Unsolved Storage for offsite VM replication
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Circling back around on this.
No one ever came up with a solution. Is this that complicated? Maybe I stated it bad? Or not enough detail?
Rephrasing:
I have Site A and Site B that are regionally separated. Site A is the live site and Site B is the desired backup site.
Site A has 2 Hyper-V servers replicating from Server A to Server B (all workloads on Server A).
Site A has Veeam B&R (paid) being used to backup from Server A to local NAS.Site B is a colo
Site B can have VPN, if needed. Nothing currently setup.
Site B has a non domain joined Hyper-V server sitting there with a few minor web based workloads on it.
Site B has about 5TB if space available to Hyper-V.Something else? Am I missing a detail that would help you make a suggestion for me?
So what wold be a solid system to setup?
This is what I was thinking to do, but did not want to pollute recommendations with my own ideas:
At site B, setup a VM with a NFS share and then Veeam in another VM and use the NFS as the storage? -
@JaredBusch If you setup a VPN, you should be able to just connect Site A Veeam to an NFS share from Site B. Unless Veeam recommends running a second instance of the software? (I haven't used anything but a trial, so I don't remember.)
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@travisdh1 said:
@JaredBusch If you setup a VPN, you should be able to just connect Site A Veeam to an NFS share from Site B. Unless Veeam recommends running a second instance of the software? (I haven't used anything but a trial, so I don't remember.)
Their documentation does say that you should run a second instance. I have not confirmed licensing yet, but I did email this question a couple years ago and was told the off site copy does not need licensing. I will be emailing support about it today.
But again, I was hoping for other people to give me ideas for things they have done in this type of scenario. I am confident of my research on this solution, but I am also confident that I do not know all the options available.
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I'm probably missing it, what piece is doing the actual data movement over the WAN, Veeam itself?
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@scottalanmiller said:
I'm probably missing it, what piece is doing the actual data movement over the WAN, Veeam itself?
Right now? Nothing. This is a new setup.
The solution I have researched base don the already purchased software? It would be Veeam.
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I wonder why you're creating an NFS mount, why not just give the disk directly to Veeam VM (assuming all of the disk is internal to the VM Host).
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it's manual, but it'd work. I'm a big fan of using the M$ 12r2 Replication built in
http://blog.powerbiz.net.au/hyperv/how-to-set-up-hyper-v-replica-for-small-businesses/
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@JaredBusch said:
The solution I have researched base don the already purchased software? It would be Veeam.
Makes sense, just wasn't sure if you'd Veeam or something like RSYNC to get from the backup target to the other backup target.
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@hubtechagain said:
it's manual, but it'd work. I'm a big fan of using the M$ 12r2 Replication built in
http://blog.powerbiz.net.au/hyperv/how-to-set-up-hyper-v-replica-for-small-businesses/
I use it on site as noted already. and it works well.
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If you are trying to use Veeam, the standard setup would to have a server running a second copy of Veeam B&R at the target site. You'll link the two and configure the replicas. You do not need to purchase a second Veeam license to do this, but you will need a running B&R at the DR site.
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@DenisKelley said:
If you are trying to use Veeam, the standard setup would to have a server running a second copy of Veeam B&R at the target site. You'll link the two and configure the replicas. You do not need to purchase a second Veeam license to do this, but you will need a running B&R at the DR site.
That was my understanding of how it works, but it has been almost two years since I talked to Veeam about it.
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@JaredBusch said:
@DenisKelley said:
If you are trying to use Veeam, the standard setup would to have a server running a second copy of Veeam B&R at the target site. You'll link the two and configure the replicas. You do not need to purchase a second Veeam license to do this, but you will need a running B&R at the DR site.
That was my understanding of how it works, but it has been almost two years since I talked to Veeam about it.
With what I've seen with v9, you now can do full failover scripted ahead of time to make it a bit more turn-key during a disaster.