Executive Summary:
Still looking for a reliable backup and recovery product? Use this handy guide to compare solutions from Microsoft and third-party vendors. |
To protect your company’s data and be able to recover data
quickly, you need to select the right backup and recovery
software for your servers. The buyer’s guide table on page
66 lists enterprise backup and recovery products and
features that can help you make that choice.
Windows OSs include built-in backup and recovery
tools, but if these tools don’t fit your needs, you might want to
consider a third-party solution (including Microsoft’s separate Data
Protection Manager—DPM). Let’s review some essential characteristics
of backup and recovery software products.
Media Compatibility
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You’ll want a product that will scale to the size of your environment
and is compatible with your current and future OSs and applications.
You’ll also need to choose a product that’s compatible with
your existing backup media. You might want to consider buying
a product that uses a different backup media type to supplement
your current backup strategy. For example, a common approach is
to implement a disk-to-disk (D2D) backup system to ensure continuous
data protection, then periodically archive the backup disk
to tape to use for disaster recovery.
Backup Types: Differential, Remote, and VSS Snapshots
To save time and reduce the number of unnecessary backups, many
products run periodic differential backups, which include only data
that has changed since the last full backup, in contrast to a complete
backup of all data on a volume or system. Consider whether a product
that performs full or differential backups makes more sense for
your environment.
Remote functioning is another feature to consider. If your environment
includes remote systems, you might need to back up to and
recover data from those systems. The ability to back up and recover
your systems from a remote location is essential, especially for all
those times that you’re away from the office—whether at a conference,
on vacation, or just at home for the weekend.
In addition, you might want your backup and recovery software
to be compatible with Microsoft’s Volume Shadow Copy Service
(VSS), which takes point-in-time snapshots of data and lets applications
continue to operate while the backup runs.
Virtualization
As virtualization becomes more prevalent, being able to back up
and recover data on virtual machines (VMs) is more important than
ever. If you use VMs, your backup and recovery solution should
support backup and recovery of data on VMs. A growing trend is for
businesses to use virtualized environments specifically for disaster
recovery—to provide a mirrored recovery environment that you can
switch over to if your physical servers or production virtual servers
are damaged in a disaster.
Analysis, Scripting, and Reporting
Capabilities such as pre-backup analysis, scripting, and reporting
can give you additional, useful information about backup and
recovery in your environment or automate backup and recovery
tasks. A pre-backup analysis will determine whether your storage
device has enough disk space to contain the backup and how
long the backup will take. In addition, many of the products in this
buyer’s guide will let users schedule backups by date and time, by
a defined interval (e.g., three hours, one week), by specific events
in the event log, by the amount of data changed, or even by specific
triggers (e.g., when the computer starts or shuts down, when the
user logs on or off).
Scripting your backups can also be helpful, so that you don’t
have to schedule them manually. Most of the products in this buyer’s
guide are scriptable and support a wide variety of scripts, such as
command-line interface, various shell languages, and Windows
PowerShell. Calling a backup program from your own script can save
time and effort down the road.
Systems administrators don’t have time to babysit their backups,
so built-in reporting features are handy for monitoring backup and
recovery status. Common reporting options include email notifications,
pager alerts, or reports that are output as Microsoft Excel
spreadsheets, comma-separated value (CSV) files, HTML files, or
other file formats.
Choices, Choices
Ever-changing compliance requirements mean that your backups
must be as current and complete as possible. Although choices
abound for enterprise-level backup and recovery software, selecting
the right product for your environment can be confusing.
See the table on page 66 for a comparison of more than a dozen
options.
See Associated Table 1
See Associated Table 2