共用方式為


Supporting Information Workers with Reliable File Services and Storage

 

Applies To: Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2

One of the major goals of IT professionals is to support information workers who use client applications such as a word processor to work on files that are stored on file shares. Information workers require high levels of availability and performance from the servers that store their files. IT professionals also require those servers to be cost-effective, manageable, and built with security in mind.

A collection of features have been improved or added to Windows Server 2012 in response to the needs of information workers and the IT professionals who support them. At a high level, most of these features fall within the following three categories.

Availability and Performance

In response to customer requests, we made availability a top priority as we were planning for Windows Server 2012.

Always Offline mode

In Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012, administrators can configure the experience for users of Offline Files to always work offline, even when they are connected through a high-speed network connection. Windows updates files in the Offline Files cache by synchronizing hourly in the background, by default. This addresses a customer concern with Offline Files where users would transition between the Online and Offline modes, depending on network availability and conditions, even when the Slow-Link mode (also known as the Slow Connection mode) was enabled and set to a 1 millisecond latency threshold.

For more information, see Folder Redirection, Offline Files, and Roaming User Profiles overview.

Cluster-Aware Updating for minimal downtime

Existing server updating tools are oriented toward standalone servers. Using these tools on clustered servers can be laborious and error-prone, and can result in unintended downtime during necessary update maintenance. The Cluster-Aware Updating (CAU) feature provides you with options for performing planned updates on server nodes in a failover cluster with minimal downtime and administrative overhead.

For more information, see Cluster-Aware Updating Overview.

SMB and NFS v3 transparent failover

Transparent failover is a technology that allows file servers to fail over to another node in the cluster in a way that is completely transparent to applications that have files open on SMB or NFS v3 file shares on the failed server node. The delay for application file-requests might be only a few seconds, while the operations are transferred to the next node in the cluster. When combined with CAU, Transparent Failover takes care of both planned maintenance and unplanned failures with minimal impact. SMB provides transparent failover during planned maintenance and unplanned failures while NFS v3 supports transparent failover only when manually initiated, typically during planned maintenance.

Note that Server for NFS supports transparent failover only when manually initiated, typically during planned maintenance. If an unplanned failover occurs, NFS clients lose their connections. It's also worth mentioning that Server for NFS doesn't have any integration with the Resume Key filter. This means that if a local app or SMB session attempts to access the same file that an NFS client is accessing immediately after a planned failover, the NFS client might lose its connections (transparent failover wouldn't succeed).

For more information, see Server Message Block Overview.

Chkdsk improvements

In the past, file system corruptions could result in unexpected downtime while Chkdsk scanned the volume and corrected these corruptions, with the downtime proportional to the number of files on the volume.

Windows Server 2012 introduces a new NTFS health model and approach to Chkdsk, reducing surprises, putting the user in control, and making computers more available and scalable. Detection of file system corruptions occurs online, while the correction of these errors happens in a small number of seconds, while offline. The design goal for Windows Server 2012 is to enable administrators to confidently deploy large volumes, including 64 TB volumes, without concern for availability or scalability.

Storage Spaces and Storage Pools

Storage Spaces enables you to virtualize storage by grouping cost-effective industry-standard disks into storage pools, and then create storage spaces (referred to as virtual disks in Server Manager) from the available capacity in the storage pools.

Storage Spaces helps you increase the availability of business-critical data in a cost-efficient way, regardless of whether you work in a large enterprise, a hosting company, or a small business. Storage Spaces reduces administration costs by decreasing the time administrators spend provisioning storage. It also simplifies administration tasks, enabling administrators who are not storage professionals to set up and manage resilient and high availability storage. Storage Spaces also saves hardware costs by enabling the use of industry-standard disks for resilient storage up to multiple petabytes in size, with high availability.

For more information, see File and Storage Services Overview.

SMB Directory Leasing

For branch office users connecting over WAN networks with high latencies, reducing the number of round-trips between a client and a server dramatically improves application response times. Directory Leasing is an enhancement to the existing SMB protocol that reduces the number of round-trips between client and server.

With Directory Leasing, client computers request a lease lock on directory information (which contains the file metadata), enabling Windows to cache the information for longer periods. Because many end-user applications access file metadata frequently, caching it for longer periods reduces the round-trips that a client has to wait for, improving the application response time.

For more information, see Server Message Block Overview.

Cost Effectiveness

We recognize that cost effectiveness is one of your top priorities, closely rivaling availability.

