Microsoft System

Download Report

Transcript Microsoft System

Peter Niven
Regional Storage Solution Specialist
[email protected]
DPM Design Goals
Introduction to Data Protection Manager
(DPM) 2007
How does DPM work?
Demo
More detail on capabilities
Virtualization, DR etc
Deployment
Roadmap
Questions
Eliminate backup windows
Provide much better than nightly backups (RPO)
Address the limitations of tape only backup
Performance
Granularity
Reliability
Provide unequalled Microsoft application support
Make protecting the branch office over a WAN
more practical
Only changed blocks transferred
Compression & bandwidth throttling
Eliminate tape drives from branches
Be Simple & Cost Effective
2006
Snapshots (up to 64)
Active Directory®
Hourly synchronization
Clients
File Servers
DPM 2006
Third-Party Tape
DPM 2006
Centralized Backup of Branch Offices
Rapid & Reliable Recovery — from disk instead of tape
End user recovery without IT intervention
SP1 Cloud Backup
Online Snapshots (up to 512)
Disk-based
Recovery
Active Directory®
System State
Up to Every
15 minutes
DPM 2007
with integrated Disk & Tape
Hyper-V
Windows XP
Windows Vista
Windows Server 2003
Windows Server 2008
file shares and directories
DPM 2007
Near Continuous Data Protection for Windows Application and File Servers
Rapid & Reliable Recovery from disk as well as from tape
Advanced Technology for enterprises of all sizes
Tape-based
Archive
Offline tape
Microsoft Platforms…..
SharePoint Server 2003 / WSS 2.0 – protected as SQL databases
SharePoint Server 2007 / WSS 3.0 - recovery to item level
SQL Server 2000 SP4
SQL Server 2005
SQL Server 2008
Exchange 2003 SP2
Exchange 2007 – including LCR, CCR & SCR configurations
Virtual Server 2005 R2 SP1
Hyper-V
Windows Server 2003 SP1 or later – Files, System State & AD
Windows Server 2008
Windows XP Professional SP2
Windows Vista Business Edition or higher
Also Bare Metal Server Recovery & DPM to DPM for Disaster Recovery
Product
Protectable Data
Recoverable Data
•Storage group
•Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 (SP2)
•Storage group
•Database
•Exchange Server 2007
•Mailbox
•Microsoft SQL Server 2000 with SP4
•Database
•Database
•SQL Server 2005 with SP1 or later
•Farm
•Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007
•Farm
•Microsoft Windows SharePoint
Services 3.0
•Database
•Site
•Volume
•Windows Server 2003 with SP1
•Share
•Windows Storage Server 2003 with SP1
•Folder
•File or list
•Volume
•Share
•Folder
•Virtual server host configuration
•File data
•Virtual server host configuration
•Virtual machines
•Virtual machines
•Data for applications running in virtual
machines
•Data for applications running in virtual
machines
•System state
•System state
•Volume
•Volume
•Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 SP1
•Hyper-V
•All computers that can be protected by
DPM 2007
•Workstations running Windows XP
Pro SP2
•Share
•Windows Vista operating systems, except
the Windows Vista Home Premium
•Folder
operating system (the computer running
Windows Vista must be a domain member) •File data
•Share
•Folder
•File data
US $577
Active Directory®
System State
DPM Server
Up to Every
15 minutes
DPM 2007
with integrated Disk & Tape
Windows XP
Windows Vista
Windows Server 2003
Windows Server 2008
file shares and directories
Also available as a DPM OEM Appliance
running on Windows Storage Server
US $577
Active Directory®
System State
DPM Server
DPM 2007
with integrated Disk & Tape
Windows XP
Windows Vista
Windows Server 2003
Windows Server 2008
Also available as a DPM OEM Appliance
running on Windows Storage Server
file shares and directories
Standard DPML = “File agent”
per protected Windows Server
No additional “Open File” or add-on modules
US $157
US $577
Active Directory®
System State
