I have a simple setup, Veeam B&R running on Win10 Pro on a (older) dual quad core Xeon box with 20GB of RAM, and the Agent installed on Windows 10 Pro on Ryzen workstation. They are connected together through a GigE switch. No other agents or anything at the moment since I was just setting it up to try it out on my configuration. However, I'm getting about 2MB/s on my backup. The network connection is far from saturated, and Veeam isn't using a significant amount of resources on either computer. Bottleneck is stuck on "Detecting". I had a similar problem when I tried setting up a Linux client also. Thanks in advance.
Hello,
that's not normal. I do maximum speed my USB drive can do (which is much faster than 1Gbit/s).
Looking at the screenshot, I believe that he is doing file-based backup (expected to be slow) instead of block based backup (recommended and much faster)
Yes I am doing file-based backups I know it's not Veeams forte but I wanted to try it out for 3 reasons:
1: I'm backing up my home computers right now while trying to learn Veeam, and the NAS I am backing up to really only has space to back up what I actually can't replace.
2: When/if I do put it into production we have a few ZFS servers that need to be backed up, as far as I know only file-based backups are supported from ZFS volumes right? I'd be happy if my information is outdated on this.
3: Some of our production workstations have messed up file hierarchies. I don't want to back up terabytes of cruft because artists put stuff wherever they feel.
I will do volume based backups wherever possible, but for where it isn't, are these really expected speeds?
but for where it isn't, are these really expected speeds?
It‘s like copying thousands of small files, that will never have full speed. This speeds are expected.
If you backup a large file (GB), then the speed will go up for that file. But never for really small files.
ah, the screenshot showed a Windows machine... yes, what Fabian said for Linux
The alternative would be adding the machines as managed servers and then to NAS backup. That would still take some time for the full backup, but the incremental runs would be fast then.
the question is, whether your users might put important stuff somewhere where you don't back up. entire machine backups solve that challenge.