Backup and Business Continuity Blog

Topics:   Backup and Business Continuity

  • Email this page E-mail this page
  • Print this page Print this page
  • Bookmark and Share
  • icon

Cemaphore MailShadow -- Exchange Failover With A Twist


Posted by Howard Marks, Mar 12, 2008 11:03 PM

E-mail, and more particularly Microsoft Exchange, is a classic example of how user adoption can turn an application mission critical before the IT guys catch on. Most IT departments protect Exchange servers with the same techniques they use to protect other applications. Replicate the data to another disk somewhere and have an idle Exchange server mount the database for failover. Rather than collect data at the file or block level, MailShadow collects Exchange objects at the transaction layer for replication. Working higher on the stack brings MailShadow some significant advantages.


The biggest advantage is not replicating database corruption the way disk replication can, especially as the production server crashes. Replicating transactions also means less data to replicate. Exchange writes every transaction at least twice, once in the transaction log and once in the .EDB file and a disk replicator has to send it each time. Disk replicators use a lot of bandwidth in the middle of the night when Exchange does an online database defragmentation.

Failover is faster than mounting a crash-consistent database since the target Exchange server is always running against it's own database. All MailShadow has to do is a little magic so the client stations will connect to the backup server. Source and target can be running different versions of Exchange. At least one customer has used this feature of MailShadow to migrate to a newer version of Exchange.

« I Smell A Reality Show | Main | Developers: Check Your %*^& Inputs »



Sign Up Now
For InformationWeek News Alerts




This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.