Monday, July 19, 2010

Virtual disaster recovery: How to take advantage

Server virtualisation has revolutionised the way businesses store and access information, saving companies millions in hardware and infrastructure costs. When applied to disaster recovery (DR) and backup, there are further savings to be made.

Virtual disaster recovery (VDR) is a relatively new concept that can get all systems back up and running quickly and efficiently without the need for expensive additional hardware or remote sites. It's the next natural step in the evolution of disaster recovery (DR), and when outsourced to a third party provider, it can be delivered as a completely managed service


VDR: What it is and how it works
Traditional disaster recovery was incredibly expensive, as everything from a data centre (which could be as simple as servers in a room) had to be duplicated to a second location. Virtual disaster recovery means that both of these data centres can operate running constantly and simultaneously.

The process of configuring, deploying and testing VDR remains the same. Databarracks is operating VDR right now, but every business has different requirements. The applications in place and how they are used can change dramatically, so a lot of work is done to ensure that the recovery system is tested.

In the event that server failure occurs and major DR is required, Databarracks finds and recalls the latest virtual server snapshot. The image of the server that suffered the data loss is then repopulated without having to reinstall or reconfigure any aspect of the virtual machine. Because the restore is incremental, rebuilding the most recent server image is a short process.

The benefits
Traditionally, businesses would implement a DR system based on its low price instead of the convenience and ease of use it offers. By contradiction, most companies also demand zero server downtime to ensure business-critical computing is maintained. Virtualised disaster recovery ensures that downtime is dramatically decreased for a fraction of the price of duplicating an entire data centre.

Best practices for implementing a VDR plan
After considering what information and applications a business needs, a DR plan can be designed. A business will have more data than is actually required for the business to survive in the first few hours of a disaster. All documents will be needed eventually, but only the active documents are needed immediately. An effective DR plan will balance the needs of the business with the technical practicality of bringing information and applications back online.

Databarracks uses NetApp products to power its VDR processes. The company uses a combination of FAS3040 filer heads and 6000 series. Depending on the type of environment that is recovered, Databarracks deploys SATA and SAS disk configurations. For file data, SATA is used. For Exchange information, databases are used and for demanding applications, SAS would be the underlying storage.

Managed online backup and outsourced VDR
Many companies are now choosing to outsource their backup and VDR to a specialist backup provider. These providers will manage the cost for less than the company could do itself, as well as offering both access to the latest technology and the manpower to manage a DR project quickly with low impact on internal IT resources.

If companies choose to manage their own virtual DR strategies, their investment will include hardware, software and hosting capabilities. This is expensive for a platform that is only used occasionally. A managed serviced provider will keep hardware available for a company to use when necessary, substantially lowering the cost. Most managed backup providers also offer VDR as well as a one-stop shop for same day backups and recovery.

Outsourced VDR is a real option for businesses that don't have the time or budget to manage DR internally, and as awareness of this service grows, we can expect to see more businesses look to outsource the entire DR function




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