Backup Exec 9.1 for Windows Servers

16 Jun 2004 15:30


A flexible backup option for networks, Backup Exec from Veritas is also easy to use.

Installation & interface

Installing Backup Exec 9.1 for Windows is clean, quick, and easy; however, you'll need to know what options you've paid for and provide the necessary serial numbers. If the serial numbers aren't handy, install the options on a trial basis and complete the registration later. A checklist on the left side of the screen tracks your installation progress. A typical setup shouldn't take more than half an hour. After your server reboots, Backup Exec will guide you through online registration and launch the First Time Start-up wizard to configure the software to your system.

Backup Exec's interface is intuitive if you're already comfortable with Windows Explorer. Tape drives and other backup destinations are presented in traditional expand-and-hide fashion. Setting up our external USB 2.0 hard drive as a backup device, for example, proved painless. Across the top of the Backup Exec interface are live icons for major task categories, including Job Setup, Job Monitor, Alerts and Reports. Down the left-hand side, you'll find major tasks available in each category. An overview tab lists how-tos and wizards for just about every aspect of the program, such as backing up a shared file on a client's desktop.

Backup Exec's greatest strength may lie in the various ways it attacks backup tasks. For first timers, it provides wizards and templates for typical tasks, such as backing up a server. But it also provides features for more experienced users who want to take full control.

Features

Backup Exec 9.1 for Windows supports a wide variety of backup destinations, from standalone tape drives to drive pools. Whenever you set up a new backup job, Backup Exec recommends that you initiate a simulated trial run to improve the likelihood of success. As it turned out, our test reported a problem which, after checking with the company, turned out to be a programming oversight.

Backup Exec is designed to back up to tape; instead, our test-bed server backs up to an external USB 2.0-connected hard drive. Backup Exec builds a virtual tape on the server's hard drive at the start of the first backup job, but because it couldn't find our tape drive, the test run reported that there was no tape available. Once the problem was identified and we manually corrected for it, the test backup proceeded flawlessly. Veritas is now aware of this problem, but as of this review, no software solution is available. We did not experience similar difficulties with Retrospect or Arcserve.

After completing your first successful backup, Backup Exec will suggest running Intelligent Disaster Recovery, an optional process that guides you through the process of building a set of disaster-recovery discs. When combined with your regular backups, Intelligent Disaster Recovery will get you up and running quickly after a system crash. The Intelligent Disaster Recovery feature works with Microsoft's Automated System Recovery functionality, available within Server 2003 and Windows XP, and your most recent complete backup set.

Another extra is the unique Desktop and Laptop Option, or DLO, which adapts the backup process for remote users. Here, too, configuration is easy and there are many choices available -- not only for scheduling, but also for how much bandwidth the backup should consume and how much it should back off when clients working on the network are accessing other applications.

Service & support

Veritas offers a good, up-to-date online knowledge base for Backup Exec 9.1 for Windows. Backup Exec's built-in help file is also very useful. If you want to speak with a live technician, however, you'll have to cough up, though that is true of the competition as well. Support is available 8am to 6pm, Monday through Friday.

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