VMware vSphere Backup

Ensure business continuity for VMware vSphere environments with Veeam

In today's data centers, virtualization is the norm, VMware is the driving force of this modernization. Every aspect, from servers to vital applications, is virtualized. In a VMware vSphere environment, virtual machines are critical to business operations, making data security and reliability crucial. Human errors, hardware failures, cyberattacks, and natural disasters threaten business continuity. As a result, a solid backup and disaster recovery plan is essential to ensure the business continuity And the risk reduction.

Veeam In fact, it proposes a solution designed and optimized for VMware environments: the close historical collaboration, in fact, assures customers the ability to restore their data quickly and reliably, wherever they are.

How does Veeam Backup and Replication for VMware vSphere work?

Backup

Veeam Backup & Replication Deploy non-persistent runtime components on VM guest operating systems using the Backup proxy and copying VM data from the source storage to a Backup Repository.

Replication

Veeam Backup & Replication replicates and transfers data directly from a proxy backup to another proxy backup located at the DR site via the WAN and makes them available and restorable In a off-site environment protected.

Backup VMware vsphere con Veeam e CloudFire

Why choose Veeam and VMware?

Hybrid Cloud Protection

Extend data protection to the cloud while meeting operational efficiency and compliance requirements

Data Center Modernization

Quickly restore virtualized applications and data within vSphere environments.

Veeam is optimized for VMware

Veeam is software defined and supports automated infrastructures and processes and is independent of hardware.

Resources

FAQ

What's the difference between VMware and Veeam?

What are the advantages of using Veeam for VMware backup compared to other solutions?

Does Veeam support only VMware or is it also compatible with other virtualized environments?

What are the best practices for implementing and managing immutable backups?