Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Missouri

Disaster recovery, to many people, means not much more than a hot site, but there is much more involved. What exactly is involved depends on how much money you have to put to the problem.

Local Companies

CoSentry, LLC
(816) 891-5913
10801 N. Amity Ave
Kansas City, MO
Midwest Technology Connection
(816) 471-3553
410 W. 5th St.
Kansas City, MO
Business Practical Security Inc.
(816) 774-2329
62 L St
Lake Lotawana, MO
Eclipse Data Systems Inc
(573) 372-3833
30356 Mariner Sands Rd
Gravois Mills, MO
Isenhower Computers
(417) 239-1170
425 Presbyterian St
Hollister, MO
Logic Solutions Llc
(573) 365-5366
1296 Bagnell Dam Blvd
Lake Ozark, MO
Comtel
(417) 886-8110
Springfield, MO
Swiftechs
(636) 207-9438
Ballwin, MO
Hcs Computer Solutions
(660) 438-2093
101 W Jackson St
Warsaw, MO
PC Satcom Inc
(573) 499-1767
2309 Primrose Dr
Columbia, MO

By Edward L. Haletky, CIO.com,

Disaster recovery, to many people, means not much more than a hot site, but there is much more involved. What exactly is involved depends on how much money you have to put to the problem.

Fully redundant hot sites cost quite a bit in hardware, software, and licensing. At best, they should be exact duplicates of your current environment; at worst, they should be able to run your most important virtual machines.

However, this is not the only aspect of DR that should be considered. Disasters come in all sizes, from the small-scale application failure to the catastrophic natural disaster. Both of these are fairly well understood.

But what about the middle of the road business-continuity and disaster issues, which somewhere in between the extremes in the scope of disaster, but are specific to virtualization infrastructures: single machine failures, SAN failures, VM failures, etc.

For these there are a few tools, mostly from VMware that will help. VMware High Availability tops the list. But any VM-to-VM clustering service will also work to solve these issues.

To help with storage server issues there is also the LeftHand Networks VSA and Xtravirt XVS products. These products use local machine disk to mirror between the systems using software. This way if one system failed, the data is not lost. These technologies add increased redundancy to the software stack and can replace redundant SANs in smaller shops.

Even good backups add to this concept of redundancy by adding replication features (VizionCore vReplicator and Veeam Backup). These will allow you to replicate VMs from storage device to storage device and place VMs in locations where they are ready to power on at a moments notice. Which is another good way to keep things running if your SAN or NAS device fails.

VMware SRM works with various SAN and NAS devices to allow the SAN or NAS's own mirroring software to work better with virtualization.

As we put more and more VMs on a system we need to consider adding more and more redundancy into the systems. There are already some hardware solutions, like RAID Blade and RAID memory technologies; we have the ability to have redundant switching fabrics.

These software storage technologies add into the existing RAID level redundancy and expand them to include multiple systems.

While hot sites are the end goal for natural disasters, don't forget to plan for the middling disasters by increasing your local redundancy, using these or other tools.

Virtualization expert Edward L. Haletky is the author of "VMWare ESX Server in the Enterprise: Planning and Securing Virtualization Servers," Pearson Education (2008.) He recently left Hewlett-Packard, where he worked in the Virtualization, Linux, and High-Performance Technical Computing teams. Haletky owns AstroArch Consulting, providing virtualization, security, and network consulting and development. Haletky is also a champion and moderator for the VMware discussion forums, providing answers to security and configuration questions.

Copyright © 2008 IDG. All rights reserved.

Featured Local Company

CoSentry, LLC

8168915913
10801 N. Amity Ave
Kansas City, MO

Regional Articles
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Arnold MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Ballwin MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Belton MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Blue Springs MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Bolivar MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Branson MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Cape Girardeau MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Chesterfield MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Columbia MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters De Soto MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Excelsior Springs MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Fenton MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Festus MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Florissant MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Grandview MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Hannibal MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Hazelwood MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Independence MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Jefferson City MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Joplin MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Kansas City MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Kirksville MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Lebanon MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Lees Summit MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Liberty MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Maryland Heights MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Moberly MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Neosho MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Nixa MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters O Fallon MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Pacific MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Park Hills MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Perryville MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Poplar Bluff MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Rolla MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Saint Ann MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Saint Charles MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Saint Joseph MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Saint Louis MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Saint Peters MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Sedalia MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Sikeston MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Springfield MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters Warrensburg MO
- Recovering from Virtualization Disasters West Plains MO

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History