On Thu, Feb 07, 2002 at 10:00:45AM +0100, Jesus Manuel NAVARRO LOPEZ wrote: > Hi, Anders: > Anders Widman wrote: > >Well, have you ever heard of diskcabbinettes? I use them alot wich means > >I don't have to have 10 disks in the same coputer at the same time. Then > >what, hot swap? Well this is very much possible, and secure (look at > >Promise.com). > >IDE disk drives are very cheap and fast enough (Maxtor 160GB has a write > >performance of about 35MB/s in average) for most purposes and does not > >require special hardware or software. > Well... let's consider all aspects. I'm a sysadmin the kind of BOFH, so > late in the evening I usually find myself a bit overloaded on beer. > Specially on friday, if I have to stay at work past 5PM I have the > irresistible temptation to go to the closet and piss*1 on the diskcabbinet. Good way to guarentee you won't have kids. > For a backup policy you *must* take appart the media from the on-line > data to be protected. Having all your backup media in a single place is > *BAAAAAAAD* idea (TM). Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. Depends on your needs. I have one database that changes fast enough that if it's 36 hours old, we're basically just recovering it for the table structures. I've got another one that changes fast enough that it's not worth backing up. If it's more than 2 hours old, starting from scratch is fine. It the first case, off site backups don't make sense, so we have 2 backup hosts (seperated by about 10 feet currently, less in a day or two) that get backups on an alternating (daily) basis. Oh, this is in addition to these databases being replicated pairs. Again, your backup strategy depends on your needs, your budget, and your risk tolerance. It doesn't make sense to spend $10k for a backup solution for $20k of data. It does make sense to spend $10k to backup $100k. > Now, start moving from the cabinet to the in-place closet your disks one > day and another, and to the off-site closet at least once a month, and > tell me you won't need to replace your disks on a shorter basis than > your DTLs or DDSs. > > *1: Standard dramatization in place. I *don't* do that (specilly true > if my boss is reading this article X^D ) No, but a handful of metal filings are (1) more effective, (2) less traceble, and (3) less likely to get your pecker arced off. -- Share and Enjoy. _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@sistina.com http://lists.sistina.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://www.sistina.com/lvm/Pages/howto.html