DPM Server
DPM 2007
with integrated Disk & Tape
Windows XP
Windows Vista
Client DPML
“Desktop agent”
XP Pro & Vista business
NEW in February Price List
Windows Server 2003
Windows Server 2008
Also available as a DPM OEM Appliance
running on Windows Storage Server
file shares and directories
Standard DPML = “File agent”
per protected Windows Server
No additional “Open File” or add-on modules
US $27
US $157
Enterprise DPML – “Application Agent” – per protected server
Unified support of Microsoft applications SQL, Exchange, SharePoint, & Virtualization – and files
Protect DPM 2 DPM 4 DR – disaster recovery
Bare Metal Recovery
US $431
US $577
Active Directory®
System State
DPM Server
DPM 2007
with integrated Disk & Tape
Windows XP
Windows Vista
Client DPML
“Desktop agent”
XP Pro & Vista business
NEW in February Price List
Windows Server 2003
Windows Server 2008
Also available as a DPM OEM Appliance
running on Windows Storage Server
file shares and directories
Standard DPML = “File agent”
per protected Windows Server
No additional “Open File” or add-on modules
US $27
US $157
pricing details are at:
http://www.microsoft.com/systemcenter/dpm/howtobuy
Example Microsoft Environment with up to 10TB of data, 2 Exchange
Servers, 2 SQL Servers, SharePoint Farm and offsite data
IBM TSM
EMC
Networker
Veritas
NetBackup
Microsoft
DPM 2007
$98,595
$78,650
$71,760
$4,686
**Source:IDEAS Whitepaper (December 2008)
Available at: http://www.microsoft.com/DPM
**
Enterprise Management Licenses
System Center Configuration Manager 2007
System Center Operations Manager 2007
System Center Data Protection Manager 2007
A product
-
System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2007
Enterprise Edition Management Licenses
New comprehensive solution for end-to-end
management of both physical and virtual server
environments
Full Application and Server
Management (P&V)
Configure and Secure
Monitor and Analyze
Data Protection Manager 2007
Backup and Restore
Consolidate and Provision
System Center DPM protects 95+% of our
Corporate data assets (migration still
underway)
about 5100 servers
more than 2 PB of unstructured data
In excess of 103,000 Exchange Mailboxes
protected at 15min intervals
Used to protect MS Online Services
D:\
+ \SQL_data
+ \Customer.MDF
E:\
+ \SQL_logs
+ \Customer.LDF
DPM filter creates a volume map, to
monitor which disk blocks contain
portions of the files to be protected
D:\
+ \SQL_data
+ \Customer.MDF
E:\
+ \SQL_logs
+ \Customer.LDF
DPM Filter – Volume Map
Time = 10:00
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
DPM Filter – Volume Map
Time = 10:01
File Write
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
1
2
3
4
DPM Filter – Volume Map
Changed blocks noted
Time = 10:06
File Write
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
7
1
2
3
4
5
6
DPM Filter – Volume Map
Changed blocks noted
8
9
Time = 10:18
File Write
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
11
7
1
2
3
4
12
5
6
DPM Filter – Volume Map
Changed blocks noted
15
8
10
9
13
14
Time = 10:26
File Write
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
11
7
1
16 17 18 19
4
12
5
6
DPM Filter – Volume Map
Changed blocks noted
15
8
10
9
13
14
Time = 10:30 (up to every 30 minutes, usually daily)
DPM Synchronization
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
11
7
1
16 17 18 19
4
12
5
6
DPM Filter – Volume Map
15
8
10
1. VSS interface calls used on
production volume to ensure
consistent data
9
13
14
Time = 10:30:01
DPM Synchronization
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
11
7
1
16 17 18 19
4
12
5
6
DPM Filter – Volume Map
15
8
9
10
Block Order
13
14
13
10
1. VSS interface calls used on
production volume to ensure
consistent data
2. Changed blocks are sent to
DPM server, while live disk
continues.
