What's new

Backing Up a Network. I am confused

  • SNBForums Code of Conduct

    SNBForums is a community for everyone, no matter what their level of experience.

    Please be tolerant and patient of others, especially newcomers. We are all here to share and learn!

    The rules are simple: Be patient, be nice, be helpful or be gone!

J

jellyboi

Guest
Greetings.

I have a small network of 5 computers and a server running Windows Server 2003. What I want to do is backup the critical files (like my accounting and other docs) on a daily basis and automatically. The more I read about NAS and DAT Tape backups and DAS, etc the more confused I become. One requirement is I need to backup offsite or away from the system incase there is a fire. Can someone recommend a suitable system without spending a fortune?

Thank you in advance.

Jeff
 
A couple ways you could do it. I usually tend to recommend tape backups as a good starting point, and working from up or out there. What is it that's confusing you?

A pretty basic HP USB Dat40 drive (40GB per tape) is going to run you around $500 dollars, plus about $40-$60 for tapes, plus whatever backup software you want to use. The software that comes with Windows Server (NT Backup) is crap IMO, so you probably want to add a decent program like Backup Exec 11d (I think 12d is out now), which is going to be around $500. All said and told you're probably in about the $1100 - $1300 range for a good entry level tape backup solution (add about $1000 for an ultrium 2 tape drive which will do 400GB per tape, if you're needing more storage). I like tape backup because it satisfies most common backup requirements in one fell-swoop (like off-site storage). Tape backup is still very much the gold standard, so it's hard to go wrong with it in most small business scenarios. The nice thing with Backup Exec is you can add agents (add-on packs) for specific tasks like backing up live databases, exchange, etc, so BE can scale to your needs pretty well.

There's other options as well, like rotating a couple external hard drives. I'm wiery of doing the hard drive rotation thing simply because I've seen this type of thing implimented several times, and there's always risk of hard drive failure, securing/encrypting the data on the hard drive, etc. Another popular option is off-site backup via. an online provider of some kind. I'm also somewhat wiery of these kinds of solutions, but I have seen the work pretty well in certain cases.

But most importantly, a bit of planning goes a long way - how quickly will you need access to your data? If your server totally blows its lid and all your stuff is on a tape, it could potentially be a couple hours or more until you're able to start getting data off the tapes. For a business of 4-5 people, having your data back up within a couple minutes or seconds probably isn't a big deal. But do keep in mind what you'll have to go through to get your data back up and running.

Lots of options though, but you'd probably want to start at a tape backup and work from there depending on whether you have specific needs.
 
Thanks for the opinion. The only reason I am confused is regarding the NAS and whether NAS is the way to go now instead of Tape. Sounds like DAT tape is still the best solution and not NAS.

Thank you.

Jeff
 
For offstie backups, Tapes are the way to go. Also, don't let 40Gb fool you with tapes. With a good tape/software backup solution, you can easily get 6x and 8x compression out of your data.

We squeeze around 6+ TB's of data onto a single 800Gb tape, which is a lot.. considering.
 
For your situation, backup to a NAS would be perfectly reasonable. Many have built-in schedulable backup from a networked share. I use an Netgear ReadyNAS NV+ that incrementally backs up my work machine's data folders every four hours during the workday. No muss, no fuss and it emails me when a backup fails.

But you need something in addition to the NAS, since hard drives eventually die. Depending on how much data you need an offsite backup service like Mozy, Carbonite, etc. could work just fine. Again, the advantage is that it's automatic and doesn't involve swapping drives or tapes.

As Scotty said, the solution that's right for you depends on your needs, especially when it comes time to recover your data.
 

Support SNBForums w/ Amazon

If you'd like to support SNBForums, just use this link and buy anything on Amazon. Thanks!

Sign Up For SNBForums Daily Digest

Get an update of what's new every day delivered to your mailbox. Sign up here!
Top