Data backup failure: Top 5 causes and tips for prevention (original) (raw)

What can you do to prevent data backup failure? Learn how using the 3-2-1 rule, turning to cloud backup and following other practical steps can help protect your data.

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Published: 18 Jan 2023

Backups are central to any data protection strategy, and they are critical to any disaster recovery plan. Unfortunately, backup failure is all too common. The inability to restore part, or even all, of an existing backup can cripple a business, ruin its reputation and leave it vulnerable to regulatory violations. When you look at the reasons for failure, the same issues come up again and again.

Keep your organization's data safe by learning five common causes of backup failure and what steps you can take to prevent them.

1. Media failure

Most of today's backups go straight to some type of disk media. As a result, IT encounters fewer media failures than when tapes were the prevalent backup medium. However, media failure still ranks among the top reasons backups and restores fail.

How to prevent media failure

There are three proactive steps you should take to make sure media failure isn't an issue you face:

2. Human error

Software, applications and systems are all consistent in their processing. On the other hand, people can be inconsistent, unpredictable and prone to error. For example, deciding to store tapes somewhere other than in a recommended environment can be the root cause of media failure. Similarly, using overworked or low-quality disk storage as backup targets can leave backups incomplete and unreliable.

People are also responsible for defining the backups -- a common step where mistakes are made. Backups are only as valuable as the data that reside on them. If you don't select a complete data set or workload, the backup won't exist in the time of need. To that point, multi-tier, multiserver applications -- along with applications that have dependencies on other servers, systems and applications -- all need to be a part of a defined backup set. If all you're backing up is one server, you might be only backing up a part of the bigger picture. For example, a key enterprise application might depend on an SQL database operating elsewhere in the enterprise. If the backup only protects the application, but not the SQL application and its database, the backup might be worthless.

Third, simply defining a backup is no guarantee that the desired backup is completed successfully. Part of human error is the assumption that a backup cycle ensures a suitable backup product. It doesn't. Regardless of the backup media or target, a key aspect of any backup is proper validation and restoration testing. Validation ensures that all intended backup content was backed up successfully as expected. Testing ensures that the backup can be restored successfully. Restoration also provides regular practice for human training and emergency response confidence.

How to prevent human error

There are four recommendations in particular that can help prevent human failures:

3. Software updates

Operating systems and enterprise applications are designed for specific processes and are not necessarily great at working with backups. Some method of connecting to an application's data always exists -- for example, simply through a defined data set or via an API. But sometimes backup failures can be caused by incompatibilities between the backup software and new versions of applications, OS or application updates, new security policies or other technology elements.

How to prevent software issues

The bad news is you can't always know when an update will affect backups, but the good news is that you do control when updates and changes occur. Indeed, awareness is key in avoiding software-induced failures. Here are some specific tips:

Diagram showing prevention tips for different types of backup failure.

Backup failure prevention methods vary based on the potential issue at hand.

4. Cyber attacks

Backups have long been a critical component in dealing with cyber attacks. But in recent years, cybercriminals have figured out ways to locate and destroy backups. By matching a number of backup file types, backups are located and deleted as part of ransomware attacks, a category of cyber attacks that's on the rise.

Additionally, attackers are finding ways to use a mix of compromised credentials and backup system APIs to delete backups from within a backup system itself. The end result: The backup you thought you had is gone.

How to prevent cyber attacks

By understanding the methods used by hackers to search for and destroy your backups, you can take steps to avoid this failure:

5. Infrastructure failure

Every part of your infrastructure responsible for backups can fail. This includes tape drives, libraries, disk arrays, backup servers and the network. And, for those relying on cloud backups, having a high-performing, low-latency network connection is critical to the success of backups.

How to prevent infrastructure failure

Here are three tips to minimize the chances that your infrastructure will fail:

Preventing backup failure

Backups are just like any other part of the IT environment: They can work flawlessly, or they can be a major pain point. Placing an elevated level of importance on ensuring failure doesn't happen is critical to resuming operations when the business faces a loss of data, system, application or location. Using the tips mentioned in this article, you'll have more confidence in your ability to both back up and recover from backup failure.

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