Originally Posted by
AntonioRocco
Hi
Time Machine is not recommended as an option by Apple themselves for Servers configured as Advanced. Strictly speaking this only really applies if the Server is a fully fledged OD Master with all that that entails and/or a Mail Service. Backing up any 'live' database - LDAP and/or Mail - is going to be risky without first stopping the services. Not so much of a problem with Mail but with LDAP it could become a problem? Sometimes Kerberos stops and never starts again. Although there are ways around this that works sometimes. It's not so much the backup that's the problem. It's the restore - as already mentioned. What's the point of backing up if all you ever recover when disaster strikes is useless?
In an Active Directory environment I doubt this would be the case? Most mac servers in such environments probably don't have more than 2-4 services running in any case? What little there is of the LDAP database would only contain OD Groups nesting AD Users and/or Groups. Any Policies would be associated with those Groups as well as any OD Computer Groups. There are no passwords to worry about either and neither is there anything 'live'. MCX or mac-style Policies once applied are 'static' settings and only change when a policy is updated or added.
To be honest the only thing worth 'backing' up, apart from any pertinent data - which you should be backing up in any case - would be those OD Groups/Computer Lists. You don't need to do anything special in that case as you could simply export them from WorkGroup Manager. Archiving the LDAP Database would achieve the same thing. If the worse happens and the server dies for any reason it's sometimes quicker to reformat/reinstall and re-import or restore after successful 'bind' to AD and promotion to OD. Both processes are not exactly time consuming are they?
Having said all that Apple's 'Best Practices' suggests using DU when booting from the Installer Disk and saving the server's 'state' as a .dmg to a share or externally connected drive. For a vanilla server you're probably talking about 8-12GB? This should take roughly 30-40 minutes.
There's nothing wrong with using CCC either. With CCC you can even scheduled cloned backups and what's more it will do it (successfully) whilst the server's 'live'.
Another solution you could look at is SuperDuper which does have a price tag.
Hope this helps?
Antonio Rocco (ACSA)