Many organizations have annual disaster recovery (DR) test requirements, whether to run production operations from a secondary facility for several days or test the functionality of systems and applications running in a DR facility while production workloads run as usual. Every business should have a disaster recovery plan and perform a DR test, especially with recent virus and ransomware activity.
In the past, disaster recovery was much more complex. However, virtualization and cloud technologies significantly improved DR capabilities and the ability to run workloads in separate or multiple locations. While advantageous, it is crucial to check the functionality of systems, processes, and people resources.
How often should I perform a disaster recovery test?
Your business needs and requirements will determine the testing frequency, but an annual test is usually sufficient for many. It is essential to schedule the test well in advance, especially if it involves a third party. Finding time for all parties as the end of the year approaches will be difficult. If you make significant infrastructure or application changes, it may be worth performing an additional test.
What are the goals of a disaster recovery test?
While you may think the goals of a DR test are obvious, setting objectives helps keep tasks in scope and focused. Implementing a disaster recovery testing plan helps. You want to verify connectivity and application functionality and ensure you have the appropriate users available to assist. Believe it or not, running into problems during your DR test can be a good thing so you can resolve the issues. You do not want to encounter issues during an actual emergency!
Some issues we have discovered while performing DR tests for customers:
- Old, unsupported, or end-of-life operating systems
- Unsupported operating systems that are too new (beta, just released)
- Old versions of virtual machines and hypervisors
- Unpatched servers take a long time to bring up, as they apply patches automatically. (Note: Be sure to follow regular patching practices.)
- Incomplete networking documentation
Disasters can happen at any time. Performing a disaster recovery test allows organizations to prepare ahead of a crisis and remediate issues before a disaster occurs. In addition to applications and systems testing, tests will enable you to fine-tune call trees, identify application owners and stakeholders, and understand the process of turning on DR workloads.
More Disaster Recovery Articles
How to Protect Against Ransomware Attacks
It's more important than ever to protect against ransomware. Cybercriminals are having a field day targeting business and government IT infrastructures. You can no longer assume that these criminals only go after weak or poorly secured targets because that is simply...
Worst Cybersecurity Breaches – VPNFilter
More and more, our business environments are connected to the cloud. The transmission of data and the speed to which it can be accessed is critical to business intelligence and competitive advantage. When that data becomes attractive to hackers, the vulnerability also...
Bandwidth – How Much is Enough?
Knowing and planning for an appropriate level of bandwidth is a key component of every DRaaS solution. In our most common DRaaS implementation, the data is moved from local repositories at the customer site over the internet or WAN to our data centers once per day,...
Network System Failure Cost Southwest Airlines $82M
Network system failure is no fun for any business, but it can be especially painful for major airlines. The outage that hit Southwest Airlines on July 20 2016 is a case in point. The disaster caused the cancelation or delay of more than 2,000 flights. The estimated...
0 Comments