9
8
15
14
6
5
12
4
19
18
17
16
1
7
11
Transmit changed blocks from 10:00-10:30 to DPM server
Data integrity preserved, since volume snapped
Time = 10:30:03
And File IO continues
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
18 19 20
11
DPM Filter – Volume Map
21
12
13
15
22
16
14
17
1. VSS interface calls used on
production volume to ensure
consistent data
2. Changed blocks are sent to
DPM server, while live disk
continues.
Time = 10:30:04
And File IO continues
VOLUME (actual disk blocks)
18 19 20
DPM Filter – Volume Map
21
22
1. VSS interface calls used on
production volume to ensure
consistent data
2. Changed blocks are sent to
DPM server, while live disk
continues.
Production Data
DPM Replica
A BCDE FGH
A BCDE FGH
Original Data
Production Data
DPM Replica
A B I DE J GH
A BCDE FGH
Original Data
1st data change
Production Data
A B I DE J GH
Original Data
1st data change
DPM Replica
I J
A BCDE FGH
Production Data
DPM Replica
A B I DE J GH
A B I DE J GH
C
F
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
Production Data
DPM Replica
A B I DE J GH
A B I DE J GH
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
CF
Production Data
DPM Replica
K B I DE J L H
A B I DE J GH
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
CF
Production Data
K B I DE J L H
DPM Replica
K L
A B I DE J GH
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
CF
Production Data
DPM Replica
K B I DE J L H
K B I DE J L H
A
G
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
CF
Production Data
DPM Replica
K B I DE J L H
K B I DE J L H
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
CF AG
Production Data
DPM Replica
K B I DMNOPQ
K B I DE J L H
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
3rd data change
CF AG
Production Data
K B I DMNOPQ
DPM Replica
MNOPQ
K B I DE J L H
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
3rd data change
CF AG
Production Data
DPM Replica
K B I DMNOPQ
K B I DMNOPQ
E J L H
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
3rd data change
CF AG
Production Data
DPM Replica
K B I DMNOPQ
K B I DMNOPQ
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
3rd data change
CF AGE J L H
Production Data
DPM Replica
K B I DE J L H
K B I DMNOPQ
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
3rd data change
CF AGE J L H
8 blocks restored
Production Data
DPM Replica
A BCDE FGH
K B I DMNOPQ
DPM Recovery Point Area
Original Data
1st data change
2nd data change
3rd data change
8 blocks
restored
CF AGE J L H
Production Server
Database
0:00
DPM Replica
Database
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
0:00
Database
Baseline Initial Mirror
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
0:XX
Database
15 minute Syncs
0:00
Every 15 minutes, closed transaction logs are sent to the DPM server
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
0:XX
Database
15 minute Syncs
0:00
Every 15 minutes, closed transaction logs are sent to the DPM server
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
0:XX
Database
15 minute Syncs
0:00
Every 15 minutes, closed transaction logs are sent to the DPM server
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
0:XX
Database
Restore
DPM can restore server to any 15 minute point in time
Database 0:00
Roll forward to 0:XX with transaction logs
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
1:00
Database
Express full
At least weekly but usually daily,
a DPM Express Full re-synchronizes the DPM Replica
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
1:00
Database
Express full
Shadow Copy
of 0:00 to 1:00
+
Transaction logs
Day 0
At least weekly but usually daily,
