2. Course Outlines
Data Protector Introduction Data Protector Introduction
Media management
Backup devices Backup devices
Backup terms and concepts
Backup Specification Backup Specification
Restoring Data
Data Protector Internal Database Data Protector Internal Database
Monitoring , Reporting and Notification
D t P t t A t l d it Data Protector Access control and security
3. Why Protect Data?
80% of companies without well-conceived
data protection and recovery strategies go out
of business within 2 years of a major disasterof business within 2 years of a major disaster
Source: US National Archives and Records Administration
93% of companies in the US that lost their 93% of companies in the US that lost their
data centre for 10 days or more due to
disaster filed for bankruptcy within one year of
h dithe disaster
Source: Boston Computing Analysts 2003
8. The IT & Storage Challengee & Sto age C a e ge
AnticipatedDataGrowth
PrimaryDataStored TotalDataStored
You must do a LOT more with Less.
Volume of Information
Value of InformationPrimaryDataStored TotalDataStored Value of Information
Apps/Sources of Information
Time to Retain Information
mt.
Archive
DataVolume
Copies of Information
Complexity to Manage
Information
Protect /
Archive
mationMg
Data
Protection
Cost to Manage Information
RELATIVE IT
Manage /
Store
Inform
Primary
Storage
Time BUDGETS!
9. THE RELEVANCE OF ILM TODAYTHE RELEVANCE OF ILM TODAY
Information Lifecycle Management (ILM)
“Classifying, managing, and moving information to the
most cost effective data repository based on the value of
each piece of information at that exact point in time.”
Implications:
• Not all information is created equal…and neither are your storage options
Information value changes over time both upward and downward• Information value changes over time…both upward and downward
• Data repositories should be dynamically matched with information value for
security, protection and cost
10. Information Lifecycle
Management
Actively managing
Management
Information management today
Create and modify
Actively managing
information:
• From creation to
Remove
P t t d
Replicate and distribute
Protect and recover
deletion
• According to its
changing business
Protect and recover
Create
d
Archive and recall
Remove
relevance over time
• With automation to
enforce application-
f l
Archive
and
recall
and
modify
Remove
specific policies
• To align with
business and
application needsapplication needs
11. St t R l ILMSteps to Real ILM
Best of Breed
Applications Customer’s Choice
Data
Management
Services
A Data Classification
B Data Management
C Data Movement (bi-directional)
Storage
Infrastructure
Network
41 3 51 2 6
Enterprise
Disk
Object-
Based File
Stores
SATA/
JBOD
Access
Tape
Mid-level
Disk
Capacity
Tape
12. Driving Cost from Storage
Storage
Infrastructure
Storage
Infrastructure
Network
SATA/
4
Mid l l
1 2
Object-
B d Fil
3
A
5
C it
6
E t i
1
SATA/
JBOD
Mid-level
Disk
Based File
Stores
Access
Tape
Capacity
Tape
Enterprise
Disk
XP or EVA MSA Near Online
Backup/ VLS
Tape Library VaultingNAS / File
library py
14. Archive
Where to store
Data Classification Intelligence
Business Value
• Period in Time
• Customer Usage
• Competitive Advantage
Compliance
• Retention Period
• Type of Storage
• Accessibility
• Where to store
• How long in this
tier
• Archive attributes
• Competitive Advantage• Accessibility
DataData
Data
M t
A Data Classification
B D t M t
Management
Services
B Data Management
C Data Movement (bi-directional)
15. Usage
Success
• Did my backups
Data Management Intelligence
• How is my data allocated
• How much of my BCV’s are used
• What business units drive usage
Status
• What device is
down
• What is my
• Did my backups
complete
• How long did it take
• Where are my weak
points• What is my
performance
• What capacity limit
points
DataData
Data
M t
A Data Classification
B D t M t
Management
Services
B Data Management
C Data Movement (bi-directional)
16. Data Movement
Intelligence
Bi-Directional
Across all 6 tiers
te ge ce
Intelligent Network
•Virtualisation
•Heterogeneous
Replicate Mirror SNAP
Automated
• Based on
Classification
• Managed by
• Across all 6 tiers
Data
•Replicate, Mirror, SNAP• Managed by
software
Data
Data
M t
A Data Classification
B D t M t
Management
Services
B Data Management
C Data Movement (bi-directional)
17. Steps to Real ILM
Enabling
Assess
ManageEnabling
Services
Implement
Design
Manage
Maintain
Best of Breed
Applications Customer’s Choice
D t A Data ClassificationData
Management
Services
A Data Classification
B Data Management
C Data Movement (bi-directional)
N k
Storage
Infrastructure
Network
Object
41 3 51 2 6
Enterprise
Disk
Object-
Based File
Stores
SATA/
JBOD
Access
Tape
Mid-level
Disk
Capacity
Tape
19. Manage: Information
Lifecycle Management
Policy-based
migration
software
ROI Tool now
available
ecyc e a age e
Policy based
Aging 30 days
Application Server
Online (ms)
Inline (ms)
ATA disk
Policy-based
migration
software
HighHighHighHigh
Inline (ms)
Aging 3 months
Policy-based
migration
software
Data
Value
Nearline (sec)
Aging to 1 Year
Tape Library
software
Reference
Frequency
Tape
Archive (min)
Aging to 1+ Years
Deletion
LowLowLowLow
Time
20. HP offers the most extensive
storage offering on the planet!storage offering on the planet!
