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Table of contents
Executive summary ...................................................................................................................................................................... 3
Target audience ......................................................................................................................................................................... 3
Introduction .................................................................................................................................................................................... 3
Solution overview .......................................................................................................................................................................... 4
HP Data Protector Integration with HP StoreOnce and HP StoreEver ............................................................................... 5
Hardware features overview ...................................................................................................................................................... 7
HP 3PAR StoreServ Storage key features and benefits ................................................................................................... 8
HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System .................................................................................................................................... 9
HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library ................................................................................................................................. 11
HP StoreEver TapeAssure software.................................................................................................................................... 13
HP ProLiant rack servers ....................................................................................................................................................... 13
Software features overview...................................................................................................................................................... 14
HP Data Protector 9................................................................................................................................................................ 14
HP Data Protector GRE for Microsoft Exchange Server 2010+ .................................................................................... 15
Sizing the backup solution ........................................................................................................................................................ 15
Sizing the HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System ............................................................................................................... 16
Sizing the HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library .............................................................................................................. 18
Backup solutioninstallation and configuration ................................................................................................................ 18
Configuring the StoreOnce Backup System, StoreEver Tape Library, and Data Protector integration ............... 21
Installing Data Protector ....................................................................................................................................................... 23
Planning your backup strategy ............................................................................................................................................ 29
Exchange snapshot backup to HP StoreOnce with HP Data Protector ........................................................................... 29
Restore options ........................................................................................................................................................................... 36
Repair all passive copies with failed status ....................................................................................................................... 37
Restore to the latest state .................................................................................................................................................... 37
Restore to a specific point in time ....................................................................................................................................... 37
Restore to a new mailbox database ................................................................................................................................... 37
Restore files to a temporary location ................................................................................................................................. 37
Restoring using the Data Protector GUI ............................................................................................................................. 37
Single mail item or individual email recovery with GRE .................................................................................................. 41
Offload HP StoreOnce backups to tape for long-term data retention ............................................................................ 42
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Summary ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 43
Bill of materials ............................................................................................................................................................................ 43
Terminology ................................................................................................................................................................................. 44
Resources ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 45
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Executive summary
Microsoft Exchange Server (Exchange) is the keystone for business communication and collaboration. As the
principal repository for business critical information in most organizations, it drives the need for protection of Exchange
environments. The growing volume of emails makes it difficult for organizations to back up Exchange environments rapidly.
Restoring data is time consuming, and often results in extended downtime and loss of productivity. Predictable backup and
recovery service-level agreements (SLAs) are critical for enhanced productivity and for Exchange environments complete
data protection. Snapshot-based backups provide instant backup and recovery of Exchange data within minutes, reducing
or eliminating the window of downtime. Disk-based backups with deduplication address the challenge of backing up large
amounts of data while minimizing storage footprint. Tape-based backups provide the most cost- and energy-efficient
platform for secure, reliable, and durable long-term retention. A robust data protection strategy should include a
tiered backup and recovery architecture solution, providing applications a balance of rapid rollbacks, fast recovery, and
cost-effective, long-term retention.
This reference architecture (RA) combines with Exchange Native Data Protection feature with the high-performance
backup capability of the HP StoreOnce Backup System and powerful capabilities of HP Data Protector software to deliver
comprehensive protection of the Exchange environment. The RA also includes the HP StoreEver Tape Library, providing a
cost-effective, long-term storage medium for disaster recovery (DR) and regulatory compliance.
Target audience
The intended audience includes IT professionals responsible for designing and implementing a data management solution
for Exchange that meets the following requirements:
Exchange administrators that are interested in developing a modern data protection solution.
Instant backup and recovery of Exchange data using HP Data Protector software.
Tiered backups using disk-based backups with HP StoreOnce and tape-based backups with HP StoreEver.
The intended audience of this white paper should have a functional understanding of Exchange and Data Protector concepts
and technologies.
Introduction
In todays business model, customers rely on an efficient, high performing, and reliable backup system to protect critical
business information. Customers need to protect increasing amounts of data while keeping costs under control. For
most IT environments, the first point of recovery is the high availability (HA) solution (e.g., Microsoft Exchange Database
Availability Group [DAG], HP server and storage hardware resiliency features, etc.), followed by recovery from tape backups.
These backup and recovery practices, while valid, are not sufficient to meet explosive data growth and shrinking backup and
recovery windows.
Many enterprise customers are starting to deploy a second tier to their backup operations. The first tier of recovery is
still the HA solution; the new second recovery tier is disk-based backups. Using a disk-based backup solution, such as
HP StoreOnce Backup System, provides the benefits of accelerated backup, recovery, and deduplication operations that
reduce required storage capacity. HP StoreOnce also provides reliable backup retention using data inflight, data-at-rest
encryption, and reliable shredding.
The third tier of recovery, or safety net, is a tape backup solution such as the HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library.
HP StoreOnce Backup System with HP StoreOnce Catalyst addresses the needs of small- to midsize-business, large
enterprises, remote offices, and cloud service providers. For this paper, we have chosen the HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup
System, scale-out disk deduplication solution to meet the needs of our enterprise messaging solution.
The HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System is a disk-based, deduplication appliance in the StoreOnce Backup System product
line. HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System provides a unique combination of features: scalability up to 2,240 TB of raw backup
capacity (1,728 TB usable), HA, and backup speeds up to 139 TB per hour. 1 This creates a highly available and high-capacity
disk-based backup solution, perfect for enterprise customers wanting to protect their messaging solution.
