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January 26th, 2009, 05:17 PM
#1
Drive Snapshot
Hey guys,
We are doing some disaster recovery planning around here, [hence all the questions about recovering data and such]. I was wondering what you would recommend as far as a good utility to take a snapshot of a drive. I have come across several, but I haven't seen many reviews on them. I was hoping you could make some suggestions. We are going to back up every Friday night, and I would like to have a few weeks stored on our drive [1TB external] at any given time, in case we need to roll back. The amount of data on the drive that will be backed up is only about 60GB, and is hosted on a Windows 2003 server.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. If you need any more info, let me know.
Thanks in advance!
\"Those of us that had been up all night were in no mood for coffee and donuts, we wanted strong drink.\"
-HST
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January 26th, 2009, 07:30 PM
#2
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January 26th, 2009, 08:14 PM
#3
Hey Nihil, thanks for the response.
I haven't given much thought to making the image on the fly. Honestly I didn't even know if that was a capability with making an image.
2. The drive will be backed up locally from it's current location, across town, and then I will bring the external drive back to my office with me for safe keeping.
3. We are looking into using a company called Mozy for our offsite backups. http://mozy.com/pro
4. Not sure on this one. It is student data, I am not sure how long we are required to keep it.
5. I did not set this server up, and have only logged into it a couple of times to look at the file structure, and run updates. So I couldn't say for sure at this time whether or not it uses journaling...
\"Those of us that had been up all night were in no mood for coffee and donuts, we wanted strong drink.\"
-HST
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January 29th, 2009, 09:49 AM
#4
Mozy is actually pretty good, as an EMC employee I get access to a small acount for free I think 10GB or something.
In general the solution should be based on at least:
- How important the data is
- How fast the data needs to be restored
- Space the backups will take
- How secure the backups need to be (security)
- How the restore will be distributed based on the environment
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January 29th, 2009, 12:47 PM
#5
Stay away from Iron Mountain's Live Vault whatever you do...Your Exchange Data will be unrestorable and your backups most likely will corrupt...everyone I know has had BAD experiences.....
"It is a shame that stupidity is not painful" - Anton LaVey
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January 29th, 2009, 12:58 PM
#6
We use Dell Virtual Copy and Snapshot (Premium features included with hardware) to copy volumes to our backup SAN (Dell MD3000i). Easy GUI for configuration and decent performance (wall time).
In God We Trust....Everything else we backup.
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