NetVault: Backup gives users a simple centralised, backup and recovery of virtual and physical environments for either VMware or Hyper-V. NetVault: Backup Virtualisation Plugins reduce complexity by enabling consistent, reliable point-and-click backup and restore activities without requiring you to be an expert. Continue Reading.
Posts Tagged ‘NetVault: Backup’
Learn more about BakBone Virtualisation Options
Posted by Paul Irvine on December 17, 2010
Posted in BakBone Asia, BakBone EMEA, BakBone Japan, BakBone North America | Tagged: Hyper-V, NetVault: Backup, plugin, Virtualisation Plugins, Virtualization Plugins, VMware | Comments Off
CIO Concerns: Maximizing Your Data Protection Budget, Part II
Posted by Mike Daniels on August 26, 2010

Mike Daniels, Product Manager
In Part I of this blog entry, I talked about maximizing your data protection budget by considering consolidation and looking at disk-to-disk (D2D) or disk-to-disk-to-tape (D2D2T) solutions. In this article, we’ll look at deduplication and some budget savers versus budget busters.
Enter deduplication. When you start deduplicating data it can drastically decrease the budget requirement for disk due to reduced space needed. It reduces storage by eliminating redundant data. One unique instance of the data is retained, and redundant data is replaced with a pointer to the original unique data. So, less space, less money.
Further savings with disk is recognized with significantly faster recovery times. Remember cassette tapes and how cool it was when CDs entered the market?
If you wanted to hear song number three on your tape, you needed to hit
fast-forward and wait. When CDs showed up, you could enter any random track and get your song near-instantaneously. I don’t know any IT managers who don’t want to deliver this functionality for data restore to their teams. So, not only are you buying less disk with deduplication, but you speed up recovery producing further cost-savings.
Another disk benefit is reliability. There is no argument that disk is more reliable than tape. Anyone who uses tape will tell you it’s fragile. Humidity, temperature, number of uses will all negatively impact your chance of getting your data back. Are you confident you have proper guidelines regarding tape storage at your organization? What happens if the person whose job it is to swap tapes and take them off-site, leaves them in the car to run a quick errand, in the middle of summer, and you happen to be located in Arizona? Basically that tape is not usable. But you won’t know until you have to restore something. That’s an extreme example and unlikely that any IT manager is advising his team to manage their tapes in this fashion, but I’m sure you’ve heard of or experienced yourselves numerous accounts of data loss when recovering from tape.
I’m not saying you do away with tape backup. It’s a good solution for long-term storage, but it certainly is not cost-effective when it comes to reliable, fast recovery. If you can get the correct business unit managers supporting a disk-based purchase initiative, you can easily show tremendous cost-savings associated with productivity and reliability to your CFO.
I’ll leave you with one last cost-savings tip, choose one vendor with a suite of products to support your data protection requirements. You don’t want multiple finger-pointing vendors when you have questions, and it makes life much easier for your team to learn and stay trained on the applications.
Consider a couple of things when evaluating vendors: 1) how easy are the solutions to administer, 2) how responsive is support. I had an experience with a customer who was using a competitive product. While I was on site, he called the other vendor’s support to help resolve some issues. Meanwhile, he allowed us to do a proof of concept with our product. We installed, configured, and completed a backup before our competitor’s support team had even answered the customer’s call.
Make sure you understand every aspect of a vendor’s support program before you enter into a contract. This is overlooked far too often, in my experience, until you actually need support. This oversight can unexpectedly impact your budget and increase the overall cost of the product.
So here’s the thing: it’s not difficult to find cost savings when it comes to adequate and proper data protection. Just remember…
Posted in BakBone North America | Tagged: BakBone, CIO concerns, D2D, D2D2T, Data protection, deduplication, disk-to-disk, disk-to-disk-to-tape, fastrecover, maximizing data protection budget, Mike Daniels, NetVault, NetVault: Backup, NetVault: FASTRecover, NetVault: SmartDisk, SmartDisk | Comments Off
CIO Concerns: Maximizing Your Data Protection Budget, Part I
Posted by Mike Daniels on August 24, 2010

