This topic has been quite popular in the past.
I run into some problems on our client's environment and could use some best practices to lower the backup time.
They have dedicated physical backup server running 2012r2 with plenty of cpu and ram.
They are doing reverse incremental backups, and they are not going to switch to forward incremental.
Backup performance is very poor. They have 30 fast sas-disks in raid5 on a HP smart-array 800-series controller with 4GB cache.
The backup speed is anything between 10-20MB/s. The bottleneck is the target.
In previous versions (pre-9) vbk file fragmentation was a big issue and frequent full backups was recommended. I guess in v9 this can be handled with backup maintenance / defragmentation?
Will reducing the number of restorepoints help (currently 21)?
Will splitting up the backup job in multiple smaller jobs help? I recall 1TB was maximum recommended vbk size. Is that correct?
The raid controllers cache is now set 10% read, 90% write. What would be ideal for reverse incremental backups?
Would enabling the sas-disks physical cache help?
What compression and dedupe settings would be easiest for storage? The backup server has 2x12core cpus and 64GB mem, so no need to worry about those.
Anything else to speed up the reverse incremental backups?
Thanks in advance
