The allowed downtime has a significant impact on the investments into network infrastructure and equipment needed for backups. For each type of data, list the maximum acceptable downtime for recovery, that is, how long specific data can be unavailable before recovered from a backup. For example, user files may be restored in two days, while some business data in a large database would need to be recovered in two hours.

Recovery time consists mainly of the time needed to access the media and the time required to actually restore data to disks. A full system recovery takes more time, because some additional steps are required. For more information, see Disaster recovery” on page 128.

How long should specific types of data be kept?

For each type of data, list how long the data must be kept. For example, you may only need to keep user files for three weeks, while information about company employees may be kept for five years.

How should media with backed up data be stored and maintained?

For each type of data, list how long the media with data must be kept in a vault, a safe, external location, if you use one. For example, user files may not be stored in a vault at all, while order information may be kept for five years, with verification of each medium after two years.

To how many media sets should the data be written during backup?

Consider writing critical data to several media sets during backup to improve the fault tolerance of such backups, or to enable multi-site vaulting. Object mirroring increases the time needed for backup.

How much data needs to be backed up?

List the estimated amount of data to be backed up, for each type of data. This influences the time needed for backup and helps you to choose the right backup devices and media for backup.

What is the projected future growth of the amount of data?

Estimate future growth, for each type of data. This will help you to come up with backup solutions that will not be quickly outdated. For example, if your company plans to hire 100 new employees, the amount of users’ data and client systems’ data will grow accordingly.

How long can a backup take?

Estimate the time needed for each backup. This directly affects the amount of time data is available for use. User files can be backed up at any time when the users are not working on them, while some transactional databases may only have a few hours available for backup.

Concepts guide

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