Actual performance is dependent upon configuration, data set type, compression levels, and number of streams, number of devices emulated, and number of
concurrent tasks, such as housekeeping or replication.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
The HP StoreOnce Catalyst software allows clients to deduplicate data on application servers such as exchange or backup
servers such as HP Data Protector Media Server before transferring the data to an HP StoreOnce Backup System. This
feature is often referred to as federated deduplication, which is a functionality unique to HP that provides customers with
the ability to move deduplicated data between StoreOnce appliances or Catalyst Stores without rehydration. HP StoreOnce
technology is independent of file system, operating system, or hardware platform. This allows better use of advanced,
disk-based storage solutions, while increasing efficiency and performance and decreasing IT costs.
HP Data Protector uses the HP StoreOnce Catalyst application programming interface (API) development kit to fully use its
StoreOnce hardware and utilize a single deduplication methodology across the entire backup infrastructure. This allows
users to control where the deduplication occurs (source, server, or storage) from within the Data Protector console;
centralized management of any additional StoreOnce appliances, as well as long-distance replication for protection or
disaster recovery. Users can now manage backup, replication, and recovery operations between StoreOnce appliances
from a single backup management console.
Combining the benefits of the HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System, HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library, and HP Data
Protector provides a complete data protection solution that protects your Exchange environment in the event of a software
or hardware failure.
For more information on HP Data Protector, visit: hp.com/go/dataprotector.
Solution overview
Key benefits of integrating HP data protection solutions into your Microsoft Exchange Server environment.
Integrates seamlessly with Exchange: HP Data Protector integrates with HP StoreOnce Backup systems and
HP StoreEver Tape Libraries to provide a complete and unified data protection solution, spanning single or multiple
mailbox servers in a DAG.
Move backup data offsite efficiently and cost effectively: Use the HP StoreOnce remote replication feature
to replicate Exchange backups to an HP StoreOnce Backup System in a remote facility for simpler recovery in the event
of a disaster.
Efficient backups: HP Data Protector and HP StoreOnce Backup systems with HP StoreOnce Catalyst utilize the same
deduplication engine that enables storing more data without adding more storage.
Autonomic failover: HP StoreOnce 6500 provides high availability by offering no single point of failure. If a node fails,
its companion node picks up the load and the backup continues without any operator involvement.
Recover single mailbox items easily: Granular Recovery Extension (GRE) of HP Data Protector software allows
Exchange administrators and backup administrators to recover a variety of Exchange objects through an easy-to-use
interface. It allows for the single item recovery of things such as mail, calendar, and contact-related items.
Grows your storage, as Exchange messaging needs increase: HP 3PAR StoreServ Storage is a scalable storage
solution that enables incremental customer purchases, allowing the array to grow as messaging requirements expand,
for increased return on investment (ROI).
Reduces risk of hardware failures: HP 3PAR StoreServ protects critical Exchange data by reducing the risk of hardware
failures with persistent technologies that deliver high availability and Tier 1 resiliency.
99.9999% data availability with HP 3PAR Get 6-Nines Guarantee Program: HP offers the only 6-Nines data
availability guarantee program in the storage market, across midrange, all flash, and high-end storage arrays.
Move backup data offsite efficiently and cost effectively: The HP StoreOnce remote replication feature seamlessly
replicates Exchange backups to an HP StoreOnce Backup System in a remote facility or simpler recovery in the event of
a disaster.
Retains data long-term: The object copy feature found in HP Data Protector offers the flexibility of copying or moving
Exchange backups from StoreOnce to StoreEver Tape Libraries. This provides a cost-effective, long-term storage medium
and frees backup capacity on the StoreOnce system.
Tape reliability: HP StoreEver TapeAssure software is designed to give storage administrators confidence that Exchange
backups written to tape can be successfully restored when the need arises. TapeAssure does proactive monitoring of
drives and media to help ensure the data integrity of data stored on tape for reliable restores.
For additional information on backup, recovery, and archive solutions from HP, visit: hp.com/go/BURASolutions.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
For additional information on installing and configuring Data Protector with Exchange Server,
visit: hp.com/go/dataprotector.
Figure 1. Data management solution using HP storage with Data Protector to back up Exchange databases
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
After the design of the initial building block is complete, the building block can be duplicated to scale and support a variety
of deployments like these:
Increasing the number of database copies
Supporting site failover
Increasing the number of mailboxes or mailbox capacity
Using this approach, Exchange administrators can create their own building blocks, based on their companys specific
Exchange messaging requirements. When messaging demands increase, this approach makes Exchange environment
expansion much easier and more straightforward.
Table 1 provided details on the Exchange building block selected to support the development of the solution
outlined in this paper. The equipment list in the bill of materials provides sufficient headroom for an expansion or
a larger initial Exchange environment. For information on tested Exchange deployments with HP storage, visit:
technet.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/ff182054.aspx.
Table 1. Exchange configuration details
Exchange 2013 configuration
Details
Number of mailboxes
1,000
Mailbox size
5 GB
Up to 200 messages sent and received for each user, each day
DAG configuration:
Number of DAGs
500
For specific deployment options and Exchange sizing best practices, HP has developed the HP Sizer for Microsoft Exchange to
assist customers with proper server and storage sizing and configuration for their Exchange deployments. The algorithms
developed and implemented in this tool are based on HPs extensive knowledge of both Exchange and the hardware required
to run it: CPU, memory, and storage subsystems. This tool is free and designed to allow very quick what-if modeling of
various configuration and design choices. For more information, visit: hp.com/solutions/microsoft/exchange2013/sizer.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
The data management in this solution use 10GbE and 8 Gb Fibre networks primarily; however, to make the solution
more cost-effective, each component offers a variety of connectivity options to meet any budget.