Software
HP OpenView
Continuous
Access Storage
HP
OpenView
Media
HP OpenView
Storage
Area
HP
OpenView
Data
HP
StorageWorks
array platform
HP
Software Appliance
(CASA)
OperationsManager Protector
y p
software
HP StorageWorks
MSA1000
HP StorageWorks
NAS solutions
HP StorageWorks
Modular Array,
HP
StorageWorks
HP
StorageWorks
Servicesa
Network
storage
Enterprise Modular
Array and Enterprise
Virtual Array
Disk Array XPVirtual Array
andsolutio
Infrastructure
IP network
SAN
iSCSI storage router HP StorageWorks Core
and Director Switches
FC SAN Switch topologies HP StorageWorks Director
and Edge Switch topologies
ons
Nearline
HP StorageWorks
Tape Drives and
Autoloaders
HP
StorageWorks
Magneto-
Optical (MO)
HP Media HP
StorageWorks
ESL Enterprise
Library series
HP StorageWorks
MSL Tape Drive
and SSL series
storage Jukeboxes
y
21. Data Protector in theData Protector in the
StorageWorks Software Portfolio
Data Protection DeviceReplicationa a o ec o
and Recovery
•HP Data Protector
•HP StorageWorks Data Protector
Express
ev ce
Management
•HP StorageWorks XP Software
•Command View AE
•Cache LUN
ep ca o
•HP OpenView Storage Mirroring
•HP StorageWorks Business Copy
•HP StorageWorks Continuous Access
W k l
Express
•HP StorageWorks Continuous
Information Capture
•HP StorageWorks Application
Recovery Manager
•HP StorageWorks Fast Recovery
•Auto LUN
•LUN Configuration and Security
Manager
•Performance Advisor
•Performance Control
•R M d
•HP StorageWorks Cluster Extension
•HP StorageWorks Flex Copy
•HP StorageWorks Replication
Solutions Manager
Storage Resource
Data Archive
and Migration
•Resource Manager and
Data Exchange
•Data Shredder
•Disk/Cache Partition
•HP StorageWorks EVA Software
•Command View
k f b I f t t
Storage Resource
Management
•HP Storage Essentials Suite
Command View
•HP StorageWorks B-Series Switch
Software
•HP StorageWorks M-Series Switch
Software
•HP StorageWorks RIM for Databases
•HP StorageWorks RIM for Messaging
•HP StorageWorks RIM for Files
•HP StorageWorks File Migration Agent
•HP StorageWorks File System Extender
•HP StorageWorks Medical Archive
Infrastructure
•HP StorageWorks Secure Path
•HP OpenView Storage Volume Growth
•HP OpenView Storage Virtual•HP StorageWorks Medical Archive
System
•HP OpenView Storage Virtual
Replicator
22. DP Solves customer challenge
Customer challenges How Data Protector solves the problem
Hitting
backup windows
Data Protector reduces performance impact on
application servers by eliminating the backup
window via
• On-line backupbac up do s p
• Open File Backup
• Zero Downtime Backup
M i
Data Protector allows Instant Recovery by retrieving
Meeting
recovery time objectives
Data Protector allows Instant Recovery by retrieving
the data directly from the replicas on disk, reducing
recovery time to minutes, instead of hours.
• Less than half the cost than other solutions in the
Reduce
operation &
Less than half the cost than other solutions in the
market,
even before you include support
Simplest and most flexible licensing model in the
industry
management costs
industry
Ease of deployment and use, saving operational
efforts and costs (e.g. automated backup and
recovery procedures, etc)
23. Data ProtectorData Protector
HP OpenView Storage Data Protector HP OpenView Storage Data Protector
is a backup solution that provides
reliable data protection and high
accessibility for your fast growing
business data.
