I don’t know if this is a dead topic (just now had a chance to read the list) and I actually just went through this. I looked very carefully at vRanger and Veeam. I ran both products and found Veeam to be much more reliable (vRanger kept failing) and the Veeam product was cheaper, more capable (much faster file level restores) and much easier to use interface.
ESX 3.5 update 2 supports VSS with their VMware agent tools and can be executed from vRanger or Veeam. Another key difference between vRanger and Veeam is I schedule a shutdown of a VM and then backup it up for older databases that don’t support VSS. vRanger wouldn’t snap the VM so that it could then be started right back up. When using vRanger it locked the files and the VM would fail to start unless the backup was finished. Veeam created a snapshot and always backed up the snapshot if the VM was running or not. I did hear from vRanger (who had very good technical support) that version 4 is going to be released in Q1 ’08 will address most of the issues I had with their product.
From: thin-bounce@freelists.org [mailto:thin-bounce@freelists.org] On Behalf Of Steve Snyder
Sent: Tuesday, October 07, 2008 11:39 PM
To: thin@freelists.org
Subject: [THIN] OT: VMWare backups
so how are ya'll backing up your virtuals?
Right now we're backing up each virtual at their OS level, looking a vRanger to do a back-end snapshot backup. Of course BUE 12.5 was just released which is supposed to support vmware (and hyper-v) too.
No comments:
Post a Comment