a DPM Express Full re-synchronizes the DPM Replica
1:00
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
1:XX
Day 1 : Data changes
Database
15 minutes
Shadow Copy
of 0:00 to 1:00
+
Transaction logs
Day 0
1:00
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
1:XX
Day 1 : Data changes
Database
15 minutes
Shadow Copy
of 0:00 to 1:00
+
Transaction logs
Day 0
1:00
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
1:XX
Day 1 : Data changes
Database
15 minutes
Shadow Copy
of 0:00 to 1:00
+
Transaction logs
Day 0
1:00
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
1:XX
DPM can restore to
Today at 2:15
Use existing 1:00 replica
Roll forward logs to 2:15
Database
Restore
Shadow Copy
of 0:00 to 1:00
+
Transaction logs
Day 0
1:00
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
1:XX
Database
Restore
DPM can restore to
Yesterday at 10:45
Shadow copy 0:00 to rebuild day 0
Roll forward logs to yesterday at 10:45
Shadow Copy
of 0:00 to 1:00
+
Transaction logs
Day 0
1:00
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
2:00
Database
Express Full
Shadow Copy
of 0:00 to 1:00
+
Transaction logs
Week 0
Week 2 : Express Full - resynchronization
1:00
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
Database
2:00
Express Full
2:00
1:00
Week 2 : Express Full - resynchronization
0:00
Production Server
DPM Replica
Database
Database
2:00
2:00
Up to 512 shadow copies, plus their logs
1:00
512w x 7d x 24h x 4(15m) = 344,000 Recovery Points
0:00
MSCS Exchange Cluster
Traditional cluster configuration, two
servers - one dataset
Exchange
Automatic Failover to new server
Active-node
name
Protection continues seamlessly in
scheduled failover and failback
scenarios, no user intervention
needed
DPM detects cluster configuration
and associated server names when
protection is setup
Exchange
Passive-node
DPM
Cluster Continuous Replication
•
•
•
Redundant exchange servers
and redundant databases
Can be geo-diverse
Databases logs are replicated
Role Preferred Backup
• Active – most current data
• Passive – least production impact
Node Preferred backup
• Protect node closest to DPM server
Exchange 2007 CCR
Exch2007
Active
Exch2007
Passive
DPM
Local Continuous Replication
One exchange server with
redundant copy of database
Failover to redundant copy in case
of database corruption or drive
loss
Backup from Active DB drive
Exchange 2007 LCR
Exchange
2007
Active
Backup
DPM
Active Node
Passive Node
E1
Exchange
E2
CCR
Exchange
Backup
DPM 2007
with integrated Disk & Tape
Active Node
Passive Node
E1
Exchange
Standby Node
E2
CCR
Exchange
E3
SCR
Exchange
SCR Protection
Failover across sites of current data
Backup
DPM 2007
Disk-based for fast recovery
Active Node
Passive Node
Standby Node
E2
E3
E1
Exchange
CCR
Exchange
SCR
Exchange
SCR Protection
Failover across sites of current data
Backup
DPM 2007 RTM
DPM 2 DPM 4 DR
DPM 2007
Disk-based for fast recovery
Disaster Recovery / Offsite Data
Recovery previous points of data
DPM 2007
Tertiary Disk – and Offsite Tape
Active Node
Passive Node
E1
Exchange
Standby Node
E2
CCR
Exchange
E3
SCR
Exchange
SCR Protection
Failover across sites of current
data
DPM
SP1
Backup
No Bandwidth
duplicated
DPM1
DPM 2007
Disk-based for fast recovery
DPM 2007
Tertiary Disk – and Offsite Tape
DPM 2007 SP1
Offsite Tape & Previous Recovery
Points
SQL Server 2000 SP4, 2005 & 2008 protection
Migration assistance from SQL Server 2005 to SQL Server 2008
Protection of mirrored databases as well as MSCS and log shipping
Failover aware
Database mirrored SQL cluster
Protect
failed Node
SQL 2005
Active Node
Production
A
B
SQL Server
Restore
SQL Server
DPM
2007
SQL 2008
Test?
Dev?
Prod?
