I have had a NAS go offline :-) forever, the most appropriate speculation was that some part of the NAS was hit by a myon, ( as in cosmic particle hits silicon ), also heavily raided systems go bust due to either bus issues ( all on the bus is not on the disk if the power goes ) or cache failures ( virtual caches on mutli CPU's ).
In all those cases it have been possible to recover from tape, I certainly believe that tape has a futute.
Also sometimes you have to have snapshots in safe storage in order to fulfill the requirements of insurance companies and such.
Lug around a disk ?
/ regards, Lars Segerlund.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
"wab" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
Case in point... My department just approved the purchase of a $4,500 Iomega NAS server, to replace our NT and Unix tape backup DLT drives. I will soon be facilitating the use of AMANDA to a NAS server Vs. a SCSI DLT Tape. I look forward to the challenge/opportunity!
So what happens when your NAS goes haywire & scribbles all over your backups? Or say a small meteor crashes through your roof & wipes out your live disks & backup disks?
Not trying to tell anyone what to do. I guess I just don't understand the "we don't need no tape" attitude some folks have.
-- toby bluhm philips medical systems, it support, mr development, cleveland ohio [EMAIL PROTECTED] 440-483-5323
