Overview
What is Veritas Backup Exec?
Veritas Backup Exec is a backup and disaster recovery solution. It works in virtual, physical, and multi-cloud environments and integrates with several third-party software releases and applications.
Veritas backup exec 20.6 my saving experience.
Flat pricing (no data tiers) and probably the most intuitive backup solution out there.
Veritas Backup Exec is smart, flexible and secure backup.
Veritas Backup Exec - AVOID! It was great (and about the only choice) 2 decades ago, but it has fallen by the wayside.
Veritas Backup Exec solutions versus cost and ease of use.
Good backup software, some learning curve
Yesterday's Backup Solution Today
BackupExec for enterprise? Why Not?
A Stable, User-Friendly Disaster Recovery Solution
Backup Exec: Solid Performer from version to version
Veritas Backup Exec review!
Backup Exec - Market Leader Lost its Way?
BackupExec
Backup Exec is our single source for data backup.
Awards
Products that are considered exceptional by their customers based on a variety of criteria win TrustRadius awards. Learn more about the types of TrustRadius awards to make the best purchase decision. More about TrustRadius Awards
Popular Features
- Management dashboard (20)9.090%
- Incremental backup identification (22)8.080%
- Recovery verification (20)8.080%
- Multiple backup destinations (21)6.565%
Reviewer Pros & Cons
Pricing
Veritas Backup Exec
Contact sales team
Entry-level set up fee?
- No setup fee
Offerings
- Free Trial
- Free/Freemium Version
- Premium Consulting/Integration Services
Product Demos
[testpassport.de] Anteil der Demo VCS-318 Administration of Veritas Backup Exec 2014
Veritas Backup Exec - Part 5 Demo Restore Backup User pada Active Directory
16 Instant Recovery Exchange for Example Demo
Usage Insights - Backup Exec Demo
Veritas Backup Exec Webinar
Veritas Backup Exec 16 and Microsoft Azure
Features
Data Center Backup
Data center backup tools send data to a secure storage location after encryption and de-duplication
- 10Universal recovery(18) Ratings
Universal recovery is the ability to restore backups to any machine regardless of the platform
- 7.5Instant recovery(17) Ratings
Instant recovery is the ability to restore operations very rapidly
- 8Recovery verification(20) Ratings
Recovery verification is automated testing and verification of backups
- 10Business application protection(17) Ratings
Protection of all applications running in the data center
- 6.5Multiple backup destinations(21) Ratings
Multiple backup destinations is the ability to backup data to more than one location
- 8Incremental backup identification(22) Ratings
Incremental backup identification is the ability to identify incremental changes since last backup
- 10Backup to the cloud(13) Ratings
Ability to store and back up data to the cloud
- 7.5Deduplication and file compression(16) Ratings
Integrated deduplication and compression capabilities
- 8.5Snapshots(16) Ratings
Ability to take regular snapshots to ensure that Recovery Point Objective (RPO) is met
- 9Flexible deployment(17) Ratings
Deployment on any servers with full support for all applications being used
- 9Management dashboard(20) Ratings
Web-based dashboard allowing configuration and monitoring of all backups
- 8.5Platform support(19) Ratings
Product supports multiple operating systems and applications
- 8.5Retention options(18) Ratings
Provision of best-practice and customizable retention policies with reporting
- 10Encryption(12) Ratings
Data encryption to ensure that data is safe while being backed-up
Product Details
- About
- Competitors
- Tech Details
- FAQs
What is Veritas Backup Exec?
Veritas Backup Exec
Veritas Backup Exec is a backup and disaster recovery solution. It works in
virtual, physical, and multi-cloud environments and integrates with several
third-party software releases and applications.
Backup Exec is designed for small to medium-sized business, not enterprise, for streamlining data backup and recovery into one product and interface. It also does not support sending data streams from multiple parallel backup jobs to a single tape drive, called multiplexing, however, Veritas’s other backup product, NetBackup, has this capability.
