Virtualization Redemption?
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You can run NAUBackup as often as the client can deal with the server going down.
I can run it on my VM's 8 times a day, and no one would notice.
The entire process takes a matter of seconds per VM.
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@hubtechagain said:
Dustin, is NAUbackup incremental?
Not on its own. There is probably a way to do an incremental transfer, but I've not thought of a good way to do it yet. It's the start of a decent solution but is missing a big piece.
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@DustinB3403 said:
You can run NAUBackup as often as the client can deal with the server going down.
I can run it on my VM's 8 times a day, and no one would notice.
The entire process takes a matter of seconds per VM.
None of that is incremental.
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And to be clear, with NAUBackup, you're building Full restores, not Incrementals.
If you need a file level incrementals what OS is the client using on the VM? Can you use a local client like Storagecraft?
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Hub's goal here is not actually to do an incremental backup but to only transfer deltas to the DR site. Incrementals is just how he is envisioning doing it and how nearly any tool will work. Reid's DRBD Proxy idea does it differently but as he pointed out, isn't trivial to set up. There are tools that can get you there, but incrementals or deltas are critical to making it work.
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We COULD use a tool like RSYNC to do a delta transfer of full backups. But that is only efficient if the backups append nearly always, not if the data is changing all over the image. We want something with the rough equivalent of change-block tracking. That's where the Veeam, Unitrends, StorageCraft or even DRBD Proxy solutions come in, they all talk to the underlying storage and can do deltas in a way that RSYNC can't do given that we are talking about enormous filesystem images.
So I think that RSYNC becomes useless here, sadly.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@JaredBusch said:
Veeam Backup Essentials Standard is $899 per 2 sockets. Sold in 2 socket packs. I have never seen it sold in any other fashion.
So basically $2700 in this scenario. That adds up quickly.
Why would you need it for the third box? should only need it for the two local ones.
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@DustinB3403 said:
If you need a file level incrementals what OS is the client using on the VM? Can you use a local client like Storagecraft?
Yeah, you are missing the point. He is not doing anything with the OS. All full backup solution for VMWare/Hyper-V have ways to push only the delta/incremental since the last backup. This has nothing to do with the OS. It is all VM level.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@JaredBusch said:
Veeam Backup Essentials Standard is $899 per 2 sockets. Sold in 2 socket packs. I have never seen it sold in any other fashion.
So basically $2700 in this scenario. That adds up quickly.
Why would you need it for the third box? should only need it for the two local ones.
Did not realize that the restore machine would not need it, but makes sense. Jared cleared that up for me.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Did not realize that the restore machine would not need it, but makes sense. Jared cleared that up for me.
I would reconfirm that with Veeam if @hubtechagain goes that route. I ended up not using the 3 host scenario. But it does make sense and the sale rep was upfront on that device not needing the license.
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we have any veeam representation here?
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@hubtechagain said:
we have any veeam representation here?
We do but they have not been very active lately
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Wait... what if we are over thinking this... What about Replication? HOST1 Replicates to HOST_DR every xx minutes?
That way only the changes replicate?
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@dafyre said:
Wait... what if we are over thinking this... What about Replication? HOST1 Replicates to HOST_DR every xx minutes?
That way only the changes replicate?
OMG, dose of reality time!! You are so right. Talking ESXi blinded us to the most obvious answer!
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Pretty sure that HyperV does what is needed, for free, completely included and we just overlooked it. Doh!
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Note: HOST2 could also replicate to HOST_DR... 8-)
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Alternatively if you have any extra hardware to run you can look into any of these.
Open Source Storage: 49 Tools for Backup and Recovery
Using for a much smaller amount, we use Create Synchronicity for our mobile users.
It works well enough.
For this Amanda might be what you need.
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Here are the heavier details on HyperV Replication from Technet. Pretty sure you can choose Azure as the DR too, if you wanted.
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Also... more thinking out loud... Doesn't XenServer have replication options like that as well?