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Chapter 9. backup and recovery, 1 snapshot – fast point-in-time copies – PLANET NAS-7410 User Manual

Page 83

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4-Bay SATA NAS RAID Server with iSCSI

NAS-7410

83

Chapter 9. Backup and Recovery

9.1 Snapshot – Fast Point-In-Time copies

Snapshots are read-only copies of file-systems at a specific point in time. Snapshot distinguishes
itself in its speed. Creating a snapshot is not involved with copying user data, thus usually taking
less than a second.

The concept of snapshot is very different from backups. Data are not copied to any media during
backup. Instead, it just informs the NAS that all the data blocks in use should be preserved, not
being overwritten. That is why it can be so fast. The “copy” occurs during everyday file access.
When a file is modified after a snapshot is created, its original data blocks are protected from being
overwritten. The new updates are written to a new location. The file-system maintains records and
pointers to keep track of the snapshot data and file changes.

Snapshot management

To manage snapshots, please open the administration page.

Enter the BackupSnapshotManage page and select a volume.

Viewing Snapshot Information

On the page shows the snapshots existing on the volume and their information. Snapshot Used
Space
indicates the disk space used by snapshot data. In the table – List of Snapshots, Space
to Free
indicates the disk space which will be freed if a snapshot is deleted. Activity indicates
whether the snapshot is being deleted or rolled back.

Configuring snapshot settings

Item

Description

Show the .snap

folder

With the .snap folders enabled, end-users can access snapshot data
without intervention of MIS people, retrieving previous versions of files
from the .snap folders.
Administrators can choose to show the .snap folders under the root of a
volume, or under all folders.

Name the .snap
folder as ~snap

Using the AFP protocol, the folders with names beginning with dot (.) will
be hidden and not able to be accessed by Macintosh clients. To make
the .snap folders visible, the administrators can choose to show
the .snap folders as ~snap instead so that the folders can be accessed
by Macintosh clients.

Delete

snapshots if free

space is low

If enabled, it will automatically delete the oldest snapshots to free more
disk space when the free space is lower than the specified percentage.

Snapshot Policy

They specify how many hourly, daily, weekly and monthly snapshots to
keep, respectively. If the limit is exceeded, the oldest snapshot of the
same type will be deleted. If not specified, it will keep the snapshots until
being manually deleted.

Creating snapshots

There are several ways to create snapshots. One is to create a snapshot manually by selecting a
volume and clicking the Create Snapshot button on the SnapshotManage page. It will create a
snapshot with a name like manual-20041010.190000, which indicates a snapshot created
manually at 19:00 on October 10, 2004. Another method is to set schedules to create snapshots
regularly. Moreover, the NAS server will create snapshots automatically when doing backup,
SmartSync and CD/DVD-burning tasks. Then it reads in source data from the automatically