HP StorageWorks 6000 HP StorageWorks VLS and D2D Solutions Guide (AG306-96028, - Page 45

Restoring from Disk Backup Device, Restoring from Backup Application-created Tape Copy

Page 45 highlights

Restoring from Disk Backup Device Restore from the VLS or D2D is performed in the same way that restore from tape is done. Simply direct your backup application to do the restore. NOTE: A restore from one tape can be performed at the same time as a backup to a different tape. Restoring from Backup Application-created Tape Copy The format of physical tapes used in the VLS and D2D environments is the same as the format in environments not using a virtual tape library. To restore from tape, place the tape in a library or drive that the host has access to and restore. • Time to retrieve media is a factor in recovery time. Depending on the location of your vault and the media management within the vaulting process, retrieval time can be a key part of recovery time. • Recovery from tape can be slower than recovery from disk. Restoring from the Replication Target Consider a use case after a site disaster where the local VLS or D2D device is unavailable and the restore must be performed from the replication target device instead. There are three main method of performing disaster recovery restore from a replication target: • Restore directly from target device. The replicated cartridges in the target device are all native format (so they can be restored directly by a backup application). After presenting the replication target to a replacement backup application and restoring its media database, you can restore your servers from the VLS or D2D device. See Restore Directly from the VLS Target Device and Restore Directly from the D2D Target Device. • Restore over LAN/WAN. This option is where some or all of the source device is rebuilt by restoring the replicated cartridges over the LAN/WAN back from the target to the source. In the VLS, this is a wholesale (non-deduplicated) restore so can only restore a subset of the source device such as the last backup set. (See Restore the VLS over the LAN/WAN.) In the D2D, this is a deduplicated reverse replication so can rebuild the entire source device. (See Reverse Replication on the D2D.) • Reverse tape initialization. This option is where the replicated cartridges on the target device can be exported to physical tape which can then be imported back into a new source device to rebuild it. This is currently only supported on D2D devices. (See Reverse Tape Initialization on the D2D.) Performance Bottleneck Identification In many cases, backup and restore performance using the VLS or D2D is limited by external factors. For example, performance is affected by the speed at which data can be transferred to and from the source disk system (the system being backed up), or by the performance of the Ethernet or Fibre Channel SAN link from the source to the VLS or D2D. To locate bottlenecks in the system, HP provides some performance tools which are part of the Library and Tape Tools package available at http:// www.hp.com/support/tapetools. HP StorageWorks VLS and D2D Solutions Guide 45

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Restoring from Disk Backup Device
Restore from the VLS or D2D is performed in the same way that restore from tape is done. Simply
direct your backup application to do the restore.
NOTE:
A restore from one tape can be performed at the same time as a backup to a different tape.
Restoring from Backup Application-created Tape Copy
The format of physical tapes used in the VLS and D2D environments is the same as the format in
environments not using a virtual tape library. To restore from tape, place the tape in a library or drive
that the host has access to and restore.
Time to retrieve media is a factor in recovery time. Depending on the location of your vault and
the media management within the vaulting process, retrieval time can be a key part of recovery
time.
Recovery from tape can be slower than recovery from disk.
Restoring from the Replication Target
Consider a use case after a site disaster where the local VLS or D2D device is unavailable and the
restore must be performed from the replication target device instead. There are three main method
of performing disaster recovery restore from a replication target:
Restore directly from target device.
The replicated cartridges in the target device are all native format (so they can be restored directly
by a backup application). After presenting the replication target to a replacement backup applic-
ation and restoring its media database, you can restore your servers from the VLS or D2D device.
See
Restore Directly from the VLS Target Device
and
Restore Directly from the D2D Target Device
.
Restore over LAN/WAN.
This option is where some or all of the source device is rebuilt by restoring the replicated cartridges
over the LAN/WAN back from the target to the source. In the VLS, this is a wholesale (non-dedu-
plicated) restore so can only restore a subset of the source device such as the last backup set. (See
Restore the VLS over the LAN/WAN
.) In the D2D, this is a deduplicated reverse replication so
can rebuild the entire source device. (See
Reverse Replication on the D2D
.)
Reverse tape initialization.
This option is where the replicated cartridges on the target device can be exported to physical
tape which can then be imported back into a new source device to rebuild it. This is currently only
supported on D2D devices. (See
Reverse Tape Initialization on the D2D
.)
Performance Bottleneck Identification
In many cases, backup and restore performance using the VLS or D2D is limited by external factors.
For example, performance is affected by the speed at which data can be transferred to and from the
source disk system (the system being backed up), or by the performance of the Ethernet or Fibre
Channel SAN link from the source to the VLS or D2D. To locate bottlenecks in the system, HP provides
some performance tools which are part of the Library and Tape Tools package available at
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HP StorageWorks VLS and D2D Solutions Guide
45