Posts Tagged ‘Daniel Jones’

The Ideal Network Backup Software

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Daniel Jones is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular tool for personal online backup — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/the-ideal-network-backup-software.html

Playing with the Network Backup Software’s Big Boys

When you backup your data at home or a workstation, with no network involved a simple zip software utility or CD burner is often enough. However when you are a system administrator, responsible for a large number of servers in a medium to large LAN/WAN you are needs are going to change radically. It’s time to start shopping for a commercial network backup software solution that can make maintenance of your total data protection solution an unobtrusive process rather then a chore.

Choosing Your Network Backup Software Solution

There are a large number of commercial software solutions available to backup your network. Before you can even thing of considering one of them, there are certain features it MUST have. Your backup software must have centralized control across the network. There is no way you can afford the time to run from server to server to modify backup scripts or initiate restores. It absolutely must be reliable, or there is no point in using it, and it needs to be easy to use.

Finally it needs to be cost effective. Finally, it doesn’t matter how good the network backup software solution is on paper, if you can’t get it into your budget it’s useless.

Other Nice Network Backup Software Features

Once we have the “must haves” out of the way we can focus on “nice to haves”. For example, a good reporting package is very useful. Several available packages provide excellent reporting on how much data is being backed-up, how long the backups require, etc… all with full color trend charts that management loves so much. More important is good reporting on backup failures! In addition it’s always nice to be able to do quick and unobtrusive restores.

The need for some features will depend on your network. Do you need support for multiple operating systems? Multiple drive types? SCSI attach devices, Storage Area Networks (SANs) and Network Attach Storage (NAS)? Will you need a scalable solution that works across WANs as well as your LAN? Especially nice, if you can get it, is support for software packages you may be using i.e. DB2, Oracle, MS SQL, SAP R/3, Exchange, Lotus Notes, etc…

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Separation is Critical to Your Backup Strategy

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Daniel Jones is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular Amazon S3 based online backup service — Back2zip. This article available at http://free-backup.info/separation-is-critical-to-your-backup-strategy.html

Thinking about Backup during a Recovery

For some reason, most people don’t seriously consider forming a backup strategy until they have experienced a significant data loss. A this point they are willing to consider all sorts of methods to protect them from data loss, but are quite put out that the new backup strategy will not help them recover what has been lost.

Failed Backup, a Double Disaster

The only thing worse then having to restore to your backup after a data loss is finding out that your backup has failed as well. This is why most experts advise your backup strategy include multiple backups and backup methods with a degree of separation between them. Without well separated and multiple backups you will often find the same issue that took down your live data will effect your backup as well.

Three Types of Backup Separation

In order to limit the number of single points of failure that can take down all your backups, it is important to separate your backup strategies in three ways. First and most obvious is the location of your backup media storage. Having a the library of backup data tapes in your server room may be convenient, but it does you little good when the fire that destroys the original also destroys your library. As many people find to their dismay, fireproof safes are often not. At a very minimum you should store copies of your backup tapes offsite and update the offsite backups regularly.

The second type of separation is method. In our previous example, storing copies of your tape backup offsite is a good first step, but if your tape backup software or hardware fails you would still be left with multiple copies of a failed backup. A more secure alternative would be to mix they backup methods, for example a local copy of your tape backups, with an offsite online backup.

With this strategy, even if the online, or tape backup were to fail due to problems with the internet connection, or other software/hardware issues, their is an excellent chance that the other backup will still be available.

The third and final type of separation we will discuss is that of time. A common problem with failed backups is that when the backup is taking place, one of the files that needs to be backed up is locked, or in use. The ideal cure for this is to monitor your logs and reports and schedule the backup to occur at a time when the task locking the file is not running. In the real world however, this is not always possible.

Since we discussed the importance for multiple backups in the previous paragraph, just make sure that their is a significant difference in time between the two backups. This gives us a better chance that one of the two backups will pick up the problem file. Despite this you still need to pay close and daily attention to your logs and reports.

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Backup Your Network Computer

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Daniel Jones is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular Amazon S3 based software for online data backup — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/backup-your-network-computer.html

Online Backup for Your Network Computer

Few things in the computer world are as easy as a backup on a network computer. One of the primary reasons for connecting you to the companies intranet is to give you access to the internet. If you have access to the internet then you can tap into a wide variety of online network backup solutions.

Online network backup is typically as reliable as your internet connection, which is a lot better then the 50% average failure rate from traditional backup methods. For most services the restore is also very easy and fast, and the cost of the online network backup service is usually a fraction of the equivalent non network backup alternatives.

An Example of a Typical Online Network Backup

Typically when you first start your online network backup service, you would do a complete backup of your hard drive. You would then schedule your nightly, weekly, etc… backups to occur late at night with the company bandwidth and your computer is not being used. These nightly backups would typically be incremental backups that only upload the files that have been added or changed since the last full backup.

Once a week, or once a month, depending on the volume of files that change, you would do another full backup of the entire hard drive. In a situation where you needed to restore the entire hard drive you would restore the last good full backup and then any later incremental backups.

Classic Backup Solutions Using Your Network

If an online network backup won’t work for you, then there is always the shared drive solution. For years network administrators have had the practice of setting up a server with a large amount of hard drive space and making portions of that space available to individuals who need to backup data. The good thing about this is it usually requires very little in material costs. Usually the server is a retired file server with legacy hardware.

The bad news is that it is prone to failure, and even when everything is working well, maintaining this server take up valuable administrator time which could be better spend installing security patches and keeping viruses and hackers off your network.

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