Data Center Backup Solutions

TrustRadius Top Rated for 2024

Top Rated Products

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1
Veeam Data Platform

Veeam’s® premier product, Veeam Backup & Replication™, delivers availability for all cloud, virtual, Kubernetes and physical workloads. Through a management console, the software provides backup, archival, recovery and replication capabilities.

2
Rubrik

Rubrik is cloud data management and enterprise backup software provided by Palo Alto-based Rubrik, Inc. It is a software platform that provides backup, instant recovery, archival, search, analytics, compliance, and copy data management in one secure fabric across data centers and…

All Products

(51-75 of 77)

52
UrBackup
0 reviews

53
PureSync
0 reviews

55
Undelete
0 reviews

57
Syncrify
0 reviews

59
Atempo Live Navigator (LINA)

Atempo's Live Navigator (LINA) is suitable for the data protection needs of mid-sized to petabyte scale businesses and large distributed enterprises.

60
R1Soft Server Back Manager (SBM)

R1Soft Server Backup Manager (SBM) gives service providers a server-friendly solution that eliminates the pains of running traditional backups. Its Continuous Data Protection™ technology enables users to run backups as frequently as every 15 minutes, with no impact on server performance.…

61
Atempo Time Navigator (TINA)

Atempo Time Navigator (TINA) is a data backup solution capturing providing restoration of data capabilities. Atempo was acquired by ASG and spun off again as an independent company.

63
Storware Backup and Recovery

Storware is an enterprise backup solution for Open Virtual Machine environments such as KVM, Redhat Virtualization/Ovirt, Citrix Xen Server, Xen, Nutanix, Oracle VM, and Proxmox. It enables VM-level data protection and can function as a standalone solution or integrate with enterprise…

64
Catalogic DPX
0 reviews

Catalogic DPX (formerly Backup Express or BEX) is a data backup and recovery option from Catalogic Software headquartered in New Jersey.

65
Flexential BaaS

The Flexential Backup-as-a-Service (BaaS) solution is designed to meet stringent security and compliance requirements, and on-demand availability is guaranteed. Flexential BaaS gives users: Increased data security and compliance. Encrypted in flight and at rest to protect data…

66
Vinchin Backup & Recovery

Vinchin Backup & Recovery is a comprehensive data protection solution for enterprise-level users. It provides backup and disaster recovery solutions with one unified platform, supported environment including VMware, Hyper-V, XenServer, XCP-ng, oVirt, RHV, Oracle OLVM, Sangfor…

67
Zmanda Enterprise Backup

Zmanda Enterprise Edition Single management consoleCentralized backup of heterogeneous systems and applicationsBackup to disk, tape, or Amazon S3Protect Linux, Solaris, Windows, Mac OS X, VMware, and Hyper-VNo proprietary data formatsLowest cost of ownershipZmanda Enterprise was…

68
Percona Backup for MongoDB

Percona Backup for MongoDB is a distributed, low-impact solution for achieving consistent backups of MongoDB sharded clusters and replica sets. Percona Backup for MongoDB is an alternative for users who want a fully supported community backup tool, but do not want to pay for MongoDB…

69
rediBackup
0 reviews

rediBackup is a cloud-based backup service to help ensure that businesses can return to normal quickly if necessary, from rediCloud, a division of New York based ATSG.

71
CBMR
0 reviews

CBMR is presented by the vendor as a standalone, easy-to-use backup and recovery solution that provides full protection for servers, data files and databases. They state it will provides reliable and speedy BMR, enabling users to restore critical servers from scratch within minutes.…

72
Fortra Robot Save

Robot Save from Fortra (formerly HelpSystems) is Data Backup Management Software for IBM i that allows users to centralize and automate IBM i backups and disaster recovery.

73
NovaStor DataCenter

NovaStor DataCenter offers network backup and recovery software for securing physical and virtual machines across distributed locations with media management for disk, tape backup and cloud, plus data migration, all on the same interface with centralized management. NovaStor DataCenter…

74
Rocket Mainstar

Rocket® Mainstar® systems optimization and data management solutions let users operate IBM® zSystems/OS®, Db2®, and IMS™ systems more efficiently, with the goal of maximizing the processing power of users mainframes in support of corporate web, mobile, and cloud initiatives.

