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Using Utility to Provision Storage Systems
Provisioning a storage system requires balancing the costs of the solution with the benefits that the solution will provide. Previous provisioning approaches have started with a fixed set of requirements and the goal of automatically finding minimum cost solutions to meet them. Such approaches neglect the cost-benefit analysis of the purchasing decision.
Purchasing a storage system involves an extensive set of trade-offs between metrics such as purchase cost, performance, reliability, availability, power, etc. Increases in one metric have consequences for others, and failing to account for these trade-offs can lead to a poor return on the storage investment. Using a collection of storage acquisition and provisioning scenarios, we show that utility functions enable this cost-benefit structure to be conveyed to an automated provisioning tool, enabling the tool to make appropriate trade-offs between different system metrics including performance, data protection, and purchase cost.
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author = {John D. Strunk and Eno Thereska and Christos Faloutsos},
title = {Using Utility to Provision Storage Systems},
booktitle = {6th USENIX Conference on File and Storage Technologies (FAST 08)},
year = {2008},
address = {San Jose, CA},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/fast-08/using-utility-provision-storage-systems},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = feb
}
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