For smaller Exchange environments, the Cell Manager and backup server can be deployed on the same server.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
scalability for four nodes, allowing your storage to grow with your Exchange environment (e.g., bigger mailboxes, more
mailbox users, increased messaging workloads, etc.).
Data resiliency: The HP 3PAR StoreServ virtual copy feature provides the ability to create snapshots of your Exchange
data. The snapshots offer instant backup and recovery of Exchange data to any specific point in time.
High availability: Featuring the same mesh-active architecture as all 3PAR StoreServ products, HP 3PAR StoreServ
7200 2-node Storage Base offers the highest levels of data availability and protection from mid-market to Enterpriselevel customers.
Service levels: With policy-based, autonomic sub-logical unit number (LUN) tiering, you can balance capacity and
performance costs, and put the right data on the right storage tier at the right time. For example, separate the disks
used for snapshots vs. the disks used for Exchange databases and logs.
Do more with less: With HP 3PAR StoreServ Storage, you can purchase up to 75 percent less capacity: meaning less
equipment to house, fewer disks to power and cool, less hardware to retire after it has reached its end of life, and a
reduced carbon footprint.
For more product information and configuration options, visit: hp.com/go/3PAR.
Figure 3. HP 3PAR StoreServ 7200 2-node Storage Base
Figure 4. HP M6720 3.5 inch 4U SAS Drive Enclosure (shown with 24 2 TB serial-attached SCSI [SAS] LFF drives)
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Details
2 (1 couplet)
Number of drives
30
Drive type
4 TB LFF SAS
Firmware version
3.11.0
Host connectivity
10GbE
Figure 5 shows the basic concepts of the HP 6500 StoreOnce Backup System architecture.
Figure 5. Conceptual 6500 couplet architecture
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
HP StoreOncedata deduplication
Store more data on disk: HP StoreOnce Deduplication reduces the disk space required to store backup data sets without
impacting backup performance. Retaining more backup data on disk for longer periods enables greater data accessibility
for rapid restore of lost or corrupt files and reduces downtime. Deduplication ratios are strongly influenced by two
factorsdata change rate and backup data retention periods. Low data change rates and data retained for longer
periods yield higher deduplication ratios.
Enable replication: HP StoreOnce Deduplication is the technology enabler for HP StoreOnce Deduplication-enabled
replication, which allows fully automated replication over low bandwidth links to a disaster recovery (DR) site. This gives
remote office/branch office (ROBO) and small data centers a cost-effective DR solution for the first time.
Rapid restore of data for dependable, worry-free data protection: HP StoreOnce Backup systems offer immediate
access to backups for rapid restores. HP StoreOnce Deduplication allows more data to be stored closer to the data center
for longer periods, which offers immediate access for rapid restores.
HP StoreOnce technology is a 5-step inline data deduplication process (chunk -> hash -> match -> compress -> store.)
It uses hash-based chunking technology, which analyzes incoming backup data in chunks that average 4 KB in size.
The hashing algorithm generates a unique hash value that identifies each chunk and points to its location in the
deduplication store.
Figure 7. StoreOnce deduplication
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Table 3 provides the configuration details of the HP StoreEver MSL6480 used in this paper.
Table 3. HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library
Tape Library configuration
Details
80
4.40
23MW
Host connectivity
8 Gb Fibre
The HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library provides the following features and benefits:
TapeAssure: HP TapeAssure makes managing, enhancing, and archiving on the HP StoreEver MSL Tape Libraries easier.
TapeAssure provides comprehensive summaries and detailed information about the status, performance, usage, and
health of all tape drives and cartridges. TapeAssure use and performance reporting features allow you to help optimize
the use of your existing HP StoreEver MSL Tape Libraries to make informed purchasing decisions if increased capacity is
needed.
Proven reliability: With a rating of 2,000,000 robot load/unload cycles, the MSL Tape Libraries provide necessary high
reliability for todays demanding environment. To improve reliability and longevity, all HP Ultrium products feature data
rate matching (DRM). This allows the tape drive to adjust the speed of the drive to match the speed of the host or
network dynamically and continuously. This increases performance, reduces mechanical wear on the tape drive, and
extends tape life.
Tape library extender: Leverage the investment in your MSL Library, now or in the future, to increase both capacity and
performance, as data needs change. Use the HP MSL Library Extender Kit to connect two MSL libraries to create one
larger, logical library.
Compatibility: HPs extensive compatibility testing program helps assure that HP MSL Tape Libraries work with leading
servers, operating systems, and backup applications such as Data Protector. The MSL Libraries work seamlessly in many
environments, making them especially suitable if you have a mixed system environment.
For more information on HP StoreEver Tape Libraries, visit: hp.com/go/StoreEver.
Table 4 shows the various capacity points and the library rack footprint. Figure 9 shows the front hardware view of the
HP StoreEver MSL6480 Scalable Base Module.
Table 4. HP StoreEver MSL6480 Scalable Base Module scalability guide
12
Installed modules
Maximum number of
tape drives
Maximum number of
storage slots
Base module
80
6U
12
160
12U
18
240
18U
24
320
24U
30
400
30U
36
480
36U
42
560
42U
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Details
Processor
Memory
128 GB
Disk drive
Network
Operating system
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
automated firmware and system software maintenance, using integrated lifecycle automation.
Dynamic workload acceleration converges storage, compute, and I/O to turbo-charge performance and resiliency while
obviating bottlenecks.
