Data Domain (NASDAQ: DDUP), the leading provider of deduplication
storage systems, today announced the Data Domain DD880, the
industry's highest performance inline deduplication storage system
for enterprise backup and archive applications. With aggregate
throughput up to 5.4 TB/hour, faster per controller than
conventional virtual tape library (VTL) systems, and single-stream
throughput up to 1.2 TB/hour to enable protection of large
databases in short backup windows, the DD880 establishes
consistently high benchmarks across the spectrum of common data
center backup metrics. A DD880 system supports up to 71 TB of
associated addressable, post-RAID, pre-deduplication disk storage.
A fully configured Data Domain DDX Array with 16 DD880 controllers
increases aggregate throughput performance to up to 86 TB/hour and
offers up to 56 petabytes of usable capacity, delivering the
capability for long-term online retention to large, consolidated
data centers.
Unlike most VTL systems or other backup storage targets, the
DD880 deduplicates data inline using an approach in which
throughput is gated by factors that are CPU-centric, not disk
centric. The DD880's price/performance is enabled by the Data
Domain SISL? (Stream-Informed Segment Layout) scaling architecture
to minimize the number of disk accesses required in the
deduplication process. Data Domain systems ride the
price/performance wave of multi-core processor architectures
instead of depending on over-provisioned storage subsystems for
throughput. As a result, Data Domain systems have improved in
throughput geometrically, by more than a factor of 36 since 2004.
Like all Data Domain systems, the DD880 supports NFS and CIFS by
default, and offers both NetBackup OpenStorage and VTL as software
options.
"There has been a popular misconception that inline
deduplication systems cannot ingest backups as fast as backup
solutions that write directly to disk and then execute data
reduction processes," said Brian Babineau, Sr. Analyst at the
Enterprise Strategy Group. "Maybe that was true at one point in
time, or for specific implementations. Data Domain's DD880 clearly
proves that inline deduplication can be highly competitive in
speed, even when compared to VTLs and other disk based backup
targets with no deduplication at all."
Also available is a new release of Data Domain Enterprise
Manager, a graphic user interface (GUI)-based management
infrastructure for Data Domain systems. Enterprise Manager now
provides monitoring or configuration support for a dozen system
features including centralized management of multiple nodes and
configuration of system replication and migration capabilities.
With the Data Domain Replicator software option, the DD880 can
automate WAN vaulting for use in disaster recovery (DR), remote
office backup, or multi-site tape consolidation. A single DD880
system can support a replication fan-in from up to 180 remote
offices using smaller Data Domain systems such as the DD120. The
DD880 can deduplicate globally across remote sites, further
minimizing required bandwidth since only the first instance of data
is transferred across any of the WAN segments. With the Data Domain
Retention Lock software option, archive data can be locked for
increased governance control or shredded when required to meet
Department of Defense (DoD) and National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) specifications.
Like all Data Domain systems, the new DD880 is simple to install
and flexible enough to be implemented into existing user
environments without disruption. Backed by available Data Domain
24x7x365 enterprise class service, the DD880 supports leading
backup and nearline software products on any standard storage
fabric. The DD880 is available as an easy-to-deploy appliance, or
as the DD880g Gateway, which supports external SAN disk array
storage.
"The CPU-centric design enables the Data Domain DD880 to attain
performance and scalability advantages that largely solve the
concurrent stream versus capacity challenges we've previously
balanced amongst our IT groups," said Michael Passe, storage
architect for Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, a teaching
hospital for Harvard Medical School with 621 licensed beds and more
than 5,000 employees. "We chose Data Domain in part for its
efficient, inline deduplication as we weren't fans of the VTL
paradigm or post-process approaches requiring capacity overhead
that becomes a wasted, difficult-to-manage resource. As our weekly
backups can surpass 100 TB, the DD880 can move data and compress to
disk faster and retain backups on disk for longer periods which
translates to less time spent managing processes."
"We are a happy Data Domain customer, having implemented a DD690
system and gateway last year, and were eager to test the
capabilities of the new DD880 system," said Eddy Navarro, computer
systems manager for storage at J. Craig Venter Institute, a world
leader in genomic research. "I was particularly impressed with the
increased storage density which can extend our data retention SLAs
and double the effective storage capacity-to-footprint utilization
within our data center. The latest version of the Data Domain
Operating System includes an enhanced Enterprise Manager with more
detailed dashboards, configuration drill-downs and a centralized
management interface, allowing my team to easily monitor and manage
our systems at a glance."
