Windows IT Pro is the leading independent community for IT professionals deploying Microsoft Windows server and client applications and technologies.
  
  
  Advanced Search 


September 2003

Disaster Recovery with Dfs

How to reliably replicate certain types of data when planning for the worst
RSS
Subscribe to Windows IT Pro | See More Backup and Recovery Articles Here | Reprints | Or get the Monthly Online Pass—only $5.95 a month!

When it comes to disaster-recovery planning, what constitutes a disaster? The answer might seem obvious, but you'd probably have a hard time identifying everything that you could construe a disaster. Natural disasters such as fires, earthquakes, and floods are easy to identify, but a disaster can also result from unusual circumstances. For example, I live in the Washington, DC area, and I've met dozens of individuals whose business productivity during the past 2 years has been affected because of quarantines and evacuations related to the threat of terrorist attacks, biological warfare, or criminal activity. Clearly, these types of circumstances are situations that most IT administrators might overlook when planning for a disaster.

After talking with people who've faced these situations, I developed my own definition of a disaster: Any event that keeps business users away from business data for an unacceptable length of time (sometimes permanently), thereby putting the viability of the organization at risk. I'll admit that my definition can be overly broad—even a simple situation such as a failed hard disk might meet those criteria. However, depending on the quantity and the type of data affected and the probability of being able to recover that information in a timely fashion (if at all), some organizations might easily consider a hard disk failure to be a disaster. To help you better design solutions for disaster recovery, you should begin thinking about disaster-recovery planning as a means to minimize the amount of time that your users are separated from business data, regardless of the circumstances. Let's look at a sample disaster scenario to see how Microsoft Dfs can play a part in your disaster-recovery plan and help you minimize the time you spend reconnecting users to certain types of data.

Preparing for Disaster
Imagine that your chief information officer (CIO) has asked you to develop a disaster-recovery plan (or, its newer, hipper cousin, the business continuity plan) for your organization to use in the event of a catastrophe. Your company has offices in New York and London, and the IT infrastructure between those locations consists of servers, desktops, routers, and switches. This infrastructure provides the foundation for several applications in your organization, including collaborative applications (e.g., email), vertical line of business (LOB) applications, enterprise resource planning (ERP) applications, database applications, and file storage. Given that terrorists have targeted both locations during the past decade, your CIO has asked you to plan for the worst—the loss of one of the offices for an indefinite time period.

A comprehensive disaster-recovery plan clearly will need to cover many areas to ensure business continuity through such a catastrophe. One of the most important items to consider is making the data from the impaired office available to staff members in the remaining office as soon as possible. Handing off this information lets the staff members at the remaining office carry the load and keep the business running while new facilities for the affected office are brought online.

The types of data in use in the organization typically consist of documents and files, database data, and custom-application data stores. Through the use of Dfs, you can make the first data category (i.e., documents and files) highly available during a disaster. With a bit of careful planning and minimal ongoing effort, Windows 2000 can store your data in multiple locations and make sure it's always up-to-date.

A Dfs Primer
Dfs is a core part of Win2K, but the name is misleading. Dfs isn't a true file system like NTFS or FAT, nor is it a means of organizing the way you store data on a magnetic or optical storage device. Rather, Dfs is a mechanism for organizing the way you present shared data to users, and (optionally) keeping replicated copies in multiple locations.

In a nutshell, Dfs lets you build virtual file shares on your network and point those shares to physical file shares, possibly across multiple servers. End users can connect to these virtual file shares as if they were connecting to physical file shares. When users connect to these virtual file shares, Dfs directs them to a copy of the data that's available in their location or to any one of several replicated copies available on the network.

The plumbing behind this magic is known as the File Replication Service (FRS). The FRS is built into Win2K and doesn't require any setup (Dfs is the only component that I discuss that you must configure). Let's look at a sample Dfs configuration suitable for disaster-recovery purposes.

   Previous  [1]  2  3  4  Next 


Top Viewed ArticlesView all articles
Command Prompt Tricks

One reader shares his tip for setting up the command prompt to reflect a remote path. ...

2009 Windows IT Pro Editors' Best and Community Choice Awards

Picking a favorite product from an impressive crowd of competitive offerings is never an easy task, and such was the case with our Editors' Best and Community Choice awards this year. ...

WinInfo Short Takes: Week of November 23, 2009

An often irreverent look at some of the week's other news, including some post-PDC some soul searching, a Google Chrome OS announcement and a Microsoft response, Windows 7 off to a supposedly strong start, the Jonas Brothers and Xbox 360, and so much more ...


Related Events Backup – The Backbone of Your Business

Disk-to-Disk Grows Up

Effectively Shrinking Your Backup Window – with CA ARCserve Backup Data De-duplication and the Riverbed Steelhead Appliance

Check out our list of Free Email Newsletters!

Windows OSs eBooks Understanding and Leveraging Code Signing Technologies

A Guide to Windows Certification and Public Keys

SQL Server Administration for Oracle DBAs

Related Windows OSs Resources Introducing Left-Brain.com, the online IT bookstore
Looking for books, CDs, toolkits, eBooks? Prime your mind at Left-Brain.com

Discover Windows IT Pro eLearning Series!
Clear & detailed technical information and helpful how-to's, all in our trademark no-nonsense format


Windows IT Pro Home Register FAQ for Windows WinInfo News
Europe Edition About Us Contact Us/Customer Service Media Kit Affiliates / Licensing  
SQL Server Magazine Office & SharePoint Pro DevProConnections IT Job Hound
Left-Brain.com Technology Resource Directory asp.netPRO ITTV Windows SuperSite 
 
 Windows IT Pro is a Division of Penton Media Inc.
 © 2009 Penton Media, Inc. Terms of Use | Privacy Statement