Discussions related to using object storage as a backup target.
Post Reply
nrizk1
Lurker
Posts: 1
Liked: never
Joined: Aug 19, 2020 1:48 pm
Contact:

Backup copy to S3

Post by nrizk1 »

Hello,

We're using Veeam Backup & Recovery version 10, and would like to copy of backup to a public Cloud bucket (S3 or Azure).

1) If we configure a "backup copy" job, can we choose a public cloud object storage repository as the target backup respository ?

2) Let's say we went with a "Scale-Out Backup" repository, composed of both on-premises storage (Performance Tier) + public cloud object storage (Capacity Tier).
Is there a way to keep recent backup (last 2 days) in both Performance Tier (on-premises storage) AND Capacity Tier (cloud repositories)?

3) Veeam recommends to not configure lifecycle management rules on the S3 bucket.
Does Veeam configure its own LCM rules for the destination bucket, to reduce cost by copying cold data to AWS Glacier, for example?
Or the data will stay on the same Storage Tier (S3 Standard, or S3 IA for example) during all its lifetime?

Thank you,

Best regards
NR
oleg.feoktistov
Veeam Software
Posts: 2010
Liked: 669 times
Joined: Sep 25, 2019 10:32 am
Full Name: Oleg Feoktistov
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by oleg.feoktistov »

Hi and Welcome to the Community Forums!

1) No, only object storage configured as capacity tier in scope of SOBR is currently supported. No option to set object storage as a standalone target repository.

2) Yes, with Copy Policy you can mirror backups to capacity tier as soon as they are created.

3) Backup file blocks on destination bucket fall under retention you configured for the job.
Possibility to archive data to colder storage classes like AWS Glacier is announced for v11 (called Archive Tier). It is going to support transferring GFS backups only and only from capacity tier.

Hope I answered your questions,
Oleg
stevenfoo
Expert
Posts: 116
Liked: 3 times
Joined: Jun 26, 2009 3:11 am
Full Name: Steven Foo
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by stevenfoo »

Hi,

We have a mount S3 bucket as a local remove drive eg. Y:

Could copy job backup to that Y:?

Will copy job use multi-thread during the copy?

How could we apply the short-term and GFS policy to the job?
veremin
Product Manager
Posts: 20400
Liked: 2298 times
Joined: Oct 26, 2012 3:28 pm
Full Name: Vladimir Eremin
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by veremin »

We have a mount S3 bucket as a local remove drive eg. Y:
How did you do that? Did you use some third-party utility to present object storage as local drive?
Could copy job backup to that Y:?
If it's configured as local drive, you can add the machine as managed server, assign a repository role to it and use it as a target for backup copy job.
Will copy job use multi-thread during the copy?
Does utility through which object storage is configured support multi-threading?
How could we apply the short-term and GFS policy to the job?
In the jobs settings - backup copy job has both short and long-term retentions.

Having said that, it still seems that usage of Capacity and Archive Tiers (native v11 features) will be a better and easier option than the described scenario.

Thanks!
Gostev
Chief Product Officer
Posts: 31804
Liked: 7298 times
Joined: Jan 01, 2006 1:01 am
Location: Baar, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by Gostev » 1 person likes this post

Generally speaking, 3rd party cloud object storage gateways are not supported by Veeam.
stevenfoo
Expert
Posts: 116
Liked: 3 times
Joined: Jun 26, 2009 3:11 am
Full Name: Steven Foo
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by stevenfoo »

Question to clarify for VBR v11.

1) Will SOBR offload job able to move veeam backup directly into AWS GAD?

2) Does the SOBR offload job use multithread?

3) How do we set the multithread for item (2)?

4) What is the maximum file size that could be move or copy to AWS GAD? 5TB or something else?

5) When SOBR offload job or backup copy runs, will it uses multipart to upload or download the data to AWS GAD?

6) Does SOBR offload job or backup copy use AWS API, does customer have to pay additional cost at AWS side?
Gostev
Chief Product Officer
Posts: 31804
Liked: 7298 times
Joined: Jan 01, 2006 1:01 am
Location: Baar, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by Gostev »

1. What is GAD? Google is unaware of such a term.
2. Yes.
3. You don't.
4. Doesn't matter, we don't upload backup files but rather individual blocks.
5. Yes.
6. Yes & Yes.
stevenfoo
Expert
Posts: 116
Liked: 3 times
Joined: Jun 26, 2009 3:11 am
Full Name: Steven Foo
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by stevenfoo »

1. What is GAD? Google is unaware of such a term. ==> GAD. Glacier Deep Archive.
2. Yes. ==> Ok understand.
3. You don't. ==> Ok understand.
4. Doesn't matter, we don't upload backup files but rather individual blocks.
5. Yes. ==> Ok understand.
6. Yes & Yes. ==> We need t to take note of that on the cost.
Gostev
Chief Product Officer
Posts: 31804
Liked: 7298 times
Joined: Jan 01, 2006 1:01 am
Location: Baar, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by Gostev » 1 person likes this post

1. Upload to Glacier is not direct.

Data goes to regular S3 first (Capacity Tier), then GFS restore points only beyond certain age are archived to DA (Archive Tier). This is because you only want to archive backups you definitely won't need to restore from other than in exceptional situations (like legal requirement), otherwise your Glacier costs will go through the roof after a single restore, erasing all benefits of reduced storage cost.

