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Build a Better Disaster Recovery Plan to Improve RTO & RPO
Lubomyr Salamakha
Sales Engineer
May 14th ,2013
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 2
Agenda
• Who is NetIQ
• Why Downtime Matters
• What is Workload Protection
• Understanding Disaster Recovery
• NetIQ Disaster Recovery Solutions
Who is NetIQ?
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 4
Terminal Emulation
Legacy Modernization
Managed File Transfer
Enterprise Fraud Management
Collaboration
File and Networking Services
Endpoint Management
Identity, Security and Compliance Management
IT Operations Management
Enterprise Linux Servers
Software Appliances
Linux Desktops
Attachmate Group, Inc.
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 5
Scale to Deliver – A Culture to Care
Established software vendor that has the scale
to execute our strategy and the focus
to deliver on customer’s expectations
1600
600
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 6
SCALE TO DELIVER, A CULTURE TO CARE.
SCALE
1,800 DISASTER RECOVERY CUSTOMERS PlateSpin Forge and PlateSpin Protect
Downtime Matters!
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 8
Why Downtime Matters - UPDATE
Total economic damage from disaster in 2009*
Economic impact felt in the U.S.
from disasters in 2009*
*September 2, 2010 , Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery are top IT Priorities
for 2010 and 2011 - Forrester
$10.8 Billion
$41.3 Billion
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 9
Becoming a Priority
• Better able to identify and quantify risk
• Better understanding of economic impact
• Less tolerance for downtime and data loss
*Jan. 25, 2010 – The State of Enterprise IT: 2009 to 2010 - Forrester
of enterprises have indicated that improving disaster recovery capabilities is a high priority*
78%
Critical Priority 30% - High Priority 48%
What is Workload Protection?
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 11
What is Workload Protection?
Workload protection means:
1. Backing up entire server workloads
(the contents of a server, including
the operating system, applications and data),
2. Recovering them to virtual machines
during an outage, and
3. Restoring them to their original production
locations after the outage.
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 12
Define Your Objectives
• Time between declaration and service availability
• Time to restore services to useable state
Recovery Time Objective
(RTO)
• Data in system lost at disaster time
• Amount of data entered since last backup
Recovery Point Objective
(RPO)
• Time required to test recovery plans
• Resources used for testing
Test Time Objective (TTO)
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 13
Key Disaster Recovery Concepts: Downtime and Availability
Availability Maximum
Allowable
Downtime
per Year
Maximum
Allowable
Downtime
per Month
Cost Products Typical
RPO/RTO
90% (“one nine”) 36.5 days 72 hours
95% 18.25 days 36 hours 12-24 hours
99% (“two nines”) 3.65 days 7.2 hours
99.5% 1.83 days 3.6 hours 15 minutes to
4 hours
99.9% (“three nines”) 8.76 hours 43.2 minutes
99.99% (“four nines”) 52.56 minutes 4.32 minutes
99.999% (“five nines”) 5.26 minutes 25.9 seconds
Understanding Disaster Recovery
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 15
Backup Your Data
• Focus is on protecting data
– Tape backup
– Imaging
• Poor performance
– Slow RTO, RPO (days)
• Hidden costs
– How do we get the data back
in to a useable state?
– How long to rebuild server?
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 16
Double Infrastructure
• Focus is on protecting
application
– Clustering
– Like-for-like infrastructure
• Performance,
but at what price?
– Near-zero RTO, RPO
• High cost
– Duplicate infrastructure
– Management complexity
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 17
Bridging the Gap
• Fast RTO and RPO • Duplicate resources • Costly and complex
• Slow RTO and RPO • Over commitment of recovery resources
Duplication Backup
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 18
Disaster Recovery Performance Needs
87% of the enterprises surveyed have RTO for their mission-critical
applications/services as four hours or less
RTOs of Mission-Critical Applications (n=93)
Source: Gartner (August 2011)
Disaster Recovery Solutions
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 20
Consolidated Recovery
Solution
• Replicate workload into
an offline virtual machine
• One-click failover
• One-click test restore
• Flexible failback
Virtual production servers
Virtual recovery hosts
Physical production servers
Physical production servers
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 21
PlateSpin® Disaster Recovery
• Solutions that replicate whole workloads into local or
remote virtual environment (over WAN)
• Can replicate changes on hourly, daily or weekly basis
• Testing recovery plans provides peace of mind
• Can restore business operations in minutes
• Leverages existing investments in virtualization
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 22
PlateSpin® Protect
Backup to virtual machines
Incremental replication
Whole-workload protection for all server workloads.
Easy to test One-click
failover
Physical servers
Virtual hosts
Blade servers Workload decoupled
from hardware
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 23
PlateSpin Forge®
Protects up to 25 workloads
PlateSpin Forge includes: • Storage • Replication software • Hypervisor
Plug-in and protect solution for : • Medium enterprises • Branch use for large enterprises
World’s first disaster recovery hardware appliance with virtualization
The (Very) Real Benefits of
Virtual Disaster Recovery
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 25
Secondary Environment Production Server
Step 1:
Replicate servers
(physical or virtual)
into a secondary
virtual environment
Step 2:
IT admin tests workloads
in new environment
to ensure they run
as expected
Step 3:
Production server goes down,
power up virtual machines in
secondary environment
in minutes
Production Server
Production Server
Secondary Environment
Secondary Environment
Users
Users
How PlateSpin Protect Works Consolidate Recovery
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 26
Step 1: Failback the workload
Step 2: Test the workload in production, while users are still connected to the failed-over workload
Step 3: Perform incremental failback to sync changes and switch users over to the production workload
Failback, Test and Cut Over
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 27
Failback Flexibility
• Failback can be used to restore workloads to:
– The same or different physical hardware
– A virtual environment
Physical Server - IBM
Physical Server - Dell
OR
Virtual Host: ESX, Hyper-V, Xen
OR
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 28
Thank You!
Lubomyr Salamakha
Solution Engineer
© 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved. 29
+1 713.548.1700 (Worldwide) 888.323.6768 (Toll-free) [email protected] NetIQ.com
Worldwide Headquarters 1233 West Loop South Suite 810 Houston, TX 77027 USA
http://community.netiq.com
This document could include technical inaccuracies or typographical errors. Changes are
periodically made to the information herein. These changes may be incorporated in new
editions of this document. NetIQ Corporation may make improvements in or changes to the
software described in this document at any time.
Copyright © 2012 NetIQ Corporation. All rights reserved.
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