jpeake wrote:I am new to Veeam as well, and researched a lot of options for this very situation. I am going the route of creating secondary "offsite" jobs, containing the same VM's as the "normal" jobs, but pointing to a repository at a remote site (a NAS hosted by Windows, using the Veeam agent).
I thought about doing what you are trying also, but as it is I already have the servers getting hit once for regular backups, a 2nd time for replication of VMs to a different building ESXi box for disaster recovery (should the main server room burn down, etc, we could get things up and running very quickly again), and so I would then have to have a 3rd job hitting each source server to replicate across the 10mbit WAN to the server in a different city after the first two jobs are completed.
I wonder how much less bandwidth is needed using jpeake's method above vs just robocopying the incremental files across the WAN (which is what I'm trying now)? So far I think the incremental .vib files are around 5GB so across 10mbit its not too bad, but I haven't converted our accounting system (Dynamics AX, 4 VMs), Exchange server VMs, or main SQL server VMs over from Hyper-V to ESXi yet so once those are converted I'm betting the incrementals will be closer to 20GB and robocopy will take a long time to copy that. (I am robocopying the main .vbk across the wan right now, 124GB, after 6hrs its only 16% done, so thats gonna take 37.5hrs total for 124GB, so for 20GB its approximately going to take 6hours to robocopy the incrementals over... not to mention since I am doing incremental 'transforms' for tape backups on Saturdays that means every week robocopy will try to copy the entire new .vbk file over the WAN after the transform, lol... yeah, so this isn't going to work (at least not over a 10mbit connection, maybe 100mbit would...).
So perhaps I will have to try what jpeake is doing... I don't see any other options really...
Like I said earlier, I really hope one of the feature requests that Veeam is looking into is to be able to replicate backups across a WAN sending only the changes ('delta' changes or whatever the term is). That's what we did/still do with BackupExec and it works well (duplicate backup-sets to additional locations).
Anyways, enough of a rant, feel free to comment
