-----Original Message-----
From: owner-toasters@mathworks.com on behalf of Leeds, Daniel
Sent: Thu 11/10/2005 9:21 AM
To: Brian Parent; toasters@mathworks.com
Cc:
Subject: RE: snapmirroring over WANyeah but that initial transfer can be fun if you are mirroring a couple terabyte volumes or if the application is generating alot of changes. a DS3 wan link would be no problem but they may need to rate limit snapmirror on much smaller wan links.
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-toasters@mathworks.com on behalf of Brian Parent
Sent: Thu 11/10/2005 9:08 AM
To: toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: Re: snapmirroring over WAN
If I recall correctly, snapmirror uses very little bandwidth,
and shouldn't be a problem on any modern network. It only copies
the blocks which were changed, rather than entire files.
Re:
> Date: Thu, 10 Nov 2005 08:49:38 -0800
> From: Lori Barfield <itdirector@gmail.com>
> To: toasters@mathworks.com
> Subject: snapmirroring over WAN
>
> for offsite backups, we hope to snapmirror our new fas 3020 on a
> regular schedule via vpn over the internet to an older filer at our colo.
> obviously, intermittent latency is a concern since we don't have a
> dedicated link. and so is the potential for overpowering the modest
> firewall/network hardware currently in place. does anyone have a
> suggestion for how we might throttle the snapmirrors to improve
> reliability in the transmission?
>
> and how are you folks handling encryption for remote mirroring?
> we have a small pix, sonicwall, or cisco to choose from...i'm
> guessing we may have to try all three but i hope to pick the one
> most likely to succeed the first time.
>
>
> ...lori