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What It Does & How It Works...
This new NAS-based technology
performs at the block level where the actual digital 1s and 0s are
captured from the hard drive, essentially eliminating failures related to open files. Because
block-level data is raw information that’s independent of file structure formatting, it’s the most efficient way to write to a disk. |
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The Technology At Work To Keep Your Systems
Working
The NAS device can be
configured to backup multiple Windows 2000 and Windows 2003 servers by
partition or by logical drives. There are no file or folder-level
exclusions, because a snapshot of the entire partition is taken at the
block level on the hard drive. Also, database applications such as Microsoft SQL Server and Microsoft
Exchange Server transfer data in blocks without having to worry if
files are open or if they are in use.
Key Components Of The Device’s Technology Are:
Base Image - The first backup taken of a server is the base image
— an exact copy of the currently used space on the server. The base
image is taken for each volume (or partition) on the server. Once the
base image is set all future backups are incrementals. Remote Storage and
Base Remote Backup Image Creation - Your
data is stored (in encrypted form) in two secure online data backup
centers, located hundreds of miles apart from each other. The BASE
IMAGE will be sent via a SATA II drive to the primary remote storage
facility. There is generally a three-week turnaround time required for
this base image transfer to occur. Incremental back ups will occur in
the meantime and they will collapse into the base image when the
transfer is complete. Incrementals - Incrementals take place at the frequency that you
schedule. If you select 24/7 backups at 15 minute incrementals 96
incremental files will be created each day. If you selected one-hour
incrementals, 24 incremental files will be created each day. Incremental Forever
Methodology -Incremental Forever
Methodology differs from regular incrementals in that only one full
backup or base image is required. This greatly reduces the time it
takes to perform subsequent backups as each incremental takes only
seconds to complete. Synthetic Incrementals - Incremental
files are collapsed into synthetic incrementals (basically one larger
incremental file). This is done to ensure chain integrity and to speed
up restorations. The fewer hops from the current point-in-time back to
the base image, the faster your restoration will be. Recovery Options - Recovering files and folders is a simple process
where the entire image is mounted as a volume on the NAS device. The
encryption is needed. Files can then be copied to the destination
server over the network. We also provide utilities enabling your
engineers to restore files, folders, Exchange mailboxes or messages and
SQL tables and databases. Virtualization
(Physical to Virtual) Standby Server Functionality - The NAS device can “virtualize” failed servers while
keeping the system in the same state as it was before the problem
arose. No configurations are necessary. Once virtualized, the NAS will
resume the backup schedule that was in effect before the failure. Bare Metal Restore
(Virtual to Physical) - When it comes
time to restore the virtualized server back to physical hardware, our
bare metal restore process allows restorations to dissimilar hardware. On-site and Off-site Solution with Multiple Restore Points - Multiple NAS devices can be placed on a LAN. Each NAS
device, depending on the model, can be configured to backup one single
server or multiple servers. Everything comes together in our NAS device to produce 15-minute
incremental snapshots that safely reside within the device and are
ready to be used to restore a file, a file folder, an email, or a
database… all within five minutes.
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