Key Features
- Virtual, physical and multi-cloud environment support
- Full integration with Azure Site Recovery for data and application availability with minimal RTO and RPO
- Integration with most popular third-party software releases, including Microsoft® Server, Microsoft® Hyper-V and VMware® vSphere®
- Backup Exec can be seamlessly scaled to the cloud with a range of certified, integrated cloud connectors for various cloud environments, including AWS S3, Microsoft® Azure and Google Cloud Platform Storage
- Users can locate and visualize their data estate to support General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and other privacy regulations, using Veritas Information Map™
- End-to-end deduplication performance to on-premise storage, as well as to public and hybrid cloud
Veritas Backup Exec Competitors
Veritas Backup Exec Technical Details
Deployment Types | Software as a Service (SaaS), Cloud, or Web-Based |
---|---|
Operating Systems | Unspecified |
Mobile Application | No |
Frequently Asked Questions
Comparisons
Compare with
Reviews and Ratings
(160)Attribute Ratings
Reviews
(1-12 of 12)Classic Backup Software without bigger flaws
Based on this we have an easy and fast recovery from disk, if a colleague accidentally deleted his files (again) and a disaster recovery from tape. Veritas Backup Exec makes a pretty good job in this scenario and works well. It passes every test till now and every recovery of the encrypted tapes are working without data loss.
- Backup to disk
- Backup to tape
- Fast recovery from disk
- Reliability
- The design
- The User interface
- Files are sometimes hard to find
- Endpoint Protection (Clients)
Therefore the scenarios are totally typical. Every environment who has the need to backup their data (in other words: every environment) has the right scenario for such a software.
Flat pricing (no data tiers) and probably the most intuitive backup solution out there.
- Easy to setup storage platforms
- Easy to see to which tape sets are in cold storage, associate tapes with backup sets
- Agents are easy to deploy across windows and Linux servers
- Initial setup of backup configuration is not suited towards big data. I wish there was a selection that asks: how much data is within scope for initial, daily, weekly, then it would automatically adjust the backup parameters including timeout windows.
Veritas Backup Exec is smart, flexible and secure backup.
- Accurate and seamless integration with VMware.
- Possibility to replicate to the cloud.
- When necessary, restoration to a specific point is quick and safe.
- Clean and friendly interface.
- Great Alerts and personalized reports.
- Updates happen frequently but are not so easy to perform.
- Providing more training for beginners.
- Backup Exec does do an excellent job of backing up all data on both Netware (which is no longer a pressing issue) and Windows based machines.
- As long as you are licensed correctly Backup Exec does a good job of backing up SQL instances, but the key is you must be properly licensed.
- Restoring files back to the original server and format is done fairly easy with Backup Exec. It is actually easier than Unitrends which requires a slightly different and less logical method.
- Backup Exec is painful regarding licensing their products and solutions especially if you are in a scattered environment with many physical servers to protect. Then through in SQL backup solutions and depending on who your sales rep is you may have a nightmare to manage. We actually purchased the product through Dell when we bought the servers, then upon renewal we used a different vendor. Backup Exec does not track these keys well when different vendors are in the mix. We lost our licenses on several servers for weeks until the issue was finally resolved. I do believe if you buy and manage your Backup Exec licenses from one vendor you will not have these types of issues. You just need to be aware that there is potential for confusion.
- Backup Exec does have some issues when servers go offline and you no longer want to have a backup instance for that server. You need to be very thorough and follow the procedures exactly or you will have backups that simply don't go away. You can remove them but it is not logical or intuitive. Simply removing the backup process and the host being backed up does not remove the stored backups.
- This should no longer be a major issue for people archiving and using tapes, but, tape backups have a nasty habit of not being consistent or reliable unless you manually do a verify of the tape after each and every backup. We have experienced several archival restores fail when attempting to do a restore. Restores from digital hard drive format does have far fewer issues.
Good backup software, some learning curve
- Backs up data
- Backs up data to usb drives
- Backups data to MS Cloud
- User Interface
- Job creation
- Alert management
Yesterday's Backup Solution Today
- It works sometimes.
