Alas, more and more reasons to push to go to 6.5.1.

Thanks for the input guys.

- Hadrian

From: Curtis Preston [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2008 9:45 AM
To: Ed Wilts; Hadrian Baron
Cc: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Is BMR worth it / How long does it really save you?

I couldn't agree with Ed more.  In addition, I BELIEVE under the new pricing 
model, BMR is included in the base product.

---
W. Curtis Preston
Backup Blog @ www.backupcentral.com<http://www.backupcentral.com>
VP Data Protection, GlassHouse Technologies
________________________________
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ed Wilts
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2008 4:47 PM
To: Hadrian Baron
Cc: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] Is BMR worth it / How long does it really save you?

On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 4:11 PM, Hadrian Baron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]>> wrote:
Does BMR really speed up recovery significantly?  Reading through  the 
documentation it seems that between the multiple reboots, reinstalling windows, 
restoring the data files, reformat time, it seems like it doesn't save much 
time over a typical restore (manually reformat the system, load nic drivers + 
Netbackup, and kick off restore).

Disclaimer:  I've seen the demos but we don't have it running yet.  I know the 
theory though.

I've seen a full system restore from bare metal in 20 minutes.  Our Windows 
admins take a day or 2 to rebuild a server...and even then, they don't always 
get it right.

One of the key things to consider, though, is how important it is to get the 
server back to the exact same configuration it was before it died.  If it's 
important, and it probably should be, BMR is far more critical than a simple 
re-install.  Don't forget that not only do you have to re-install Windows, 
you'd have to apply all of the identical server paks you had on the system to 
begin within, all of the exact same versions and patches to the applications, 
identical drivers, identical registry settings, local user configurations, 
share configurations, and only then can you worry about the application data.  
If you try the rebuild approach, the odds are almost 100% that what you end up 
with will not be the same as what you started with.  One missed setting and 
your application could crash, fail, or corrupt data.  You may not even 
partition the drives the same as what you had.
   .../Ed

--
Ed Wilts, Mounds View, MN, USA
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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