Among traditional models, a more enterprise-oriented backup and restore approach alleviates some of the drawbacks of the dedicated tape approach (see Figure 2). This typically involves a primary backup and restore server that controls tape resources. Sophisticated applications, such as VERITAS NetBackup, Legato NetWorker, and Tivoli Storage Manager, control the backup and restore process. The backup server receives data from other servers across a LAN or WAN, then stores that data on centrally owned disk and tape resources. This centralized approach provides much better utilization of tape resources and makes the deployment of faster, more reliable tape drives and libraries much more cost-effective.
The primary drawback to this approach is that the network introduces potential bottlenecks to the backup and restore process that can impact the system's ability to meet backup and restore windows. In addition, using the primary LAN or WAN for backup and restore can degrade performance for production workloads running on the same network.
In contrast, Storage Area Networks (SANs) can accelerate and simplify the data backup and restore process. SANs are ideal for backup-intensive environments, especially when there are clearly defined areas for isolating backup workloads.
The switched 2 Gbit/sec full duplex capabilities of Fibre Channel fabrics can significantly improve backup and restore performance. Moreover, Fibre Channel is designed to transport large blocks of data with greater efficiency and reliability than IP-based networks. Two popular SAN-based backup and restore approaches are typically referred to as the "LAN-free" and "server-free" backup and restore models.
Figure3. A SAN-based LAN-free backup and restore model