HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,233
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
I need some suggestions for a backup configuration.
Here is an overview of the current hardware and process.
2 x Poweredge 2900 servers, circa 12/08 One is DC + Exchange, 2nd is app server & data. DC is SBS2003, App server is Server Std 2003. Both are the 32-bit versions (a mistake we are living with for now).
The servers each have 500GB storage in Raid5
30 Workstations (Mix of XP-Pro and Win7-Pro)
There are some remote workers (GoToMyPC & RDP only, nothing fancy), so overnight is the only predictable period of low use.
We use Symantec Backup Exec to make a full backup of both servers each night to 640GB RDX1000 drives. The backup footprint is currently 180GB. We use a 6-disk TOH rotation with unneeded disks taken offsite each night.
Several things have been carved out of the nightly backup and are being backed up separately (robocopy via scheduled batch files) to daily folders on a series of 3 external USB drives we rotate weekly. This was done to allow the whole routine to finish before 8am. The carveouts are:
Exmerge files (created nightly before the full backup starts)
WSUS database
Roaming profiles
Email archives
The workstations are basically static, with no data. We take images of each one a couple of times per year and store it on a Buffalo 2TB Raid 1 NAS. This is a manual process. This takes up about 600GB on the NAS.
While this process is a bit fragmented because it was developed over time, it works very well. The disk-changers are well trained at this point and we've never lost a file (shouldn't have said that out loud).
The business deals with individual employee data for their customers, so there is a lot of social security, salary & IRS Tax information. They are very reluctant to look at cloud backup.
Ok, now they are starting to eliminate paper files where possible by scanning in the customer files. The copiers can scan directly to the NAS, so we setup a separate directory for this purpose as a proof of concept. This has worked well enough to start the scanning in ernest.
I'm thinking this is the time to re-think the entire backup strategy.
At the very least we need to increase the storage on our NAS and pick up a 2nd one to backup the first. This doesn't make it offsite, however, hence the question here.
How would you approach designing a more robust backup strategy or use the existing equipment more efficiently? This isn't in the current budget so money is definitely a concern. I appreciate your comments & suggestions.
Here is an overview of the current hardware and process.
2 x Poweredge 2900 servers, circa 12/08 One is DC + Exchange, 2nd is app server & data. DC is SBS2003, App server is Server Std 2003. Both are the 32-bit versions (a mistake we are living with for now).
The servers each have 500GB storage in Raid5
30 Workstations (Mix of XP-Pro and Win7-Pro)
There are some remote workers (GoToMyPC & RDP only, nothing fancy), so overnight is the only predictable period of low use.
We use Symantec Backup Exec to make a full backup of both servers each night to 640GB RDX1000 drives. The backup footprint is currently 180GB. We use a 6-disk TOH rotation with unneeded disks taken offsite each night.
Several things have been carved out of the nightly backup and are being backed up separately (robocopy via scheduled batch files) to daily folders on a series of 3 external USB drives we rotate weekly. This was done to allow the whole routine to finish before 8am. The carveouts are:
Exmerge files (created nightly before the full backup starts)
WSUS database
Roaming profiles
Email archives
The workstations are basically static, with no data. We take images of each one a couple of times per year and store it on a Buffalo 2TB Raid 1 NAS. This is a manual process. This takes up about 600GB on the NAS.
While this process is a bit fragmented because it was developed over time, it works very well. The disk-changers are well trained at this point and we've never lost a file (shouldn't have said that out loud).
The business deals with individual employee data for their customers, so there is a lot of social security, salary & IRS Tax information. They are very reluctant to look at cloud backup.
Ok, now they are starting to eliminate paper files where possible by scanning in the customer files. The copiers can scan directly to the NAS, so we setup a separate directory for this purpose as a proof of concept. This has worked well enough to start the scanning in ernest.
I'm thinking this is the time to re-think the entire backup strategy.
At the very least we need to increase the storage on our NAS and pick up a 2nd one to backup the first. This doesn't make it offsite, however, hence the question here.
How would you approach designing a more robust backup strategy or use the existing equipment more efficiently? This isn't in the current budget so money is definitely a concern. I appreciate your comments & suggestions.
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