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5 Hot Enterprise Backup and Recovery Vendors

  • The backup and recovery market has become a crowded space, with hundreds of vendors vying for market share. At the higher end of the market, the enterprise data center segment, the bar is higher and the result is that just a handful of software vendors command most of the sales.

    With most tape drive vendors exiting the market, support of other backup media has become essential to maintaining a vendor’s business. Most initially pushed for hard disk-based backup, but the latest trend is to offer cloud storage solutions as well.

    In what had become a somewhat stale and undifferentiated market, both HDD/SSD and cloud opened up new opportunities and something of a “space race” has occurred in the industry over the last few years. Backup and recovery vendors have added compression and deduplication, which can radically reduce the size of a typical backup image. This is important when data is moved to a remote storage site via WAN links, since these have lagged well behind compute horsepower and LAN bandwidth.

    Many backup and recovery packages create a backup gateway that stores the backup at LAN speeds and then send it off across the WAN at a more leisurely pace. The benefit is a reduced backup window, though with some risk of data loss if the backup is corrupted prior to completing the move to the remote site.

    Today, the target of choice for backup data is the cloud. It’s secure, very scalable and new low-traffic services cost very little to rent. The backup gateway encrypts all data so backups are hack-proof, though not necessarily deletion-proof, which requires action by the cloud service provider to provide storage types with only a well-protected manual deletion path.

    Continuous data protection (CDP) is one of the hot backup services today; it manifests as either server-side snapshots or high-frequency polling by backup software for changed objects. Using these approaches reduces the data loss window, though it can hurt performance. SSDs help solve most of the performance issues, but daytime WAN traffic will increase.

    Noting that access to backup storage tends to occur within just a few hours of the backup itself, some of the newcomers to the space offer a caching function, where data already moved to the remote site is held in the backup gateway for a couple of days. This speeds recovery of cached files.

    With applications such as Salesforce, MS Office and Exchange common in the enterprise, optimizations capabilities to enable backup without disrupting operations are common features among the main players in datacenter backup. Many vendors also now offer backup for virtual machines and their contents and container backup will no doubt become common as well.

    There is a school of thought that says that continuous snapshots, with replicas stored in the cloud, solve both backup and disaster recovery requirements, but there are issues with this concept of perpetual storage, not least of which is that a hacker could delete both primary data and the backups. Not paying your cloud invoice on time can do that, too! The idea is attractive, however, since license fees for software mostly disappear.

    Readers are likely familiar with "old-guard" established backup and recovery vendors such as Veritas, Commvault, Dell EMC, and IBM. In this slideshow, we look at five of up-and-coming vendors, in alphabetical order, that are driving innovation in enterprise backup and recovery.

    (Image: deepadesigns/Shutterstock)

  • Actifio

    @actifio

    A relative newcomer to the backup space, Actifio has developed a good reputation, especially with virtual systems and large applications. Actifio pioneered copy-data management, reducing the number of data copies for test/dev, analytics, and disaster recovery to a single copy, according to Gartner, which cited the vendor as a visionary in its 2017 Magic Quadrant for data center backup and recovery vendors. This area is getting a lot of attention and one reason Actifio now markets itself as enterprise data-as-a-service providing, among other things, hybrid cloud data mobility and intelligent search, both hot areas today.

  • Cloudberry Lab

    @cloudberrylab

    Cloudberry’s products are offered both as software and as an AWS-based managed service. Designed from the start to be cloud-centric, the products offer excellent cloud support. A notable feature is OpenStack support, which addresses the growing hybrid cloud market. Some of Cloudberry's benefits include ease of deployment and API integration with customer applications.

    (Image: IK3/Pixabay)

  • Druva

    @druvainc

    Druva has a well-featured suite of software solutions covering cloud operations and end-point backup, as well as virtual and physical server backup and archiving.  The product is fresh with current code and this has resulted in an enterprise customer base of more than 4,000 users. Deduplication is one of its strong features.

  • Rubrik

    @rubrikInc

    Only a couple of years old, this is the newbie of the market leaders in the enterprise backup space, winning a spot in Gartner's Magic Quadrant as a visionary. Rubrik has an excellent strategy going forward, which has resulted in speedy expansion. The company offers either a hardware appliance or a subscription-based software solution that runs in both the cloud and local COTS servers. Rubrik’s approach uses extended metadata and modern backup and recovery approaches. It is still an evolving product, so it lacks  features needed for a complete solution, but for many users it is a viable alternative.

  • Veeam

    @veeam

    Veeam is a top backup supplier for VMware and Hyper-V environments. It has expanded its portfolio to include server backup for Linux and Windows and for apps such as Exchange and Oracle. According to Gartner, the company has reached No. 4 in revenue in the backup space and continues to grow rapidly. Keep an eye out  for the freebies Veeam often offers.