I
was reading some stuff related to share point remote blob feature. And I
got this Awesome short but very important information from MSDN Jie Li
blog. It’s not detail but definitely you can get much more from it..
Enjoy..! :)
Q:
What is RBS?
From
SQL RBS Team Blog:
RBS(Remote
Blob Store) is a set of standardized APIs that allow storage/retrieval of BLOBs
outside of your main SQL database where a dedicated BLOB store is desirable for
various reasons. This uses a provider model for plugging in any dedicated BLOB
store that implements these RBS APIs.
Q:
Which version of SQL Server can I use for SharePoint RBS?
SQL
Server 2008 and SQL Server 2008 R2 both support RBS. A RBS Library needs to be
downloaded and installed on SQL Server to enable the feature. All SQL editions
(Express, Standard, Enterprise…) support RBS. Licensing requirement may involve
depending on the scenarios.
Q:
What is FILESTREAM?
FILESTREAM
is a SQL Server 2008 feature to store BLOB content on to file system.
From
FILESTREAM Overview:
FILESTREAM
integrates the SQL Server Database Engine with an NTFS file system by storing varbinary(max)
binary large object (BLOB) data as files on the file system. Transact-SQL
statements can insert, update, query, search, and back up FILESTREAM data.
Win32 file system interfaces provide streaming access to the data.
FILESTREAM
uses the NT system cache for caching file data. This helps reduce any effect
that FILESTREAM data might have on Database Engine performance. The SQL Server
buffer pool is not used; therefore, this memory is available for query
processing.
SQL
FILESTREAM feature does not allow to store content on anything other than local
storages. (SMB shares cannot be used for store BLOB content)
Q:
Is there a comparison of FILESTREAM and RBS?
Please
check SQL RBS team blog: SQL Server Remote BLOB Store and FILESTREAM feature
comparison.
Q:
What is RBS FILESTREAM Provider?
RBS
FILESTREAM Provider is a free out-of-the-box provider shipped by Microsoft SQL
RBS Team that allows a deployment to use a SQL Database (local or remote) as a
dedicated BLOB store. This provider utilizes the FILESTREAM as the BLOB storage
mechanism and ties the two technologies together.
Q:
Any benefit for using RBS with SharePoint?
By
using RBS for SharePoint, customer maybe able to leverage cheaper
storage, improve performance, and enable better integration stories with 3rd
party technology for their SharePoint databases. But be careful, the benefit is
different case by case. You need to investigate your scenarios to see if RBS
really fits you.
Q:
Any benefit to use RBS FILESTREAM Provider?
Benefit
for Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 with Windows Internal Database upgrade:
We
no longer support Windows Internal Database (WID) with SharePoint Foundation
2010. However, SQL Server Express has a 4GB DB size limit. The direct upgrade
of a content DB > 4gb from WID to SQL Server Express is not supported.
To get around of this limit, customer can use RBS FILESTREAM Provider to store
all the BLOB content on to file system so the DB size will still remain small.
Benefit
for other scenarios:
We
are currently recommending to use this technology with document archiving and
media streaming scenarios. Tests show that with RBS FILESTREAM Provider large
BLOB objects can have better I/O compared with putting everything in the
database.
Q:
Can RBS FILESTREAM Provider support SMB shares to store the content, for
example a NAS device?
No.
SQL FILESTREAM feature does not allow to store content on anything other than
local storages. Therefore RBS FILESTREAM Provider has the same limitation. 3rd
party RBS Providers do not have this limitation if they are not leveraging SQL
FILESTREAM feature.
Q:
How is the BLOB content stored on the file system with RBS FILESTREAM Provider?
Is it encrypted? Does TDE helps with the encryption?
The
BLOB objects are stored with GUID names to make sure they can be linked from
the RBS tables. The content is not encrypted. TDE does not apply to the content
in file stream.
Q:
I heard there’s a remote feature in RBS FILESTREAM Provider, is that supported
by SharePoint 2010?
This
feature allows SQL RBS FILESTREAM Provider to store BLOBs on to a remote SQL
Server DB/Instance. SharePoint 2010 will support this remote feature of RBS
FILESTREAM Provider. However the test work will not be finished at the
time of SharePoint 2010 RTM. We will announce the supportability of this remote
feature later when the test is done.
Q:
Is there a licensing requirement for SQL Server when I want to use RBS for
SharePoint?
Yes,
there is. If the BLOB objects are stored on local SQL Server file system then
you can use any SQL Server SKU. For any other scenarios, local SQL Server needs
to be Enterprise. The following table shows the license requirement for
different scenarios.
Scenario
|
Local SQL SKU
|
Remote SQL SKU
|
FILESTREAM Provider,
BLOB stored on local SQL Server file system |
Any SQL SKU
|
N/A
|
FILESTREAM Provider,
BLOB stored on Remote SQL Server file system |
SQL Enterprise
|
SQL Standard or above
|
3rd Party RBS Provider
|
SQL Enterprise
|
N/A
|
Q:
Any 3rd party RBS provider I can use?
Currently
StoragePoint (acquired by Metalogix recently) and EMC are providing RBS
Providers for different storage options. NetApps, Opentext, Commvault are also
working on it.
AvePoint
also made their DocAve Extender free – a EBS provider for 2007, and a RBS
provider for 2010. (thanks to Chris Musico for pointing out)
STEALTH
Software also offers RBS providers. (Thanks Mark)
Q:
Is EBS still supported?
EBS(External
BLOB Storage API) is introduced by SharePoint 2007. It is still supported in
this release (2010). Moving forward, in order to have a more unified storage
solution, we will only support RBS in the next release.
Q:
How should I backup the content if I’m using RBS?
By
using SharePoint Backup and Restore, it doesn’t really matter where the BLOB
objects are stored – this is taken care by SQL RBS. So when you use SharePoint
Backup on a RBS enabled content database, it will still backup everything. You
can restore the backup to a non-RBS enabled database too, the BLOB objects will
be inside the database – SQL RBS will decide where to put them, not SharePoint.
SQL
Backup now can take care of FILESTREAM BLOB objects.
Q:
Can RBS help to remove the 2GB file size limit in SharePoint?
No,
using RBS with SharePoint will have the same file size limit.
Q: Can I
enable RBS on a content database with content existing? How to migrate
those content into the BLOB store? (Thanks to Chris Givens)
Yes,
you can enable RBS on a content database and then migrate content into the
external storage. There's a "Migrate()" method to handle this
process. For example using Windows PowerShell, $cdb is the content db with RBS
enabled, the following command will do the job:
$cdb.Migrate()
Q:
Should I consider using RBS all the time?
No.
RBS may be used when :
- You have huge content dbs for document archiving so you want to reduce storage cost (terabytes of data)
- You have large media files to stream to the audience
- You need to use RBS to integrate 3rd party storage/archiving solutions to SharePoint. (For example EMC Documentum)
For
example, if you only have 100GB of data, seperated in several content
databases, and most of the content are documents, go for RBS will not benefit
your server farm.
Q: Are
SQL Mirroring, Clustering and Log Shipping supported when using RBS
FILESTREAM Provider?
Log
Shipping and Clustering are supported. SQL FILESTREAM cannot be used
together with SQL Mirroring.
1 comment:
Hi, probably our entry may be off topic but anyways, I have been surfing around your blog and it looks very professional.
Sharepoint Remote Blob Storage
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