Tech Magazine Loses June Issue, No Backup 245
Gareth writes "Business 2.0, a magazine published by Time, has been warning their readers against the hazards of not taking backups of computer files. So much so that in an article published by them in 2003, they 'likened backups to flossing — everyone knows it's important, but few devote enough thought or energy to it.' Last week, Business 2.0 got caught forgetting to floss as the magazine's editorial system crashed, wiping out all the work that had been done for its June issue. The backup server failed to back up."
After the swearing stopped. (Score:5, Funny)
Then the swearing started again.
Re: (Score:2)
this happened to me too! (Score:2)
That's what I said when Byte went out of business and instead of refunding my subscription they sent me "Business 2.0". Multiple letters latter, they stopped sending the piece of crap magizine, but I never got my refund. It was only like $10, but it was mine.
OMG, this happened to me too! Instead of Business 2.0, they switched me to PC Magazine, one of the biggest and most annoying MS shills. Not only had I lost a cherished subscription, but it had been replaced with the very antithesis of what I had subscribed to. And!, I had a three year paid subscription.... I tried unsuccessfully to get a refund, and eventually just resorted to tossing the new PC Magazine issue when it arrived. What a ripoff!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You could still find great conceptual articles, decent coverage of non-PC platforms, lots of stuff about internet and such and was a much better read than the average computer magazine.
I felt the loss, deeply.
Re:After the swearing stopped. (Score:5, Insightful)
honestly, they CANT have competent IT. The FIRST thing you do in the morning is check the backups.
I have a HP sdat jukebox here and I STILL check the backup logs to make sure the backup and verify succeeded last night. if they dont I mirror the important files right away and then run a manual backup to not lose the last 24 hours of backup.
I hope that Business 2.0 learned that paying top $$$ for competent IT is a good idea and they should run a article about it.
Re: (Score:2)
What does it say about a tech magazine that can't even handle the basics of technology?
Re:After the swearing stopped. (Score:5, Informative)
The problem is that tech magazines are in the advertising business, not the tech business. I write content for the Web site of a tech radio show, and it's just a bunch of us in cubicles looking stuff up on Google. No tech people involved.
Re:After the swearing stopped. (Score:5, Insightful)
There is not a week going by without me getting an issue from one of out regular analysts with question about how the customer can salvage their data because they don't have a backup. My standard answer is that we may be able to save some data, but it's going to cost a lot of $$$. And I also say: "When you don't have a backup, you have either deemed that you can easily recreate the data or that they are not important for the company"
And these are not mom&pop companies but big multi million/billion dollar companies.
Re:After the swearing stopped. (Score:4, Insightful)
HP DAT? You'd better do more than check the logs. A test restore (if your users don't already test for you by deleting files) at least a few times a week might save your butt one day. Actually DAT or not, test restores are a must. Logs lie.
Re: (Score:2)
If the logs are lying to you, then that's a prime indication that you're using the wrong software.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
I would imagine they had a "complete backup solution". So simple anyone who could drive a mouse could do backups.
Then they found someone who could drive a mouse. And that someone could click on "do backup". And the magically complete fully integrated all comprehensive patented backup solution provided a nice friendly reassuring pop-up window that said something like "Your computer is protected".
Instead of browsing the log files, or even scripting the browsing of the log files. The mouse driver went back
Re: (Score:2)
It came with no recovery features. It would 'back things up', but there was no actual process for recovering said data.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
First, no one really understands best practices for backup, and a lot of systems that are backed up "successfully" can't be restored anyway (in fact, most commonly this is Microsoft Exchange, the most important system in most companies!). Second, Tape sucks! You MUST have Disk-to-disk backups to have any true recoverability in today's world. Third, check you logs EVERY day, there's no excuse! Fixing a
Re: (Score:2)
Sure, if you have the capacity.
And don't reply "disks are cheap", because there's more to a disk subsystem than buying a few 500GB drives from NewEgg.
Paging Jerry Seinfeld (Score:5, Funny)
IT: We have your backup, we just can't restore it.
Jerry: But the backup keeps the data here, that's why you have the backup!
IT: I think I know why we have backups.