Reclaims space, power, and cooling resources needed for workloads and extends your data center capacity with
Control. HP iLO Advanced, a key component, provides enhanced remote server functions that reduce IT travel costs and
decrease resolution time.
For more product information and configuration options, visit: hp.com/go/ProLiant.
Figure 10. HP ProLiant DL380p Gen8 Rack Server
HP ProLiant servers are connected to a 10GbE network using HP 6600 Switch Series. For more information on
HP FlexFabric switches, visit: hp.com/go/FlexFabric.
HP Data Protector 9
HP Data Protector 9 is a backup solution that provides reliable data protection and high availability for your fast
growing business data. Data Protector offers comprehensive backup and restore functionality specifically tailored for
enterprise-wide and distributed environments. The following list describes major Data Protector features:
Scalable and highly flexible architecture: can be used in environments ranging from a single system to thousands
of systems on several sites. Due to the network component concept of Data Protector, elements of the backup
infrastructure can be placed in the topology according to user requirements. The numerous backup options and
alternatives to setting up a backup infrastructure allow the implementation of virtually any configuration you want.
Data Protector also integrates seamlessly with StoreOnce Backup and StoreEver.
Easy central administration: with its easy-to-use GUI, Data Protector allows you to administer your complete backup
environment from a single system. To ease operation, the GUI can be installed on several systems to allow multiple
administrators to access Data Protector via their locally installed consoles. Even multiple backup environments can be
managed from a single system. The Data Protector CLI allows you to manage Data Protector using scripts.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
High-performance backup: enables you to perform backup to several hundred backup devices simultaneously.
It supports high-end devices in very large libraries. Various backup possibilities, such as local backup, network backup,
online backup, disk image backup, synthetic backup, backup with object mirroring, and built-in support for parallel data
streams allow you to tune your backups to fit your requirements better. With Data Protectors support for Federated
Catalyst and Catalyst over Fibre Channel, mission-critical backup and recovery at scale is possible. Data Protector offers
varieties of deduplication methods such as backup-server deduplication, target-based deduplication, and source-side
deduplication. For this RA, we have selected the backup-server (server-side) deduplication method.
Backup object operations: provides flexibility in the choice of backup and archive strategy. Advanced techniques are
available for performing operations on individual backup objects. These include copying of objects from one medium to
another, useful for disk staging and archiving purposes, and consolidation of multiple object versions from incremental
backups into a single full-backup version. To support such functionality, there is also the ability to verify both original and
copied or consolidated backup objects. For more information on HP Data Protector, visit: hp.com/go/dataprotector.
such as messages, inboxes, deleted items, sent items, attachments, tasks, folders, and calendars.
The main advantage of this extension over other solutions is that you do not need to recover the entire database to
find the items needed. The granularity is already visible after the restore process; you can search and recover single
mailbox items. You can also recover a complete single user mailbox, its subfolders, and even a single message or item
from subfolders.
The extension enables you to recover individual mailbox items, such as email folders, calendars, contacts, or notes,
with no need to recover the whole Microsoft Exchange Server mailbox or the entire mailbox database.
Integration into the Microsoft Exchange Management Console: integrates into the Exchange Management Console to
empower Exchange administrators to perform recovery of single items independently, without the assistance of backup
administrators.
Recovery of multiple mailboxes: recovers multiple mailboxes concurrently.
Easy search: advanced and quick search options help you find the item you need to recover. This search system
checks the objects metadata, enabling you to filter your search by document type, author, date, and so on.
Recovery to different locations: enables recovery of your mail objects to a different directory than the one
originally specified.
For more information on HP Data Protector GRE for Microsoft Exchange Server 2010+, see the GRE User Guide for Microsoft
Exchange Server found on the HP Data Protector installation CD or at support.openview.hp.com/selfsolve/manual.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Details
Number of nodes
2 (1 couplet)
Number of drives
30
Type of drives
4 TB LFF SAS
80
Backup software
HP Data Protector 9
any location, directly from the backup management console, greatly simplifying administrative tasks.
HP StoreOnce Catalyst protocol runs on a standard IP network and FC protocols.
Enables space occupied by expired backups to be returned for re-use.
Enables asymmetric expiration of backup data to satisfy the business and governance requirements at each location.
Backup jobs can restart automatically if the StoreOnce has a node failover condition (requires a restart script.)
Capacity planning
The amount of required backup storage for Microsoft Exchange 2013 database backups depends on the measurements of
the following items:
Size and number of Exchange databases
Size of the database logs
Site backup retention policy (What are your requirements for data retention?)
Type (full, incremental, or differential) and frequency of backups
Rate of change (growth) of the Exchange mailbox databases
The deduplication ratio achieved by the StoreOnce Backup System
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
(source-side deduplication)
Deduplication in the media agent running on a server but with the disk agent on a different server (server-side)
deduplication
The decision on whether to use source or server deduplication depends on the WAN or LAN link speed available, the CPU and
memory size of the server running the disk agent, and how much load that server can stand. If for example, you have a large
database server that is heavily loaded and you are backing up a snapshot, it may not be a good idea to use source- or
server-side deduplication for some jobs. Target-side deduplication places less load on the server.
In the case when Exchange Server is hosted in the remote office location, small remote office backups over a WAN may
really benefit from source- or server-side deduplication, because their data change rate is low and they may well be backed
up after hours, when server load is not so critical.
Considerations for implementing server-side and source-side deduplication include these requirements:
Allow 50 MBps of stream data per GHz of CPU core and 30 MB of RAM (allow two cores for the HP Data Protector Media
Agent software)
Allow at least 16 GB of RAM overall
Ignore hyper-threading (for example, 12 cores = 24 with hyper-threading)
Following the above guidelines, we can calculate the available data stream bandwidth for our RA.
Two Intel Xeon E5-2680 2.70 GHz processors (16 CPU cores total)
14 cores x 2.7 GHz = 38 GHz (two cores are allocated to the HP Data Protector Media Agent)
38 data streams @ 50 MBps = 1,900 MBps (providing the sources of the data are not the bottleneck)
The backup server, with two Intel Xeon E5-2680 processors and configured for server-side deduplication, should be able to
deliver StoreOnce Catalyst data streams at a rate of 1,900 MBps.
HP StoreOnce Catalyst Stores
Each catalyst store is an independent deduplication domain. To achieve better deduplication ratios, create a unique Catalyst
Store specifically for similar data types. The RA is configured with four Catalyst Stores per node, for a total of eight Catalyst
Stores across the entire couplet. Multiple streams are recommended for superior performance with HP StoreOnce Catalyst.
For help with choosing the most appropriate HP StoreOnce Backup System configuration for your specific environment, we
recommend you talk to your HP partner or sales advisor about using the HP Storage Sizing Tool (free tool) that can be
downloaded from the downloads section of hp.com/go/StoreOnceSizer.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
576 GB/h
1,152 GB/h
1,728 GB/h
2,304 GB/h
2,880 GB/h
3,456 GB/h
The RA expects that most customers will perform a monthly tape offload from the HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System to
the HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library. For this white paper, assume that each month there are 20 TB of data to archive
and offload from the HP StoreOnce Backup System. We have six tape devices, giving us a native transfer rate of up to
3,456 GB/h. We must address the following concerns:
What is the size of the Catalyst Stores that need to migrate to physical tape?
How fast do you want the migration to occur to physical tape?
How often do you want to migrate to physical tape?
To object copy 20 TB to tape can take up to nine hours to complete. Depending on other activities happening on the
StoreOnce Backup System, it may not be possible to spare a single nine-hour copy time to physical tape. In this case, one
option is to stagger the monthly offloads to tape over separate weeks, doing approximately 3 TB each week. This would
then occupy just over two hours bandwidth per week from the StoreOnce, which is easier to schedule.
2
3
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Actual performance is dependent upon configuration, data set type, compression levels, and number of backup streams.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Data Protector offers interactive and scheduled backups of the following types:
Backup
You can select among the following Microsoft Exchange Server backup types:
Table 8. Data Protector backup types
Full
Backs up the database files (.edb), transaction logs (.log), and checkpoint files (.chk), and then truncates the
transaction logs
Incremental
Backs up the transaction logs (.log) that has been created since the last full or incremental backup, and then
truncates the transaction logs
Differential
Backs up the transaction logs (.log) that has been created since the last full backup, without truncating the
transaction logs
When you back up a Microsoft Exchange Server database, the following files are backed up automatically:
database files (.edb)
transaction logs (.log)
checkpoint files (.chk)
Restore
During restore, each database can be restored using a different restore method. The following methods are available:
Repair all passive copies with failed status
Restore to the latest state
Restore to a point in time
Restore to a new mailbox database
Restore files to a temporary location
In a DAG environment, Data Protector communicates with the DAG using one of the Microsoft Exchange Server systems
(the one that is currently active in the environment). All backup and restore requests are sent to the active Exchange Server.
In a single session, you can back up active and/or passive database copies from different Microsoft Exchange Server
systems that belong to the same DAG.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
If a database has multiple passive copies, you can specify which particular passive copy you want to back up, using one of
the following backup policies:
Minimize the number of hosts
Lowest activation preference
Highest activation preference
Shortest replay lag time
Longest replay lag time
Longest truncation lag time
You can also specify from which Microsoft Exchange Server system database copies should not be backed up.
For a brief description of the activation preference number, replay lag time, and truncation lag time, see table 9.
Table 9. Microsoft Exchange Server parameters in DAG environments
Parameter
Description
The activation preference number determines which passive copy is activated if multiple passive
copies meet the same criteria; the copy assigned the lowest activation preference number is
activated.
The ReplayLagTime parameter plays a role when synchronizing a passive copy with the active copy.
As soon as a log file at the active copy side is filled up, it is copied to the passive copy side. By default,
the newly copied log is also applied to the passive copy database files. However, if the passive copy
ReplayLagTime parameter is set to a value greater than 0, the log is applied with a lag, creating a
lagged database copy.
The maximum value is 14 days.
The TruncationLagTime parameter specifies how long the Microsoft Exchange Replication service
waits before truncating log files that have already been applied to the database files.
The maximum value is 14 days.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
The HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System base hardware configuration includes two server nodes and two dual controller
disk shelves with 120 TB of backup storage capacity. To obtain the increased backup and recovery performance with
HP StoreOnce Catalyst, it is essential that the backup server keeps the Catalyst Stores (backup target) supplied with the
desired number of data streams.
For the RA building block, each server node is configured with four Catalyst Stores, providing a better configuration for our
backup solution. Network connectivity is 10GbE for user management and data, which is essential for large configurations
that require maximum performance. Additionally, the HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System is a multi-node appliance that
supports autonomic failover. More care is required in the network configuration to help ensure better operations of the
autonomic failover feature.
The HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library base hardware configuration starts with zero tape drives and 80 tape cartridge
slots. To prevent excessive copy times for moving backups from StoreOnce to physical tape, the RA building block is
configured with the HP StoreEver MSL6480 Tape Library having four HP StoreEver LTO-6 Ultrium 6250 tape drives, to
provides a better configuration for our backup solution. Network connectivity is through an 8 Gb Fibre Channel for data and
1 GB network for management.
HP Data Protector software version 9 is installed on an HP ProLiant DL380p Gen8 Rack Server running Microsoft Windows
Server 2012 R2 Edition. This server acts as the Cell Manager for the RA. It contains the HP Data Protector Internal Database
(IDB) and runs the core HP Data Protector software and session managers. Data Protector software controls the backup
operations and fully leverages the features and functions of the HP StoreOnce 6500 Backup System and HP StoreEver
MSL6480 Tape Library to help minimize backup and recovery windows, enhance business application performance, and
maintain long-term backup storage.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
A second ProLiant DL380p Gen8 Rack Server, also running Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 Edition, is dedicated to be a
backup server where deduplication takes place to reduce Cell Manager and Exchange Servers overhead. Data Protector
Media Agent and StoreOnce software deduplication are installed on this server.
Configure every Exchange Server you intend to back up from or restore to and the corresponding Exchange Server users
with the following items:
On Microsoft Exchange Server, install .NET Framework 3.5.1. On Windows Server 2012 R2, the installation of .NET
In DAG environments, the DAG virtual system (host) must also be imported to the Data Protector Cell. For information on
how to import a client to a Data Protector Cell, see the HP Data Protector Help index: importing, client systems.
Due to incompatibility between Microsoft Exchange Server versions, backup objects belonging to a particular Exchange
Server version cannot be restored to Data Protector clients on which a different Exchange Server version is installed.
Create StoreOnce Catalyst subclient
1.
2.
3.
4.
Log on to the StoreOnce 6500 management console from a standard Web browser as the administrator.
Under Navigator, expand the HP StoreOnce menu and select StoreOnce Catalyst to show the status and
configuration of StoreOnce Catalyst subsystems.
Select Settings. Make sure Client Access Permission Checking is checked.
Select Clients. Create the Client named dpclient1 and dpclient2 and their passwords. Check the Allow Store Creation
check box.
Figure 13. HP StoreOnce management consoleadd new client
5.
Select Add.
Figure 14. HP StoreOnce Management Console showing available clients
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Log on to the server dedicated to be the Cell Manager with administrative rights. Download the
Data Protector software.
Run the autorun.exe file.
3.
4.
5.
As shown in figure 16, enter the credentials for the Cell Manager. Click Next to specify Destination folder.
Figure 16. Account information
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
6.
As shown in figure 17, select the Change buttons to select the desired destination folder. Click Next.
Figure 17. Destination folder
7.
Select the following minimum required components for Data Protector operation.
A. Disk Agent
B. General Media Agent
C. User Interface
D. English documentation
E. Installation server
8.
24
1.
Log on to the server designated as the backup server with administrative rights and download the
Data Protector software.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
6.
Select the following components, as shown in figure 19. Click Next to complete the installation of the backup server.
A.
B.
C.
Disk Agent
Media Agent
User Interface
7.
3.
4.
5.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
6.
Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 backup and recovery requires the following Data Protector components installed on
all Microsoft Exchange Servers in the DAG. Select the following components:
A. Disk Agent
B. Media Agent
C. User Interface
D. Microsoft Exchange 2010+ Server
E. Microsoft Volume Shadow Copy integration
F. Microsoft Exchange GRE
Go to the backup server and launch the HP Data Protector Manager console.
In the scoping pane, select Devices & Media. Right mouse click on Devices. Select Add Device... as shown in figure 20
to open the Add Device dialog box shown in figure 21.
Figure 20. Device and mediaadd device
3.
In the Add Device dialog box, enter the device name. Select the device type as Backup to Disk. Select the interface type
as StoreOnce Backup System. Click Next.
Figure 21. Add device
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
4.
Enter the IP address or DNS address of the 6500 node that has the Catalyst Store created. Enter the store Client ID and
its password as used when dpclient1 and dpclient2 were created.
Figure 22. Specify the store and gateways
5.
In the same dialog, in the Gateways section, select the Backup host from the drop down list and click Add to open
the Add Gateway dialog box shown in figure 23.
Figure 23. Add gateway
6.
7.
Select Settings. Click Advanced button to open the Advanced Options dialog, shown in figure 24.
Select Server-side deduplication check box. Click OK. If target-side deduplication is preferred, leave this
box unchecked.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
8.
Select Select/Create Store as shown in figure 25. Select the existing store and click OK.
Figure 25. Add StoreOnce 6500 device
9.
28
Select OK.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
An incremental backup session cannot be followed by a differential backup session, or the other way around. You must
first run a full backup session.
For more information on backup strategy planning, see the HP Data Protector Concepts Guide, found on the HP Data
Protector installation CD or at support.openview.hp.com/selfsolve/manual.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
3.
In the Create New Backup dialog box, shown in figure 28. Click OK.
Figure 28. Create new backup
4.
In the Application system drop down list, select the Microsoft Exchange Server system that you want to back up.
In a DAG environment, select the DAG virtual system or a Microsoft Exchange Server system and click Next.
The Application system drop-down list contains all clients that have the Data Protector MS Exchange 2010+
Server integration component installed. In a DAG environment, the list also contains the DAG virtual system (host).
The backup session (that is, the integration agent e2010_bar.exe) will be started on the client that you specify
here. If you select a DAG virtual system, the integration agent starts on the currently active Microsoft Exchange
Server node.
