What Are the Differences Between SFS, OBS, and EVS?
Table 1 shows the comparison between SFS, OBS, and EVS.
|
Dimension |
SFS |
OBS |
EVS |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Concept |
SFS provides on-demand high-performance file storage, which can be shared by multiple cloud servers. SFS is similar to a remote directory for Linux OSs. |
OBS provides massive, secure, reliable, and cost-effective data storage for users to store data of any type and size. |
EVS provides scalable, high-performance, high-reliability, block storage that can be used to meet a wide variety of service requirements. EVS disks are like physical disks on PCs. |
|
Data storage logic |
Stores files. Data is sorted and displayed in files and folders. |
Stores objects. Files are saved directly to OBS. The files automatically generate corresponding system metadata. You can also customize the metadata if needed. |
Stores binary data and cannot directly store files. To store files, you need to format the disk with a file system first. |
|
Access method |
SFS file systems need to be mounted to ECSs or BMSs through the NFS protocol before they can be accessed. A network address must be specified or mapped to a local directory for access. |
OBS buckets can be accessed through the Internet or Direct Connect. The bucket address must be specified for access, and transfer protocols HTTP and HTTPS are used. |
EVS disks can only be used and accessed from applications after being attached to ECSs or BMSs and initialized. |
|
Use cases |
Media processing, file sharing, high-performance computing, and data backup
NOTE:
Mainly suitable for high-performance computing workloads like gene sequencing and image rendering that require high bandwidth for file sharing. |
Big data analysis, static website hosting, online video on demand (VoD), gene sequencing, and intelligent video surveillance |
High-performance computing, enterprise critical clustered applications, enterprise application systems, and development and testing
NOTE:
Mainly suitable for high-performance workloads like industrial design and energy exploration that require high speed and high IOPS for high-performance storage. |
|
Capacity |
EB-level |
EB-level |
TB-level |
|
Latency |
10 ms |
10 ms |
Sub-millisecond |
|
IOPS/TPS |
Millions |
Tens of millions |
128,000 per disk |
|
Bandwidth |
TB/s |
TB/s |
MB/s |
|
Data sharing |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
|
Remote access |
Supported |
Supported |
Not supported |
|
Online editing |
Supported |
Not supported |
Supported |
|
Used independently |
Supported |
Supported |
No (EVS disks can only be used after being attached to cloud servers, such as ECSs.) |
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