Unless all of your clients are really, really tiny, you're not going to want
to look at software encryption so you really have 2 options - Decru and
Neoscale appliances.

 

We've been happy with our Decru FC520 appliances front-ending our 8 LTO-3
drives (spread across 2 data centers).  We don't actually get any
degradation - in some cases, we've actually seen performance *improvements*.
A single FC520 will support 2-3 LTO-3 drives but there are larger models
(the FC1020) and there are rumors of 4Gbps faster versions coming out this
year.

 

Since each FC520 has a single 2Gbps interface for input and another for
output, you're limited to 200MB/sec in total throughput.  Depending on how
fast you drive your tape drives now will help you determine how many
appliances you would need.  I would guess that your 20 drives are spread
over 2 fabrics and putting one FC1020 per fabric would probably suffice
since they have 5 2Gbps ports in and 5 out for 10Gbps total throughput.
These suckers encrypt and compress at wire speed.

 

We haven't had any unresolvable issues with the appliances themselves.  Key
management isn't a problem at all - it's all handled by the appliances and
can be backed up using their software.  Our 3 appliances share the keys
amongst themselves and also know that a single pre-defined NetBackup pool
will write unencrypted data.  By default, all of our NetBackup pools are
encrypted - we have just a single clear-text pool just in case we have to
send a customer a clear-text tape (we haven't had to do this yet).  You only
really need to worry about the special cards whenever the keys need to leave
a box - either when you're replacing one (we haven't had one fail yet) or if
you add another box to the cluster and want to share the keys (we did this
recently).  The rest of the time the special cards sit in lockboxes and
safes.

 

The Decru appliances do need to understand NetBackup but so long as the tape
headers don't change, you won't have any issues.  Just don't expect to use
any old off-the-shelf software product some day and expect it to work out of
the box without talking to Decru first.

 

Once you see these suckers, you'll be impressed.   You can even get them
with a big red button on the front that automatically flushes the keys when
pressed (for use in military environments when the bad guys are breaking
down your door).

 

>From NetBackup's point of view, you don't need to do anything special at
all.  You unpresent all of your existing drives, present them to the
encryption appliances, it presents new WWNs for the encrypted drives (they
appear on the fabric as loop devices), and you tell NetBackup to use those.
That's it.  You don't need to worry about which tapes are encrypted and
which aren't - the appliances handle all of that automatically and will read
clear-text tapes transparently and when they're rewritten, will
automatically encrypt the data.  It just doesn't get any easier.

 

   ./Ed

 

--

Ed Wilts, RHCE, BCFP, BCSD

Mounds View, MN, USA

mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Cruice,
Daniel (US - Glen Mills)
Sent: Wednesday, September 05, 2007 3:33 PM
To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
Subject: [Veritas-bu] Tape encryption

 

Looking for some information regarding tape encryption, anyone out there
using it?  And if so what kind of tape degradation did you experience.  We
are being asked to implement it and we are just trying to figure out what we
are going to need.  Our environment is mixed with Windows and UNIX, all of
our NBU servers are Windows (Master and Media) with a 20 drive LTO3 Library,
over 900 clients.  About 90% of our environment is running 6.0 MP4 and soon
will be rolling out 6.5 w/ MP1.  Any gotchas we need to be aware of.

 

Thanks

Dan

  

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