| Author |
Message |
Gareth Watson
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Jul 27, 2004 1:32 pm Post subject:
NT Backup |
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Hi,
My company is looking at purchasing a NAS with Windows Storage Server
2003 installed on it.
All the versions of Windows Server so far have included a very useful
utility called NT Backup (which lives in
Start->Programs->Accessories->System Tools->Backup).
In the past I have always had to install it from the relevant Windows
Server CD. Does Storage Server also include the NT Backup utility?
If for some reason the utility is not available in Storage Server, can
the version from Windows 2000 Server be installed and used?
Many thanks for all your help,
Gareth Watson. |
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Joseph J. Hand
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Jul 27, 2004 3:58 pm Post subject:
Re: NT Backup |
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Yes, Storage Server includes NTBackup. If it is not installed, it'll be on
the CD. Look for it in the came location, under System Tools. Also, it has a
pretty good CLI that will allow you to script and schedule the backups for
that host. If you want more of a centralized approcach, check out any third
pary backup vendor like VERITAS, CA, EMC, CommVault, etc... They [ we
-) ] all do a bit more on the centralization and management end.
--
Joseph Hand
VERITAS Software Corporation
joseph.hand@veritas.com
PLEASE REPLY TO NEWSGROUP ONLY
s
"Gareth Watson" <gw-ext@abs-ltd.com> wrote in message
news:2mmlpsFobeqoU1@uni-berlin.de...
| Quote: | Hi,
My company is looking at purchasing a NAS with Windows Storage Server
2003 installed on it.
All the versions of Windows Server so far have included a very useful
utility called NT Backup (which lives in
Start->Programs->Accessories->System Tools->Backup).
In the past I have always had to install it from the relevant Windows
Server CD. Does Storage Server also include the NT Backup utility?
If for some reason the utility is not available in Storage Server, can
the version from Windows 2000 Server be installed and used?
Many thanks for all your help,
Gareth Watson. |
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|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Gareth Watson
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Jul 27, 2004 4:32 pm Post subject:
Re: NT Backup |
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Thanks very much. We are going to use NT Backup to transfer thousands
of small files to our NAS and then restore them on the NAS. For
general backup work we use Backup Exec which we have found more than
adequate for managing our tape library. I am hoping it will be just as
efficient using the new NAS instead of tapes.
Thanks again for your help,
Gareth.
Joseph J. Hand wrote:
| Quote: | Yes, Storage Server includes NTBackup. If it is not installed, it'll
be on the CD. Look for it in the came location, under System Tools.
Also, it has a pretty good CLI that will allow you to script and
schedule the backups for that host. If you want more of a centralized
approcach, check out any third pary backup vendor like VERITAS, CA,
EMC, CommVault, etc... They [ we -) ] all do a bit more on the
centralization and management end. |
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Andre Dieball
Guest
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Posted:
Thu Aug 26, 2004 2:02 am Post subject:
Re: NT Backup |
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Hi Gareth
if you're talking about thousends of small files, you might want to look
into a backup software which supports some kind of "image option" in
order to get the best backup performance. Backing up thousands of small
files could take much longer than backing up the same amount of capacity
spread over larger files. Therefore, an image option will wrap them
together on the server itself, before they get transmitted to the backup
device of your choice. This reduces your backup window and increases
your backup performance. Not sure about veritas and BackupExec, bit CA
and BAB definitly do.
Andre
--
-------
out out, you daemons of stupidity!
http://www.storagecommunity.com
In article <2mn0b4Fo71ctU1@uni-berlin.de>, gw-ext@abs-ltd.com says...
| Quote: | Thanks very much. We are going to use NT Backup to transfer thousands
of small files to our NAS and then restore them on the NAS. For
general backup work we use Backup Exec which we have found more than
adequate for managing our tape library. I am hoping it will be just as
efficient using the new NAS instead of tapes.
Thanks again for your help,
Gareth.
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