Jerry: I don't think you do. You see, you know how to MAKE the backup, you just don't know how to RESTORE the backup. And that's really the most important part of the backup: the restoring. Anybody can just make them.
Re: (Score:2)
With this much free advertising (Score:5, Funny)
We've all been there. Don't be too pious, here. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
It happens, it will continue to happen, not much else to say really.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe not so bad as losing your entire monthly product, per se... but it does happen
If it happens to me then I'm looking for a new job. Honestly, losing 24hrs worth of data is the worst that should happen. Well, OK, maybe 48hrs if you happen to be unlucky enough to have a crash just before the backup after a failed backup (if you see what I mean) And if the data is that important then a suitable RAIDed disk array will sort things out. (we use mirrored RAID5 arrays in separate data centres but I work for a bank)
No, I'm not being pious, I would guess that the loss in revenue from a lost ed
Re: (Score:2)
Re:We've all been there. Don't be too pious, here. (Score:4, Informative)
The topic here is backups, not RAID.
Say it again with me everyone "RAID IS NOT A BACKUP"
RAID increases-uptime by decreasing/eliminating the downtimes needed to do restores when an individual drive bites it. It is *NOT* a backup.
RAID does not save you if someone accidentally deletes a needed file.
RAID does not save you if your machine gets nailed by a virus/upatched-exploit.
RAID does not save you if the drive power supply fries taking out attached hardware.
RAID does not save you if a bugler steals your machine.
RAID IS NOT A BACKUP.
Re: (Score:2)
RAID at geographically separate data centers with journaling(? you know, where every change is recorded like a CVS ?) file systems, however, are a backup. That's what we use, then take the second system to a disk to disk snapshot, then snapshot to tape, thus the two primary systems are always on-line.
-nB
Re:We've all been there. Don't be too pious, here. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
This is not only a Dilbertism, but it's the sad/funny/haha-only-serious official backup/disaster recovery plan at work. We've gone for more than 3 years without backups and management is giddy with all of the perceived cost savings. It's amazing how many hardware failures you can pretend didn't h
Nelson Muntz (Score:5, Funny)
Ha-ha!
err... (Score:3, Insightful)
*coughs
TFA:
sorry, their MAIN problem is not in any way a dysfunctional backup system. ever heard of verifying backuped data?
Re:err... (Score:5, Informative)
honestly though, talking management into backup solutions is like pulling teeth, then they blame you for not having it in place when the failure does happen.
Last place I worked at we were using 4 year old DLT tapes because management was too stupid and cheap to buy new ones.
"we will buy new when those fail" is what we were told.
Re:err... (Score:4, Informative)
/grabs hammer...
*bang* *bang* *bang*
Oops, it looks like a couple of those DLT drives are running into problems. We need replacements. Did you see what happened to Business 2.0?
Re: (Score:2)
That's like playing Russian Roulette with your data. Once a tape gets that old you might as well not bother backing up to it at all.
Re:err... (Score:4, Insightful)
"we will buy new when those fail" is what we were told
"Your successor will buy new when these fail." is the correct response to this.
Re:err... (Score:5, Funny)
Errr...uhh....umm...'verifying'? Uh, I'll be right back!
Re:err... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sure they've heard of it, in a conversation that went something like this:
IT Guy: We need a system for verifying our backups.
Suit: How come? Don't the backups work?
IT Guy: We need to be sure that if there is a failure, the backups will be ok.
Suit: But they're just copies, aren't they? I copy files all the time and it never goes wrong.
IT Guy: This is a little more complicated than that.
Suit: How hard can it be?
IT Guy: Well, I was thinking we might need to hire a part-timer just to take care of backups and verification.
Suit: But we've never had a failure! Sounds like empire building to me. I know that's what I'd be doing in your position. Nice try. We'll keep the backup system the way it is, thanks.
IT Guy: But..!
Suit: Moving on to the next item on the agenda... ok, Executive Bonuses!
Re: (Score:2)
"Yes, we guarantee 100% that your data is being backed up. Look at all those tapes going offsite. You need a recovery? I dunno. We never tested that."
jfs
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
What POS backup software are you using? And you say it cost 200K???
