I am having issues of efficiency of backing up data from one SQL data
base to another.
The two servers in questions are on different networks , behind
different firewalls. We have MS SQL 2000.
On the source data i run a job with the following steps:
1> take trans backup every 4 hrs
2> ftp to the remote server
3> if ftp fails , disable the whole job
On the target server I run a job which does the following
1> restore the trans backup with NORECOVERY.
If the job fails at target. I will have to go through the whole process
of doing a complete backup of the source , restoring it at the other
ens and then starting trans-backup again.
Also, if we do a failover to the target server, then when we roll back
to the source server again we have to da a back-up of the target and
restore it on the source server.
Is ther a more efficent way of doing this??Vishal (bajaj.vishal@.gmail.com) writes:
> I am having issues of efficiency of backing up data from one SQL data
> base to another.
> The two servers in questions are on different networks , behind
> different firewalls. We have MS SQL 2000.
> On the source data i run a job with the following steps:
> 1> take trans backup every 4 hrs
> 2> ftp to the remote server
> 3> if ftp fails , disable the whole job
> On the target server I run a job which does the following
> 1> restore the trans backup with NORECOVERY.
> If the job fails at target. I will have to go through the whole process
> of doing a complete backup of the source , restoring it at the other
> ens and then starting trans-backup again.
> Also, if we do a failover to the target server, then when we roll back
> to the source server again we have to da a back-up of the target and
> restore it on the source server.
> Is ther a more efficent way of doing this??
I'm not sure exactly the purpose of this home-made log shipping is,
but could replication be a better alternative?
(Although, I have no idea whether replication can cross your network
and firewalls.)
--
Erland Sommarskog, SQL Server MVP, esquel@.sommarskog.se
Books Online for SQL Server 2005 at
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/pr...oads/books.mspx
Books Online for SQL Server 2000 at
http://www.microsoft.com/sql/prodin...ions/books.mspx|||As per my understanding you are concerned with
3> if ftp fails , disable the whole job
* If you want to save time then you can go ahead and use SQL Litespeed
tool.
You can go through this article for more information.
http://www.sql-server-performance.c...d_spotlight.asp
Thanks
Ajay Rengunthwar (Ajay)|||thnks a lot, but will i be able to do a failover easily ? and can i do
transactional backups and keep restoring it at the other end. I cannot
do a complete backup due to bandwidth constraints.
No comments:
Post a Comment