Originally posted by ldillon
View Post
Originally posted by ldillon
View Post
Originally posted by ldillon
View Post
Originally posted by ldillon
View Post
Also, full disclosure, I don't actually backup 99% of my ZFS based NAS. My files, outwith my code (I work at home and thats backed up) none of my files are really important. I have the NAS mostly as a home server for convenience, and being mostly trust worthy is good enough for me (when I lose all my files, it'll be a bummer, but its not like I'll lose any money or productivity).
Originally posted by ldillon
View Post
- If their data isn't important (and lets be honest, most peoples data isn't important) but their uptime is then I'd just leave them with the straight up RAID1 and make them a restore disk at a push.
- If teir data is important, but their uptime less so, then something like bacula (or the cloud if you're into that sorta thing) to do offsite backups (assuming they have a decent net connection).
- If both are important, then combine the first two options.
- If neither is important, I'd do nothing (maybe a restore disk, this at least will stop them calling you when their disk eats itself).
If you're taking it seriously, you're gonna want to run some checks to make sure the RAID array is clean and that it'll email errors (and label the disks!). You'll also want to make sure those backups and working. You can do that on the backup server, but you'll probably want to do a bit of work to check whether the box is up because you dont want it screaming about no backups on a PC that hasn't been turned on in 3 days. As always, the amount of effort depends on the value of the data.
On that point I started my career at a webhosting provider on the phones no less. Obviously we dealt with servers falling over on occasion. You'd get people calling up (on the cheapest package no less) screaming down the phone they were losing $20k per hour because their site was down. The answer was generally always the same, "why on earth are you paying for a best efforts shared pacakge at $20 a year when you're losing several times more of the cost of a proper solution".
Leave a comment: