Jul 2, 2009
Have you done your backups today? – My Backup System Explained
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We’ve recently been having quite a few clients that have been interested in getting their files backed up and secure. This is a topic that has always interested me and I’ve done a lot of research in the past in order to get my backups setup, secure, automated and fail-safe. I’m going to go over my backup solutions and what I’ve done in the past that hasn’t worked for me.
When I first started to have files that needed to be backed up I started out with what I had at the time. Without having a secondary hard drive to rely on and no money to pay for online backup services (which weren’t even an option at the time, non existed or they were very expensive), I decided to use the only thing I had available to me. At the time I had more Cd-R’s than I knew what to do with, mainly because I burned my own music from the ever growing collection I had amassed on my computer.
This was a form of backup for me, because if I lost it on the computer than I had a CD that I could re-rip back into the computer and the other way around. Other files were backed up to Cd’s as well until they would get out dated and/or damaged, which happened very often. Cd’s aren’t a great medium to use for backups in the first place, they don’t have a very long life span before the data will start degrading and in some cases can’t even be accessed at all. After I got my Mac Pro, I decided that I would install a few hard drives to use for backup purposes.
Current Work-Station Setup
Brand and Model
Model Name: Mac Pro
Model Identifier: MacPro1,1
Processors
Processor Name: Dual-Core Intel Xeon
Processor Speed: 2.66 GHz
Number Of Processors: 2
Total Number Of Cores: 4
Total Combined Processing Speed: 10.64 GHz
Memory (RAM)
Size: 7 GB
Type: DDR2 FB-DIMM
Speed: 667 MHz
ECC Status: Enabled
Graphics
Chipset Model: NVIDIA GeForce 7300 GT
Bus: PCIe
PCIe Lane Width: x16
VRAM (Total): 256 MB
Displays
Left Display: ViewSonic Graphic Series VG2230wm Black 22″ 5ms DVI Widescreen LCD Monitor
Right Display: ViewSonic Graphic Series VG2230wm Black 22″ 5ms DVI Widescreen LCD Monitor
Hard Drives
Bay 1: WDC WD2500JS-41SGB0 (250 GB) SATA 3.0Gb/s
Bay 2: SAMSUNG SP2504C (250 GB) SATA 3.0Gb/s
Bay 3: ST31500341AS (1.50 TB) SATA 3.0Gb/s
Bay 4: ST3500630AS (500 GB) SATA 3.0Gb/s
Bay 1 & 2: Striped RAID Set SATA 3.0Gb/s
Ok, enough about my system. The above drives are raided together in a Striped RAID setup. This allows the drives to function as one and I have both drives working in tandem, so I get double the speed on my writes and seeks. This helps because I work with a lot of large files and really need faster drives than what I have, but they suffice for what I currently do.
In order to backup the 500 Gigs of those two drives, I purchased a 500 GB hard drive to use with Time Machine<"Apple's Leopard" href="http:" target="_self">Leopard<"Apple's Time Machine" href="http:" target="_self">Time Machine<"Apple's Time Machine" href="http:" target="_self">Time Machine<"Apple's Time Machine" href="http:" target="_self">Time Machine allows me to recover files that were deleted, lost or renamed months ago. This has saved me a number of times and I will never be able to function without having a system such as this.
Now, what happens if something happens to the computer itself? Well I have a way to protect against lightning strikes and/or power surges. First I have a whole house surge protection system installed, if you don’t, do it. They are cheap and your power company will normally spread the payments out over a few months and it’s only around $20 to get them to come out and install it. I think total the system cost us roughly $150, but over 3 months it wasn’t much at all. The next thing I use is a UPS system, that has a very nice surge protection system built in. This saves me from power outages, surges and a number of other problems. This has saved me roughly 30+ times since I’ve purchased it, just from random outages with our power company, storms and the like. I roughly have 5 minutes to get my files saved and my system shut down, then the batteries die.
To cover myself from a fire or other natural disaster, I use online backup services. I used Mozy<"iDrive" href="http:" target="_self">iDrive<"Mozy" href="http:" target="_self">Mozy<"Mozy" href="http:" target="_self">Mozy<"Carbonite" href="http:" target="_self">Carbonite<"Carbonite" href="http:" target="_self">Carbonite account as well and she has loved her as well. She runs her flat out, mainly because her computer houses all of our family photos and videos, so we wanted to make sure it backed up quickly and also so it backups up fast when they are uploaded to the computer so those files are safe. Currently I have a server running here at the home office aptly dubbed “Obtuse”, which is my companies full time backup server. All of our web servers (A few in the Texas DC), as well as some of the office servers all backup to this one server. I have purchased a pro license for the Linux version of an application called Crash Plan, which runs full time on Obtuse. In a few days I will be setting up all the other computers in the house with this application (which is free for the standard version) and those computers will backup to Obtuse as well. So this will give me another layer of protection, which is still in-house, but having multiple copies of the same data, even in the same place, is better than 1.
So to re-cap. Get a backup system in place and automate it. There are applications for Windows that act the same as Time Machine, you’ll just need to do a little digging to find them. I don’t know of any free off hand, but Retrospect<"Crash Plan" href="http:" target="_self">Crash Plan<