They probably still have most of it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They probably still have most of it (Score:4, Funny)
I think we can all relax and rest assured that the June issue of Business 2.0 will have all its intended advertising.
HAHAHA (Score:2, Funny)
Rag (Score:2, Funny)
That's OK, nobody reads Business 2.0 anyway.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, certainly not anymore. :-)
Re:Rag (Score:5, Insightful)
I wish. I wish people didn't read Time, either (the publisher), but they do. Time's writing style is the dumbed down, try-to-be-hip crap I wouldn't have gotten away with in sixth grade. Seriously. Like I said before [slashdot.org], to understand why its writing is like fingernails on a blackboard for me, consider how the same information would be conveyed by two sources:
8-year-old: "6 divided by 3 is 2."
Time magazine: "Okay, imagine you've got a half-dozen widgets, churned out of the ol' Widget Factory on Fifth and Main. Now, say you've gotta divvy 'em up into little chunklets -- a doable three, let's say -- and each chunklet has the same number that math professor Gregory Beckens at Overinflated Ego University calls a 'quotient'. The so-called 'quotient' in this case? Dos."
Based on how that post got modded, I'm not alone in this.
What was the nature of the crash? (Score:2, Insightful)
But whatever the case - there is a useful lesson here. Make sure your backups are backing something up.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
usually that is the case but it has happened when one of my backup failed one night and someone needed a file restores from the previous day, if that company never checked it's backup or never configure some kind of noticaition upon failiure or success then they are very lame
The laws of the universe (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
This happens all too often, it's funny because it was Business 2.0, but would we all be laughing if it was the main Ubuntu repository (multi-site distributions are conveniently ignored for the purpose of this post)? Or [insert OS/code here]? I know I'd be pretty pissed if this happened to my kit.
Let this be a lesson to you all... the laws of the universe DO hold true... and every man or woman can be struck down and proven wrong.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
High profile SNAFUs (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know about you people, but after reading this (and giving it the "haha" tag) I'm going home and catching up on a couple of backups I've been slacking off on for a while.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:High profile SNAFUs (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You pony up the $300,000 (Large Systems cost a heck of a lot more than Windows servers) for a QA system and I'd leap at the chance to test the backups and procedures.
Re:Didn't you read the article? (Score:4, Funny)
Pr0n still on the way right? (Score:2, Funny)
-m
Word Police (Score:3, Informative)
How does this actually happen? (Score:5, Interesting)
There aren't a lot of ways for a machine to "crash" that loses all its data. Even a lightning-fried hard drive can have its platters removed by a data recovery lab and many files can be pulled off. A mechanical failure doesn't grind the platters into sand. As a network server it really should have a RAID too. So how exactly can "the server crash" so spectacularly that the RAID, backups, and widely available data recovery services all fail? Did the building blow up?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Backups and fault-tolerant hardware cost money. You can talk about potential losses and risks until you're blue in the face, until it *actually* costs the company money, nobody will listen. What's going to happen here more than likely is the person who asked for the RAID will ge
Re:How does this actually happen? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
When you're under a deadline gun, sometimes re-creation is faster than:
- logging a job ticket w/ the help desk
- waiting for it to work its way up the queue
- waiting for IT to figure out which file to restore
- waiting for the file to be restored
William
(who keeps Quark set to save 10 revisions of each file that he's working on to a backup partition (this can be a couple of GBs of data for some projects) and at a previous job where he was administering an NT Server had every
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps, although my experience is that IT people are incredibly bad at framing business cases in terms more compelling than my daughter's request for a mobile phone for her birthday: a few vague reasons, followed by a sulk when asked for specifics.
I keep 20TB on RAID5, and replicate it daily to a RAID5 array that has no components or software above the spindle level in common (Solaris/EMC and Pillar Data). The data we really care
Re: (Score:2)
If the IT staff is unable to present a cogent business case, I suggest their position has been deliberately isolated from the Business in general. It is not that hard.
My experience says it was often historical, political, or organizationally ill-placed middle management that would not deal with a unique proposal, formal or otherwise, and could not (or
Re: (Score:2)
As an IT person myself, I'm probably guilty of having done this in the past. The thing which trained me to think properly about what I was going to say was a former manager. And it's really not hard.
