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Double-Take puts disaster recovery in the cloud

Author: Daniel Robinson
Date: Mon, 22 Feb 2010 17:25:00 GMT

Service lets customers failover critical workloads to a cloud-based replica

Double-Take Software has introduced a disaster recovery service that lets organisations switch mission-critical workloads to a cloud-based backup while their production system is repaired.

The new offering can dramatically reduce downtime, yet is cost-effective enough even for smaller companies, the firm claimed.

Available immediately, Double-Take Cloud uses the firm’s system state replication engine to maintain a cloud-based duplicate of key workloads using Amazon’s EC2 platform.

In the event of failure, customers can run their recovered workload from the cloud while at the same time restoring the original workload to their production system.

Double-Take chief executive Dean Goodermote claimed that the offer is unique in providing a backup replica using the public cloud rather than storing it on a customer’s own infrastructure.

"A customer runs Double-Take on their production server, and this is continuously replicated to Amazon’s cloud. When or if there is a fail, a virtual machine is spun up and you have an image of it as it was right before it went down," he said.

"You can carry on operating from this while you start to download the image back to your production system."

Using Amazon’s EC2 means that customers pay only for the capacity they need, and can avoid the cost having to build their own disaster recovery site. Capacity can also be scaled up easily if a customer’s infrastructure expands.

The service is designed for Windows, protecting applications and services such as Microsoft’s Exchange, SharePoint and SQL Server that run on top of Windows Servers.

Double-Take Cloud can be configured to make the switchover automatically in the event of a failure, but most IT departments opt for manual switchover, according to Goodermote.

"Most of those guys want to have control and know that they are switching over," he said.

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