Nasuni

Nasuni

Nasuni

American hybrid cloud storage company


Nasuni is a privately-held hybrid cloud storage company[4] with headquarters in Boston, Massachusetts.[5]

Quick Facts Company type, Industry ...

History

Nasuni was founded in 2009, and has raised approximately $169M, with the last funding a $25M investment in which all previous investors participated, including Goldman Sachs, Telstra Ventures, and Northbridge Venture Partners.[6]

In the time since Nasuni requested a patent on UniFS in November 2013, the company has expanded its access to cloud storage infrastructure, as well as its on-premises edge appliance offerings, which provide local access to content stored in Nasuni-managed cloud storage.[7]

On 14 July 2020, Nasuni Corp. collected $25 million in a new round of funding, plus an additional $15 million debt facility, and upgraded its cloud file storage platform to support remote workers.[8]

In May 2022, Nasuni acquired the technology assets of DBM Cloud Systems in order to provide enhanced data migration and cloud portability features.[9]

In June of 2022, Nasuni acquired Storage Made Easy, a file data management company, for an undisclosed sum. [10]

Technology

The firm's storage software uses object storage,[11] file caching appliances, and the company's proprietary UniFS global file system[12] to offer a cloud solution that replaces traditional file servers and Network Attached Storage (NAS). Nasuni integrates with public cloud storage platforms, such as Google Cloud Storage,[13] Amazon Web Services, and Microsoft Azure,[14] and private cloud storage platforms such as IBM Cloud Object Storage and EMC Elastic Cloud Storage (ECS).[15] Such storage platforms provide an object-based storage infrastructure, on top of which UniFS creates a complete versioned file system.[16] The Nasuni platform stores customer data as a sequence of snapshots that include every version of every file. The firm has demonstrated the ability to store more than one billion objects in a single storage volume.[17]

Nasuni Edge Appliances run in the public cloud or on-premises to provide shared access to cached copies of active files. These Appliances are typically deployed as virtual machines, running on existing infrastructure, including VMware, Nutanix hyper-converged infrastructure, and Microsoft Hyper-V. The Edge Appliances can also run in the cloud on Microsoft Azure, Amazon EC2, or Google Cloud Platform. Hardware appliance choices offered by Nasuni include systems with solid-state drives.[18]

Features

Nasuni’s File Data Platform provides a variety of services, including the following:

  • Multi-site collaboration that enables multiple users in multiple locations to work on the same files. [19]
  • Global file lock to ensure that only one user is changing a file at a time. [20]
  • Global file acceleration that optimizes the distribution of files to users. [21]
  • Access Anywhere to enable users to access the files they need from any location. [22]
  • Rapid recovery from ransomware attacks. [23]
  • Professional services to assist with migrating data to cloud storage. [24]

Patents

Nasuni holds a number of patents for technologies that support the Nasuni enterprise file services platform, including:

  • Method and system for interfacing to cloud storage.[25]
  • Versioned file system with pruning[26]
  • Versioned file system with sharing.[27]
  • Versioned file system with fast restore.[28]
  • Cloud-native global file system with multi-site support using push classes.[29]
  • Network accessible file server.[30]
  • Versioned file system with global lock.[31]
  • Systems and methods for restoring an interface to a global file system.[32]
  • Versioned file system using structured data representations.[33]
  • Cloud-native global file system with constant-time rekeying.[34]
  • Cloud-native global file system with reshapable caching.[35]

Awards

Nasuni has earned several awards for technology and customer service, including the following:

  • NorthFace ScoreBoard Award for Customer Service, by the Customer Relationship Management Institute LLC.[36]
  • Silver Product of the Year Award for Cloud Storage, by Storage magazine and SearchStorage.[37]
  • SIIA Software CODiE Award for Best Cloud Infrastructure, by SIIA Software .[38]

Origin of "Nasuni"

The company name "NASUNI" is shorthand for Andres Rodriguez's original idea for the company: "NAS UNIfied".[39]


References

  1. "David Grant President, Nasuni" - StorageNewsletter - 17 Jun 2022
  2. "Nasuni Company profile". Craft. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  3. Joseph F. Kovar (14 Jul 2020). "Nasuni Raises New $25 Million Funding Round". CRN.
  4. Kidd, Mark (2015-07-24). "Company Profile: Nasuni". StorageReview.com. Retrieved 2021-07-21.
  5. "Nasuni raises $40M and upgrades its cloud file storage platform". siliconANGLE. 14 July 2020. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  6. infotech; infotech (2022-06-29). "Nasuni buys Storage Made Easy". InfotechLead. Retrieved 2022-07-05.
  7. Linden, Josh - "Company Profile: Nasuni " - StorageReview.com - 24 July 2015
  8. Dolan, Kerry - "Lab Validation Report - Nasuni: Cloud NAS for the Distributed Enterprise" - Enterprise Strategy Group - March 2015
  9. Sliwa, Carol - "Nasuni cloud NAS helps score $38 million in funding" - TechTarget SearchStorage - September 2017
  10. Tom Smith - "Enterprise File Storage Simplified in the Cloud" - Insights From Analytics – 8 Feb 2022
  11. E-Channelnews - " Nasuni Makes your Files Accessible from Anywhere" - eChannelNews – 12 Sep 2022
  12. Chris Mellor - " Nasuni file sync accelerates ransomware recovery" - Blocks and Files – 14 Sep 2021
  13. "Versioned file system with pruning" - Justia Patents - 10 Jun 2015
  14. "Versioned file system with sharing" - Justia Patents - 12 Oct 2011
  15. "Versioned file system with fast restore" - Justia Patents - 1 Mar 2016
  16. "Network accessible file server" - Justia Patents - 11 February 2020
  17. "Versioned file system with global lock" - Justia Patents - 23 February 2021
  18. "Origin" - About Nasuni - 25 September 2020

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Nasuni, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.