Optimising your cloud backup

August 1, 2012

You’re ready to move into the cloud, but before you can get there you actually have to get your data to the cloud. Below are some tips on how you can optimize your first cloud backup deployment.

Backup the Most Important Files First

When you sign up for a cloud backup service, your trusted managed  service provider will have to make an initial backup before they can begin to back up your data incrementally. Depending on the amount of data that is required to be backed up and on the speed of the internet connection, this initial backup can take a long time to complete.

With the first backup taking so long, it is important to prioritize your data. You may want to organize your organization’s operational documents (word processing files, spreadsheets, etc) to be backed up first and have uncommon file types backed up last. Depending on your managed service provider, you may be able to determine which files are used most often in your business and back that up first.

Take Advantage of Bandwidth Throttling

Although your initial backup may take a long time, you don’t want it to affect your network during working hours while people are trying to get their work done via the internet. During the day, you should be able to strike a balance between getting your backups done and having enough bandwidth for the workday. After business hours and on weekends you can increase your bandwidth to focus on your backups.

Deduplication and Compression

It’s best to minimize the data being sent over the wire and to the cloud through deduplication, especially if you’re paying for backups per gigabyte on a monthly basis.

One way to decrease the amount of data being backed up (without sacrificing data protection) is to use de-duplication. When seeking the services of a cloud backup services provider, this feature should be standard. The way de-duplication is performed can often be unique to each managed service provider.

Some providers will only back up each file once and if the same file exists in multiple locations, pointers to the files will be created. Other service providers will provide block-level de-duplication. Rather than skipping duplicated files, the software which powers the cloud backup service will create a checksum for each block that’s being backed up and then uses the checksum value as a way of determining whether a duplicate block has already been backed up.

Keep a Local Copy of Backup Files

It’s important that you continue to store backups on premise – it will always be easier and faster to restore data from a local backup then from the internet. Local backups also allow you to further align the value of data with the cost of protecting it. Using the cloud for backup will allow you to recover in any situation when data loss occurs, but creating a second local backup is best for accidental file deletion or to quickly recover a single server in your network.

For more information or to request a demonstration please visit http://www.c24.co.uk


Deduplication and Autonomic Healing Make Data Recovery Fast and Easy

July 10, 2012

A data loss event is the stuff of nightmares for businesses. Something goes wrong – a natural disaster, a server crash, tapes are misplaced – and  crucial information is lost and business continuity is threatened.  Preventing this scenario is one of the main reasons businesses have backup and recovery procedures in place.

Backing up and storing data can have a significant impact on the operation of your IT department – performing backups over the network takes up bandwidth and the backup data  can take up significant storage space. That’s why it’s important to use a backup and recovery solution that provides deduplication, one that supports both local and client-side duplication at the LAN level as well on a global level across all protected sites. The solution should identify duplicate data by looking for the same data queued up for backup more than once and compare the data based on content, so it doesn’t matter if the files have different  names or are stored on different servers. After an initial, full backup, the solution should only transmit new or changed data so it doesn’t negatively affect bandwidth.

By eliminating redundant data, data deduplication optimizes the backup environments, reduces costs and makes recovery faster and easier.

However, data deduplication is just one necessary aspect of your cloud backup and recovery solution. Imagine going through the trauma of a data loss event only to find the data you recovered is useless because it is corrupted. Just when you thought you were out of the  frying pan, you find yourself in the fire.

To  keep that worst case scenario from happening, your backup and recovery solution  needs to perform Autonomic Healing. Autonomic Healing acts as an immune system  for your network by constantly scanning all backup data for corrupted files. This can include corrupted files as well as ones with logical inconsistencies  caused by third-party technologies, such as faulty file systems or network  packet loss.  Before the file can cause  any harm, Autonomic Healing sends notifications so a fix can be applied during  the backup process. Autonomic Healing ensures that backup data is constantly in  a valid state, so when it comes time to restore, you have confidence in the  data.

The only cloud backup and recovery solution that  provides you with both deduplication and Autonomic Healing is Asigra Cloud  Backup™. To find out more information on how Asigra Cloud Backup can ensure you can recover and  restore your data to resume business operations quickly, visit www.c24.co.uk


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