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    Upgrading our Veeam backup server

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    • DashrenderD
      Dashrender @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said:

      @Dashrender said:

      @scottalanmiller said:

      @Dashrender said:

      @scottalanmiller said:

      @Dashrender said:

      Another advantage would be the ability to use the two slots that the OS is on as part of your backup storage. You're spending two drive slots on space that could extend your data nodes noticeably.

      He could do that physically, too.

      what?

      Put all of his drives into a single array (replacing the two littles with matching bigger ones) and install the OS and the data partitions to the same array to get a lot more space (and performance) with minimal investment.

      I thought I said that? that's why I was confused by your comment.

      I thought that you associated that with a benefit of virtualization.

      Aww, I see, I didn't spell it out as it's own benefit regardless of virtualization.. gotcha..

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • C
        Carnival Boy
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said:

        The biggest chance will be the addition of the network bottleneck... but you already have that on the front end with the system talking to the HP, so I doubt that it will be very bad.

        We also offload the backup files to an external hard drive, weekly. The 1GB network connection in the server is going to be much slower than the USB 3.0 connection, I believe.

        With a ReadyNAS, I'd be tempted to connect it directly to the server, but a quick Google brings up a quote from @scottalanmiller on Spiceworks saying NAS should never be a solution for a one to one connection and DAS is always preferable. Is that still the case?

        DashrenderD scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • C
          Carnival Boy @Dashrender
          last edited by

          @Dashrender said:

          Also, what RAID is the ReadyNAS? RAID 10 or 5? Assuming RAID 10, and 8 TB is enough, you'll probably be fine, but remember you are reducing your IOPs, but for backup and restore, you probably don't care.

          RAID10 I believe. Why wouldn't I care about IOPS? The HP 410 RAID controller may also be faster than whatever is used by the ReadyNAS. Speed is always important with backup and recovery - especially recovery.

          scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
            last edited by

            @Carnival-Boy said:

            @Dashrender said:

            Also, what RAID is the ReadyNAS? RAID 10 or 5? Assuming RAID 10, and 8 TB is enough, you'll probably be fine, but remember you are reducing your IOPs, but for backup and restore, you probably don't care.

            RAID10 I believe. Why wouldn't I care about IOPS? The HP 410 RAID controller may also be faster than whatever is used by the ReadyNAS. Speed is always important with backup and recovery - especially recovery.

            You would care, but only up until it has enough IOPS then you wouldn't care further. Backups have a maximum potential write throughput, once you can accept it at full speed, you don't care that you could take more because there is no more to take (currently.)

            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
              last edited by

              @Carnival-Boy said:

              Speed is always important with backup and recovery - especially recovery.

              Read speed is the same across all RAID types and not a factor, though. It's only the write speed that differs.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • DashrenderD
                Dashrender @Carnival Boy
                last edited by

                @Carnival-Boy said:

                @scottalanmiller said:

                The biggest chance will be the addition of the network bottleneck... but you already have that on the front end with the system talking to the HP, so I doubt that it will be very bad.

                We also offload the backup files to an external hard drive, weekly. The 1GB network connection in the server is going to be much slower than the USB 3.0 connection, I believe.

                With a ReadyNAS, I'd be tempted to connect it directly to the server, but a quick Google brings up a quote from @scottalanmiller on Spiceworks saying NAS should never be a solution for a one to one connection and DAS is always preferable. Is that still the case?

                How would you connect the NAS directly to the server? USB? iSCSI? Using either of those solutions turns them into a SAN solution which would be much more fragile than a NAS solution, though might not matter substantially in this case - Scott would know better than I.

                In this case, your NAS or DAS would nearly the same. Same hardware, you'd just be picking which protocol to use to communicate with the hardware. NAS would be using SMB, and DAS would be using iSCSI (it would be DAS only if you connect ethernet directly from the server to the ReadyNAS, otherwise it would be considered SAN, because you would be talking over the network.

                scottalanmillerS C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                  last edited by

                  @Carnival-Boy said:

                  With a ReadyNAS, I'd be tempted to connect it directly to the server, but a quick Google brings up a quote from @scottalanmiller on Spiceworks saying NAS should never be a solution for a one to one connection and DAS is always preferable. Is that still the case?

                  It's true as a theory. You don't have a reasonable "pure DAS" option here with a SAS connection, though. No one makes a good one in the price and size range. Using the NAS as a "direct attack file server" is fine here.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DashrenderD
                    Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said:

                    @Carnival-Boy said:

                    @Dashrender said:

                    Also, what RAID is the ReadyNAS? RAID 10 or 5? Assuming RAID 10, and 8 TB is enough, you'll probably be fine, but remember you are reducing your IOPs, but for backup and restore, you probably don't care.

                    RAID10 I believe. Why wouldn't I care about IOPS? The HP 410 RAID controller may also be faster than whatever is used by the ReadyNAS. Speed is always important with backup and recovery - especially recovery.

