Virtualization may be possible in the future but budgets say otherwise for now.

Even in a virtualized enviroment, there would still be an underlying system 
that can fail and needs to be backed up in a more traditional sense isn't there?

----------------------

Bob Hartung
Wisco Industries, Inc.
736 Janesville St.
Oregon, WI 53575
Tel: (608) 835-3106 x215
Fax: (608) 835-7399
e-mail: bhartung(at)wiscoind.com
  _____  

From: Jonathan Link [mailto:[email protected]]
To: NT System Admin Issues [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Mon, 12 Jul 2010 08:35:40 -0500
Subject: Re: Server Disk Imaging


Have you considered virtualizing your environment?  
You can achieve a lot of what you want to do and more with virtualized servers. 
 I'm always amazed at how much easier things are in a virtual environment.  And 
I apologize for not providing the answer you were looking for.
  
  
On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 9:30 AM, Bob Hartung <[email protected]> wrote:
    
  
I've been looking for a disk imaging solution for the servers on our network. 
They currently are all Dell PowerEdge servers running Windows 2003. My main 
goal is to be able to restore a server quickly in the event of a hardware 
failure, like a RAID card failure that hoses the hard drives.
  
We use Arcserve for doing nightly backups and as a file by file solution, it's 
fine. For disaster recovery, it leaves a lot to be desired. It essentially does 
a reinstall of the operating system and then restores from back. As such, it's 
not very fast.
  
I've tried a number of disk imaging software packages. They all can create an 
image of the server system drive while the server is running and that's great. 
However, what seems to always be a weak point is restoring from a boot disk.
  
All the packages have a utility to create a bootable CD but they generally have 
a problem either accessing the RAID volume or the LAN adapter or both. Whether 
they use Windows PXE, Linux or DOS, drivers seem to be a problem. It would seem 
logical that these software packages would have a utility to copy the existing 
drivers off the system and incorporate them into the BootDisk but none do that 
I've found.
  
The only package I've tried so far that seems to work with the couple of 
servers I've been testing on is Acronis Backup and Recovery for Servers. I'd 
use this if it weren't so expensive at roughly $1,000 per server.
  
Anyone using a disk imaging solution they'd care to recommend?

Thanks.

----------------------

Bob Hartung
Wisco Industries, Inc.
736 Janesville St.
Oregon, WI 53575
  Tel: (608) 835-3106 x215
Fax: (608) 835-7399
e-mail: bhartung(at)wiscoind.com   

   



   




    

           

          

           

  
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