just watched the livestream of the veeamON yesterday and got in touch with some new features of v10. Something that I always wannted to have was the ability to backup "the live data" of a running business-critical VM to reduce the loss of data in case of desaster as good as possible. This will now be introduced in v10 using the vsphere API for I/O filtering - well done, VEEAM

The thing is that we are using an old database for our business-critical application which can't be changed that easy in an acceptable amount of time. This database does not have a VSS writer and therefore a hot-backup won't be application aware. We are stopping the service at night via script but of course this cannot be done during business hours. I think the new feature in v10 will be a gamechanger because veeam will be able to backup the write-operations of a VM on datastore level and because of that we should be able to backup our data even during business hours.
Now the question is if my assumption is right or not. I would say in our case if we do regular backup via VSS- and vmware-Snapshot it could be that some changes to the database are written while others are not and this is the reason why the database could or will be corrupted if we do the restore... But the new feature in v10 will backup the sequential written data to the virtual disk and in the end this would be equal to a power loss or bluescreen or whatever a vm could forcible stop from a normal operating. So if my database is able to recover from power loss, it will able to recover from a restore created by the new feature in v10.
Thank you for your thoughts and response!
Mike