                    You would care, but only up until it has enough IOPS then you wouldn't care further. Backups have a maximum potential write throughput, once you can accept it at full speed, you don't care that you could take more because there is no more to take (currently.)

                    Said so much better than I could.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      @Dashrender said:

                      How would you connect the NAS directly to the server? USB? iSCSI?

                      NFS as NAS. If he hooked up with iSCSI, it would be a traditional DAS.

                      USB isn't an option with the gear he is looking at.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • C
                        Carnival Boy @Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        @Dashrender said:

                        How would you connect the NAS directly to the server?

                        Er, crossover cable. Is that right?

                        M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • M
                          marcinozga @Carnival Boy
                          last edited by marcinozga

                          @Carnival-Boy said:

                          @Dashrender said:

                          How would you connect the NAS directly to the server?

                          Er, crossover cable. Is that right?

                          Why crossover? 1Gbit and faster doesn't require crossover anymore.

                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medium-dependent_interface#Auto_MDI-X

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • C
                            Carnival Boy
                            last edited by

                            Oh, ok. I really have no idea. I was just getting info from here https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/198210-10gb-and-nas-direct-connect-or-need-a-switch

                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                              last edited by

                              @Carnival-Boy said:

                              Oh, ok. I really have no idea. I was just getting info from here https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/198210-10gb-and-nas-direct-connect-or-need-a-switch

                              You can always do direct. Should be fine with straight cable. Nothing requires a switch, a switch is supposed to be invisible on the network.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • wrx7mW
                                wrx7m
                                last edited by

                                My Veeam server is a VM and I use a Synology 1813+ with 8 4TB Seagate Constellation HDDs in OBR10 as a backup repository. With Veeam 9, you can create the scale-out backup repository that allows you to add several device types and combine them into a single repository. I would not run Veeam on a physical server.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • wrx7mW
                                  wrx7m
                                  last edited by

                                  Furthermore, with several (maybe most) Synology models you can expand/add storage via optional enclosures that would be completely transparent to the devices you are presenting the volumes to. So it would not even need the Veeam scale-out feature to allow you to increase storage capacity.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • C
                                    Carnival Boy
                                    last edited by

                                    Is it ok to run Veeam server as a VM on the host that you want to backup, or should it always be on a separate host? Or can you install it on two hosts for redundancy? We only use local storage for VMs.

                                    Is you repository part of a VM or just raw storage outside of any hypervisor?

                                    wrx7mW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • DashrenderD
                                      Dashrender
                                      last edited by

                                      You can install Veeam where ever you want. Just keep in mind that if you install it as a VM on your one and only VM host, when that host is down, so is your ability to restore any data, So this means that you need to have a plan on who you are going to gain access to your backups so you can restore them to another VM Host.

                                      As for the backup data - @wrx7m did mention that he is backing up his data to a Synology 1813+ which he called a backup repository. While he didn't specifically say it, we can only hope that his VMs aren't running from that same appliance. If that assumption is true, and he has a VM host failure, his recovery scenerio could be like the following:

                                      install Veeam on a desktop in the office
                                      import backups from Synology
                                      install hypervisor on new VM host
                                      restore VMs to new VM host

                                      This is a very top level view of steps, but as you can see it's really not that complicated.

                                      C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • C
                                        Carnival Boy @Dashrender
                                        last edited by

                                        @Dashrender said:

                                        You can install Veeam where ever you want.

                                        Well, yeah. But just because I can doesn't mean I should.

                                        My second question is basically asking if the repository is a CIFs share on the NAS, or storage on a Windows/Linux VM (with the VMs storage being a datastore on the NAS) . I'm inclined to use the latter, but don't know what's best.

                                        DashrenderD wrx7mW 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • DashrenderD
                                          Dashrender @Carnival Boy
                                          last edited by

                                          @Carnival-Boy said:

                                          @Dashrender said:

                                          You can install Veeam where ever you want.

                                          Well, yeah. But just because I can doesn't mean I should.

                                          I suppose that's true. If you have a Windows license free to run Veeam on the VM host, I'd probably do that.

                                          My second question is basically asking if the repository is a CIFs share on the NAS, or storage on a Windows/Linux VM (with the VMs storage being a datastore on the NAS) . I'm inclined to use the latter, but don't know what's best.

                                          If the ultimate location of the data is on a NAS, I'd skip the intermediary step of the VM.

                                          here's my setup:
                                          VM running AppAssure Replay (it's like Veeam, mostly) attached to that I have DAS storage - a Drobo Pro that only works with either USB 2.0 or iSCSI. So I have the appliance mapped directly inside my Replay VM. In case of VM host failure, I can move the iSCSI connection to another host, install Replay, import the backups and be back in business.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • wrx7mW
                                            wrx7m @Carnival Boy
                                            last edited by

                                            @Carnival-Boy You can run as a VM and Veeam will backup itself/its own VM. I only use local storage too. If you add the NAS in Veeam, you don't need it to be a VMware datastore.

                                            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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