article thumbnail

Introducing Pure Protect //Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS)

Pure Storage

Introducing Pure Protect //Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) by Pure Storage Blog In today’s unpredictable world, natural disasters are ramping up in both frequency and intensity. Combatting these various threats and disasters can lead to complex solutions and costly applications that only solve part of the problem.

article thumbnail

New Solutions for Cloud Migration, Disaster Recovery, and More

Pure Storage

To learn more and see demos, check out the blog posts on AWS and Azure Migration: Migration to Microsoft Azure made easy with Pure Cloud Block Store. For on-premises business continuity and disaster recovery, ActiveCluster ™ enables zero RPO and zero RTO at metro distances. And they require only minimal downtime. .

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Disaster Recovery (DR) for a Third-party Interactive Voice Response on AWS

AWS Disaster Recovery

Since the primary objective of a backup site is disaster recovery (DR) management, this site is often referred to as a DR site. Disaster Recovery on AWS. DR strategy defines the recovery objectives for downtime and data loss. The workload has a recovery time objective (RTO) and a recovery point objective (RPO).

article thumbnail

Disaster Recovery with AWS Managed Services, Part I: Single Region

AWS Disaster Recovery

This 3-part blog series discusses disaster recovery (DR) strategies that you can implement to ensure your data is safe and that your workload stays available during a disaster. In Part I, we’ll discuss the single AWS Region/multi-Availability Zone (AZ) DR strategy. Disaster Recovery on AWS Series.

article thumbnail

Implementing Multi-Region Disaster Recovery Using Event-Driven Architecture

AWS Disaster Recovery

In this blog post, we share a reference architecture that uses a multi-Region active/passive strategy to implement a hot standby strategy for disaster recovery (DR). The main traffic flows through the primary and the secondary Region acts as a recovery Region in case of a disaster event. Related information.

article thumbnail

Disaster Recovery (DR) Architecture on AWS, Part IV: Multi-site Active/Active

AWS Disaster Recovery

In my first blog post of this series , I introduced you to four strategies for disaster recovery (DR). Each Region hosts a highly available, multi- Availability Zone (AZ) workload stack. Figure 2 shows Amazon Route 53 , a highly available and scalable cloud Domain Name System (DNS) , used for routing.

article thumbnail

Field Notes: Setting Up Disaster Recovery in a Different Seismic Zone Using AWS Outposts

AWS Disaster Recovery

That’s why many customers replicate their mission-critical workloads in multiple places using a Disaster Recovery (DR) strategy suited for their needs. Depending on the RPO and RTO of the mission-critical workload, the requirement for disaster recovery ranges from simple backup and restore, to multi-site, active-active, setup.