SOURCE: Marathon Technologies
November 03, 2008 08:30 ET
Marathon Technologies Introduces Five Steps to Simpler Microsoft® Exchange High Availability in Physical and Virtual Environments
5 Steps Stem From Industry Best Practices to Improve Exchange Availability Through Planned and Unplanned Downtime
LITTLETON, MA--(Marketwire - November 3, 2008) - Marathon Technologies, the
only provider of fault-tolerant, high availability software for physical and virtual servers,
today announced a series of best practices for protecting servers running
Microsoft® Exchange, the industry's leading platform for e-mail,
calendaring and unified messaging, in physical and virtual environments.
Businesses of all sizes leverage Microsoft Exchange as a core component to
their business processes and communication strategies, making it imperative
that it remain up and running. Marathon's five steps to simpler Exchange
high availability are outlined below to help companies ensure that their
Exchange platforms remain robust, reliable and continuously available. This
will also be the focal point of a live webinar on
November 11th hosted by Citrix and Marathon.
Step # 1 - Protect Against Server Failures with Quality Hardware and
Component Redundancy
Server core components include power supplies, fans, memory, CPUs and main
logic boards. Purchasing robust, name brand servers, performing recommended
preventative maintenance, and monitoring server errors for signs of future
problems, can all help reduce the chances of Exchange downtime due to
catastrophic server failure.
Downtime caused by server component failures can be significantly reduced
by adding redundancy at the component level. Examples are: redundant power
and cooling, ECC memory, with the ability to correct single-bit memory
errors, and combining Ethernet cards with RAID.
Step # 2 - Get Rid of Storage Failures with Storage Device Redundancy and
RAID
Storage protection relies on device redundancy combined with RAID storage
algorithms to protect data access and data integrity from hardware
failures. There are distinct issues for both local disk storage and for
shared, network storage. For local storage, it is quite easy to add extra
disks configured with RAID protection. A second disk controller is also
required if you want to protect against controller failures.
Access to shared storage relies on either a fibre channel or Ethernet
storage network. To assure uninterrupted access to shared storage, these
networks must be designed to eliminate all single points of failure. This
requires redundancy of network paths, network switches, and network
connections to each storage array.
Step # 3 - Prevent Network Failures with Redundant Network Paths, Switches
and Routers
The network infrastructure itself must be fault-tolerant, consisting of
redundant network paths, switches, routers and other network elements.
Server connections can also be duplicated to eliminate failovers caused by
the failure of a single server or network component. Take care to ensure
that the physical network hardware does not share common components. For
example, dual-ported network cards share common hardware logic, and a
single card failure can disable both ports. Full redundancy requires either
two separate adapters or the combination of a built-in network port along
with a separate network adapter.
Step # 4 - Forget Site Failures with Data Replication to another Site
Site failures can range from an air conditioning failure or a leaking roof
that affects a single building, a power failure that affects a limited
local area, or a major hurricane that affects a large geographic area. Site
disruptions can last anywhere from a few hours to days or even weeks.
There are two methods for dealing with site disasters. One method is to
tightly couple redundant servers across high speed/low latency links, to
provide zero data-loss and zero downtime. The other method is to loosely
couple redundant servers over medium speed/higher latency/greater distance
lines, to provide a disaster recovery (DR) capability where a remote server
can be restarted with a copy of the application database, which only misses
the last few updates. In the latter case, asynchronous data replication is
used to keep a backup copy of the data.
Data replication is combined with error detection and failover tools to
help get a disaster recovery site up and running in minutes or hours,
rather than days.
Step # 5 - Consider Virtualizing Exchange for Better High Availability
The latest server virtualization technologies, while not required for
protecting Exchange, do offer some unique benefits that can make Exchange
protection both easier and more effective. Virtualization makes it very
easy to set up evaluation test and development environments without the
need for additional, dedicated hardware. Virtualization also allows
resources to be adjusted dynamically to accommodate growth or peak loads.
For more on how the latest virtualization technologies makes it easier for
IT to keep users continuously connected to Microsoft Exchange, register online
for the webinar, Virtualizing Exchange - The Cold, Hard Numbers on Why
Citrix XenServer + everRun VM is the Best Platform, hosted by Marathon
Technologies and Citrix Systems on November 11.
About Marathon Technologies
With more than 2000 global customers, Marathon is the world's first and
only provider of fault-tolerant, automated, high availability and disaster
recovery software for physical and virtual servers. Marathon's everRun®
software prevents outages and data loss -- without IT intervention.
Organizations using everRun achieve continuous availability, 100% data
protection, and rapid disaster recovery -- all through "one-click"
operation. In the past year, the company has been awarded eleven major
industry accolades including the "Best of VMworld 2007 - New Technology" award for bringing
fault-tolerant, high availability to virtual servers. CIO.com named
Marathon Technologies one of "10 Virtualization Vendors to Watch in 2008." The company was
also recognized as a 2008 Computerworld Honors Program Laureate and named a winner
in eWEEK's Eighth Annual
Excellence Awards Program. For more information visit
www.marathontechnologies.com.