New
Active
“migrate”
DPM 2007
with integrated Disk & Tape
IIS “Front End”
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
SharePoint VSS Writer
DPM 2007
Content Servers (SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
IIS “Front End”
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
DPM 2007
NEW
Content Servers (SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
IIS “Front End”
DPM AGENT
installed
automatically by
AD/GP or
SMS/SCCM
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
DPM 2007
NEW
Content Servers (SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
IIS “Front End”
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
next scheduled backup
DPM 2007
NEW
Content Servers (SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
IIS “Front End”
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
Updated SharePoint topology
DPM 2007
NEW
Content Servers (SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
IIS “Front End”
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
SharePoint VSS Writer
DPM 2007
NEW
Content Servers (SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
The Entire Farm
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
Entire Farm
DPM 2007
Content Servers
(SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
The Entire Farm
The Config DB
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
Config DB
DPM 2007
Content Servers
(SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
The Entire Farm
The Config DB
A Content DB
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
Content DB information
DPM 2007
Content Servers
(SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
The Entire Farm
The Config DB
A Content DB
Site Collection
A Site
Document
“Farm” Config dB
(SQL)
Content DB
“Recovery Farm”
(single server)
Temporary Staging Area
Complies with MOSS design
Garbage scrubbed after restore
Might be a VM
DPM 2007
DPM handles restore thru
Recovery Farm to production Farm.
Farm then redirects data to
appropriate content dB and site.
Content Servers
(SQL)
Enterprise Search (index)
•
•
Optimization of catalog
Protection of index
DPM 2007
DPM 2007 Service Pack 1
GOOD Protection for SharePoint
content
GREAT Protection for SharePoint
content with optimized catalog
Supported Restore for SharePoint,
including individual documents
Supported Restore for SharePoint,
including individual documents
BUT -- Need to manually protect
Index via whitepaper
Now including Index protection
Optimization of catalog
IIS
WFE.1
IIS
IIS
WFE.2
WFE.3
SQL
Config DB
SQL
Content.1
SQL
Content.2
SQL
Content.3
Search
Index
SQL
SQL
SQL
Content.X
Content.Y
Content.Z
Microsoft IT = 5TB of content in just one farm
Time
DPM 2007
Backup
2 hours
Re-Catalog
8 hours
Total
10 hours
Optimization of catalog
IIS
WFE.1
IIS
IIS
WFE.2
WFE.3
SQL
Config DB
SQL
Content.1
SQL
Content.2
SQL
Content.3
Search
Index
SQL
SQL
SQL
Content.X
Content.Y
Content.Z
Microsoft IT = 5TB of content in just one farm
Time
DPM 2007
DPM 2007 SP1
Backup
2 hours
2 hours
Re-Catalog
8 hours
15 minutes!
Total
10 hours
2:15
Virtual Machine1
Virtual Machine 2
Virtual Machine 2
Virtual Machine 4
Virtual Machine1
Windows
NT 4.0
Virtual Machine 2
For any OS or application that
is not internally VSS-aware:
•
•
•
•
•
Linux
Windows
Windows
Windows
Windows
NT 4
2000
with Oracle
with LOB app
Virtual Machine1
Windows
NT 4.0
Virtual Machine 2
1. Hibernate OS to dump
memory / CPU to VSV
2. Snap with VSS
3. Resume OS
4. Compare block
checksums to send only
changes within VHD’s
Virtualization Host -- VSS Writer
VSS writer for SQL Server
Database consistent
VSS writer for Windows Server
C: & D: volumes
VSS writer for Windows Hypervisor
WinSvr_C.VHD & WinSvr_D.VHD
Referential VSS writer
No downtime
Recursive VSS consistency
Only requires updated VM additions
from MSVS SP1
Protected from host
“No downtime” (no bounce)
“No agent” (SW or $$$)
Host
•
•
•
•
•
•
Protect or recover the whole machine
No data selectability / granularity
“Bare Metal Recovery” of every VM
Single DPM license on host, all guests protected
Protect non-Windows servers
One DPML “agent” on Host
DPML
Host
Protect or recover the whole machine
No data select-ability / granularity
“Bare Metal Recovery” of every VM
Single DPM license on host, all guests protected
Protect non-Windows servers
One DPML “agent” on Host
Guest
Protect or recover data specifically
SQL database
Exchange
SharePoint
Files
No different than protecting the physical server
DPML per Guest
DPML
If the backup happens from the
virtualization host, all you see are
the servers backed up as a whole
object
If you want to backup individual
data objects like databases, you
have to initiate the backup from
machine’s perspective.
