Hi,
I'm planning for a deployment in a 12 node hyper-v 2012 cluster. The backup proxy will be using on-host method and therefore my Veeam server does not has a FC HBA. All Hyper-V hosts are connecting to SAN via FC.
My concern is which backup repository provisioning method i should use in this case for best performance? I've figured out few options on my own after some reading of the Veeam guide. Please correct me if i'm wrong.
Option 1:
Provision another LUN from SAN to cluster and create another csv. Then assign the CSV as backup repository.
(Question: We add the cluster to Veeam using wizard. Can we then add the CSV provisioned to the cluster as backup repository? I'm not familiar with Hyper-V, all the while was deploying Veeam in VMware environment)
Option 2:
Get a FC HBA for Veeam server. Then provision a LUN to Veeam server directly and assign it as backup repository. Then allow all hyper-v nodes in the cluster to access to the same LUN to store backup files.
Option 3:
Via shared folder as documented in Veeam guide.
Will Option 1 and 2 lead to corrupted partition? Or there is any better option which i do not know? Would like to get a best performance provisioning type.
Thank you in advance.
-
- Enthusiast
- Posts: 52
- Liked: 1 time
- Joined: Dec 09, 2013 8:46 am
- Full Name: Eddy Chong
- Contact:
-
- Product Manager
- Posts: 20413
- Liked: 2301 times
- Joined: Oct 26, 2012 3:28 pm
- Full Name: Vladimir Eremin
- Contact:
Re: Hyper-V Backup Repository Provisioning Type
Hi, Eddy,
Am I wrong in assuming that whatever implementation you finally choose, the said SAN device will be the single point of failure? In other words, if something goes wrong with the SAN itself, you will lose both production VMs and backup data.
Thanks.
Am I wrong in assuming that whatever implementation you finally choose, the said SAN device will be the single point of failure? In other words, if something goes wrong with the SAN itself, you will lose both production VMs and backup data.
Thanks.
-
- Enthusiast
- Posts: 52
- Liked: 1 time
- Joined: Dec 09, 2013 8:46 am
- Full Name: Eddy Chong
- Contact:
Re: Hyper-V Backup Repository Provisioning Type
Hi v.Eremin,
Thanks for replying. I was confused because i don't really understand how Hyper-V works. Yes you are right, single point of failure.
I had a discussion with a friend now I will share the information.
Important point, Hyper-V host will send backup files to Veeam Backup Repository via "Network". (Apply to on-host proxy method only)
Therefore using fc lun or das as backup repository does not make any difference. (VMware method has a lot of difference, this is the part i get confused. )
Adding backup repository is just the same as what we have in VMware method.
Option 1 using csv is just overkill for a repository. And we don't need to go option 1, just leave hyper-v host with proxy role.
Option 2/3 is just like vmware method, can be a network share, das, iscsi, or fc (different box to avoid single point of failure)
Thank you
Thanks for replying. I was confused because i don't really understand how Hyper-V works. Yes you are right, single point of failure.
I had a discussion with a friend now I will share the information.
Important point, Hyper-V host will send backup files to Veeam Backup Repository via "Network". (Apply to on-host proxy method only)
Therefore using fc lun or das as backup repository does not make any difference. (VMware method has a lot of difference, this is the part i get confused. )
Adding backup repository is just the same as what we have in VMware method.
Option 1 using csv is just overkill for a repository. And we don't need to go option 1, just leave hyper-v host with proxy role.
Option 2/3 is just like vmware method, can be a network share, das, iscsi, or fc (different box to avoid single point of failure)
Thank you
-
- Product Manager
- Posts: 20413
- Liked: 2301 times
- Joined: Oct 26, 2012 3:28 pm
- Full Name: Vladimir Eremin
- Contact:
Re: Hyper-V Backup Repository Provisioning Type
The best approach, from my perspective.different box to avoid single point of failure
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 20 guests