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CommVault boosts Simpana e-discovery and data reduction

By Beth Pariseau, Senior News Writer
11 Apr 2008 | SearchStorage.co.uk

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CommVault Systems this week released the first service pack update to its Simpana 7.0 data protection and archiving suite, adding a new workflow between its replication and single-instance storage engines, e-discovery search, legal hold capabilities and support for Windows Server 2008.

While CommVault is trying to give customers a "one-stop shop" for data protection features ranging from legal hold to single-instance storage, there can be a trade-off between comprehensive products and more developed single-focus offerings. For instance, CommVault customers said they're looking to specialists for more granular data deduplication.

Vendors 100% focused on one specific thing can go a lot deeper than vendors offering a unified platform
Lauren Whitehouse
analyst, Enterprise Strategy Group
New support for Windows server upgrades

Like most other storage and data protection vendors on the market, CommVault will support Microsoft's newest release, Windows Server 2008, along with new 64-bit applications from Microsoft, such as Office, Exchange 2007 and SharePoint 2007.

Included in this new support is the CommVault storage resource management (SRM) module, which allows customers to migrate files between disk arrays based on policies or classification using Simpana archiving, which creates stub files on the original storage if required.

Support for new Windows applications also includes CommVault's "release independent" feature, which CommVault claims can help users migrate between Exchange 2003 and 2007 by doing a full backup to CommVault, then restoring the data to a new server with no conversion in between.

Not quite WAN optimisation for backups

CommVault's continuous data replication (CDR) CDP module and single-instance storage (SIS) file-level deduplication have now been realigned within Simpana so that SIS will keep CDR from sending duplicate data over the wire. It's not quite WAN optimisation or block-level data deduplication for backups, but it will at least keep Simpana from recognising each new copy of a file at a branch location as brand new and replicating its changes over the wire to the central data centre.

Keith Price, system administrator at US university Johnson and Wales, said the institution had deployed CDR but not SIS. He is thinking about adding this new function with Simpana, but is also considering block-level deduplication products from Data Domain and Diligent Technologies. "We just started looking about two to three weeks ago," he said. "I'm looking for CommVault to be able to do block-level deduplication - if they did, I probably wouldn't be evaluating those other guys."

But Price indicated that CommVault might be too late with block-level dedupe to keep him from bringing in another vendor, "At this point, even if CommVault were to come out with block-level deduplication, I might not snap it up right away," he said. "First-generation stuff can be hard to use, especially with products like this that change the data so dramatically."

New e-discovery, legal hold features.

The Simpana archiving module will now support collaborative tagging and saved searches on disk, tape and archive repositories. Customers can also annotate saved search threads for later review by others. The federated search capabilities for Simpana are based on a partnership with search vendor FAST (now a Microsoft subsidiary) but CommVault developed the additional features for this release.

Another new feature in the archiving module is the ability to enforce legal holds on relevant content. Users can click a button to designate that all items in a data set should be placed on hold. If the user doesn't have WORM storage media, CommVault's software will put it in a WORM file system, locking the files to prevent overwrites. A release button enables regular backup and archiving policies to take over the data once legal hold isn't needed anymore.

Customers must weigh the benefits of unified products, such as Simpana, against best-of-breed offerings. "Vendors that are 100% focused on one specific thing can go a lot deeper with that feature than vendors offering a unified platform," said Lauren Whitehouse, an Enterprise Strategy Group analyst. However, recent ESG surveys show that up to 80% of respondents preferred a unified approach over specialisation in storage products.

Whitehouse said block-level dedupe also falls into this category. "I believe it is a goal of theirs," she said. "This also goes back to a trade-off between unified solutions versus single-focus vendors."



Tags: Email archiving and compliance initiativesTools for managing dataVIEW ALL TAGS

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