The two tiers use different formats optimized for costs with the given tier, so data is transformed when it goes from Capacity to Archive tier. S3 format is optimized to reduce storage consumption (since for S3, storage costs are high) - while Glacier format is optimized to reduce API costs (since for Glacier, API costs are high).
veremin
Product Manager
Posts: 20400
Liked: 2298 times
Joined: Oct 26, 2012 3:28 pm
Full Name: Vladimir Eremin
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by veremin »

You can read more on that: here and here. Thanks!
stevenfoo
Expert
Posts: 116
Liked: 3 times
Joined: Jun 26, 2009 3:11 am
Full Name: Steven Foo
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by stevenfoo »

Gostev wrote: Jul 15, 2021 9:12 am 1. Upload to Glacier is not direct.

Data goes to regular S3 first (Capacity Tier), then GFS restore points only beyond certain age are archived to DA (Archive Tier). This is because you only want to archive backups you definitely won't need to restore from other than in exceptional situations (like legal requirement), otherwise your Glacier costs will go through the roof after a single restore, erasing all benefits of reduced storage cost.

The two tiers use different formats optimized for costs with the given tier, so data is transformed when it goes from Capacity to Archive tier. S3 format is optimized to reduce storage consumption (since for S3, storage costs are high) - while Glacier format is optimized to reduce API costs (since for Glacier, API costs are high).

Could we go from Performance tier to Archive tier by skip Capacity Tier?

If it cannot go from Performance to Archive tier directly, could we use or cheap NAS as Capacity Tier?

We don't want to put anything on S3 first as it request additional charge by AWS if not mistaken. AWS will charge pee GB. If you put 2TB there for 2 days, it will charge the fees for it.

Since we don't restore much of the time, may be access 1 or 2 times a year, we are looking at Archive tier.
Mildur
Product Manager
Posts: 9846
Liked: 2605 times
Joined: May 13, 2017 4:51 pm
Full Name: Fabian K.
Location: Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by Mildur » 1 person likes this post

Could we go from Performance tier to Archive tier by skip Capacity Tier?
No.
If it cannot go from Performance to Archive tier directly, could we use or cheap NAS as Capacity Tier?
And no.

- For Azure Archive Tier, Azure capacity tier must be used.
- For AWS Archive Tier, AWS capacity tier must be used.
- Capacity tier can not be left out.

It‘s documented on the limitation page:
https://helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backu ... ml?ver=110
Product Management Analyst @ Veeam Software
stevenfoo
Expert
Posts: 116
Liked: 3 times
Joined: Jun 26, 2009 3:11 am
Full Name: Steven Foo
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by stevenfoo »

Could we then create a bucket of S3 in AWS and default it to DEEP Archive when we create Capacity Tier we refer to this bucket?

There are tools out there in the market that can automatically apply storage class during uploading.

Example below.

Code: Select all

<LifecycleConfiguration>
  <Rule>
    <ID>id1</ID>
    <Filter>
       <Prefix>documents/</Prefix>
    </Filter>
    <Status>Enabled</Status>
    <Transition>
      <Days>0</Days>
      <StorageClass>DEEP_ARCHIVE</StorageClass>
    </Transition>
  </Rule>
  <Rule>
    <ID>id2</ID>
    <Filter>
       <Prefix>logs/</Prefix>
    </Filter>
    <Status>Enabled</Status>
    <Expiration>
      <Days>365</Days>
    </Expiration>
  </Rule>
</LifecycleConfiguration>
Mildur
Product Manager
Posts: 9846
Liked: 2605 times
Joined: May 13, 2017 4:51 pm
Full Name: Fabian K.
Location: Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by Mildur »

As far as I know, lifecycle management in the object storage is not supported by veeam.
If lifecycle management in the AWS will move the blocks away from the capacity tier, veeam cannot find it's data.
Your backups in capacity tier will get corrupted and veeam cannot restore any data.

https://bp.veeam.com/vbr/VBP/3_Build_st ... bject.html
Lifecycle Rules & Tiering
Do not configure any tiering or lifecycle rules on object storage buckets used for Veeam Object Storage Repositories. This is currently not supported.

And here is why:

Tiering and lifecycle rules in object storages are based on object age. However, with Veeam’s implementation even a very old block could still be relevant for the latest offloaded backup file when the block was not changed between the restore points. An object storage vendor can not know which blocks are still relevant and which not and thus can not make proper tiering decisions.
The vendor APIs for the different storage products are not transparent. E.g. accessing Amazon S3 or Amazon Glacier requires the use of different APIs. When tiering/lifecycle management is done on cloud provider side Veeam is not aware of what happened and cannot know how to access which blocks.
Object Storage Limitations:
https://helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backu ... ml?ver=110
Data in object storage bucket/container must be managed solely by Veeam Backup & Replication, including retention and data management. Enabling lifecycle rules is not supported, and may result in backup and restore failures.
Product Management Analyst @ Veeam Software
stevenfoo
Expert
Posts: 116
Liked: 3 times
Joined: Jun 26, 2009 3:11 am
Full Name: Steven Foo
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by stevenfoo »

Thank you. Then we have to explore other solution in the market place.
veremin
Product Manager
Posts: 20400
Liked: 2298 times
Joined: Oct 26, 2012 3:28 pm
Full Name: Vladimir Eremin
Contact:

Re: Backup copy to S3

Post by veremin »

Fabian is correct here that life-cycle rules are not supported and currently you cannot skip the Capacity Tier layer.

So in your case the valid approach will be to create a Scale-Out Backup Repository with both Capacity and Archive Tiers configured. Enable move policy for Capacity Tier and set short operational restore window (so sealed backup chain is moved to object storage faster) and do the same for archival window (so GFS restore points are placed on Glacier or Glacier Deep archive sooner, if you prefer).

Thanks!
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 22 guests