Thursday 5 May 2011

DPM and "Secondary Protection" and "Chaining"

So first, the good news. Having rolled out DPM 2010 to our production environments, by and large all seems well, backups are completing, using less time, hassle and bandwidth overall than the previous Backup Exec solution.

It does seem to consume much high amounts of storage - but it isn't yet sufficiently clear if this is worthwhile yet (eg. if the space is pre-allocated so it can meet retention policies and then fills it, or it simply over-estimates likely requirements resulting in lots of unused capacity). We'll find out once we've run it a few weeks in a full production environment with realistic changes and replicas - and if needbe we'll tweak things a little.

Anyhow, I digress, so back to the purpose of this post... The next part of our rollout is to enable the "off site" capabilities - specifically making sure we have a second copy of each servers data at another site - you know for "total disasters".

This is called "DPM Chaining", "Secondary Protection" and various other things depending on the version of DPM, the documentation you read etc and what you are trying to achieve.

Basic steps are simple (after doing the normal DPM setup):

(a) On the second DPM server, push the protection agent to the first.

(b) On the first DPM server, push the protection agent to the second.

(c) On the second server, create protection groups, selecting the first dpm server as the data source, expanding "protected servers" and then treating it as if it was the first server.

(d) Complete the wizard, wait (a long time possibly) for replication to complete the first time.

We'll see how our trial run goes...

No comments: