Backup

Backup in computer engineering refers to the copying of data for the purpose of having a second copy of an original source, in case of damage to the original data source. The "data" in question may be either data as such, or stored program code, both of which are treated the same by the backup software.

The word may be used as a noun, e.g., "have you remembered to move the backup to a safe place?", or as a verb, "he didn't back up the data, so we lost last week's work". Also common are various combinations, such as backup copy, backup software (the applications that are used for performing the backing up of data, i.e., the systematic generation of backup copies), backup policy (an organisation's procedures and rules for ensuring that adequate amounts and types of backups are made, including suitably frequent testing of the process for restoring the original (production) system from the backup copies).

As of 2004, backups are most often made from hard disk based production systems to large capacity magnetic tape storage, or optical disk WORM media like CD-R and DVD-R and similar formats, but Internet-based online backups are becoming more popular as more users have broadband connections and more services offer Internet-based backup (Google Keyword Search (http://www.google.com/search?num=50&hl=en&lr=&safe=off&rls=GGLD%2CGGLD%3A2003-32%2CGGLD%3Aen&q=file+and+data+storage)). During the period 1975–95, most personal/home computer users associated backup mostly with copying floppy disks.

Backing up active databases requires highly-specialized software that must be integrated with the database system in order to prevent data corruption. Suppose for example that I access the website of my bank and transfer money from one of my accounts to another while a backup is running. Such a transaction will affect multiple places on the hard disks of the bank's systems. At minimum, the amount of the transfer will be subtracted from the balance of one account, and added to the balance of the other account. If there is then a disk crash and restore, it is important to ensure that the database holding my account balances gets restored correctly. If the subtraction part is restored correctly but the addition part isn't, then I am unhappy. If the addition part is restored correctly but the subtraction part isn't, then the bank is unhappy.

There are four primary metrics relating to data backup:

  • Recovery Point Objective (RPO) is the point in time that the restarted infrastructure will reflect. Essentially, this is the roll-back that will be experienced as a result of the recovery. Reducing RPO requires increasing synchronicity or frequency of copying the data to be protected.
  • Backup Window is the amount of time that is taken to copy a given data set to the backup device. Most traditional backup systems require a data set to be frozen for hours while the entire content of a filesystem is copied to magnetic tape. Newer techniques use a mirror or snapshot of a set of data as the backup source, effectively reducing the required backup window.
  • Restore Time is the amount of time required to bring a desired data set back from the backup media.
  • Retention Time is the amount of time in which a given set of data will remain available for restore. Some backup products rely on daily copies of data and measure retention in terms of days. Others retain a number of copies of data changes regardless of the amount of time.
  • Backup Validation , also known as "Backup Success Validation", is the process by which Owners of data can get information regarding how their data was backed up. This same process is also used to prove compliance to regulatory bodies outside of the organization, for example, a biotech company might be required to show "proof" to the FDA (http://www.fda.gov/) that their test result data is backed up properly. Terrorism, data complexity, data value and increasing dependence upon ever-growing volumes of data all contribute to the anxiety around and dependence upon successful backups. For that reason, many organizations rely on third-party or "independent" solutions to test, validate, optimize and charge for their backup operations. Such third party solutions can be examined by searching Google for the terms "backup reporting (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=backup+reporting)". More info on BackupValidation.

Computer backups are useful primarily for two purposes, the first and most obvious is to restore a computer to an operational state following a disaster also called disaster recovery. This includes loss of a hard disc or the file system becoming so badly corrupted it cannot be read. The second use, often overlooked but probably more common, is to facilitate the recovery of a single file or set of files when they are accidentally deleted or corrupted by the user or a program.

Proper backup procedures require redundancy of the backup to a remote location and rotation schemes such as the GFS method (Grandfather-Father-Son Backup). Storing the copy near the original is unwise, since many disasters such as fire, flood and electrical surges are likely to cause damage to the backup at the same time. The 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center presented many organizations with unprecedented disaster recovery scenarios, due to its scope. A few years earlier, during a fire at the headquarters of a major bank in Paris, system administrators ran into the burning building to rescue backup tapes because they didn't have offsite copies.

A backup is only as useful as its associated recovery strategy. Having a complete set of backup tapes is of no use if the only copy of the software required to read them is on one of the tapes. It is also possible for backup software to run successfully for several months, only to fail when it is needed most due to read errors on the backup media. Magnetic tapes in particular should be read-tested on a regular basis.

Many backup programs make use of checksums or hashes. These offer several advantages. First, they allow data integrity to be verified without reference to the original file: if the file as stored on the backup medium has the same checksum as the saved value, then it is very probably correct. Second, some backup programs can use checksums to avoid making redundant copies of files, to improve backup speed. This is particularly useful when multiple workstations, which may contain duplicates of the same file, are backed up over a network: if the backup software detects several copies of a file having the same size, datestamp, and checksum, it can put one copy of the data onto a backup medium, along with metadata listing all places where copies of this file were found. Also, checksums can improve performance of the verification pass for backups across a network, by computing checksums independently on each computer, then sending only the checksum over the network so that checksums can be compared instead of actual data.

See also

pt:Backup es:Copia de seguridad it:Backup pl:kopia bezpieczeństwa

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