
     Chapter 19. AMANDA Survey Results
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Chapter 19. AMANDA Survey Results


Jon LaBadie

Original text
AMANDA Core Team
<jon@jgcomp.com>

Stefan G. Weichinger

XML-conversion
AMANDA Core Team
<sgw@amanda.org>

Note

Refer to http://www.amanda.org/docs/survey.html for the current version of this
document.

Note

This chapter still needs much more formatting, there are many tables and lists,
that need to get added. Volunteers welcome. sgw, April, 2005.

Introduction

AMANDA (Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver) is a backup system
freely available available in source form. For more information about AMANDA
visit the website http://www.amanda.org.
Readers of the amanda-users mailing list (approximately 1100 subscribers) were
asked in April of 2003 to describe their use of the backup system by filling
out a survey questionnaire that was posted to the mailing list weekly. Seventy
two (72) surveys were submitted during the month-long collection period.
In several postings that follow, I will report summaries of the collected data.
In some cases I've included comments (Surveyor's Notes) of my own reaction to
the data.
Later, I plan to recast these results in the form of questions and answers to
add to the FOM (FAQ-O-Matic) at amanda.org. Should you have any thoughts on
this please let me know via the list or personal email.
Jon LaBadie
<jon@jgcomp.com>

Note

[Surveyor's Note] While the number of submitted surveys neither surprised me,
nor disappointed me, what did greatly disappoint me personally was this fact:
Of the twenty five (25) individuals most active on the list (based on number of
postings for 12 months), only seven (7) bothered to respond to the survey.

Organizations

What follows is a summarization of the responses describing the organizations
using AMANDA.
 _____________________________________________________________________________
|Types_of_organizations_using_AMANDA|___|_____________________________________|
|Category___________________________|Num|Type_________________________________|
|University_Department______________|20_|_____________________________________|
|Research_Organizations_____________|10_|medical,_scientific,_engineering,____|
|___________________________________|___|oceanography,_statistical,_behavioral|
|Internet_Service_Providers_________|5__|_____________________________________|
|Data Processing Services           |11 |software, graphics, integration,     |
|___________________________________|___|consulting___________________________|
|Manufacturers (DP)                 |5  |computers, electronics,              |
|___________________________________|___|semiconductors_______________________|
|Manufacturers_(non-DP)_____________|4__|rubber,_chemical,_turbine,_video_____|
|Government_Related_________________|3__|federal,_local,_public_defender______|
|Service Organizations              |4  |publishing, power utility, forestry, |
|___________________________________|___|money_management_____________________|
|Small_Office/Home_Office___________|6__|_____________________________________|
|Others                             |3  |natural history museum, education    |
|___________________________________|___|charity,_national_opera_and_ballet.__|


Note

[Surveyor's Note] The `Categories' were my grouping, they were not on the
survey. I expected more in the SOHO category.

Note

[Surveyor's Note] Extent of AMANDA usage was asked on the survey. Few indicated
that their entire firm based their backups on AMANDA, and then only relatively
small companies (like JG Computing :). Thus the category is `University
Department' not `University'. Similarly, AMANDA is used by a groups within
organizations like the chemical manufacturer or computer manufacturer or
federal government noted above, not the entire entity. But AMANDA may have
helped produce the tires you are riding on, the workstation you are typing on,
or to collect the taxes you pay :))
 _________________________________________________
|Location_of_organizations_using_AMANDA___________|
|1_Belgium|1_Japan_______________|2_Poland________|
|1_Canada_|1_Mexico______________|2_Switzerland___|
|1_Estonia|1_Norway______________|3_Sweden________|
|1_Finland|1_Portugal____________|5_Germany_______|
|1_France_|1_United_Arab_Emirates|5_United_Kingdom|
|1_Italy__|2_The_Netherlands_____|45_United_States|


Note

[Surveyor's Note] The totals are greater than number of submitted surveys as
some respondents described multi-national installations.

