PC Pro

Retrospect Backup 17

This comprehens­ive backup solution covers all the bases, with effortless deployment and flexible licensing

- REQUIREMEN­TS DAVE MITCHELL

SCORE

PRICE Multi-Server, 1yr support, from retrospect.com

£2,015 exc VAT

Backup specialist Retrospect is one of the industry’s old hands, now in its 31st year. Don’t think its software is old-fashioned, though: Backup 17 introduces a range of brand-new features, mostly aimed at simplifyin­g deployment.

One notable addition is automatic onboarding, which can dramatical­ly speed up installati­on. It works by providing a custom client that users can download and install themselves; this then immediatel­y starts backing up files according to your policy, with zero user configurat­ion required.

Elsewhere, the ProactiveA­I feature helps keep your protection up to date by dynamicall­y adjusting backup windows, and it can now process more hosts for faster responses. Other improvemen­ts include reduced restore times for larger sites and an option to export preflight summaries of all backup informatio­n.

All of this comes under a range of licensing plans. The Single Server 5 package covers one Windows server and five desktops for £445, while the Multi-Server version we tested costs £2,015 for unlimited Windows, Mac and Linux clients. Optional add-ons are available for Exchange, SQL Server and IMAP email; for agentless backup of VMware and Hyper-V hosts, you’ll need the separate Retrospect Virtual solution, although it’s rumoured that this could be incorporat­ed into the main Backup product in the future.

Once you’re set up, it’s time to sign up with the Retrospect web console, which provides real-time monitoring and management of your backup environmen­t. You can even manage multiple organisati­ons from here, although this requires an add-on, which adds £404 to the cost of the Multi-Server licence.

The web console is also where you set up automatic onboarding. If you want your desktops to start backing up as soon as the software is installed, this is easy to configure: create a backup task with the entire set of clients as the source, then generate a web link to send to your users. Using this, they can download and activate the backup client.

In practice, we found this worked perfectly. Once the software was installed on our Windows 10 desktops, they immediatel­y appeared in the host’s client container, and backup jobs started whirring away without users having to lift a finger.

We were also pleased to see that the onboarding feature works in exactly the same way with remote clients. You just need to provide the external IP address or DNS name of your backup server in the web console while configurin­g the client package. On installati­on, the client will then quietly make the connection and start backing up.

“Once the software was installed, backup jobs started whirring away without users having to lift a finger”

Creating new backup jobs is a simple step-by-step process, and you can define multiple backup sets for different media, with destinatio­n options including local, removable and networked disks, as well as optical media, tape and cloud storage using any account compatible with Amazon S3, Backblaze B2 or Dropbox.

If you’ve created a ProactiveA­I task, this will default to always active, which means it will run whenever it can for the best possible protection. If you prefer, you can specify a minimum time between backups, and ticking the “Allow early backup” box permits users to trigger additional backups whenever appropriat­e.

As for what’s backed up, Retrospect’s progressiv­e backups start with a full backup of everything that’s supposed to be protected, then subsequent­ly secures all new and changed files, with user-configurab­le grooming policies to determine how many old versions to keep.

Should the day come when you need to restore your data, a wizard guides you through this too. You’re prompted to choose a backup set and snapshot version, select the drives, folders or files to be recovered and decide where to put them. Single files can also be restored directly from the web console and you can permit users to browse their own backups and restore items on demand.

Retrospect Backup has lasted the course for good reason: it offers a wealth of data-protection features at a price that SMBs will find pleasing. Platform support is as good as you could ask for, and the new automatic onboarding feature means you can roll out an entire backup strategy with minimal effort.

Windows 7 Windows Server 2012 macOS 10.15 upwards Linux

 ??  ?? 102
BELOW Automatic onboarding can be configured from the web console
102 BELOW Automatic onboarding can be configured from the web console
 ??  ?? ABOVE The web console and app give a full overview of your backup environmen­t
ABOVE The web console and app give a full overview of your backup environmen­t

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