About Backup and Data Protector
24. Why Data Protector ?
Scalable Architecture
Central Administration
High Performance High Performance
Mixed Environment Support
High Availability
Automated Operation
Service Management
Integration with other application Integration with other application
Monitoring and Reporting capabilities
25. DP High Availability integration
Description
management
t
p
• Data Protector integrates with clusters, to
ensure fail-safe operation with the ability to
backup virtual nodes
• Each Data Protector component can
fail over
system
LAN
automatically fail over within a cluster. It also
enables the Data Protector management
system itself to run on a cluster
Umedia
agent
Usage
Servers that have to be available 24x7
Benefits
A ti d t t ti ti
SAN
Assures continue data protection operation
• ensuring data protection to continue to
run, by running the management system
on a cluster
i th t b k b t d b• ensuring that backup can be executed, by
running the agents on a cluster
26. Introducing Backups and Restores
Wh t I B k ?What Is a Backup?
A b k i th t tA backup is a process that creates a copy
of data on backup media.
27. Introducing Backups and Restores
Wh t I R t ?What Is a Restore?
A t i th t t thA restore is a process that recreates the
original data from a backup copy.
28. Introducing Backups and Restores
N t k B k Network Backup
•During backups in a network environment, data is transferred
over the network from systems to be backed up to media onover the network from systems to be backed up to media on
systems with backup devices, where the data is stored.
29. Introducing Backups and Restores
Di t B k Direct Backup
A direct backup is one in which you can
send data directly from disk to tape in
the SAN without involving a dedicatedthe SAN without involving a dedicated
backup server for the data movement.
30. Data Protector Architecture
The Data P otecto cell sho n in fig e bello is a net o kThe Data Protector cell, shown in figure bellow is a network
environment that has a Cell Manager, client systems,
and devices.
31. Data Protector ArchitectureData Protector Architecture
GUI
Windows
HP-UX
Solaris
Linux (patch
Cell Manager
Windows (32/64 bit) (Intel EM64T, AMD x64)
HP-UX
Solaris
Linux SuSE Red Hat
Application Agent
SharePoint Portal Server
( h b d 6 0)
Disk Agent
Windows
Linux (patch
based on 6.0)
Linux SuSE, Red Hat
(Xeon64, AMD64)
Media Agent
(patch based on 6.0)
Data Protection Manager
Oracle
SQL Server
ExchangeWindows
HP-UX
Linux
Solaris
AIX
T 64 UNIX
Media Agent
Windows
HP-UX
Linux
Solaris
AIX
Exchange
VSS API
Internet Info Server
SAP R/3, SAP DB
Informix
S b Tru64 UNIX
MPE/iX
OpenVMS (Alpha, IA64)
NetWare
SCO OpenServer; SCO Unixware
AIX
Tru64 UNIX
MPE/iX
OpenVMS (Alpha, IA64)
NetWare
Sybase
Lotus Notes / Domino
DB2
OpenView NNM
p
SNI SINIX; SGI IRIX; NCR MP-RAS
Additional platforms via NFS,
shared disk (CIFS) or NDMP
NetWare
SCO OpenServer, Sinix
32. Data Protector Architecture
Operations in the CellOperations in the Cell
The Data Protector Cell
Manager controls backup
and restore sessions,
which perform all the
required actions for a
backup or restorebackup or restore,
respectively, as shown:
33. Enterprise Environments
The systems may be located in different geographical areas andThe systems may be located in different geographical areas and
time zones.
35. MOM Usage
Spreading the Clients in the WAN
Centralized reportingp g
Backup media and device sharing with CMMDB
(Central Media Management DB)
36. Media Management
Using Media Pools
R i i d i B d Recognition and supporting Barcodes
Fully Automated Media Management Functionality Fully Automated Media Management Functionality
37. Backup Devices
D t P t t d fiData Protector defines
and models each
device as a physical
device with its owndevice with its own
usage properties, such
as the default pool.
38. User Interface
We can use User Interface to access all administration and
configuration task in Data Protector
Use user interface in heterogeneous environment
40. Steps to Setup Data Protector
Analyze
Cell Manager
Backup Clients
S it G d Security Groups and users
Backup Devices
Installing The DP Installing The DP
Configuring Backups
Configuring Devices and Media Pools Configuring Devices and Media Pools
Configuring Backup specification along with
IDB Backup
Configuring Reports
41. Steps to Setup Data Protector
Data Protector Maintenance
Maintaining IDB
Configuring Reports
Vaulting Media
42. HP Storage Essentials
Backup Manager for HP Data ProtectorBackup Manager for HP Data Protector
Backup resource management
and reporting to ensure health
and performance of data
protection infrastructurep
Capabilities:
Report backup
resources,
success/failure, SLA,
backup volume jobbackup volume, job
size, and client history
Maps backup
dependencies on SAN
resources
Extends topology to
tape libraries and
drives, backup servers
Monitors drive
performanceperformance
HP Data Protector
Cell Manager 5.5 & 6.0
job status and details