On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 12:00 PM, Ross Walker <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
> If this is only a 1-2 year temporary solution and the backups will be
> discarded once a permanent solution is obtained then I'm sure it will be OK.
>
> If your thinking of building a long-term backup solution this way then your
> building your castles on a foundation of sand. As backup sets grow and
> hardware/software ages you may find yourself in a technological dead-end
> unable to migrate the data off and unable to continue going forward.
On the other hand, if you have a predictable churn of high performance
production boxes being replaced every few years, tossing a few new big
cheap drives into a still nice but retired server and starting over is
a very attractive option. You don't need to migrate anything - just
keep the old box around until the replacement has the history you need
to keep.
> Buy a Data Domain, Exagrid or Falconstor backup storage appliance with
> builtin compression/de-duplication that is fully supported and has a viable
> upgrade path. Use a good centralized backup platform such as netbackup,
> networker, etc. The investment made in backup is an investment in the
> business' future.
There's a place for those, but probably not for someone who doesn't
even want to buy new drives.
--
Les Mikesell
[email protected]
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