75
StarWind Backup Appliance

StarWind Backup Appliance (BA) is designed to help organizations eliminate the dependency of their production environment on the backup processes. Powered by NVMe storage, it removes the common backup repository performance bottleneck and the need to plan and fit into a specific…

Videos for Data Center Backup Solutions

Disaster Recovery vs. Backup: What's the difference?
09:32
In this lightboard video, Bradley Knapp with IBM Cloud, answers these questions and many more as he breaks down the differences and similarities between disaster recovery and backup, as well as explains how both of these solutions can help you solve the needs for you and your business.

Data Center Backup Solutions TrustMap

TrustMaps are two-dimensional charts that compare products based on trScore and research frequency by prospective buyers. Products must have 10 or more ratings to appear on this TrustMap.

Learn More About Data Center Backup Solutions

What are Data Center Backup Solutions?

Data center backup and recovery software is designed to provide business continuity and prevent critical data loss, even while data centers grow more complex. While backup solutions provide a disaster recovery solution, they may also be used for workload migration. Additionally, some data center backup solutions are designed to meet data archiving and storage needs in compliance-governed industries. Modern software-defined data center backup solutions provide replication and backup of data in a vendor and hardware agnostic fashion.

Small businesses may rely on backup solutions that come with the server operating system, or built-in server backup. However, this approach creates vulnerabilities due to a lack of transparency. It also means the company may have multiple non-integrated data protection solutions. This is not viable for larger enterprises where transparency and policy-based governance rules exist. And for virtualization heavy environments, virtualization-aware data backup solutions are key.

The modern data center needs data backup solutions that cover:

  • Physical and virtual servers
  • Databases
  • Enterprise applications (i.e., SaaS products)
  • Mobile endpoints
  • Public infrastructure platforms (like AWS)

Most modern data center backup solutions will optionally back data up to the cloud. However, many backup solutions provide target storage options. This includes on-premises options like a NAS appliance or tape drive for long-term storage. Many data center backup solutions are "agentless"—meaning they have no process running in the background on every machine. Yet still, data is backed up automatically according to administrator-defined rules and schedule.

Data Center Backup Features & Capabilities

Data center backup and recovery solutions provide the following feature sets:

  • Combine backup & replication, recovery, and storage in a single service
  • Machine / platform agnostic backup restorations
  • Centralized web-based management console
  • Deduplication, changed block only backup, low bandwidth consumption
  • File archival, long-term storage optimized backup
  • Near continuous data protection (e.g., high interval) & restore availability
  • Support for remote offices, remote employees (e.g., laptops, VDI)
  • Test and validation of recovery plans, recovery assurance
  • Verification of backups, ransomware / virus detection
  • Encryption and deduplication of transmitted data
  • Protection & restore of running applications, open files, etc.
  • Cloud-to-cloud backup for SaaS services (e.g., Exchange, Microsoft Office 365)
  • Image-level virtual machine (VM) backup
  • Multiple data restore locations (e.g., tape appliance, cloud)
  • Copy data management with search & analytics
  • Optional unlimited cloud storage for backups, managed cloud-based storage
  • Integrated deduplication and file compression
  • Regular snapshots to ensure Recovery Point Objective (RPO) is met
  • Replacement appliances in case of total disaster

Data Center Backup Comparison

When evaluating data center backup software, carefully take into account the following considerations:

1. Do you need converged secondary storage? Converged secondary storage is a combination of many data protection technologies including backup, recovery, archiving, replication, deduplication, compression and encryption. The idea of a turnkey packaged solution is very attractive to some who have little interest in selecting a server and the associated software components, and just want something that is scalable and secure and optimized out of the gate. On the other hand, some customers are likely to have appropriate infrastructure in the data center and would prefer a software-only solution that they can install themselves. One of the big advantages of this converged storage approach is that it allows buyers to think beyond backup, and to think in terms of a broader data protection management strategy.