In the Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 environment, to back up public folders residing on a Microsoft Exchange
Server system that is a part of a DAG environment, select the Microsoft Exchange Server system and not the
DAG virtual system (host). If you select the DAG virtual system, you can back up only databases that belong to
the DAG. The Microsoft Exchange Server public folders database is not the part of it.
5.
30
In the Configure MS Exchange 2010+ Server dialog box, provide the domain, username, and password to browse,
backup, or recover the Exchange Server.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Click OK.
6.
7.
The Microsoft Exchange 2010+ Server is added in HP Data Protector. Exit the GUI or proceed with creating the backup
specifications in step 7.
If you select the DAG virtual system (host), specify View Type to define how Microsoft Exchange Server databases
should be organized in the next page (source page) as shown in figure 30.
Figure 30. Specify view type
By client
All clients in the DAG are displayed, together with all the databases (active or passive) residing on them. Active databases
have the label (active) appended at the end. Passive databases have no label.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
8.
Select which Microsoft Exchange Server databases to back up. Figure 31 shows the available databases in the DAG if
you select View type by role in the previous step.
Figure 31. Selecting databases (DAG environmentby role)
Figure 32 shows the available databases (active and passive) per server to back up if by client View was selected in
the previous step (figure 30).
Figure 32. Selecting databases (DAG environmentby client)
9.
Click Next.
If you select the by Role view type, select the Backup passive copy option, shown in figure 33. Click Apply.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
10. Select Show all devices option in the drop down list to display the list of available devices to back up. Select the
StoreOnce 6500 to use for the backup. Click Next.
Figure 34. Select devices to use for the backup
11. Optionally, you can setup actions both before and after a backup or restore session, such as checking the number of
files to back up, stopping some transaction processing, or shutting down an application before backup and restarting it
afterwards. See the Data Protector Administrators Guide found on the HP Data Protector installation CD or at
support.openview.hp.com/selfsolve/manual for more information.
12. To set Pre-exec and Post-exec scripts, click Advanced button under Backup specification options.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Description
Pre-exec,
Post-exec
Specifies which command line to run on the backup server both before (Pre-exec) and after (Post-exec) the backup.
Note: Type only the name of the command and ensure that the command is located in the default Data Protector
commands directory on the same system. Do not use double quotes.
DAG environments: If you select the DAG virtual system (host) in the Application system option to be backed up,
verify that the command is located on the currently active node.
Click Next.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
13. Optionally, schedule the backup using the scheduler shown in figure 37. This scheduler is available in the Schedule tab
of the saved job specification.
Figure 37. Backup job scheduler
An incremental backup contains only log files that have changed since the previous backup. A differential backup
contains log files that have changed since the last full backup. These backup types do not back up the entire database.
For example, create a full back up on Saturdays and differential backups during the weekdays. There are tradeoffs
between incremental and differential backups.
Differential backups give you shorter restore times. Restoring a differential backup requires only one full and one
differential backup to be restored: it might require multiple incremental backups to be restored when restoring a
database. A differential backup tape can grow to contain a lot more data than an incremental backup. To save space on
the backup system, we recommend incremental backup.
The following example shows how to schedule differential backups. To schedule differential backups at
8:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m., and 6:00 p.m. during weekdays, follow these steps:
A. Open the saved back up job specification. In the Schedule tab of the backup specification, select the starting date
in the calendar. Click Add to open the Schedule Backup dialog box, shown in figure 37.
B. Under Recurring, select Weekly. Under Time options, select 8:00. Under Recurring Options, select Mon, Tue,
Wed, Thu, and Fri. Under Session options, select Differential from the Backup type drop-down list. If you plan
on Incremental backup, select Incremental from the Backup type drop-down list instead.
C. Click OK.
D.
E.
Repeat step 1 and step 2 to schedule differential backups at 1:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Click OK to save the changes.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
14. Save the backup specification, specifying a name and a backup specification group.
Restore options
There are various reasons for restoring a Microsoft Exchange Server database. Here are some examples:
The database has become corrupt.
The synchronization between an active and passive database copy is broken, but you want to avoid reseeding the passive
Data Protector offers different restore methods. You can choose among the following:
Repair all passive copies with failed status.
Restore to the latest state.
Restore to a specific point in time.
Restore to a new mailbox database.
Restore to a temporary location.
The first three methods restore backup data to the original database and are only available if the original database
still exists. The last two methods restore backup data to a new location. You can specify different restore methods
for different databases in the same session.
After you have restored a database, start a full backup session for the database. Otherwise, the subsequent
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
3.
In the source tab, Data Protector displays all Microsoft Exchange Server databases backed up from the selected DAG or
standalone environment.
Select the Microsoft Exchange Server databases to restore.
When you select a database, the Properties for DB1 dialog box is displayed automatically. Specify a restore method
and click OK. For databases that are part of a DAG, the default restore method is Repair all passive copies with failed
status. For standalone databases, the default is Restore to the latest state.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
To change the restore method, right-click the database and click Properties.
Figure 40. Repair all passive copies with failed status
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
4.
In the Options tab, specify the Data Protector Microsoft Exchange Server 2010+ integration restore options.
Figure 45. Restore options
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
In the Devices tab, select the devices to use for restore. For details on how to select devices to be used for restore, see
the HP Data Protector Help index: restore, selecting devices for.
Click Restore.
In the Start Restore Session dialog box, click Next.
Specify Report level and Network load.
Click Finish to start the restore. The statistics of the restore session, along with the message Session completed
successfully, is displayed at the end of the session output.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Figure 46 shows the HP Data Protector GRE for Microsoft Exchange Server GUI.
