MCSE, CCNA, CCNP, Security+, Network+, A+ Certification
Cramsession Library

Help | Advanced Search
What's New?
What's Popular?
MCSE, CCNA, CCNP, Security+, Network+,A+ CertificationMCSE, CCNA, CCNP, Security+, Network+, A+ Certification
MCSE, CCNA, CCNP, Security+, Network+, A+ Certification
Hot Spots: Backup vs. Archiving: Make the Break
sponsored by Storage Magazine
Posted:  12 Dec 2006
Published:  01 Dec 2006
Format:  HTML
Length:  3   Page(s)
Type:  Journal Article
Language:  English


ABSTRACT:
Backup and archiving processes can intersect at two specific points. First, IT should archive inactive data to free up capacity on primary storage and servers, and reduce the amount of data that needs to be backed up regularly from these systems. If the data being protected is old, unchanging or rarely accessed, but still needs to retained, there's no reason to keep the information on production servers and storage. That data can be archived and moved to lower cost storage where it will still be accessible. This takes the aged data out of recurring backup operations. Organizations can complete backups much faster and save money on tertiary media by archiving. The brute-force alternative is to simply delete old data from primary systems. However, this would put an organization at risk of being out of compliance with regulations and limit the opportunity to leverage the information for other business purposes.

The second point of intersection involves adding information archive systems to the backup schema for data protection purposes. Efficient archiving mandates that the data doesn't reside anywhere else (because it was moved from primary systems). As such, IT must back up the archive system as part of the backup schema so that archived data is also protected appropriately.


Author

Brian Babineau
Senior Analyst, Enterprise Strategy Group
Brian Babineau serves as the primary analyst for Continuous Data Protection and Intelligent Information Management solutions. The latter segment includes information analysis, classification, archiving, search, retrieval and indexing. In addition, his research activities continue to focus on regulatory compliance, corporate governance, and electronic discovery and their impact on IT. With an accounting background, Brian also supports ESG's financial services offerings to vendors and investors.



BROWSE RELATED RESOURCES
Backups | Content Archiving | Email Archiving | Records Retention

View All Resources sponsored by Storage Magazine

Library Home | Advertise with Us


MCSE, CCNA, CCNP, Security+, Network+, A+ CertificationMCSE, CCNA, CCNP, Security+, Network+, A+ Certification
  CramSession. All Rights Reserved.     HOME   ADVERTISE   CORPORATE INFO   HELP