What is the business benefit for spending money in the way you propose?
That is ultimately what any manager means when they sa
RAID =! BACKUP (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How does this actually happen? (Score:5, Informative)
Doesn't it? [ufl.edu]
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Me: You're home early; not enough work to do?
Roommate: No, the server burned out
Me: Oh, that's no big deal; you just wait for them to get replacement parts and then you get back to it
Roommate: No, seriously, it's burned out. The air conditioning unit failed, the entire server room heated up to the point of spontaneous combustion and the entire server room caught fire
Lesson learned, keep your backups somewhere far, far away from the servers.
Re: (Score:2)
From what I've seen, almost no places verify backups. Sometimes, when adding a server to a backup plan the first time, there is one test restore, but never again. So, the backups were probably bad without their knowledge. This can happen with old media, an old drive with a head out of alignment, storage issues, poor selection of what files to backup, or other such reasons.
At this exact moment across the world (Score:3, Funny)
Wrong problem (Score:5, Insightful)
the problem was, as always, not the backup. I've rarely seen problems resulting from the backup process. The troublesome process is the restore. Or as a friend put it once:
Nobody wants backups, what everybody wants is a restore.
In my twenty years of IT i've seen several companies making backups like a well oiled machine. The backup process was well documented and everyone was trained to a degree, they could do it with their eyes closed. But everything fell apart in the critical moment, because all they had planned was making the backup. Nobody ever imagined or tried a restore on the grand scale. So they ended up with a big stack of tapes with unuseable data.
Backup is the mean, not the goal.
Regards, Martin
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Wrong problem (Score:5, Interesting)
I heard a story about a LAN admin who was doing backups every night. The tapes would go into a safe, then would go offsite, then be used again.
Everything worked well(?) until they needed to do a restore. The tape in the safe was corrupt. The tape at the offsite storage was corrupt. No tape was good.
It seems that the LAN admin made tea every morning. The electric kettle sat on top of the steel safe.
So the backup tape was placed into the safe, then the kettle was started, magnetizing the safe, and erasing the tape.
Not ONCE did anyone try to do a test restore to prove the system.
Re:Wrong problem (Score:4, Informative)
Nice story, though. Reminds me of the sysadmin in my first company who automatically back-upped our server every day. Only problem was: the proces put a copy of the backup on a drive that was being back-upped. You can imagine what happened after a few weeks (it failed, disk full). He only noticed a few months later when we asked him to restore some files.
Re: (Score:2)
Right now, I just backup to a local separate array and a remote array. When something went bad, I did lose a week's worth of my work because I didn't back up often enough, but that's far better than losing everything.
Re: (Score:2)
That is why backups must be created in an open format.
I don't care what the front end is so much as I care if I can restore onto any system with a minimum of fuss. And as ugly and whatever else you want to call tar, it's format is beautiful and simple, accessible with a wide variety of different front ends, and you have to look really hard to find a system that will not be able to read the format. Even WinZip can read and pull files out of the tar format. I prefer not to have a proprietary back up program
My Motto (Score:2)
My Motto for Backups is: "I have never had a backup that failed to loose information." or "All my backups have failed to restore in the critical moment."
After a few backup/disaster/restore cycles, I learned my lesson. A backup is only good if you check that you can actually restore it, and are able to restore it easily with freshly purchased computer equipment. Always assume that when the thieves/flood/disaster comes, you are left without any equipment whatsoever.
When disaster occurs, you need a credit
Re:Wrong problem (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes and No:
Re: (Score:2)
Data compatibility between models of Smart Array Controllers means customers can easily upgrade to future Smart Array, SAS products to get higher performance, capacity and availability. Unlike competitive products, successive generations of Smart Array products understand the data format of other Smart Array controllers, providing investment protection for your HP storage solution.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If by mirroring you mean periodic mirroring to another drive which lives in the same machine or in another machine on the same. that can be a good soloution but the limited number of drives in a machine means you can only back up the most recent s
RAID1? (Score:2)
Backup alone is not enough, in some cases there needs to be multiple levels of protection.
