Hi Mac,

hdfs has at the moment no solution for an complete backup- and restore
process like ITL or ISO9000. An strategy could be to "park" the data from
hdfs do you want to backup on tape with "distcp" to another backup cluster
and snapshot from them with SAN mechanism. Here the DN store has to be
located on the SAN box.

- Alex

On Tuesday, January 3, 2012, Mac Noland <mcdonaldnol...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Good day,
>
> I’m guessing this question been asked a myriad of times, but
> we’re about to get serious with some of our Hadoop implementations so I
wanted
> to re-ask to see if I’m missing anything, or if others happen to know if
this might
> be on a future road map.
>
> For our current storage offerings (e.g. NAS or SAN), we give
> businesses the opportunity to choose 7, 14, or 45 day “backups” for their
> storage.   The purpose of the backup isn’t
> so much as they are worried about losing their current data (we’re RAID’ed
> and  have some stuff mirrored to remote
> datacenters), but more so if they were to delete some data today, they can
> recover from yesterday’s backup.  Or the
> day before’s backup, or the day before that, etc.  And to be honest,
business units buy a good portion of their backups to make people feel
better and fulfill custom contracts.
>
>
> So far with HDFS we haven’t found too many formalized
> offerings for this specific feature.  While I haven’t done a ton of
research, the best solution I’ve found is an
> idea where we’d schedule a job to pull the data locally to a mount that is
> backed up via our traditional methods.  See Michael Segel’s first post on
this site http://lucene.472066.n3.nabble.com/Backing-up-HDFS-td1019184.html
>
> Though we’d have to work through the details of what this
> would look like for our support folks, it looks like something that could
> potentially fit into our current model.  We’d basically need to allocate
the same amount of SAN or NAS disk as we
> have for HDFS, then coordinate a snap on the the SAN or NAS via our
traditional
> methods.  Not sure what a restore would
> look like, other than we could give the end users read access to the NAS
or SAN
> mounts so they can pick through what they need to recover and let them
figure
> out how to get it back into HDFS.
>
> For use cases like ours where we’d need multi-day backups to
> fulfill business needs, is this kind of what people are thinking or
doing?  Moreover, are there any things in the Hadoop
> HDFS road map for providing, for lack of a better word, an “enterprise”
> backup/restore solution?
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Mac Noland – Thomson Reuters
>

-- 
Alexander Lorenz
http://mapredit.blogspot.com

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