Data protection. Storage professionals have been worrying about securing, backing up, and restoring data pretty much since computers came into use. And just when you think you’ve got it figured out, there’s a new wrinkle – a new regulation, a new data source, a shorter backup window, and endless new technologies to manage it all. Here are answers to some of the most frequent questions our customers ask in the never-ending battle to protect data and manage data growth:
Q. What’s the most common missing element in an enterprise’s data protection strategy?
A. Two things come to mind – First, an active and consistent review of backup success, as indicated by the ability to perform an effective and timely restore. And second, a lack of policy based backup that mirrors the enterprises’ document retention requirements.
Q. Is cloud the answer for DR?
A. More and more so, but it still requires a careful and comprehensive review of your RPOs and RTOs to ensure that you are covered properly, while keeping a close eye on the costs and associated response times in the event you need to declare a disaster. Virtualization has enabled a much wider adoption of cloud as a DR site, but you cannot forget your key non-virtualized assets, and just how to provide a truly integrated and comprehensive solution
Q. What strategies work best for remote office backup?
A. Try to find a product that gives you options – such as deduplication at the client, at the backup server, or at the backup target. It will ensure you can deploy the most effective model given your constraints and requirements.
Q. What’s working when it comes to protecting unstructured data?
A. Journaling of data has become more and more prevalent when backing up standard clients. It allows a backup product to reduce the requirement to scan an entire file system every time a backup is scheduled to run. Removing the overhead of that metadata discovery process creates significant efficiencies in backup speeds. This functionality is no longer contained to just standard file servers but it is also being leveraged in the filer market and integrated with the Network Data Management Protocol (NDMP).
Q. What are the most common mistakes in backing up VMs?
A. There are a few. One big one is failing to use deduplication technology to shrink the size of backups and their duration. There are still hundreds of thousands of VMs that are not benefitting from deduplication. A second one would be using a backup solution that does not leverage Change Block Tracking (CBT). This relatively new technology can increase your backup speed by 10-50 times! In a recent customer implementation, what used to take 13 hours to backup, now only takes 45 minutes…
Q. What are some best practices to future-proof my data protection strategy?
A. Three things come to mind: