Hi Wanda, I'm thinking that deduplication might be especially useful for all those copies of Windows System Objects that are backed up periodically, for sites that have large numbers of Windows client nodes. TSM/Windows is unable to back them up incrementally, which means each backup of a System Object is another copy. If you keep the default 3 copies, and have 500 systems, that's 1500 copies. Granted, not backing up the files that haven't changed in the first place would be best, but that doesn't seem to be an option with Windows and TSM. I don't know about front-end dedup such as Avamar.
With Vista, we see the System Object climbing to 7-8GB per copy. In the above scenario, that would be 12TB without deduplication. Of course, if you've chosen not to backup System Objects, then this won't be a factor for you. It would be easy to target just these System Object files to a different storage pool on a dedup VTL. The reduction for these files should be substantial, I would think. I would agree with your statement that you have to "know your data", and think about this some. I'm not convinced that throwing a dedup VTL behind TSM for *all* of your data makes financial sense with TSM. I'm on the fence about this, until I see some hard numbers. But I do think there are some good opportunities for putting a smaller dedup VTL behind TSM for *some* of your data, if you know which data will dedup well, and if you have enough of it to make financial sense in your shop. ..Paul At 08:55 AM 9/1/2007, Wanda Prather wrote:
"It depends". Just another thing to think about: Yes, it sounds cool to reduce the footprint of all those XP files if you have hundreds of XP systems. But, at a site where we were backing up about 200 desktops along with Windoze severs, I sat down and actually spent a bunch of time looking at what was really getting backed up (there's no quick and easy way to get this info out of TSM.) Those OS files, while annoying, are read-only (translation, only 1 copy per client) and are actually a very small part of today's very large hard drives. At that particular site where I did the study, I calculated that the OS files from 200 Windows systems made up less than 10% of the total data stored in TSM. Result: Not the place to spend $ or effort in reducing backup footprint. That's not to say that de-dup won't save you bunches of space somewhere else; just that you gotta KNOW YOUR DATA to figure out what is worth doing. YMWV..
-- Paul Zarnowski Ph: 607-255-4757 Manager, Storage Services Fx: 607-255-8521 719 Rhodes Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-3801 Em: [EMAIL PROTECTED]