>> On Thu, 5 Jan 2006 09:54:34 -0500, "Kauffman, Tom" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> Electronic off-siting isn't an option -- I've seen us cut 400 MB > Oracle redo logs for our SAP/R3 database at the rate of one every > 2.5 minutes for extended time periods (and this is explicitly the > data that has to go off-site). I'd need multiple T1 lines to cover > the traffic, and the cost of a single T1 is considered to be "too > high". I feel for you. You might want to cost out the following things for your physical-carry offsites. Once my chain saw the numbers laid out, the case for the bandwidth and the remote site were compelling. + Courier trips + Inefficient use of tape [ what % full are your offsite vols? This will get worse if you make trips more frequently ] + Risk of courier error/subversion. NIBCO isn't medical, you might not care that much. We had more than one tape request be greeted with a "You want -what-?" sort of shrug. Shudder. + Need to keep extra copies. I don't know if you have an onsite copypool, but we weren't comfortable with having the only recourse for fixing a media error be a 30+hour tape retrieval cycle, especially if your confidence in the courier is less than 100%. + Delay in getting data offsite, which you're already interested in. This has an additional note: In the event of a serious, predictable disaster [hurricane bearing down] you're SOL if you want to get your courier in and out at the 11th hour. You could keep bits moving up until the building falls in, if you're well connected. + Ostrich behavior re: failures; putting off the acquisition of the harware which will serve you in DR scenarios until you're in a disaster mostly means you're not exercising your DR. I've been able to write by-god shell scripts that recover my TSM servers. And test them. For real. (and that was fun!) I've got a gigabit from Gainesville to Atlanta now, and I'm feeling happy about it. The remote site isn't production yet, but we're getting close. - Allen S. Rout