Xen Orchestra Upgrading
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@DustinB3403 said:
Now on the next force, all of the delta's should "disappear" and get compressed into a single full. If I understand it correctly.
so then you are left with either one state for restoring, or possibly two (if one, obviously only the most recent, if two, the most recent and either the previously most recent or the original full backup).
This is not what I'm looking for.
If I take hourly delta backups, I want to go back 3 hours and restore from there, not be limited only to the most recent backup.
it's just a feature I want.
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@Dashrender said:
@DustinB3403 said:
If I take hourly delta backups, I want to go back 3 hours and restore from there, not be limited only to the most recent backup.
it's just a feature I want.
This is exactly how it works
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@DustinB3403 That's it: you said 3 backups max, you got 3 backups. You can restore any of them.
If you choose the restore the full: we'll import the full.
If you choose to restore the first delta: we'll import the full then import the delta.
Etc. -
@Dashrender I think you're missing it.
I have a very short roll over (3 before it compresses) you can also use the default backup functionality as well.
Plus you still have the option of agent based backups to backup at the file level if you need that.
@olivier could better explain the different backup functions.
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Go read the blog post: https://xen-orchestra.com/blog/continuous-delta-backup/
If it's not clear enough, come back here
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In a production roll for this with something like a file server, I'd likely keep 24 Delta's (on the hour) to restore from any hour and then roll over.
But I'd still use Shadow Protect to perform File level restores on the VM. (because we already own it)
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So you'll have 24 files per VM disk: 1 full vhd and 23 delta. Each new backup will:
- create a new delta vhd file
- merge the oldest delta vhd in the full
- remove this oldest delta
You will be able to restore any of those 24 last backup.
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@DustinB3403 said:
@Dashrender I think you're missing it.
I have a very short roll over (3 before it compresses) you can also use the default backup functionality as well.
Plus you still have the option of agent based backups to backup at the file level if you need that.
@olivier could better explain the different backup functions.
What does file level backups/restores? XO? or something else I have to provide?
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@Dashrender said:
@DustinB3403 said:
@Dashrender I think you're missing it.
I have a very short roll over (3 before it compresses) you can also use the default backup functionality as well.
Plus you still have the option of agent based backups to backup at the file level if you need that.
@olivier could better explain the different backup functions.
What does file level backups/restores? XO? or something else I have to provide?
Nothing in XO would be able to do file level backups, it works at the hypervisor level. You'd have to have another solution for file level backups.
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Exactly, you can't do file-level backup without an agent installed on your VM!
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@olivier said:
Exactly, you can't do file-level backup without an agent installed on your VM!
I Fixed that for you.
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Totally ^^
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So... are you running systems that you would only ever consider doing a full system restore of on XenServer?
I'm really looking more importantly at restoring individual files more often than whole systems.
Sure I can use Windows built in Shadow Protect, but that's no good for a whole volume. If I have a network share get encrypted through a workstation by crypto locker, I don't want to restore the whole VM. The server itself isn't infected, the client was. I just want to restore the data for the share.
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@JaredBusch said:
All of @DustinB3403's fanboy enthusiasm aside, this is yet another reason why XO is not something ready for prime time in the SMB space. It is too much work.
By extension, this is also why XS is not ready for prime time in the SMB space. In this space we generally need ready built tools that take little to no fiddling to keep up to date and active.
As an ITSP, I can assure you that it is much more cost effective for my client to run Hyper-V and buy Veeam than to pay my rates setting up and maintaining something like XO.
The same goes for the in house lone wolf IT guy. His time is not free, no matter how some people look at salary employees.
Don't get me wrong, I like XS and XOA looks awesome, but for the price point, I will still recommend something stable that has been around longer (Veeam). Dropping the Price point means using XO and that is simply too much in man hours.
The setup and maintenance of the program from the sources actually hasn't been to difficult. Sure the ML community has seen a lot of recent post regarding XO, and even compiling the basic installer into a single line to go from a clean installation to a working XO installation.
But even that isn't much work or time.
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@Dashrender said:
So... are you running systems that you would only ever consider doing a full system restore of on XenServer?
I'm really looking more importantly at restoring individual files more often than whole systems.
Sure I can use Windows built in Shadow Protect, but that's no good for a whole volume. If I have a network share get encrypted through a workstation by crypto locker, I don't want to restore the whole VM. The server itself isn't infected, the client was. I just want to restore the data for the share.
Currently, today. Yes all of the systems I have in place on XS would I do a full restore on. Also because on my XS VM's don't have any sort of File Level backup solution for these VM's.
Also the VM's aren't that large (that I'm running today).
In production I'm looking at a full 8TB of data, obviously a file level restore solution would be required. But also having the option to restore an delta from the production file servers is a plus. As another backup to Shadow Protect.
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Shadow protect isn't a backup. It's a convenience.
I suppose one could decide that it's good enough, and if what you need doesn't fit in that solution, then you do a full recovery. But I guess I just don't see that being the more common desire.Dustin - what is your 8 TB of data?
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@Dashrender said:
Shadow protect isn't a backup. It's a convenience.
What do you mean? It's absolutely a backup.
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@Dashrender video & audio files and MS office documents are the bulk.
Shadow Protect can restore to bare metal to be a backup solution. But it's not the most graceful (it was there before I was so I'm not fighting that one)
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@Dashrender said:
I suppose one could decide that it's good enough, and if what you need doesn't fit in that solution, then you do a full recovery. But I guess I just don't see that being the more common desire.
Shadow Protect does full restores. Even bare metal to dissimilar hardware. It's an enterprise class, agent-based, block storage backup system.