
How to Improve NAS Backup Performance, Without Comprise
Concat’s dsmISI products can dramatically boost backup performance when targeting NAS, as well as offering a great alternative to NDMP.
Backing up large network attached storage (NAS) data is typically a painful, clunky and unrealiable process.
Many backup using the Network Data Management Protocol (NDMP), a protocol that enables to transportation between NAS devices and backup devices.
The main advantage of NDMP is that it removes the need for transporting that data through the backup server itself and can directly offload to secondary storage.
However it does have quite a few pitfalls including the following:
- NDMP is not storage agnostic
In general you cannot backup data and restore to another array from another vendor or sometimes even another OS version. This means you need an identical array to recover onto so it is a very inflexible solution. - The majority of the backup software solutions do not index the files of the NDMP files
For example in Spectrum Protect you can store a Table of Content (TOC) with the backup but if you want to restore a single file you have to load the TOC into a temporary table to work with it. This is typically very time consuming. - NDMP doesn’t really support a incremental forever strategy
That means it doesn’t scale well and you have to do a full backup periodically which is a no go with large file systems at petabyte scale that contain billions of files.
The business realities of these pitfalls are:
- You cant backup your NAS data quickly enough
- Your RPO is days or weeks rather than hours
- Your consuming too much space due to having to store periodic fulls
- You have to have an identical array available to recover onto
- The array will at some point go EOL meaning if you need to recover previous backups you still need access to a EOL array and
- More than likely your boss is shouting at you that this should be easier and more cost effective
So how do you provide a sustainable method to your company to backup NAS data and make each of those business realities of NDMP history?
General Storage dsmISI MAGS solves this fundamental problem by accelerating identification of changes and the resulting movement of data by orders of magnitude. Even extremely large and busy file systems can be backed up incrementally within a reasonable timespan using regular Spectrum Protect incremental backup when controlled by dsmISI MAGS.So how does it work?
- Requires a 64 bit Windows operating system (Windows 8.1, Windows 2008 R2 or Windows 2012 R2)
- Requires Spectrum Protect Client/TSM Version 6.3 or later, configured to a Spectrum Protect/TSM Server (any Platform) Version 6.2 or later
- Microsoft .Net 4.5
- If you plan to backup data through a Linux system (NFS or Unix-type file systems), that system has to have a Spectrum Protect/TSM client V 6.3 or later installed
From version 1.1 MAGS monitoring and configuration are based on a web interface. From MAGS CONFIG you can alter the web port the webserver is configured under (8088 by default), ensure a valid license key is active, install the service, uninstall the service, start, stop and restart the MAGS web server service.
Once the web service is installed and running your flying and can access the MAGS web interface so assist setting up backups, monitoring backups and setting up parallel restores to run.
Scheduled backups run via Spectrum Protect have to call on a .cmd containing a command to run the mags executable and referencing the MAGS option file created via the web interface during setup. You will have obviously needed to configure the schedule in Spectrum Protect to run the .cmd which should be located on the MAGS proxy server, associated the MAGS proxy node with the schedule, setup the client scheduler on the MAGS proxy node and ensured the scheduler is running via an ID that can access the fileshare to be backed up via MAGS.
- It enables an incremental forever backup strategy for large filesystems and makes quicker and more frequent backups possible
- Provides organisations with a reduced RPO and RTO vs NDMP
- Ensures data can be restored from backup and enables recovery onto ANY storage
- Significantly reduces your storage requirement due to storing incremental’s rather than regular full’s
- Ultimately it provides a sustainable method for backing up NAS data
William Bush
27.10.2017