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Veeam Backups Linux Servers in Cloud and On Premises

With free standalone agent

Veeam Software AG announced Backup for Linux, a free standalone agent that delivers backup and recovery for Linux servers running in the public cloud, as well as for a few remaining physical Linux servers running on premises.

Customers can use this tool to backup individual cloud instances and restore them on premises, or backup on premises and restore in the cloud.

Linux remains the go-to choice for the cloud, with 75% of enterprises reporting they use Linux as their primary cloud platform. (*) Existing solutions often require a manual process to execute or are complex and expensive, which means the availability of many of these Linux servers is at risk.

Backing up and recovering Linux servers is often a complicated and costly process, frequently needing manual intervention or consuming too much of an IT administrator’s time,” said Doug Hazelman, VP, product strategy, Veeam. “Moreover, as hybrid cloud increasingly becomes the industry standard and more enterprises look to run more workloads in the public cloud, it is important to ensure that these public cloud server instances are backed up and can be recovered easily and quickly in order to ensure availability and avoid business disruption. The Veeam community has asked us for an easy to use tool to ensure the availability of their Linux cloud instances and restore them anywhere. We are not only meeting this need for them, but are also adding it to the Veeam portfolio of free tools for the IT community that solve real challenges.

Backup for Linux, standalone tool, provides following benefits:

  • Backup anywhere: Backup Linux instances running in the cloud or on premises.

  • Flexible recovery: Perform on-premises restores from backups of individual cloud instances, or cloud restores of on-premises backups.

  • Integration with company’s Backup & Replication v9: Take advantage of Veeam backup repositories as target locations; leverage existing Veeam Backup & Replication capabilities for granular recovery.

A closed beta version of Backup for Linux will be available in the first half of 2016 on a first come, first serve basis.

To get access to the beta code

(*) 2014 Enterprise End User Trends Report, the Linux Foundation in partnership with Yeoman Technology Group; December 3, 2014.

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