The Three T’s of Backups

I just read several more horror stories that include, among other things, failed backups. I’ve said it before (at volume, extreme volume), and evidently I have to say it again. Simply creating a backup file is not enough to ensure the protection of your information. In order to attempt to reinforce the importance of this idea, I’m going to introduce a new concept. Maybe it’ll help. I’m calling it “The Three T’s of Backups.”

Take ‘Em

First, and most important, you have to Take backups. That’s your first “T”.

No, disk redundancy through RAID or a SAN or some other setup is not adequate to protect your information. You must take backups. They have to be created and they have to be run regularly. You absolutely should automate this.

Test ‘Em

Now that you are taking your backups, you need to Test your backups. That’s your second “T”.

Simply having a backup doesn’t mean much if you can’t restore it. How do you know if you can restore a backup? You test it. How do you test it? You run the restore process. Not only does this test your backup, but it tests your ability to do the restore. I would strongly recommend automating this as well.

Transfer ‘Em

With your backups in place and tested, now you need to copy them to a second location, Transfer them offsite. This is your third “T”.

Things happen. Fire, flood, wind and extra-solar radiation. Any, or all, of these things and more, can affect your servers. So, let’s take our tested backups and transfer them to a second location (and maybe a third if we’re feeling really paranoid). One onsite and one in the cloud. One in a local data center and one in a distant data center. Oh, and let’s automate transferring the tested backups we’ve taken.

The Three T’s

Backups:
Take ‘Em
Test ‘Em
Transfer ‘Em

Now get out there and make this happen. Take your backups. Test your backups. Transfer your backups. Automate each of these steps and validate that everything is actually working. It’s your information. It’s your business. If you want to protect it, you’ll do the Three T’s.

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