Note

[Surveyor's Note] Americans must be procrastinators. For a while, the number of
non-US submitted surveys exceeded the ones from the US.
 _________________________________________
|Length_of_AMANDA_usage_at_organization|__|
|0_-_1_years___________________________|25|
|1_-_2_years___________________________|8_|
|2_-_3_years___________________________|13|
|3_-_4_years___________________________|10|
|4_-_5_years___________________________|8_|
|5_-_6_years___________________________|2_|
|7_-_8_years___________________________|2_|
|8_-_9_years___________________________|2_|
|9+_years______________________________|1_|
|10%_of_responders_>_5_years_use_______|__|
|33%_of_responders_>_3_years_use_______|__|
|50%_of_responders_>_2_years_use_______|__|
|33%_of_responders_<_1_year_use________|__|

Mean and Median are ~29 months (2.5 years)

Note

[Surveyor's Note] Some really long time users of AMANDA. It must do the job.

Servers and Clients


AMANDA servers

 _________
|Number|__|
|1_____|53|
|2_____|11|
|3_____|5_|
|5_____|1_|
|6_____|1_|
|7_____|1_|

Table 19.1. Operating Systems Running on AMANDA Server Hosts
 _____________________________________
|FreeBSD:_______|Total_10,_including__|
|2______________|4-STABLE_____________|
|1______________|4.7__________________|
|1______________|4x___________________|
|HP-UX:_________|Total_2,_including___|
|1______________|10.20________________|
|1______________|11.00________________|
|Irix:__________|Total_2,_including___|
|1______________|6.5__________________|
|SCO_Openserver:|Total_1,_including___|
|1______________|5.0.6________________|
|Solaris:_______|Total_14,_including__|
|5______________|8____________________|
|1______________|8_x86________________|
|3______________|9____________________|
|Tru64:_________|Total_4,_including___|
|2______________|5.1__________________|
|Linux:_________|Total_48,_including__|
|13_____________|Debian_Total_________|
|1______________|2.4__________________|
|2______________|3.0__________________|
|3______________|Woody________________|
|14_____________|RedHat_Total_________|
|1______________|6.2__________________|
|2______________|7.1__________________|
|1______________|7.2__________________|
|6______________|7.3__________________|
|3______________|8.0__________________|
|1______________|8.0_with_RHNet_kernel|
|1______________|Slackware_Total______|
|1______________|7____________________|
|3______________|SuSE_Total___________|
|2______________|8.1__________________|


AMANDA Versions Run on Server Hosts

2.4.1: Total 2, including
1 2.4.1p1
2.4.2: Total 33, including
1 2.4.2p1
28 2.4.2p2
2.4.3: Total 21, including
1 2.4.3b2
1 2.4.3b3
2 2.4.3b4
2.4.4: Total 21, including
2 2.4.4-20030415
1 2.4.4-20030426
[Surveyor's Note] The percentage of older versions surprised me.
Shouldn't have as I just upgraded 2 months ago. If it works why fix it?

AMANDA CLIENTS


Number of AMANDA Clients

client num.
hosts sites
14
25
36
46
57
a6-1012
b11-2013
21-3012
31-505
61-704

Operating Systems Run on AMANDA Clients

(mentions, not number of hosts)
AIX, total 4, including Linux (all variants), 86 total including
1 4 Debian, 17 total
1 2.2
Darwin, total 1 1 2.4
2 3.0
FreeBSD total 17, including 1 potato
1 2.2.5 2 sarge
1 3.2 1 sid
1 3.3 1 stable
1 3.4 2 woody
2 4-STABLE Mandrake, 1 total
1 4.1 1 8
1 4.7 RedHat, 26 total
1 5.0 1 5.0
1 6.0
HP-UX, 8 total, including 2 6.2
1 10 1 6.2 Alpha
2 10.20 2 6.2 Sparc
3 11 3 7.1
2 7.2
Irix, 8 total, including 4 7.3
3 6.5 5 8.0
1 6.5 MIPS 1 9
Slackware, 3 total
MacOS X, 6 total, including 2 7.0
1 10.1 PowerPC 1 8.1
1 10.2 PowerPC SuSe, 4 total
2 8.1
NetBSD, 1 total, including Yellowdog, 1 total
1 1.6 1 2.3 PowerPC
OpenBSD, 1 total, including Tru64, 8 total, including
1 3.2 1 4.0 Alpha
1 5.1
Snap, 1 total
Windows, 22 total, including
Solaris, 39 total, including 1 95
2 2.5 2 98
2 2.6 4 NT
5 7 1 NT 4 server
11 8 7 2000
4 9 3 XP
3 8 x86
1 9 x86
SunOS, 1 total, including
1 SunOS 4.1.4