"It used to be that VTLs running at top speed could go faster
without dedupe, storing straight to disk," said Brian Biles, VP of
Product Management at Data Domain. "This was one of the last
defensible arguments for considering a post-process dedupe system
architecture. That is so over. The DD880 doesn't just change the
game. It pulls the rug out from under the post process
argument."
Why Architecture Matters
The DD880 is based on the same CPU-centric approach to inline
data deduplication as all Data Domain systems. Unlike most
deduplication approaches that are added as afterthoughts to
existing disk arrays, Virtual Tape Libraries (VTLs) or backup
software, combined efficiencies of Data Domain include:
-- SISL scaling architecture leverages CPU improvements to increase
deduplication speed inline while minimizing reliance on disk accesses for
performance. Data Domain systems have delivered consistent improvement in
throughput performance by nearly 36x and in capacity by more than 56x over
the last 5 years. Based on Intel's CPU roadmap, increased throughput is
expected to continue growing significantly in the future.
-- High performance inline deduplication for simplicity, to minimize
system resources, administration, and internal system process contention.
-- Green storage efficiency for a smaller system footprint and lower
power consumption.
-- Easy infrastructure integration with support for backup, archive or
other nearline workloads, as a local consolidated storage tier and for
remote networked DR.
-- Data Domain Data Invulnerability Architecture defends against data
integrity issues by providing continuous verification during storage and
recovery of data.
Availability
The DD880 will be generally available in the third quarter of
2009. For more information about Data Domain deduplication storage
systems, please visit www.datadomain.com.
ABOUT DATA DOMAIN
Data Domain� is the leading provider of deduplication storage
systems. Thousands of companies worldwide have purchased Data
Domain systems to reduce storage costs and simplify data
management. Data Domain delivers the performance, reliability and
scalability to address the data protection and nearline storage
needs of enterprises of all sizes. Data Domain products integrate
into existing customer infrastructures and are compatible with
leading enterprise backup and archive software products. To find
out more about Data Domain, visit www.datadomain.com.
Data Domain Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements
including; "The DD880 will be generally available in the third
quarter of 2009."; "It used to be that VTLs running at top speed
could go faster without dedupe, storing straight to disk. This was
one of the last defensible arguments for considering a post-process
dedupe system architecture. That is so over. The DD880 doesn't just
change the game. It pulls the rug out from under the post process
argument." and regarding our ability to reduce the amount of stored
back-up data and associated storage costs and to provide faster
access to data and advanced levels of data protection; and other
statements identified by forward-looking words such as
"anticipated," "believed," "could," "estimate," "expect," "intend,"
"may," "should," "will" and "would" or similar words. These
forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, as well
as assumptions that, if they do not fully materialize or prove
incorrect, could cause our results to differ materially from those
expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. The risks
and uncertainties include: the impact of the global recession and
continuing weakening of general economic and market conditions and
customer budgets for information technology spending; our ability
to react to trends and challenges in our business and the markets
in which we operate; our ability to anticipate market needs or
develop new or enhanced products to meet those needs; market
acceptance of our products; our ability to scale our distribution
channels; our ability to recruit and retain personnel; our ability
to compete in our industry; our ability to maintain and expand
relationships with technology partners; our ability to protect our
intellectual property; shortages or price fluctuations in our
supply chain and the performance of our contract manufacturer;
general political, economic and market conditions and events; and
other risks and uncertainties described in the "Risk Factors"
section of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2008 and our other documents filed with or furnished
to the Securities and Exchange Commission. All forward-looking
statements in this press release are based on information available
to us as of the date hereof, and we assume no obligation to update
these forward-looking statements.
Data Domain, the Data Domain logo and Global Compression are
trademarks or registered trademarks of Data Domain, Inc. All other
trademarks used or mentioned herein belong to their respective
owners.
Contacts: Terry Frechette Lois Paul & Partners
1.781.782.5791 tfrechette@lpp.com Ed Luboja Data Domain, Inc.
+1.203.210.7404 edward.luboja@datadomain.com
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