The step-by-step can be a bit tedious, especially the first time you configuring it, so I’ve decided to put a guide about how to do it, with a luxury of details, comments, etc. How to create an Immutable Backup Repository using Cloudian and Veeam Backup and Replication v11 – video Finally, and completely optional, we can even have a third copy of the data into Public Cloud, but probably not ideal for those use cases to keep data on-prem, or cost-prediction desire.We can configure our Scale-Out Backup Repositories to send COPY, and even MOVE as well, and keep the immutability on these Buckets. ![]() Now, the new layer, an additional copy, our air-gap, the Cloudian Object Storage.Veeam Backup and Replication require Storage to save the Backup, I do 100% recommend Linux Repositories with Immutability, but it does support as well any Windows Server with ReFS, NFS, iSCSI, etc.Then, we introduce the Backup layer, Veeam Backup and Replication, that of course, allows us to trigger Instant Recovery, Automated Backup, etc.We have at the left our Primary Storage, and the Production workloads there, physical, virtual, Workstations, etc.The main use-case of this usually is to have an air-gap different from traditional storage, the diagram could look something like this: Quick Diagram about Where Cloudian FitsĪs said before, there are Companies that due to regulations, or even just to keep costs under control, these Customers prefer Object Storage on-prem. Let’s take a quick look at where Cloudian fits anyways. Today, we will take a step further, and configure those buckets with object lock, into Veeam Backup and Replication v11. Greetings everyone, on the previous blog post, I’ve covered in detail the whole deployment of Cloudian, using the trial version which gives us a great OVA to deploy. Part XXXII (Monitoring Veeam ONE – experimental).Part XXVII (Monitoring ReFS and XFS (block-cloning and reflink).Part XXVI (Monitoring Veeam Backup for Nutanix).Part XXV (Monitoring Power Consumption).Part XXIV (Monitoring Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure).Part XXIII (Monitoring WordPress with Jetpack RESTful API). ![]()
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