This blog post is a refreshed version of articles we originally published around 2016 about FLAPE and how we foresaw the evolution of combining Flash/SSD storage with tape storage.
At that time, the goal was to understand whether these two technologies—which seemed very different and even opposed—could actually have a future together, instead of spending time positioning them against each other.
This question has resurfaced due to shortages first in HDDs and now in SSD technologies, pushing us to reconsider these kinds of solutions and what is required to start organizing and storing petabytes of data with only a few dozen SSDs in the overall architecture.
When analyzing the current storage market, we see that traditional solutions like HDDs and SSDs are increasingly showing their limitations. HDDs provide massive capacity but struggle with performance, while SSDs deliver high performance but become very expensive at large scale.
So the question becomes: can we balance speed, capacity, and cost by mixing flash and tape—an approach known as FLAPE (Flash + Tape)?
FLAPE is a tiered storage architecture designed on top of HDDs or SSDs and Tape.
FLAPE ensures the right data is in the right place at the right time, hiding tape’s latency behind flash performance.
Common FLAPE approaches:
Flash advantages:
Flash limitations:
Tape advantages:
Tape limitations:
FLAPE combines the speed of flash with the capacity of tape, creating a hybrid storage solution that overcomes the limits of HDDs and SSDs.
FLAPE defines the tiers, but Nodeum manages them intelligently: