I'll look into Avamar.

 

I forgot about DFSR. I need to see exactly what they have there in order to
proceed.

 

Thanks.

 

Art DeKneef

Avanti Computers

Mesa, AZ

480-649-4430 Office

480-529-4430 Mobile

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of J- P
Sent: Monday, January 12, 2015 2:15 PM
To: NT
Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] Backing up between main office and remote site

 

As a starting point, you can use DFSR (since its included in windows) to get
your data from one location to another.

Case in point, I have an account with 6 locations 3 Africa, 2 LatAm, 1 US
Using dfsr, the remote servers replicate back to HQ , then I only have to
run backups from one server as opposed to 6 remote ones. Obviously you can
tweak your solution, but its a starting point & you can get real creative
since you have fiber at the two locations.

Unfortunately for me, all the remote locations have  512k sat links and 2meg
dsl's  so it kind of limits my creativity. 


 



  _____  

Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2015 15:54:57 -0500
From: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] Backing up between main office and remote site

We use Avamar here for backup and replicate the backup data across our WAN.
It works well, 

particularly given the modest bandwidth we've got. It's not a low cost
solution though.  There's

going to be a tradeoff between how smart the backup
compression/deduplication is (Avamar's

is very clever) and how much bandwidth costs. If you've got fiber, and the
data change rate

isn't huge, you should have a bunch of options. 

 

 

  _____  

Looks like you definitely have some additional information gathering before
you can start identifying suitable solutions. Obviously the budget will be a
big factor in narrowing down the options. With what you've provided it looks
like you may want to focus on a single solution that can address both
Physical and Virtual environments, provide application aware support for
SQL/Exchange, and possibly include remote agent-based media servers to
provide local de-dupe/compression to reduce impact to the MAN/WAN links. 

 

It's been awhile since I've been involved with a backup/data protection
design project, but I do believe some of the following products may be worth
looking at. 

 

Disclaimer, I've been in a larger enterprise environment for quite some time
so some of these products may not be suitable for smaller environments:

 

Microsoft DPM

Vmware VDP

CommVault

EMC Avamar/Data Domain

Veeam

NetVault (Dell)

 

As well as several cloud-based solutions from various sources. It may be
worth looking into more DR oriented solutions (Zerto, Atlantis, etc) for the
Virtual environment (if there's a focus on moving from physical to virtual).


 

- Sean

 

 

On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 10:53 AM, Art DeKneef <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

I am asking for feedback from those that backup between multiple sites. What
were the good things and what would you do different? First time I've had to
look at this in a very long time. 

 

Talked with a potential new client looking to backup up between the two
offices and possibly cloud backup. Current data size is estimated at 17 TBs.
A disaster recovery type of thing. Besides have the backup local another
copy is off-site.

 

Main office has several Windows Server 2008 physical servers along with
15-20 virtual servers. They are running VM Ware (unknown version). Included
in the mix is an Exchange Server (probably 2010), couple SQL Servers
(unknown version), file and print and AD. The remote office has a few
servers. Each site is on a fiber network but speed is unknown at this time.
He is checking.

 

Their previous IT guy just quit so they asked for a proposal to go in and
document the network and implementing a remote backup solution. Right now
we're focusing on this backup solution but I'm sure it will change as we get
further into our discussions.

 

I could use a couple of enterprise NAS devices or put in a couple of Server
2012 R2 servers as a storage and possibly turn on de-dup to reduce data
transfer size.

 

Thanks for the help.

 

Art DeKneef

Avanti Computers

Mesa, AZ

480-649-4430 Office

480-529-4430 Mobile

 

 

 

 

-- 

Thanks,

 

Joe Matuscak | Director of Technology
Rohrer Corporation | Office: 330-335-1541
717 Seville Road | Wadsworth, Ohio 44281
www.rohrer.com <http://www.rohrer.com>  | A Better Package


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