In part 1 of these series we discussed the merits of Azure file sync. One of the options of this technology is Cloud tiering. This feature of Azure File Sync in which frequently accessed files are cached locally on the server while all other files are tiered to Azure Files based on policy settings. When a file is tiered, the Azure File Sync file system filter replaces the file locally with a pointer, or reparse point. In the event a user needs a file which has been cached, Azure File Sync quietly downloads the file from Azure Files from the cloud.
There are two fundamental policies which are available for tiering:
Volume free space policies always takes precedence over any other policies, including the date policy. Optionally, you can enable a date policy for each server endpoint on that volume. Regardless of the precedence, the results are similar: when a threshold is met, it will tier the file replacing the file with a reparse point which represents a URL to the file in Azure Files.
One aspect of the Azure files sync which should be noted (regardless of Tiering option) is that the Storage account will maintain a complete copy of the share data. Because of this, Azure owners can take advantage of an Azure Vault to completely backup the storage account.
Key features of this which would be advantageous to companies:
In this blog we discussed the storage and backups considerations which are related to getting Azure File Sync Online. The 3rd part of the series we will explore the networking aspects for consideration.