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May 2007

Virtualizing Disaster Recovery

Tackle the complexity and rigidity of your existing disaster recovery objectives
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SideBar    A VMware-Specific Backup Option , Microsoft Virtual Server Backup Guidelines

Virtualization has been making significant inroads as a viable technology in a variety of applications, not least of which is business continuity and disaster recovery. Virtualization's intrinsic features of encapsulation, consolidation, and independence from the hardware platform can make disaster recovery solutions more manageable, flexible, and less costly.

Thanks to a virtual machine's (VM's) encapsulation properties—in which the complete computing environment contains the OS, BIOS, applications, data, and virtualized hardware—you can recover VMs to any supported AMD- or Intel-based server without worrying about the differences in the underlying physical hardware. Thus, the physical-world necessity to restore to an identical server (i.e., make, model, and configuration) doesn't apply: System-compatibility concerns between the hardware and OS at the recovery site are eliminated, making recovery much more reliable. Another virtualization benefit is the ability to consolidate servers at the recovery site by hosting multiple VMs on one physical server. During a failover scenario, it's often acceptable to temporarily provide somewhat lower application performance. This ability to oversubscribe hardware with multiple workloads with minimal performance impact makes this disaster recovery model economically attractive. During day-to-day operations, you can also use the servers at the recovery site to handle test and development workloads. Then, when a disaster occurs, you can repurpose those servers by shutting down those jobs and starting up the recovery VMs. In this way, resources are fully utilized and system reconfiguration is kept to a bare minimum.

So, how do you start utilizing virtualization as part of your company's disaster recovery process?

Getting Started
Let's assume that your business is running several Windows applications, each on a dedicated server with local SCSI storage. You have no shared storage devices—Fibre Channel SAN, NAS, or ISCSI—in your environment. Your applications are tiered in terms of how critical they are to your business. For this exercise, let's suppose you'd like to initially focus on your second-tier applications, which have less stringent Recover Point Objective (RPO) and Recovery Time Objective (RTO) requirements. Your current environment and business requirements will determine the mechanisms that are viable for replicating the data from the production site to the recovery site.

Microsoft's Virtual Server and VMware's ESX Server lead the market in the server virtualization space. Both offer comparable functionality, and although this article references the ESX Server virtualization platform, you could adapt the process workflow to apply to a Virtual Server environment. Virtual Server installs on an existing Windows host OS, such as Windows Server 2003 and Small Business Server (SBS) 2003. In contrast, ESX Server installs directly on your server hardware—or "bare metal"—and inserts a virtualization layer between the hardware and the individual guest OS. ESX Server partitions a physical server into multiple secure and portable VMs that run side by side on the same physical server. The virtualization layer abstracts the underlying processor, memory, storage, and networking resources into the multiple VMs.

Once you have a virtualization platform in place, you need to consider the three general methods for moving data from a source site to a recovery site: backup/restore, host- or server-based replication, and storage array–based replication. Table 1 shows the replication options that can meet various recovery objectives. Your options for which data-protection mechanism is applicable in your environment will also depend on where you locate the ESX Server system and VM files (as you see in Table 2). Because you have only local SCSI drives in our example, the options for shared storage don't apply. Thus, in this article, we'll consider only backup/restore and host-based replication scenarios.

With virtualization as part of your disaster recovery solution, there are two general architectures that you can deploy: physical-to-virtual and virtual-to-virtual. Let's walk step by step through the implementation of both architectures. I'll start with the backup/restore scenario and follow that with host-based replication.

Physical-to-Virtual Architecture
In the physical-to-virtual architecture, the source (i.e., production) applications will continue to run on existing physical servers. The recovery platform will have the applications running in VMs on ESX Server. The replication mechanism will use the traditional backup/ restore methodology.

To set up the environment, you first need to identify the applications that you want to include in the disaster recovery plan. Then, you confirm that the current file-level backup policy (e.g., full, incremental, differential, frequency) for each physical server meets your recovery objectives. For the recovery target, you select the physical server on which you want to install ESX Server. Before you take this step, be sure to check the "VMware Systems Compatibility Guide for ESX Server 3.x" (http://www.vmware.com/pdf/vi3_systems_ guide.pdf) for compatibility information. Now, you're ready to install ESX Server 3.x Standard on your physical server.

Once installation is complete, you need to convert selected physical servers to VMs. To do so, you can use VMware Converter 3.0, which converts Windows-based physical machines and third-party image formats to VMware VMs. The VMware VM that the Converter creates will contain an exact copy of the disk state from your source physical machine, with the exception of some hardware-dependent drivers (and sometimes the mapped drive letters). Settings from the source computer that remain identical include OS configuration (e.g., computer name, security ID, user accounts, profiles and preferences), applications and data files, and each disk partition's volume serial number.

When you download VMware Converter, you have the option of installing it either on the machine you're converting or on a separate computer. You'll be converting several physical machines, so I recommend installing it on a separate machine so that you need perform only one installation.

In VMware Converter, click Import Machine, then select a physical computer as your source. Follow the wizard by selecting either a remote or local machine. If you select a remote machine, you'll need to enter its computer name or IP address and proper authentication credentials. Choose the disks to import and indicate the desired volume size. You can maintain the disk size, minimize it, or specify an exact size. Choose a destination for the new VM, and follow the wizard steps to select the ESX Server system. You'll need to log on to it and assign a VM name, then specify a data store to contain the VM's configuration files and disks.

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Reader Comments
Good article, but it does not talk about once you have your physical server up and running again how to (if possible) restore from a vm to a physical.

itguy4 May 16, 2007 (Article Rating: )


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