The VTL was invented because, at the time (2012ish), none of the largest enterprise backup solutions had a good S3 interface and none supported Glacier. After talking with the backup software vendors (Spectrum, Tivoli, Symantec, Commvault, etc) it became clear that adding another backup target wasn't something we (AWS) could get them to prioritize, for perfectly reasonable reasons. We could (and did) apply pressure via our shared customers, even then they estimated it would take years.The fastest way to enable large enterprise access to S3 and Glacier for backups was to meet them where they were. We did this by virtualizing a tape library.
Background: I'm one of the original inventors - https://image-ppubs.uspto.gov/dirsearch-public/print/downloa.... I am no longer with AWS.
sshagent|3 years ago
free-ideas|3 years ago
This is a fantastic example of how broken the patent system is.
This is not an invention it’s a good implementation of a well understood problem.
It is also priced ridiculously - it is at least an order of magnitude more expensive than operating a physical library and remote physical storage that is beyond cyber threat by virtue of it being disconnected.
A real backup is offline and offsite.
Twirrim|3 years ago
Some of the solutions that external vendors produced were nightmarish and left customers up the creek without a paddle in a disturbing number of situations.
unknown|3 years ago
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