- Can't intuitively chain backup jobs.
- Forever incremental backup feature is limited and basically useless, feels tacked on.
- Storage based compression and de-duplication are awkward to manage compared to other backup solutions.
- Convoluted licensing model.
- Poor fault tolerance.
Any kind of serious enterprise is going to want to avoid this software like the plague. Deploying this across multiple sites requires fully licensed servers at each site and a second management server at the primary site. Beyond that, running multiple backup jobs can be problematic as, per Veritas support, there is no native way to chain separate backup jobs.
BackupExec for enterprise? Why Not?
- Version updates are fairly frequent and provide new features often.
- Easy to use interface.
- Speed of access to backup sets is pretty slow, could use a boost.
Backup Exec: Solid Performer from version to version
- The license/agent deployment feature in Backup Exec facilitates effective and speedy population within your data center.
- Veritas Backup Exec's feature rich job creation is intuitive and simplifies backup strategies.
- Customizable views in the Administrator console allow you to view your backup environment to maximize visibility.
- Could provide better license management from an inventory perspective. How many licenses do I have?.. etc.
- When Backup Exec backs up itself it should not select iSCSI backup targets by default. The result is recursive data backup ending in the loss of storage capacity.
- I'm struggling to come up with another con.
Backup Exec - Latest thoughts from a longtime user
- Manage agent based backups - It is easy to schedule and monitor backups. Verifying backups is done for all jobs. Backup performance is excellent.
- Provide a wide ranging contingent of backup options - Despite providing a dizzying array of backup options, it is easy to schedule individual or recurring jobs.
- Integrates well with our Active Directory - Restoring even individual Active Directory objects is possible.
- Backup Exec was recently spun off from Symantec and is now back under the Veritas umbrella. Since the transition I have noted an increased number of anomalous errors occurring during backups. I think most of these have to do with an increased level of security built into the product, but attention needs to be paid by Veritas to eliminate these problems.
- Backup Exec has always had an annoying habit of making it very difficult to cancel a job in progress. This should be an easy thing to fix. For some reason they are unwilling or unable to correct the problem, making it frustrating for the user.
- Veritas has a rather confusing licensing scheme and it seems to cover up what is an expensive product.
Backup Exec - affordable and useful for any amount of data
- Design jobs with unique schedules and times, with exceptions to avoid or run one-time jobs.
- Backup any type of database across Windows servers, including granular restoration of mailboxes or SQL databases.
- Customized retention of data to keep backup jobs depending on age or automatic overwrite of older data.
- Overwrite and retention does not always work as efficiently as it should, leading to manual deletion of older jobs on the media.
- Occasional glitches with backups to external disks, needing to recreate device folders and redirect jobs.
- Licensing is based on server and database count, no total data. If you have numerous servers and SQL databases and Exchange databases, you will have to buy licenses for each individual machine and instance of database.
- Physical server management
- Virtual server management
- Centralized management through a single interface
- Some paid agents
- Simple interface but needs a minimum of study about functionality before having full control
- The interface could be al litte bit more attractive
Backup Exec for Simple Environments Only
- Backup Exec has done a good job programing and managing the Physical Tape Libraries. This is always a tricky feature to provide great service on.
- Backup Exec continues to do a great job Backing Up and Restoring Simple File Server Shares and Directories. This is all I would recommend using Backup Exec to accomplish.
- Backup Exec needs to improve its Virtual /HyperVisor Backup Feature. We always had low success rates on the Virtual Server Backups and continual needed to troubleshoot the root causes.
- Backup Exec needs to get away from the AGENT based Backup Software. Modern Backup software utilizes VSS and APIs to leverage efficiency and not create additional load on the systems.
- Backup Exec needs to get better license management. It is always too confusing and difficult to upgrade your licenses or find details. Specifically they need to streamline their Var Re-sellers to not create a new customer account every time you order something new. The UI in the license portal has always been too complex or confusing.