Mike Daniels, Product Manager
How do you protect an enterprise environment without an enterprise budget? I see this problem so frequently in customer data centers, trying to adequately protect data in a budget constrained environment.
Don’t despair. There are several things your team can do to maximize your budget.
First, consider consolidation. Do different departments or branch offices have their own protection solutions? Maybe some are on Mac, Windows, or Linux. Each likely has critical some critical data and applications that need special attention. If you haven’t already, consider consolidating requirements into a central location with heterogeneous protection. By centralizing, you recognize savings on economies of scale – one large environment versus small islands. You’ll have one maintenance cost, perhaps price breaks on standardized applications addressing multiple departments’ needs rather than each sourcing its own solution.
Many large companies have been doing charge backs for a long time. Why not you too? Departments were going to pay for the protection anyway, and now you could actually end up saving them money by charging a smaller fee than their previous individual payments. Not only is it an overall cost-savings measure, it addresses what should be your top concern: data being protected properly by the experts who really know how to do it.
Aside from consolidation, ensuring fast, reliable restores is one of your best budget-savers. One way to do this is to look at a disk-to-disk (D2D) or disk-to-disk-to-tape (D2D2T) solution. I know what those of you who haven’t already done this are thinking… new hardware, new applications, how is this possibly a cost-savings measure? Stay with me, because, ultimately, this could save you a lot of money.
In the past, disk-based backup has been a niche feature, because backing up to disk could take anywhere from ten to fifty times the amount of space versus server space. This was a big hindrance for people not moving to disk-based solutions faster.
In Part II of this blog entry, we will examine deduplication as it relates to maximizing your data protection budget, and we will discuss some budget savers versus budget busters.
Posted in BakBone North America | Tagged: BakBone, CIO concerns, D2D, D2D2T, Data protection, deduplication, disk-to-disk, disk-to-disk-to-tape, fastrecover, maximizing data protection budget, Mike Daniels, NetVault, NetVault: Backup, NetVault: FASTRecover, NetVault: SmartDisk, SmartDisk | Comments Off
Podcast – A Quick Guide to Data Classification with Storage Expert Ray Lucchesi
Posted by Gary Parker on May 12, 2010
5 min 16 sec
In this Experts & Insights podcast, Gary Parker, senior PMM at BakBone, talks to Storage Expert Ray Lucchesi of Silverton Consulting about data classification. Ray shares with us how to create a data classification strategy that safeguards your business based on the value of its data. This podcast also explores how to determine the value of data by evaluating the real Recovery Time Objectives (RTO) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPO); how to work with users to create classes of data such as Static, Business-Vital and Mission-Critical; and how to assign storage software and hardware systems based on the class of data to gain maximum use of resources.
Posted in BakBone North America, Podcasts | Tagged: BakBone, business vital data, data classification, Data protection, disk-based backup, Experts & Insights, fastrecover, Gary Parker, mission critical data, NetVault, NetVault: Backup, NetVault: FASTRecover, NetVault: SmartDisk, Podcasts, Ray Lucchesi, RPO, RTO, Silverton Consulting, static data, tape | Comments Off
Choosing Where to Deploy Your NetVault: SmartDisk Instances
Posted by Dawn renee Campbell on April 6, 2010

Dawn renee Campbell
Another step in your NetVault: SmartDisk (NVSD) Deployment Strategy is choosing where you want to deploy your NVSD Instance(s). Whether the NVSD Instance will be enabled for deduplication will dictate the available deployment options.
NetVault: SmartDisk Non-deduplicated Instance Deployment Options
NVSD Instances which have deduplication disabled can be deployed on the NetVault: Backup (NVBU) Server, a NetVault: Backup Heterogeneous Client, or a dedicated server and can accept data streams from heterogeneous platforms. When multiple NVSD Instances are deployed, Storage Pools and processes are not shared across the multiple NVSD Instances. However, multiple NVSD Instances cannot be deployed on the same machine whether it is a NVBU Server, NVBU Client, or a dedicated NVSD Server.
Following are several deployment options that are possible when deploying NVSD Non-deduplicated Instances and should not be considered exhaustive. You can also check out the graphics at the bottom of this post, depicting the different deployment options.
NetVault: SmartDisk Non-deduplicated Instance Deployed on Single NetVault: Backup Server
In the simplest deployment, when only one (1) NVSD Non-deduplicated Instance is required for a NVBU Domain with a single NVBU Server, the NVSD Instance is deployed on the single NVBU Server utilizing file system paths accessible by the NVBU Server for the NVSD Storage Pools. The single NVBU Server’s Clients that target backups to NVSD will stream backup data on a user-defined port to the NVSD Instance where the backup is stored in the NetVault: SmartDisk Storage Pools.
NetVault: SmartDisk Non-Deduplicated Instance Deployed in Multiple NetVault: Backup Server Environment
In NVBU environments where only one (1) NVSD Instance is required for a NVBU Domain with multiple NVBU Servers, a single NVSD Instance can accept data streams from multiple NVBU Servers. In the example below where a single NVSD Instance is deployed for multiple NVBU Servers, the NVBU Clients from both NVBU Servers will stream backup data on a user-defined port to the NVSD Instance that is deployed on one of the NVBU Servers.
In NVBU environments where multiple NVSD Instances are required for a NVBU Domain with multiple NVBU Servers, one (1) NVSD Instance can be deployed on each of the NVBU Server, one (1) NVSD Instance can be deployed on the NVBU Server and one or more NVBU Clients. In the example below two (2) NVSD Instances are required and there are two (2) NVBU Servers, a single NVSD Instance will be deployed on each of the NVBU Servers. The NVBU Clients from both NVBU Servers can stream backup data on a user-defined port to either NVSD Instance that is deployed.
Posted in BakBone North America | Tagged: BakBone, deduplicated backups, deduplication, NetVault, NetVault: Backup, NetVault: SmartDisk, non-deduplicated backups | Comments Off














