Good afternoon. I am about at my wit's end to figure out how to do this.
Does anyone have a *good* way of backing up 200+ VMs across 13 HA ESX hosts, backed with 16TB of SAN space?
All of the hosts are managed by a VirtualCenter Server.
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Now, I have done ESX-level backups on some of our other ESX servers, that are not SAN-attached (all DASD), and don't have VMs sliding around all over the place with VMotion auto-load-leveling. These work fine, and I'm happy with them. The short version on these, is that a snapshot is taken (vcbSnapshot), a backup is taken directly into our backup software (Networker 7.4.4), then the snapshot is released.
This does not work in our main HA environment, on account of a VM being able to float amongst hosts.
If I snapshot a given VM, the vmdk files are still accessible only to the host that is actually running the VM.
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I've read enough about VCB to not be comfortable with its ability to scale.
For image-style backups, it seems to want to copy the entire vmdk directory over to the VCB proxy, then my backup software backups up that proxy.
I'm not thrilled about that for a couple of reasons:
1. It requires yet more disk space, 1-to-1. As this is several terabytes, this is not so easy. (and before anyone pops off about how cheap disk space is, imagine it's your $40k that you have to spend and can't bill back to anyone).
2. Designing the backup method as a two-stage backup also requires that recovery be two-stage. Both of these processes being two-stage is undesirable complexity, and makes DR that much more difficult.
This methodology does not strike me as scalable to and above my current environment.
The vmdk-mount-into-Windows method, while inappropriate for some of my VMs, also seems to suffer from lack of scaling. I haven't dug into this one in as much detail, but it seems to require a drive letter for every mounted vmdk? There aren't enough letters to go around - I would have to have to have 2-3 VCB servers per ESX.
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I would like to minimize the number of transits across whatever networks (san or lan) are involved - at this scale, I don't believe I can afford to shuffle data multiple times between its living space and backup media.
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Yes I am aware of Avamar and other de-dupe technology. Those still do not resolve the "VM can be anywhere in this HA" problem for ESX-level backups.
Does anyone have a *good* way of backing up 200+ VMs across 13 HA ESX hosts, backed with 16TB of SAN space?
All of the hosts are managed by a VirtualCenter Server.
---
Now, I have done ESX-level backups on some of our other ESX servers, that are not SAN-attached (all DASD), and don't have VMs sliding around all over the place with VMotion auto-load-leveling. These work fine, and I'm happy with them. The short version on these, is that a snapshot is taken (vcbSnapshot), a backup is taken directly into our backup software (Networker 7.4.4), then the snapshot is released.
This does not work in our main HA environment, on account of a VM being able to float amongst hosts.
If I snapshot a given VM, the vmdk files are still accessible only to the host that is actually running the VM.
---
I've read enough about VCB to not be comfortable with its ability to scale.
For image-style backups, it seems to want to copy the entire vmdk directory over to the VCB proxy, then my backup software backups up that proxy.
I'm not thrilled about that for a couple of reasons:
1. It requires yet more disk space, 1-to-1. As this is several terabytes, this is not so easy. (and before anyone pops off about how cheap disk space is, imagine it's your $40k that you have to spend and can't bill back to anyone).
2. Designing the backup method as a two-stage backup also requires that recovery be two-stage. Both of these processes being two-stage is undesirable complexity, and makes DR that much more difficult.
This methodology does not strike me as scalable to and above my current environment.
The vmdk-mount-into-Windows method, while inappropriate for some of my VMs, also seems to suffer from lack of scaling. I haven't dug into this one in as much detail, but it seems to require a drive letter for every mounted vmdk? There aren't enough letters to go around - I would have to have to have 2-3 VCB servers per ESX.
---
I would like to minimize the number of transits across whatever networks (san or lan) are involved - at this scale, I don't believe I can afford to shuffle data multiple times between its living space and backup media.
---
Yes I am aware of Avamar and other de-dupe technology. Those still do not resolve the "VM can be anywhere in this HA" problem for ESX-level backups.