Marty If you mean disk names being cryptic - you are correct.
Speaking of NetApp NFS level snapshot backups, it creates a .snapshot directory with structure for hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, etc.. I had many occasions where a user would mistakenly delete VMs and i had to reverse the deletion - which was a royal pain but eventually worked. Regards ilya On 11/7/16 3:26 PM, Marty Godsey wrote: > The only problem with this is if you are dong NFS, the VHDs are named very > cryptic so you don't have an idea which VM is which. > > Regards, > Marty Godsey > > -----Original Message----- > From: ilya [mailto:ilya.mailing.li...@gmail.com] > Sent: Monday, November 7, 2016 12:25 PM > To: users@cloudstack.apache.org > Subject: Re: Good backup solutions for Cloudstack > > Consider using SAN/NAS level snapshots. > > On 11/3/16 9:12 AM, a...@globalchangemusic.org wrote: >> >> >> How about KVM? >> >> On 2016-11-02 16:47, Sergey Levitskiy wrote: >> >>> Veeam works OK for VMware based implementations. You can tag VMs and based >>> on vsphere tag Veeam will automatically pick them up for the backup >>> processing. >>> >>> On 11/2/16, 4:21 PM, "Asai" <a...@globalchangemusic.org> wrote: >>> >>> Hello, >>> >>> Can anyone recommend a good backup solution for a Cloudstack deployment? >>> What's the best way of backing up VMs and snapshots? I have experience with >>> XenServer, but I'm moving into a CS deployment now and am looking for >>> recommendations on best practices. >>> >>> Thanks >>> Asai >>> Network and Systems Administrator >>> GLOBAL CHANGE MEDIA >>> http://globalchange.media [1] >>> Tucson, AZ >> >> >> Links: >> ------ >> [1] http://globalchange.media >>