Thanks for the info. The links are great and the tips!!!! -----Original Message----- From: Keith Morse [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2001 10:51 PM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: Re: backup routines/etc.
On Thu, 25 Oct 2001, Schmeits, Roger wrote: > Does anyone have preference for DAT drives, backup software, > hardware config.? > > I have about 8 servers with several drives that I backup nightly which about > 50gig per night. > Currently we are using ArcServe 6.6 on NT 4.0 with 12/24 dat drives. It > works ok but I have to > baby-sit it about once every three months. Is there anything in the Linux > world that is comparable?? > Platforms covers Microsoft NT 4.0, win2k, Exchange 5.5., MS SQL2000, Linux > Redhat 7.1, and a variety of Sybase DB's. > In light of Sept.11 our org. is re-evaluating our backup routine and what it > would that you recover if necessary. My opinion is that 50GB is large enough to warrant some type of tape library and a software frontend that manages it and the tapes used for backup. I currently am responsible for managing backups for an enviroment that is comprised of roughly 100 Sun Microsystems computers of various flavours and about 8 WINnt hosts thrown in for good measure. This is driven by a Sun Enterprise 420R with 4 cpu's and 4GB of ram with a Quantum/ATL 7100 (4 DLT 700 Drives installed, 7 possible, with 100 tapes available) using Veritas's Netbackup Datacenter Software. Serious overkill for this environment, but Marketing's expectations were bigger than the public's willingness to participate. One aspect I particularly like about Netbackup is that it uses gnu-tar to write the data to tape, so if your database of backup's gets mucked up you can still recover backups with standard unix commands. I know they support all the OS's you listed above. And I believe they have a server product that works on linux. Also another one I've been pleasantly with is Arkeia. With your experience with ArcServe, my opinion is that you can pick it up rather quickly. I've only worked with the downloadable evaluation version. The interface is straight forward but can't get a feel for it's networked capabilities. The other route is the total free one, price but not labor. Amanda is one. Customized scripts using standard unix commands are another. Check out www.backupcentral.com _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list Archives, Digests, etc at http://linux.nf/mailman/listinfo/linux-users _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list Archives, Digests, etc at http://linux.nf/mailman/listinfo/linux-users