Hi.
Wonder if anyone can shed some light on this:
We currently have a Very powerful DL580 with 8gb ram and 4 3.2ghz Xeon cpus running win server 2003 and NBU6 MP4.
It is running 2x1gbit switch load balanced network cards and currently has 4 LTO1 drives in a MSL5000 tape library, each drive running off its own HBA
Ive heard that windows isnt really the platform to use for out and out backup throughput from a network to tapedrives/storage. Is this the case? what kind of speeds will a windows server top out at??
The reson i ask is that we were planning an upgrade to LTO3 drives for the capacity and performance increase, but have since been told that a windows server would struggle to support the throughput to keep 4 drives streaming.
Is there any easy way to see what the overall throughput of the system is when NBU is running full tilt? ive tried unscientifically adding up the KB/S of all the running jobs at one time, and that hovers around 70mb/s (4x4multiplexed)
Ta
Wonder if anyone can shed some light on this:
We currently have a Very powerful DL580 with 8gb ram and 4 3.2ghz Xeon cpus running win server 2003 and NBU6 MP4.
It is running 2x1gbit switch load balanced network cards and currently has 4 LTO1 drives in a MSL5000 tape library, each drive running off its own HBA
Ive heard that windows isnt really the platform to use for out and out backup throughput from a network to tapedrives/storage. Is this the case? what kind of speeds will a windows server top out at??
The reson i ask is that we were planning an upgrade to LTO3 drives for the capacity and performance increase, but have since been told that a windows server would struggle to support the throughput to keep 4 drives streaming.
Is there any easy way to see what the overall throughput of the system is when NBU is running full tilt? ive tried unscientifically adding up the KB/S of all the running jobs at one time, and that hovers around 70mb/s (4x4multiplexed)
Ta