[23] Storage Capacity and Availability
By:
Prasanna
|
๐ Topic: Storage Capacity and Availability
Domain: D7 โ Security Operations
Tags: #cissp
๐งพ Definition
Storage space issues can threaten logging, backup, recovery, and overall system availability. Capacity planning is therefore a security and operational control, not just an infrastructure concern.
๐ Key Points
- Monitor disk utilization and define thresholds for warnings and alarms.
- Ensure logs, backups, and snapshots have sufficient capacity.
- Retention policies should balance business needs with storage cost and compliance.
- Storage exhaustion can cause log loss, failed backups, and blind spots during incidents.
- Scale-out storage or archival solutions may be needed for long-term growth.
โ ๏ธ CISSP Insight
- Availability can be impacted by simple capacity failures, especially when monitoring or backup systems stop functioning.
- Security teams must treat storage growth as a resilience issue.
โ๏ธ Key Difference / Trap
- Adding storage is not always the real fix
- The real issue may be poor retention, missing monitoring, or oversized logs
- Backups must be tested
- Capacity alone does not guarantee recoverability
๐๏ธ Example
A SIEM server begins to run out of disk space. If logging stops, security detection and investigation quality decline, so the team must add capacity and review retention settings.
๐ References
- NIST SP 800-53, CP family and AU family
- ISO/IEC 27001:2022, Annex A 8.15 and 8.16
๐ Quick Recall
- Full disk = risk to logging and recovery
- Capacity planning = availability control