|
INTRODUCTION
The cost
of disk
storage
has been
dropping
so substantially
that it
is now economical
to replace
optical
and tape
products
with on-line
disk storage
for backup
and restore
functions.
Archiving
to removable
media can
still be
performed
to move
data off-site
for disaster
recovery
but will
not be needed
for everyday
data restore.
Storage
costs per
megabyte
for Fibre
Channel
and SCSI
products
have come
down from
over a dollar
per megabyte
to just
2 - 4 cents
per megabyte
in the last
several
years. The
latest Serial
ATA products
that now
are available
to departmental
and enterprise
storage
environments
as secondary
storage
devices
cost under
a penny
per megabyte.
Terabytes
of data
can easily
and inexpensively
be backed
up every
day at 3
to 5 times
the speed
of tape
and optical
backups.
A 12-hour
backup can
be accomplished
in 2 to
3 hours.
Backup windows
are dramatically
shortened,
data availability
time is
sharply
increased,
substantial
system administrator
time is
saved avoiding
the fuss
with tapes,
file recoveries
are much
faster and
end users
are much
happier.
Finally,
backup and
restore
success
rates are
near 100%
rather than
the typical
40 - 60%
from tape
- thus increasing
reliability
significantly
as well.
HOW
IT WORKS
This solution
is a relatively
easy one
to implement.
The first
step is
to acquire
the correct
amount of
storage
for the
backup copy.
The additional
storage,
whether
it be SATA,
SCSI or
Fibre Channel
disk storage,
should be
installed
and connected
to the server
as shown
in the diagram
to the right,
so the server
can read/write
to both
storage
devices.
Now that
the server
is able
to access
the newly
installed
storage,
the administrator
must set
up the backup
software,
create scripts/batch
processes,
or some
other method
that will
do the scheduled
copy from
the primary
application
data to
the secondary
backup copy.

|