Installing a DPM agent on a guest OS virtual server

There are a few things to consider when deciding how to protect data in a virtual environment.

John Savill

November 20, 2008

1 Min Read
ITPro Today logo in a gray background | ITPro Today

Q: Should I install a System Center Data Protection Manager (DPM) 2007 agent on my guest OS virtual server?

A: It depends on what you want to protect. If you install a DPM agent on the virtual server’s main DPM 2007 administrator console, you can protect only virtual machines (VMs)—you can’t protect any applications run by the VMs. If you deploy the agent in the guest OS, you can protect everything the VM runs. For example, if the VM runs Microsoft SQL Server, you can protect the databases and capture the transaction log data.

There are also licensing considerations. If you deploy the DPM agent in the guest OSs, they each need an agent license.

This doesn’t mean that protection at the virtual-server level is inconsistent. Virtual Server 2005 R2 SP1 has a recursive Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) writer, so when DPM 2007 asks the virtual server for a snapshot, the request is passed to all VM VSS writers and you get a consistent data backup.

—John Savill

About the Author

Sign up for the ITPro Today newsletter
Stay on top of the IT universe with commentary, news analysis, how-to's, and tips delivered to your inbox daily.

You May Also Like