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Showing posts with label Recovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recovery. Show all posts

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Polish enterprises embrace cloud and virtual disaster recovery


Disaster recovery and business continuity have evolved quickly in recent years. It’s not so long since disaster recovery simply meant taking tapes off-site, or even to a different part of the same site. But now the options for disaster recovery – and the ease and speed of restoration in case of unforeseen events – have been boosted by virtualised environments, high-speed WAN connections and the cloud. Meanwhile, customers’ attitudes to disaster recovery have also evolved. Once disaster recovery was seen as an obligation, enforced by law or regulation. Now, effective business continuity and disaster recovery are increasingly recognised as essential – and that businesses that don’t have such plans and systems in place usually go out of business when disaster strikes. Some customers in Poland stick to the old methods, with the cheapest possible solutions carried out in-house. Organisations carry out risk assessments and often conclude that, while business continuity is a necessity, they don’t want to spend money on current technology that may cost a bit more, but is much more effective. “We find organisations that can estimate the risk, but still choose the cheapest methods and do not want to pay for more advanced options,” says Jaroslaw Smulski, research manager at IDC Poland. Accelerating data recovery A lot of companies store their key data on tapes and move them to vaults at another location. This protects data and enables the business to recover, but it’s an approach measured in timescales of several days and only protects the data that is moved before disaster strikes. It’s still a common way of doing things in Poland, but such procedures are increasingly obsolete in the age of high-speed data networks, server virtualisation and the cloud. Often nowadays those kind of approaches and timescales are simply not adequate, says Artur Matzka, director of infrastructure development at IT services provider Integrated Solutions. “The cost of data loss or lack of access to information can be dangerous, and not only in financial terms. For companies operating in a really competitive market, even 10 days without access to key data could cause an outflow of customers and the death of the business,” he says. “The consequences of a disaster can be data inaccessibility and, in extreme cases, even its destruction,” says Tadeusz Czichon, CEO at ATM, a Polish hosting and networks provider. “Such a situation leads to paralysis in decision-making processes and results in financial loss and corrupting the company's image.” So, for an enterprise that wants more than to just take tapes off-site, there is a need for some kind of secondary disaster recovery site. Traditionally, that meant creating a physical mirror of the primary site, complete with a full software duplicate of the operating environment. “Before the virtualisation era, such an investment was expensive. Mirroring the physical environments in separate locations could only be afforded by the biggest and richest companies,” says Zbigniew Szostakiewicz, service and datacentre development team manager at IT service provider, CK Zeto. “But now almost every company can invest in a backup datacentre, because buying a single virtual server is no longer an expense a company cannot afford.” Case study: Volkswagen Bank Poland Volkswagen Bank Poland initiated a business continuity project so it could move beyond operations at only one location. “We needed to ensure the ability to continue our business, but in another safe location,” says Kai Fischer, IT director at Volkswagen Bank Poland, which has its headquarters in Warsaw. “Design assumptions are translated into numbers: The maximum time to restore the process (RTO – Recovery Time Objective) and the maximum potential data loss (RPO – Recovery Point Objective). These values enable us to define resource requirements and IT strategy with regard to the disaster recovery plan.” Volkswagen Bank Poland turned to IBM with a proposal of co-operation. In response, IBM helped to translate the concept into concrete technological tools. It provided hardware and software, ensured optimal configuration and carried out testing. The project took 14 months, including preparatory work. “The main challenge for us was to co-ordinate the project and configure different technologies,” says Pawel Bondar, business development executive, IBM Polska. “The IT environment at Volkswagen Bank Poland is a complex heterogeneous structure. There are IBM technologies which co-operate with products from suppliers such as Cisco, Adva and CheckPoint. Integrating everything to achieve the RTO and RPO required knowledge, experience and a lot of work.” Fischer says: “The plan took into account the creation of a spare contact centre with office space and the equipment needed to perform normal bank tasks.” Virtualisation dramatically simplifies the deployment of disaster recovery services and significantly increases their efficiency Krzysztof Waszkiewicz, VMware Virtualisation and cloud change the game IBM has provided server, network and storage hardware in its datacentre at Blonie, 30km west of Warsaw, and has assured the configuration of the whole system in data replication, switch failover and security. According to the disaster recovery plan, key business processes as well as systems supporting them must be restarted within one hour of disaster. “Currently, failover between the primary and backup datacentres takes a short time. From the user’s perspective, there are no changes. In practice, it is impossible to notice the difference. Volkswagen Bank Poland can deliver its services even if the building and the infrastructure located there are not fit for use,” says Fischer. The growth of virtualisation and cloud services have completely changed the disaster recovery market. “Virtualisation dramatically simplifies the deployment of disaster recovery services and significantly increases their efficiency,” says VMware business solutions architect, Krzysztof Waszkiewicz. “Virtualisation simplifies disaster recovery by abstracting the physical hardware, data, operating system and applications to encapsulate them within a virtual machine. “Virtualisation adds a key element, critical to modern disaster recovery: Unified management and automation. Typically, companies must manage multiple steps in disaster recovery, because it is required for disparate physical components and layers of the infrastructure. Modern disaster recovery focuses on protecting and restoring virtual machines.” Disaster-recovery-as-a-service (DRaaS) is when data is replicated to hosted servers, physical or virtual, on a provider’s infrastructure. “Data written to the primary datacentre is confirmed only after acknowledgement is received that it has been written to the backup datacentre. It means that, in case of emergency or disaster, the backup datacentre can immediately restore the system and start service provision, with zero lost data,” says Artur Matzka. Case study: Lublin Coal Bogdanka Lublin Coal Bogdanka (pictured above) is one of the largest coal mines in Poland and supplies mainly industrial customers. The dynamic growth of the company in recent years has caused the rapid development of its IT infrastructure. In 2013 Bogdanka’s board of directors created a business strategy with one of its priorities the creation of a modern IT infrastructure to support the business and eliminate defects in data management. “One of our priorities became ensuring high availability of data and its protection,” says Zbigniew Łoś, IT manager at LC Bogdanka. “The company’s IT administrators were challenged to choose an IT architecture that avoids large expenditures but enables high availability for our IT systems.” The company built out its own environment using virtualisation. Now the entire IT architecture comprises three elements. The first is a cluster of VMware virtual servers. The second is the storage cluster built on DataCore SANsymphony storage software. The third is a cluster of servers for backing up the whole IT environment. Implementing the virtual environment was like an operation on a living organism Zbigniew Łoś, LC Bogdanka Consolidating the IT infrastructure "Virtualisation has enabled us to spread our systems over two locations. We doubled all critical components and systems to ensure continuity of operations," says Daniel Szymanski, IT principal administrator at Bogdanka. “Implementing the virtual environment was like an operation on a living organism. We did not even have a test environment. However, we did it successfully without disturbing the work of the mine,” says Zbigniew Łoś. But operating all IT systems in one location does not guarantee sufficient security, and data loss is a real threat. So, Bogdanka looked to DRaaS, provided by an external provider, while the mine’s existing systems were enhanced with new technologies. “It was necessary to add VMware vSphere Site Recovery Manager software, which allowed us to manage virtual environments in the different locations,” says Łoś. Virtualising the servers and storage has allowed the company to consolidate its IT infrastructure and re-use its existing resources to create a failover site. “DRaaS tools eliminate the complexity of our traditional runbooks and automatically orchestrate all the steps needed to ensure the desired level of protection. Manual runbooks are no longer good enough to manage recovery plans for applications and expanding infrastructure,” says Szymanski. Email Alerts Register now to receive ComputerWeekly.com IT-related news, guides and more, delivered to your inbox. By submitting you agree to receive email from TechTarget and its partners. If you reside outside of the United States, you consent to having your personal data transferred to and processed in the United States. Privacy Read More Related content from ComputerWeekly.com RELATED CONTENT FROM THE TECHTARGET NETWORK