Coming soon ... (Score:2, Funny)
Better article (Score:3, Informative)
Practicing what they preach (Score:2, Funny)
Backups are usually no problems. (Score:2)
There are invariably 2 possible situations that can happen when a restore is in order:
Either the backups simply don't work 'cause they've been using the same media for 5+ years and nobody ever bothered checking the error messages (or because there were no errors produced in the first place 'cause the backup was done without a verify).
Or the last person who knew how to do a restore with those tapes was fired a year ago and the others just followed the backup proce
Link to original article (Score:3, Informative)
always test you (Score:2)
Having a backup you can'r recover from is useless.
I wonder if they run DR on a regular basis. (Score:3, Informative)
For one of our server apps we actually have two laptops configured with all of the required software and we do restore production data from backups on a regular basis as we use that for our system testing on projects. This happens several times a year so we know that the backup and restore procedures truly work. It is also very cool walking in to the client site, plug in the laptop and show them that in an emergency they have a working machine very quickly. Not as fast as a server, but, it gets them a working machine until the replacement server arrives.
Check out their website: It's 'Dumbtastic!' (Score:2, Funny)
101 Dumbest Moments in Business [cnn.com]
I think they might want to revise their list. I'm sure I would like to :)
I don't trust any single backup mechanism. (Score:2)
At work I tend to back the UNIX stuff I'm working on to my PC, my mainframe files to my PC, and my important PC stuff to either the UNIX box or to CD-R. The UNIX stuff is also in CVS.
I've invested a year or more in some of this software, and I don't want to lose it even if the entire data center fails.
We can't backup, its too expensive. (Score:5, Insightful)
Read All About It: Special July Issue (Score:2)
From first hand experience.
Backup stories (Score:3, Informative)
Story #1. Fortune 500 company. Lost some source. Big brouhaha. Edict went out: all files are to be backed up to diskettes and the diskettes sent to offsite storage which the management had contracted for with an outside firm. It took a lot of extra time, but people did it. After about two years, an important server with source code for a major product crashed. Developers tried to get the source back from offsite storage. It turns out that nobody at any point had taken any responsibility for cataloging, identifying, or indexing the diskettes. The diskettes might as well have not been labelled: the developers couldn't identify what diskettes were needed, and the offsite storage firm couldn't have retrieved them if they had.
Story #2. Medium-size scientific research organization with a Digital 11/70 running RSTS. Enlightened manager pays operator overtime pay to stay late three nights a week and do backups. Backups are performed with the "verify" option enabled. Tapes are placed in a fire-resistant tape vault every night. But no actual restores are performed. Database (Oracle, in the days when Oracle Corporation's name was still Relational Systems, Inc). is corrupted. A restore is attempted. It transpires that this version of Oracle uses the maximum record length for its files, which happens to be 65,536 bytes, and the Digital-supplied backup-restore utility... you guessed it... has a bug with records of that length. Yep. Writes 0 bytes, verifies 0 bytes.
Story #3. I worked at a place that recommended that individual developers perform individual backups using a cartridge tape system and some standard PC software. I set it up. There were two "verify" options. One used the cartridge system's read-after-write feature to read every block as it was written. The second performed the entire backup, then verified the entire backup in a second pass. Took twice as long, of course. I opted for the second method. The problem was: more than half the time, the verify would report one or two errors. And for some reason, probably efficiency of use of the tape, it didn't write file by file, it munged them into blocks. And it didn't even report the names of the files affected. Just "2 errors were encountered" or something like that. So, when that happened, I didn't see that a rational person had any alterative except to perform the whole backup again. And more than half the time, it would report a couple of errors the second time, and...
When I asked colleagues about this, it turned out that I was the only one ever to have picked the second verify option. Everyone else had picked the read-after-write-verify option, "because it was faster."
And told me not to fuss because "if it was only a couple of errors, the chances they were on files you needed to recover was too small to worry about."
Re:Why isn't this a default (Score:4, Informative)
Wait for OS X 10.5 and "Time Machine".
Re: (Score:2)
You shouldn't have to be hand-held for every little thing, you should have a competent IT staff.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Ha ha!