Data Deduplication

By using the new Data Deduplication role service to reduce the number of duplicate blocks of data in storage, you can store much more data in a given amount of storage capacity than was previously possible using Single Instance Storage (SIS) or NTFS file system compression. General purpose file servers can typically reduce storage capacity utilization by a 2:1 ratio (for example, files that previously used 1 TB would use 500 GB after deduplication). Servers that host virtualization data (such as VHD files) often reduce storage capacity utilization by a 20:1 ratio, which reduces 1 TB of data to 50 GB. Data deduplication has minimal CPU and memory overhead and maintains a high level of data integrity.

For more information, see Data Deduplication Overview.

BranchCache for Network Files version 2

The BranchCache for Network Files role service in Windows Server 2012 uses the same technology as the Data Deduplication role service to reduce duplicate data replicated over WAN connections. As a result, the BranchCache in Windows Server 2012 can further reduce WAN costs, and improve application response times for branch office users.

Enhanced support for low cost SATA disks

Windows Server 2012 features enhanced support for low-cost SATA disks. This enhancement decreases the possibility of metadata inconsistency due to unexpected power loss on commodity hard disks while enabling the disk to cache associated data as long as safely possible. This enables customers to more reliably utilize cost-effective SATA drives in enterprise deployments.

Access-denied assistance

In the past, when users are denied access to a file or folder, typically on a file share, users received little help with troubleshooting the issue. Often times, the solution was to determine the owner of the file share and then send the owner an email asking for access. In other instances, users would call the help desk or give up.

With Access-denied assistance, file server administrators can provide users with a customized access-denied message, including troubleshooting information and the ability to request assistance via email. Upon receiving the email requesting assistance, the designated owner of the folder can look at the details provided by Windows to help determine why the user was denied access and then take the appropriate action.

Access-denied assistance can reduce support costs by enabling server administrators to provide users with the means to help themselves solve access-denied issues and obtain assistance directly from the folder owners when they need additional help.

For more information, see Access-denied assistance.

Security and Manageability

Primary Computers support for Folder Redirection and Roaming User Profiles

In Windows Server 2012, you can designate a set of computers, known as primary computers, for each domain user, which enables you to control which computers use Folder Redirection, Roaming User Profiles, or both. For example, the administrator can choose to roam user data and settings between a user’s desktop and laptop, and to not roam the information when that user logs on to any other computer, such as a conference room computer. Designating primary computers is a simple and powerful method to associate user data and settings with particular computers or devices, simplify administrator oversight, improve data security, and help protect user profiles from corruption.

For more information, see Folder Redirection, Offline Files, and Roaming User Profiles overview.

SMB Encryption

A security concern that comes up with data traversing untrusted networks is that it is prone to eavesdropping attacks. Existing solutions to the problem typically use IPsec, WAN accelerators, or other dedicated hardware solutions. However, these solutions are expensive to setup and maintain.

Windows Server 2012 includes encryption built-in to the SMB protocol. This allows end to end data protection from snooping attacks with no additional deployment costs. You have the flexibility to decide whether the entire server or only specific shares should be enabled for encryption. SMB encryption is also relevant to server application workloads if the application data is on a file server and traverses untrusted networks. With this feature, data security is maintained while it is on the wire.

For more information, see Server Message Block Overview.

File Classification Infrastructure and Dynamic Access Control

Data governance, data retention, and regulatory compliance are responsible for a significant portion of IT budgets. Dynamic access control and the File Classification Infrastructure technologies included in Windows Server 2012 provide new ways to classify data, control access to data, and achieve regulatory compliance. It provides sophisticated authorization and auditing controls, along with data classification capabilities that enable organizations to apply information governance to unstructured data on their file servers. You now have greater control over file server data, a conditional expression ACL model, centralized authorization and auditing policy management, and business-driven data.

For more information, see What's New in File Server Resource Manager in Windows Server 2012 [redirected].

Unified remote management of File and Storage Services in Server Manager

The File and Storage Services role in Server Manager enables you to remotely manage multiple file servers, including their role services and storage, all from a single window.

This functionality is built on top of a Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) and Windows PowerShell infrastructure. As a result, Windows Server 2012 includes Windows PowerShell cmdlets for performing the majority of administration tasks for file and storage servers, simplifying the task of automating common tasks.

For more information, see File and Storage Services Overview.

Improved management of Folder Redirection, Offline Files, and Roaming User Profiles

Windows Server 2012 includes improved WMI interfaces for Folder Redirection, Offline Files, and Roaming User Profiles, making it easier for independent software vendors (ISVs) that deliver management suites to integrate managing, monitoring, and troubleshooting these technologies into their existing management tools.

See Also

File and Storage Services Overview
Scale-Out File Server for Application Data Overview