What type of backups are commonly used with virtual machines?

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Updated Thursday, July 08, 2021

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Procedure Results

You can run an immediate backup to capture complete virtual machine information or to capture information that has changed since a previous backup.

Caution: Because OpenShift applications do not have a UUID or GUID to uniquely identify each application, the Commvault software indexes each application with an ID in the form project_name-application_name.

If you delete an application and later create a new application for the project that uses the same application name, the backup history for the new application is indexed using the ID that was created for the original application. In that scenario, restoring from a backup job for the original application might overwrite data for the new application, resulting in data loss.

Note:

  • For virtual machines that are hosted on an SMB share, a Microsoft limitation prevents restore operations from reading file and folder information from a snap backup. To enable restores of guest files and folders from Microsoft Hyper-V backups using a server plan, use the Collect file details option for the VM group.

  • You can only back up and restore instances in the root compartment and first-level compartments for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure regions. You cannot back up instances in subcompartments or restore instances to subcompartments. As a workaround, either move the instances to the root compartment or a first-level compartment, or install an agent such as a file system agent on the guest instances.

Procedure

  1. From the navigation pane, go to Protect > Virtualization.

    The Virtual machines page appears.

  2. On the Hypervisors tab, click the hypervisor.

    The hypervisor page appears. The VM groups area displays summary information for any existing VM groups.

  3. In the VM groups area, click the VM group that contains the virtual machines to back up.

  4. In the top right corner of the page, click Backup.

    The Backup options dialog box appears.

  5. For Backup level, select the backup type. (A full backup is always performed for the first backup of any virtual machine.)

    • Full: Perform a full backup for a virtual machine that has previously been backed up. A full backup includes virtual machine configuration files and all virtual machine data disks.

    • Incremental: Selected by default. An incremental backup only backs up changes since the last full backup.

    • Synthetic full: Create a synthesized backup from the most recent full backup and all subsequent incremental backups.

      An incremental backup is performed first to ensure that the synthetic full backup will be up to date.

      The resulting synthetic full backup is identical to a full backup for the VM group. Unlike full and incremental, a synthetic full backup does not actually transfer data from a client computer to the backup media, and does not use any resources on the client computer.

      Note: You cannot run a synthetic full backup job if no incremental or differential backups were run after the last full or synthetic full backup.

  6. Click OK to begin the backup operation.

Results

The backup operation runs and alerts are triggered based on the success or failure of the backup job. To view the alerts created for your virtual machine backup jobs, go to the Triggered alerts page and filter on the following alert definitions:

  • VM Backup succeeded

  • VM Backup failed

  • VM Backup succeeded with errors

For information about alerts, see Alerts.

/Blog @en /Incremental Backup of Virtual Machines: time of being part of your strategy

  • July 21, 2017
  • Iperius Backup Team

Backup has always been one of the must-have IT capabilities, especially in enterprise network. It has to be done to ensure that the IT system can always be recovered from a failure or disaster condition, and also to ensure that users will not lose their important data and access to services. A good backup strategy should include an incremental backup in its plan. It is important to have an incremental backup on Virtual Machines (VMs) to ensure continuous backup while still maintaining efficiency in the process. Of course, popular virtualization platforms like VMware vSphere or Microsoft Hyper-V has been made to support incremental backup.

Incremental backup is a type of backup that only copies part of the data that are changed since the successful backup. It works differently with the typical full backup, where the whole data parts were copied. To help better understanding on how each type of backup works, see this example:

For example, a data contains three letters “X-Y-Z” was fully backed up yesterday. Today, the data is modified so now we have four letters “W-X-Y-Z”. If we then perform another full backup, it will copy the whole data “W-X-Y-Z”. But if we perform an incremental backup instead, it will only copy the “W” part of the data. Obviously, copying only the “W” part of the data will consume less disk space compared to copying the whole “W-X-Y-Z” data. Moreover, we already have the “X-Y-Z” part backed up previously, so we don’t need that part to be backed up again. With this way, we can save disk space used to store the backup. Incremental backup is also processed faster, as the size of the backup data is smaller. And because of the smaller size, it gives less burden to the network.

The importance of incremental backup for VMs

We all know that in this virtualization era, administrators are given the option to do the backup at the virtualization layer rather than the traditional backup at the OS level. The option to perform backup at the virtualization layer is easily preferred because it reduces the service disruption caused by the backup process that usually eats up a lot of resources on the OS. This also adds more flexibility to the process as the administrator can easily restore a VM by simply mounting the virtual disk to a host data store. Technology like deduplication, snapshot, and replication also helps in making the backup process more efficient. However, in the contrary to all the facts mentioned above, backup data could consume lots of disk space if the administrator doesn’t plan it correctly, and ended up with high investment on storage infrastructure. One of the strategies to avoid this is by implementing incremental backup.

The common best practice in VM environment is to do incremental backup more often than the full backup. For example, the full backup can be done on the VM only on the weekend while the incremental backup can be done every day during weekdays. It makes sense to do the full back up only on the weekend as, usually, it requires more time and network bandwidth. On the other hand, incremental backup performed during the weekdays to catch the changes made on the VM after the last successful full backup.

There was a concern in the past in terms of restoring a backup resulted from incremental backups. At first, the initial full backup data needs to be restored, then followed by the incremental backup data. With this way, restore task requires more time and very error prone because the incremental backup data needs to be restored in the same order they were backed up. However, this was in the past. In today’s technology, most of the backup software has the capability to consolidate the backup data. So, for example, if we have performed a full backup followed by three incremental backups, the result will be combined into a single backup file that can be restored as a whole. In VMware, this feature is called VMware Consolidated Backup (VCB) while Microsoft doesn’t have a specific name but simply refer it as a merged checkpoints/snapshots.

Today, there’s no more reason to not using the incremental backup. Incremental backup has been proven to save cost of storage infrastructure as it can maintain the backup to stay current, but with very efficient, non-disruptive process. Iperius supports incremental backup as well as consolidation on the incremental backup data on your vSphere ESXi or Hyper-V host.

See how to achieve an incremental backup of virtual machines with Iperius here.

Incremental Backup of Virtual Machines: time of being part of your strategy
July 21, 2017

Iperius Backup Team
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PLEASE NOTE: if you need technical support or have any sales or technical question, don't use comments. Instead open a TICKET here: https://support.iperius.net

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How do I back up my virtual machine?

To back up the virtual machine:.
Ensure your virtual machine is in a powered off state..
Locate the virtual machine folder. ... .
Right-click the virtual machine folder and click Copy..
Navigate to the folder in which you want to store the backup, right-click anywhere within the folder, and click Paste..

Which type of backup are you likely to perform with a virtual machine so that you can restore it to a specific point in time?

Snapshots can be used capture the state of a virtual machine at a specific point in time. They can contain a copy of current disk state as well as memory state. Incremental cloud database backups occur three times daily.

Why do we backup virtual machines?

Used to perform off-loaded file-level and full virtual machine backups. information stored in their disk files constantly changes. As with physical machines, virtual machine data needs to be backed up periodically to prevent its corruption and loss due to human or technical errors.

What type of backup method creates a copy of the entire virtual disk associated with a virtual machine?

Incremental-forever-full virtual machine backup processing backs up all the used blocks on a virtual machine's disks. To run this type of backup, you must have a license for one of the following products: Tivoli® Storage Manager for Virtual Environments: Data Protection for VMware V6. 4 or later.