Backup & Recovery Techniques
for Web Hosting Companies.
What kind of backup recovery techniques
should a company have for
its dedicated server? Web hosting firms have been debating this
architecture
since their life began. It is really a question for the whole IT
community.
There are many right solutions, dependent on your company’s
ability to handle
downtime. The correct solution for you will factor in the amount of
redundant
protection you need against the overall cost.
Before we discuss the different options for
backing up and
recovering your dedicated server, we should mention that the server
hardware,
data center, and fiber connection are all critical to reliability. This
article
is specifically focused on strategies to backup and recover your
server’s data.
At a minimum, you can create a partition in
your hard drive and
backup your server weekly or monthly. There is no cost to this kind of
solution, but the downsides are obvious. If your hard drive crashes,
you will
lose your backup as well. This kind of solution is only recommended if
you can
afford to lose all of your data, which most web hosting companies
cannot.
Next, you can contract a remote backup
service to set up offsite
backups. These backups can be run daily, weekly, or monthly. The cost
of this
solution is around $30-$50/month depending on the web hosting provider.
This
option gives you a solid backup in case your hard drive crashes. The
downside
is that recovery time will take 6-12 hours or more depending on how
much data
you have. The data has to be manually copied over, and this is a slow
process.
If you can afford the cost, this solution is part of an overall backup
system,
but it is not recommended as your only solution.
The next backup option is to have a second
hard drive installed on
your server and have it set up to do daily, weekly, or monthly backups.
Most
web hosting companies that provide dedicated servers will charge
between
$15-$30 for a second hard drive. This is a nice compliment to the
previous
solution if you have the budget for both. The recovery time is faster
then a
remote backup. But unlike a remote backup, if your dedicated server or
the
datacenter are down, then you cannot access the backup. For most small
web
hosting companies this is not a problem. If their entire server or
datacenter
are down, they have larger issues to worry about. We recommend this as
a
complimentary option with a remote backup.
Next, a web hosting company can use mirrored
RAID drives. This
option will cost $50-$80/month more, but it provides the fastest
possible
recovery in case of a hard drive crash. You can just reboot using the
mirrored
drive, and you are back in business. The cost is a little higher, but
this is a
nice luxury. The downside of this option is that if your server is
unavailable,
then you still cannot reach your data. Additionally, if the hard drive
becomes
corrupted it will also corrupt your backup. This is why we recommend
mirrored
drives as part of a larger solution that includes other backup systems.
Finally, there are mirrored servers. This
entails the largest cost
and is really not necessary, except for those web hosting companies
that can tolerate
no downtime at all. In this scenario, if the server itself dies you can
have
another server ready to take the load. In fact, if your company is
large
enough, you might already need this kind of solution for performance.
Some
websites require multiple servers to handle the performance, and it is
load
balanced across them. In this case, if a server dies the system still
runs.
This is the best solution but it is not always necessary. And, of
course it is
costly.
We recommend a weekly remote backup to
provide you with a fail safe
version. Even if the datacenter burns down, you will have a copy of
your data.
To this we would add either mirrored RAID drives or a second hard
drive,
depending on your hosting company’s needs. If you are more
worried about recovery
time from hard drive crashes, which is the most frequent hardware
problem with
dedicated servers, then go with the RAID drives. If you are more
worried about
the hard drive getting corrupted, go with the second hard drive.
So
go, backup before it's too late!
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