SQL08A
Databases
in guest
DB1
DB1
WSHVA
Entire server
from host
Host Configuration
SQL08A
All data protected
Sync / 15min
File RPO = 2hrs (12d)
App RP = 512 days
with 15m RP’s
DPM2007A
DPM2007B
Important Data
Sync / 6 hours
File RPO = daily (63d)
App RP = 512 weeks
with 15m RP’s
dpm2dpm4dr
FS1 \ data (share)
AccountingdB
(SQLdb)
Mailboxes
(ExchSG)
FS2 E:\team
(directory)
DPM2007A
FS1_data (share)
SQL25\AccountingdB (sql)
EX23\SG1\Mailboxes (exchange)
FS2_E:\team\ (directory)
DPM2007B
FS1_data (share)
SQL25\AccountingdB (sql)
EX23\SG1\Mailboxes (exchange)
FS2_E:\team\ (directory)
dpm2dpm4dr
FS1 \ data (share)
AccountingdB
(SQLdb)
OFFSITE TAPE BACKUP
Mailboxes
(ExchSG)
FS2 E:\team
(directory)
DPM2007A
FS1_data (share)
SQL25\AccountingdB (sql)
EX23\SG1\Mailboxes (exchange)
FS2_E:\team\ (directory)
DPM2007B
FS1_data (share)
SQL25\AccountingdB (sql)
EX23\SG1\Mailboxes (exchange)
FS2_E:\team\ (directory)
dpm2dpm4dr
FS1 \ data (share)
AccountingdB
(SQLdb)
Mailboxes
(ExchSG)
FS2 E:\team
(directory)
DPM2007B
FS1_data (share)
SQL25\AccountingdB (sql)
EX23\SG1\Mailboxes (exchange)
FS2_E:\team\ (directory)
dpm2dpm4dr
“Windows Backup” Standalone
Tape-based
Archive
Tape
to Tape
Disk to Disk
Exchange
SQL
Better Backups
More Reliable Recovery & $$$ saving
SharePoint
Windows File
SAP
AS/400
UNIX
“Enterprise Heterogeneous”
Tape-based
Archive
Tape
Disk to Disk
Exchange
SQL
Better Backups
More Reliable Recovery & $$$ saving
SharePoint
Windows File
SAP
AS/400
UNIX
DPM Documentation
Online: http://technet.microsoft.com/enau/library/bb795539.aspx
Downloadable: http://technet.microsoft.com/enau/dpm/bb847848.aspx
Sizing Guides and Tools
Volume sizing tool HERE
Specific workloads http://technet.microsoft.com/enus/library/bb795684.aspx
Infrastructure Planning and Deployment Guide (IPD)
for DPM 2007 SP1
Published December 2008 HERE
Always use a 64bit DPM Server environment
Nearly 5x disk repository supported on x64 (48TB)
More than 2x protected element fan in (300 data sources)
Pagefile size
0.2 % the size of all recovery point volumes combined (eg
6GB for 3TB in DPM store)in addition to the
recommended memory
Max 9,000 VSS Shadow Copies per server
But allow 1,000 for adhoc activites
Max 100 members in a single Protection Group
Do not use the MSFT iSCSI Initiator for the DPM
Repository on Server 2003
Either use HBA’s iSCSI Initiator or
Windows Server 2008
This is a Dynamic Disk support limitation in Server 2003
If protecting MOSS
Use SP1 – HUGE performance improvement on
catalogues
No item level recovery for Exchange
For good reason: KB 904845
Not hard to achieve – see video:
http://edge.technet.com/Media/DPM-2007-how-to-doindividual-item-restore-for-Exchange/
Partner solutions:
Quest Recovery Manager - $$s
Mail Retriever http://www.mailretriever.net/index.html
Granular AD Recovery
Today 3rd party solutions – e.g. Quest
No BMR for Vista or Server 2008
Planned for “v3”
Consider your normal provisioning methodology
DPM 2006 – General Availability Q3 2005
Initial DPM release, support for File Servers – Windows 2000 onwards
DPM 2006 SP1 – October 2006
Add support for clustered servers
Add protection for x64 and SiS Systems
DPM 2007 General Availability – November 2007
Broad Microsoft Application Support
Major functional improvements
PowerShell Support…..etc
DPM 2007 Rollup Update – June 2008
DPM 2007 SP1 – December 2008
Windows Server 2008
Protection for Windows Server 2008
