CA ARCserve Backup r12.5 review

By Dave Mitchell,
Rating:
Price as reviewed:£547 ex. VAT
We also tested deduplication by backing up the system drives and system states on four Windows client systems. The total amount of data sent to the appliance was 90.1GB but our backup file store and index only had a total of 68.4GB of data resulting in an initial deduplication ratio of 1.4:1 and a storage saving of 25 per cent.
Naturally, the longer data is retained, the better the storage savings will get. ARCserve provides deduplication policies for backup jobs that aren’t part of a staging process where you can decide on the number of days, weeks or months data should be retained for before being purged.
Backing up VMware VMs requires the VCB utility to be installed on a Windows Server 2003 system acting as the proxy along with the ARCserve Windows and VMware agents. With these in place we ran ARCserve’s configuration tool to declare where our backup server and ESX Server systems were. On completion, the main ARCserve backup source window was automatically updated with our Server 2008 VMs presented ready for backup and restore operations.
The Dashboard offers a wealth of information and during testing it provided us with reports and graphs on deduplication efficiency and projected storage savings. It covers a wide range of other areas including status reports on all backup jobs, client nodes and encryption plus reports on backup data distribution, volume usage, media assurance operations, backup servers and much, much more.
ARCserve’s data deduplication delivered in our real world tests and along with big savings on storage, it offers an excellent range of data protection features. It’s very easy to deploy and its pricing structure makes it an ideal solution for SMBs as well as enterprises.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Back Up News
Hitachi unveils ‘industry first’ 25nm SSD
The storage giant brings single-level cell NAND flash to enterprise storage.
Latest Back Up Analysis & Insight
Michael Dell: Back from the brink?
In late 2010, Michael Dell didn't have the full confidence of shareholders. Has he turned things around over the past year?
advertisement
Most popular
- Ubuntu vs. Windows 7 on the business desktop
- York researchers heat storage to speed up data
- BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
- OneNote hits Google?s Android
- O2 trials Olympic-scale remote working
- Will someone rid me of these troublesome Macs?
- Lenovo beats expectations again
- Who to trust after the VeriSign hack?
- Google to promise fairness after Motorola buy
- Report: Google cloud storage coming soon
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.






huokdinaro
senate
By Ip_huokdinaro23b on Monday Sep 7