common and can _________ reduce latency.
a. farther
b. further
Answer

 

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For feedback about any of our definitions or to suggest a new definition, please contact me at: mrouse@techtarget.com

 

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