Figure 46. HP Data Protector GRE import from backups
For additional information on HP Data Protectors GRE feature for Microsoft Exchange Server, read the HP Data Protector
Granular Recovery Extension User Guide for Microsoft Exchange Server found on the HP Data Protector installation CD
or at support.openview.hp.com/selfsolve/manual.
You can start an object copy interactively or specify an automated start of the session. HP Data Protector offers two types
of automated object copying: post-backup object copying and scheduled object copying.
Post-backup object copying
Post-backup, post-copy, and post-consolidation object copying are subsets of post-backup object copying, which takes
place after the completion of a session that is specified in the automated object copy specification. Objects are selected
according to the automated object copy specifications that were written in that particular session.
Scheduled object copying
Scheduled object copying takes place at a user-defined time. Objects from different sessions can be copied in a single
scheduled object copy session.
For additional information on HP Data Protector object copy feature, please read the HP Data Protector Concepts Guide
found on the HP Data Protector installation CD or at support.openview.hp.com/selfsolve/manual.
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Summary
Microsoft Exchange customers demand an efficient, reliable, expandable, and cost-effective data backup system. HP Data
Protector, HP StoreOnce Backup System with HP StoreOnce Catalyst, and HP StoreEver Tape Library together provide a
backup solution that meets these requirements. HP StoreOnce Backup systems offer rapid backup and recovery,
performance, and reliability, while addressing data growth through HP StoreOnce Catalyst data deduplication technology.
HP StoreEver Tape Libraries provide flexibility for long-term storage and off-site protection. In addition, HP Data Protector
brings together a full generation of traditional and next generation data protection under a unified interface. In all, HP offers
backup solutions that easily integrate into new and existing Microsoft Exchange deployments and lead the way with a
comprehensive data protection solution for Exchange data application.
Bill of materials
Table 12 lists the bill of materials for major network, server, storage, and backup components used in this RA technical
white paper. However, this is not the list of all the necessary components needed to build a complete solution. For a
complete solution, contact your HP Reseller or HP Sales Representative.
Table 12. Bill of materials
Quantity
Description
Part Number
Network switches
2
J9265AZ
J9269AZ
J9271AZ
HP 3800-24G-2SFP+ Switch
J9575A
J9581A
653200-B21
662226-L21
662226-B21
24
672631-B21
652611-B21
652235-B21
C8R39A
593722-B21
629142-B21
666988-B21
720863-B21
HP 1200W Common Slot Platinum Plus Hot Plug Power Supply Kit
656364-B21
BB896A
BB895AAE
QR482A
QR486A
QR491A
24
QR499A
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Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
QU625A
C0H28A
AK344A
80
C7976A
TC444AAE
TC445AAE
Terminology
The table below provides definitions for the technical terms used throughout this paper.
Table 13. Terminology and definitions
Microsoft Exchange terms
Definition
A DAG is the base component of the high availability and site resilience framework built into
Microsoft Exchange Server 2010. A DAG is a group of mailbox servers that hosts a set of
databases and provides automatic database-level recovery from failures that affect
individual servers or databases.
Database copies
Copies of an active mailbox database across mailbox servers offer increased levels of
mailbox resiliency.
This role is the most common server role and is at the core of an Exchange organization.
Servers on which the mailbox server role is installed are called mailbox servers. The mailbox
role hosts mailbox and public databases.
Definition
Cell
The cell is the Data Protector network containing Cell Manager, clients, and backup devices.
Cell Manager
The Cell Manager is the main system that centrally controls and manages the cell. It contains
a database, runs the core software, and runs the backup and restore sessions, writing
session information to the database.
Systems to be backed up must have the Data Protector DA installed. The Disk Agent
reads data from and writes data to disks on the system and exchanges data with a
Media Agent (MA).
Systems with connected backup devices must have a Data Protector Media Agent (MA)
installed. A Media Agent reads data from, writes to media in the device, and exchanges
data with the Disk Agent.
The GRE allows single item recovery of things such as mail, calendar, and contact
related items.
HP StoreOnce terms
Description
Couplet
44
Node
Autonomic failover
It is the process in which a node is shut down due to a planned or unplanned event and the
software modules all move over to the partner node. Failover can only occur with a couplet.
Catalyst software
This is the API that enables end users to control the complete backup operation,
including data movement and scheduling all around the organization via a backup
applicationwithout the need for rehydration.
Catalyst target
Catalyst Store
Low-bandwidth backup
This refers to a StoreOnce Catalyst backup where deduplication takes place at the clientin
the case of Data Protector, the media agent. After the first backup, only new data is sent over
the network to the HP StoreOnce 6500 Catalyst Stores.
Technical white paper | Microsoft Exchange 2013 data protection with HP storage and HP Data Protector 9
Resources
HP 3PAR StoreServ Storage, hp.com/go/3PAR
HP StoreOnce Backup, hp.com/go/StoreOnce
HP StoreEver Tape, hp.com/go/StoreEver
HP Storage Networking, hp.com/go/SAN
HP Servers, hp.com/go/Servers
HP Services, hp.com/go/services
HP Data Protector software, hp.com/go/dataprotector
To help us improve our documents, please provide feedback at: hp.com/solutions/feedback.
Learn more at
hp.com/go/BURASolutions
Copyright 2014 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. The only warranties for
HP products and services are set forth in the express warranty statements accompanying such products and services. Nothing herein should be construed as
constituting an additional warranty. HP shall not be liable for technical or editorial errors or omissions contained herein.
Microsoft and Windows Server are registered trademarks of the Microsoft Group of companies. Intel Xeon is a trademark of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and
other countries.
4AA5-5105ENW, October 2014