Cloud Data Storage
University Licensed Cloud Storage Applications
Note: While cloud storage is not a substitute for a data backup strategy, having data replicated in the cloud is insurance against risks like theft or hardware failure.Â
The following are supported and licensed by UC San Diego for use by faculty, staff, and students
Google Drive (a G Suite for Education application)
For individuals who are unfamiliar, or not yet using Google Drive, more information and how to get started can be found here.
In My Drive, the Principal Investigator (PI),or data owner, can create a hierarchical structure of folders for lab members’ data. We have outlined recommended practices that may be considered when created shared folders on the Lab Data Management: Recommended Practices page. Under the UC San Diego licensing agreement with Google, users have unlimited storage space.Â
NOTE: Per call with Google rep Jeff Nessen on 2/10/21, unlimited data storage capacity will soon go away for our users. No date is currently available, nor is the future data storage capacity per user known at this time but users are cautioned.
For more information about G-Suite for Education at UC San Diego, visit this Blink page
Health Sciences personnel should consult this Pulse page
OneDrive for Business and Education
As an alternative to Google Drive, UC San Diego's licensing agreement with Microsoft provides for allocations of 5TB in OneDrive, available to all UC San Diego students, faculty, and staff. A similar folder and permissions structure as outlined on the Lab Data Management: Recommended Practices page that can also be created in OneDrive.
Quick access to OneDrive via web browser.
Points of Note:
- When granting access and applying the Principle of Least Privilege, please note the following for OneDrive:
- Assigning ‘can edit’ privilege to project members, allows for files or folders to be created, modified, deleted, and shared.Â
- Assigning ‘can view’ privilege to project members, allows for files or folders to be viewed only.Â
- Members with edit privileges may share folder with others without requiring the owner's permission.
- The UC San Diego Campus OneDrive and UC San Diego Health Sciences OneDrive are under separate licenses.
- Furthermore, the UC San Diego Health Sciences OneDrive licenses are owned independently by departments. These licenses have user allotments of either 1TB and 5TBs depending on the department.Â
- UC San Diego Health Sciences OneDrive will allow sharing with non-health affiliated users entering the user's full email address and adding as a guest to the shared folder or document.
Detailed instructions for OneDrive features are available from Microsoft support. Here are the links to a few of the more commonly used features:
- Share documents or folders in SharePoint Server (via OneDrive)
- Stop sharing OneDrive files or folders or change permissions
- Sort, rename, or move a file/folder in OneDrive
For more information about OneDrive at UC San Diego, visit this Blink page
Health Sciences personnel should consult this Pulse page
Commercial Cloud Storage Supported by UC Business Associate Agreements (BAA)
Commercial cloud providers offer affordable data storage solutions, in particular long-term storage (cold and archival), and these are often recommended as options for storing secondary copies of data. Those interested in getting started with commercial cloud services should contact research-it@ucsd.edu in order to take advantage of benefits to users under UC San Diego's Consolidated Billing Program.
Benefits may include (depending on the service provider chosen):
- 11% discount on all services under UC negotiated rate
- Additional discount on data egress under UC negotiated rate
- Additional 1% discount offered by reseller
- Federated login
- Multi-factor authentication
- Access to spend-monitoring and security-risk dashboards at no cost (licensed by UC San Diego)
- Monthly recharge billing
- Access to in-house technical expertiseÂ
If commercial cloud storage is a solution under consideration, these best practices are advised:
- Be cautious, as data egress (downloading) can be costly and minimum storage durations apply to infrequently accessed data, which may result in additional charges.Â
- Schedule regular deposits of archival data to reduce the volume of active storage and provide the assurance that data is in a durable and secure environment.
- Consider using automated workflows to move data between storage classes. This can significantly reduce costs.
- The service offerings of cloud providers can be challenging - contact research-it@ucsd.edu for additional guidance and advice.
Example: Cost Savings Between Storage Classes
An illustration of potential cost saving variances between active and cold storage tiers might look as follows:Â
Amount of Data | Description | Minimum Storage Duration | Retrieval Time | Cost per Month |
---|---|---|---|---|
5TB | Standard: Active data | None | -- | $117 |
5TB | Infrequently accessed data | 30 days | -- | $64 |
5TB | Very infrequently accessed data | 90 days | Minutes to hours | $20 |
5TB | Archival data | 180 days | 12 hours | $6 |
Note: Rates above are shared only as an example and should not be relied upon for accuracy.
Calculating Costs in the Cloud
Please use these calculators to help determine current, actual costs with these service providers.
- Amazon Web Services Pricing Calculator
- Google Cloud Platform Pricing Calculator
- Microsoft Azure Calculator
Learn more about commercial cloud service providers, UC negotiated agreements, and how to request an account under the Consolidated Billing Program here
Need help establishing a data management best practice workflow for your research group or lab? Please contact research-it@ucsd.eduÂ
Last updated: 9/23/20