How the Data Show the Economic Recovery Is Still Young


Not much changed in the revised third-quarter gross domestic product data: Growth was a bit faster than the first estimate indicated, largely because inventory investment slowed less rapidly. But the preliminary estimates of third-quarter corporate profits, also released Tuesday, were more interesting. It’s a common historical pattern that capital incomes (profits and net interest payments, mostly) fall sharply as a share of corporate-sector income during recessions but rise rapidly in the early phase of recoveries. As recoveries mature and labor markets tighten and wages rise, the capital share of corporate-sector income then tends to fall. And the share of corporate-sector income claimed by labor compensation (wages and salaries) follows a mirror opposite pattern: rising sharply during recessions, falling in early recoveries, and then rising again in mature stages of the business cycle. The behavior of these capital and labor income shares is a pretty good way to assess whether a recovery is “young.” And Tuesday’s data highlight that the recovery from the Great Recession, despite having gone on for more than five years, is still very young. In making this “young recovery” argument, a colleague and I noted (in this paper) that the first-quarter data on corporate profits should be largely discounted, as the sharp drop in profits in those months was driven by a tax change (the end of accelerated depreciation at the beginning of the year). Goldman Sachs research notes also indicated that according to capital income share measures the recovery was still young and that it was too early to declare that this share had peaked in 2013. Tuesday’s data confirm this: The share of corporate-sector income accruing to capital-owners reached 27.3%–the highest since the recovery from the Great Recession began and the highest since 1950. Even stripping out the recent abnormally high profits earned by the Federal Reserve leaves the profit share just 0.1% below its post-Great Recession high point, and it still remains higher than any pre-Great Recession level since 1950.

Recovery of explosives, encounter ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit in Assam


Guwahati: An ULFA (I) militant was killed in a police encounter and huge cache of explosives was recovered in two separate incidents, ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's two-day visit to Assam from November 29. Acting on a tip-off, police recovered four rocket launchers, a carbine, 40 live cartridges and five explosives from a field in Gorsinga No 2 Tokajan village of Tinsukia district this morning, Additional Superintendent of Police Sauravjyoti Saikia said. In another major haul, three cartons containing 30 packets of gelatin sticks, 1,800 packets of detonators and 12 packets of cordex wire hidden inside gunny bags were recovered during routine checking of vehicles on the Gauahati-Shillong Road in Dispur police station area in the early hours. The vehicle was coming from Meghalaya and its driver and the lone passenger were detained, Guwahati City Senior Superintendent of Police A P Tiwari said. Meanwhile, an ULFA(I) cadre was killed in an encounter with police while three others managed to escape at Betonisuk in Dibrugarh district, police said. ULFA(I) militants struck back killing an employee of a petrol pump and critically injuring two others at Khelmati in North Lakhimpur district, Superintendent of Police P K Bhuyan said. Search operations have been intensified following intelligence inputs on Wednesday that two youths, possibly belonging to the ULFA (Independent), were planning to keep explosives in city buses and that ULFA(I) may indulge in violence ahead of the prime minister's visit, police officials said.