Protection for Windows Server 2008 core
Protection for Windows Server 2008 system state
Protection for Bitlocker–secured systems
Ability to run DPM 2007 Server on Windows Server 2008 platform
DPM 2007 has been backing up Longhorn since Beta 3 -- rollup makes it official
SQL Server 2008
Protection for SQL Server 2008
Includes capability to recover SQL 2005 databases to SQL 2008 for test migrations
DPM 2007 has been backing up SQL Server 2008 since CTP-4 -- rollup makes it official
Protection for Virtual Server 2005 R2 clusters
DPM 2007 already protects clustered Exchange, SQL Server and SharePoint
DPM Media Enhancements
Tape Library sharing between DPM servers – already in use at MSIT
Ability to co-locate multiple Protection Groups on one tape
Includes Roll-Up plus the following features:
SQL Server protection
Protection for mirrored databases now includes failover
Ability to protect databases in parallel within same instance
SharePoint protection
Index and catalog protection within SharePoint setup, instead of manual inclusion
Unified protection of mirrored SQL databases within SharePoint farm
Hyper-V protection
Now including Virtual Server 2005 R2, Hyper-V™ Server and WS08 with Hyper-V
Provides “online” backups without agents inside of guests
Enables protection of virtualized servers not natively protected by DPM 2007 (e.g. Linux & NT4)
Differentiator versus other hypervisors within MS virtualization story
Local Data Source protection
DPM server can now protect its own file shares and virtualization guests for branch office solutions
General Enhancements
Support for Cross-Forest protection
Scale and Performance Enhancement
You had to be at the session to hear
about this!!
Gold Award for protecting virtualized
environments
“Judges selected Data Protection Manager 2007 for the Gold award
because it offers a vertical, end-to-end, managed solution for
virtualization deployments and because it's the easiest to manage and
integrate with existing data center software.”
ITPro “Microsoft has a winner here..”
“http://windowsitpro.com/Windows/Articles/ArticleID/97601/pg/2/2.html
APC Magazine December 2007
“….. DPM is simply the best way to back up any of the major Microsoft
workloads today in medium-to-large networks. “
Complete protection and recovery of Microsoft
workloads from Microsoft
Integrated continuous data protection to disk and
tape backup in a single platform
An integral part of Microsoft System Center™
No finger pointing!
Designed to be best of breed for Microsoft
applications
Visit http://www.microsoft.com/DPM
Download the new DPM 2007 120 Eval
Website: www.microsoft.com/DPM
How to Protect SQL Server with DPM 2007
datasheet & technical whitepaper
How to Protect Microsoft Exchange with DPM 2007
datasheet & technical whitepaper
How to Protect Microsoft SharePoint with DPM 2007
datasheet & technical whitepaper
Technet:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/dpm/
Webcasts
TechNet – Technical Overview of DPM 2007
TechNet – How to Protect SQL Server with DPM 2007
TechNet – How to Protect Exchange Server with DPM 2007
NEW Virtual Labs on main DPM site
email: [email protected]
© 2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries.
The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market
conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation.
MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.