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Technology Transfer @ Sun Labs
Honeycomb Storage System Transfers to Network Storage
Project Honeycomb
July 1, 2005 -The Honeycomb Storage System is a radical new approach to managing
large collections of reference data. Designed for ultra-low cost,
high availability, and simple to install, manage, and grow over
time, Honeycomb uses advanced clustering techniques to build large
systems from inexpensive components. Honeycomb is designed with a variety of other advanced features including searchability and regulatory compliance that will be announced over time.
From the Beginning . . .
Project Honeycomb began 2.5 years ago with the observation that disk
costs were plummeting while power consumption and IT management costs
would trend ever higher, accompanied by mushrooming demand for
cataloging write-once data from digital security cameras, financial
record regulations, medical imaging, satellite photography, and health
sciences research. After six months of early research and modeling,
a rough proof-of-concept prototype at the CTO open house led to Sun
Labs funding an advanced development project.
Dick Sillman and his staff quickly assembled a team of twenty
researchers with clustering and storage backgrounds who shared a
passion for quick decisions, simplicity in design, and delivering
innovative products that delight customers. They conducted over sixty
customer interviews, recorded hundreds of pages of customer input, and
invented new approaches to data integrity, high availability,
protocols that scale efficiently, load balancing, and self-healing
systems. Over fifteen patents were filed on their object placement
algorithms, autonomous cluster management, and low cost load balancing.
Once the detailed design specs were written, reviewed, and cross-
checked by senior technical staffers in Sun's DE and Fellow community,
rolling iterations of the system were built, unit tested, QA'd, and
revised. During this 14-month period, two versions of the system were
deployed in field trials to verify and correct initial design
assumptions and learn exactly how real customers would use the
features. Many conversations with field sales reps, support
engineers, and storage practice experts were incorporated into the
final feature mix.
What comes next . . .
Honeycomb's groundbreaking advances in low cost, high availability,
scalable storage application servers would be most logically delivered
to customers by Sun's Network Storage business unit led by Mark Canepa.
In December 2004, fifteen of the original development team were
transferred from Sun Labs to Network Storage under the direction of
Fidelma Russo, VP of Engineering. Honeycomb is a
classic example of innovative thinking being applied to real customer
problems, and it puts Sun in an excellent position to shake up the
storage marketplace with this carefully crafted, superior solution.
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