SNIA Developer Conference September 15-17, 2025 | Santa Clara, CA
Salon IV
Tue Sep 13 | 7:00pm
The SNIA Technical Council believes that it is important for storage developers to learn about the emerging technology of Data Processing Units (DPUs). We have created a task force to provide an overview and answer the following questions. What is a DPU? Why might storage developers want to adopt DPUs in their products or services? What tools and libraries do you provide for developers? Which parts are open source? What development languages are supported? Following the panel presentations, we will open the floor to questions from the participants. Don’t miss this great opportunity to learn more about DPUs!
Please join the interactive discussion on this exciting next class of storage devices. Now is your chance to get involved in the definitions, standardization, and direction of the future evolution of our industry.
AI use cases are evolving to consume both unstructured and structured data. Object storage is evolving to support both unstructured and structured data becoming tier-1 storage. This BOF sessions covers the fundamentals of structured data, like iceberg tables and use cases enabled by supporting this natively in object storage.
Let's continue the discussion with the really smart presenters from the mainstage panel discussion earlier in the day.
AI is driving the future of Data. A holistic approach to how this data moves through the pipeline is needed, with open, supported ecosystem that can help users manage their data from storage, memory, processing, and networking in a vendor-neutral way.
Come to this BoF to discuss SNIA's new Storage.AI efforts and hear how you can be a vital piece of this work regardless of your intersection with your data and the AI ecosystem!
With SMB3.1.1 POSIX Extensions now implemented in multiple open-source clients and servers, the protocol has matured to support a wide range of Linux/POSIX semantics over the network. However, as the Linux kernel and its ecosystem continue to evolve—with new filesystem syscalls, flags, and ioctls—further protocol enhancements are needed to maintain parity with local filesystems. This BoF offers an informal forum to discuss priorities for new features, explore support for emerging workloads, and identify performance improvements for key Linux use cases.
The arrival of true permanent and long-term storage technologies brings a new challenge: ensuring that the data we preserve today remains retrievable and meaningful in the distant future. What must a future IT expert know in order to independently access and interpret data stored on today’s long-term media? This session will launch a multidisciplinary discussion aimed at answering that question, with the ultimate goal of developing a new international standard for digital preservation. The proposed “open framework” would span every layer of the preservation stack — from how data is physically structured on media, through algorithms, codecs, compression formats, and software, to how preserved information is rendered and interacted with. Such a framework would serve as the basis for a new ISO standard that not only safeguards humanity’s most valuable data for generations, but also defines best practices for passing on our digital heritage. All professionals engaged in digital preservation are invited to join this collaborative effort and review the current state of the “open framework” initiative.