2. What about copy data management? Copy data management is a solution to the problem of proliferating copies of data across the enterprise. The amount of data collected and processed by enterprises has grown exponentially over the last few years, and if multiple copies of the same data are being stored, this can use up available storage space and degrade performance. The key insight behind the development of copy data management is that there should be a centralized, policy-driven way to manage the creation and use of copies in an automated and efficient manner. Copy data management capabilities have now become pervasive in backup offerings, and most enterprise vendors include some form of copy data management as standard with their products.

3. Is cloud backup for you? Cloud storage is not yet the de facto storage option for most organizations despite advantages like elasticity which allows for capacity growth with unlimited storage. However, a large majority of organizations have a hybrid strategy allowing them to utilize both on-premises and cloud backup strategies, sometimes dictated by the kind of data being backed up. For example, mission critical data might be backed up to disk in the data center, while data that is less likely to be needed in the short term is stored in the cloud as a form or archiving.

Start a Data Center Backup software comparison

Pricing Information

Costs of data backup solutions vary widely but directly correlate with the quantity of data backed up as the foremost cost determinant. However, infrastructural complexity (primarily virtualization) also provides a source of cost increase. Many vendors of data center backup software do provide very limited “community” editions of their backup solutions at no cost. These free backup solutions are available perpetually and provide basic file protection and sometimes finite cloud storage for backup data. Paid plans are generally available on a per server or per socket basis. For various degrees of feature breadth cost will generally range from $450 to $1200 per server.

While all products feature basic data center backup, advanced backup solutions include workload automation, role-based access, self-service recovery, and other features. Alternatively, protection plans can be purchased per workstation. This may present a viable, low cost (e.g., approximately $100 per workstation per year) backup solution for small businesses. Also, leading providers of data center backup and disaster recovery solutions may provide wholly managed recovery services, or data backup hardware and appliances as well.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is backup and recovery?

Backup is a simple but fundamental operation that creates a copy of the data, as an insurance policy against the occurrence some kind of disaster. Data backup is important not only for protecting an organization’s crucial data, but also for helping maintain SLAs and ensure business continuity. Backups can be used to recover data after data loss due to deletion or corruption, or to recover data from a previous point in time.

Recovery, which is interchangeably used with disaster recovery, is a comprehensive strategy designed to allow an organization to maintain or quickly resume mission-critical operations following a natural disaster or other unplanned data loss events. While backup is the process of storing a copy of data, recovery is the process of obtaining that data when something goes wrong.

A combination of backup and replication is often the best strategy for disaster recovery. In this scenario, both production data and local backup data are replicated to a remote site in real time. In its most simple iteration, what makes data recovery possible is hosting a file and the information about that file in different locations. In this way, the backup data with long retention periods are made available for restores and is highly available because it’s replicated to the disaster recovery site.


What is converged secondary storage?

Converged secondary storage is a combination of many data protection technologies including backup, recovery, archival, replication, deduplication, compression, and encryption. The purpose of converged secondary storage is to consolidate data protection processes. Typical use cases are combining data backup with archival, or with recovery.

These systems are similar to hyper-converged platforms and are often sold as hardware/software combinations that integrate computing, storage, or virtualization on a single box. The idea of a turnkey packaged solution is attractive to those with little interest in selecting a server and the associated software components, and just want something scalable, secure, and optimized out of the gate.

What is copy data management?

Copy data management is a solution to proliferating copies of data across the enterprise. This is a common problem. The amount of data collected and processed by enterprises has grown exponentially over the last few years. If multiple copies of the same data are stored, this uses up available space and degrades performance. By some estimates, over half of the data store by an enterprise is copy data.

What is cloud storage? What is hybrid storage?

Cloud storage is not yet the de fact storage option for most organizations. This is despite advantages like elasticity which allows for capacity growth with unlimited storage. Due to rapidly declining costs, backup storage in the cloud is growing quickly.

However, a majority of organizations have a hybrid strategy. This allows both on-premise and cloud backup strategies, typically dictated by the kind of data being backed up. For example, mission-critical data might be backed up to disk in the data center, while data less likely to be needed in the short term is stored in the cloud as a form of archiving.