This discussion has been locked.
You can no longer post new replies to this discussion. If you have a question you can start a new discussion

Best way to get quickly access about 300gb of data? mount drag/drop too slow

I've setup a cross country replication (from West coast core to East coast core) of 4 machines.  (physical machines NOT virtual).  I'm testing Virtual Standby as a method of booting up one of the machines so I can get to the Exchange EDB's on cutover night.  There is about 300gb between 2 EDBs.  I'll need "quick" access to that data so I can import the mailboxes into my East enviroment.  I can't wait 5-6 hours to mount the drive and copy the data out.  

Theory is, I boot up the Virtual Standby, and can much more quickly get to the data.  BUT I had a new theory; why can't I mount the VMDK as a drive on another VM.  DONE.  I tried that and Windows didn't like the drive.  "Invalid" or something like that. 

So, my question; what are the methods to quickly get to backed up data? (when it's about 300+GB)  simple file restores are quick, 300gb is NOT quick when using traditional mount and drag/drop.

 

thanks!

Parents
  • thanks for the very detailed response, I really appreciate it.

    So, it turns out I need about 300gb from a 900gb drive. so the restore the whole volume method takes about as long as just mounting and dragging the data I need out. none of this restore has to be live.. all users will be offline.

    **I'm exploring mounting the Virtual Standby vmdk as an additional HD on another VM, should that work right??, but so far the disk shows up as Not Initialized.** the VS VM is from a bare metal system with ZERO drivers for vmware, it won't boot. I'm sure that's another topic.

    My current Repository storage subsystem in a 4 drive sata(maybe sas) 7200rpm raid6. So, pretty weak. I should increase rpm and disk count. but $$.
    My current drag and drop rate of a Mount is from 5/MBs to 15/MBs. does that sound about right? If I delete all recovery points do you think this might speed up? is there a way to "optimize" the repository?
    core stats: 12gb ram allocated to the Rapid Recovery core, about 3gb being consumed by the core processes... low cpu load during drag and drop. I feel like I'm maxing out MB/s given my low disk/rpm count. correct?

    lot's of questions, but good info for most users from this thread. thanks again
Reply
  • thanks for the very detailed response, I really appreciate it.

    So, it turns out I need about 300gb from a 900gb drive. so the restore the whole volume method takes about as long as just mounting and dragging the data I need out. none of this restore has to be live.. all users will be offline.

    **I'm exploring mounting the Virtual Standby vmdk as an additional HD on another VM, should that work right??, but so far the disk shows up as Not Initialized.** the VS VM is from a bare metal system with ZERO drivers for vmware, it won't boot. I'm sure that's another topic.

    My current Repository storage subsystem in a 4 drive sata(maybe sas) 7200rpm raid6. So, pretty weak. I should increase rpm and disk count. but $$.
    My current drag and drop rate of a Mount is from 5/MBs to 15/MBs. does that sound about right? If I delete all recovery points do you think this might speed up? is there a way to "optimize" the repository?
    core stats: 12gb ram allocated to the Rapid Recovery core, about 3gb being consumed by the core processes... low cpu load during drag and drop. I feel like I'm maxing out MB/s given my low disk/rpm count. correct?

    lot's of questions, but good info for most users from this thread. thanks again
Children
No Data