AMANDA Versions of Run on Client Hosts

2.4.1, 4 total, including
3 2.4.1p1
2.4.2, 42 total, including
1 2.4.2p1
33 2.4.2p2
2.4.3, 30 total, including
1 2.4.3b2
1 2.4.3b3
1 2.4.3b4
2.4.4, 25 total, including
2 2.4.4-20030415
1 2.4.4-20030426
1 2.4.4b1

Installation Properties


Total Disk Capacity of Clients

smallest: 20 GB
largest: 5000 GB
13 20 to 100 GB
22 101 to 200 GB
16 201 to 500 GB
12 501 to 1000 GB
5 1001 to 2000 GB
6 2001 to 5000 GB

Total Data Currently Stored on Clients Disks

smallest: 3 GB
largest: 4000 GB
22 3 to 50 GB
14 51 to 100 GB
15 101 to 200 GB
10 201 to 500 GB
7 501 to 1000 GB
5 1001 to 4000 GB

Average Size of a Single Backup

smallest: 0.3 GB
largest: 700 GB
22 0.3 to 10 GB
11 11 to 20 GB
22 21 to 50 GB
13 51 to 100 GB
8 101 to 200 GB
1 350 GB
1 700 GB

Backup Program Used

72 use gnutar or some tar variant including:
3 hfstar
1 nttar
1 smbtar
50 use dump or some dump variant including:
1 e2fsdump
2 ext2dump
12 ufsdump
2 vdump
1 vfsdump
2 vxdump
5 xfsdump

Dumpcycle

5 0 days
3 1 days
1 2 days
6 3 days
5 5 days
34 7 days
17 8 days - 2 weeks
10 15 days - 4 weeks
5 30 days - 75 days
1 4 months
1 6 months
1 1 year
1 1000 days

Frequency of Backups

6 1/week
4 2/week
4 3/week
5 4/week
36 5/week
6 6/week
31 7/week
2 1/month

Type of Compression Used

1 gpg
15 none
17 hw
31 sw - server
46 sw - client

Installed Hardware


Brand and Model of Tape Drive Used at AMANDA Installations

The number of mentions of each brand is shown
followed by specific models where reported.
3 Archive, including: 2 Qualstar TLS-4200
Python 04106
Python 06408 10 Quantum, including:
DLT-VS80
5 Compaq, including: DLT-4000
AIT-2 DLT-7000
DLT-90 DLT-8000
MSL5126-S2
SDLT320 10 Seagate, including:
DAT
1 Dell DLT-IV 12/24G
20/40G
5 Ecrix, including: CTL-96/4586N
VXA-1 DDS4
DDS3 Scorpion-24/STD124000N
5 Exabyte, including: 13 Sony, including:
8500 AIT-1
Eliant 820 AIT-2
VXA-2 AIT-3
DLT-IV
15 HP, including: DLT-9000
A4845A SDX-500C
C1533A Sony SDX-700C
C1557
C6280-7000 3 Sun, including:
DDS-4 DDS3
DLT vs80 7000
ESL9595 Python
SureStor DAT-24
SureStor DAT-8 7 Tandberg, including:
Surestore Ultrium 230e DLT vs80
Ultrium 1 SDLT 220
SDLT-320
1 IBM DDS4 SLR5
SLR7
1 Mammoth
2 Wang, including:
3 None, backup to disk only DAT 3400DX
2 Overland Data, including:
Loaderexpress DLT8000

Native Tape Capacity of the Above Drives

7 4 GB 8 35 GB
1 7 GB 13 40 GB
2 10 GB 8 50 GB
11 12 GB 1 60 GB
1 15 GB 1 80 GB
1 17 GB 7 100 GB
10 20 GB 1 110 GB
1 22 GB 3 160 GB
4 25 GB 1 500 GB
2 30 GB

Preferred Brand of Tape

2 Compaq
1 Dell
4 Exabyte
3 Fujifilm
5 HP
1 Imation
2 Maxell
2 Quantum
11 Sony
1 Verbatim
16 No Preference

Tape Format

1 4mm 1 EXA
4 8mm 3 LTO
2 AIT 1 Mammoth
1 AIT-1 4 sDLT
7 AIT-2 1 sDLT320
3 AIT-3 1 SLR
8 DDS-2 1 SLR25
12 DDS-3 1 SLR7
6 DDS-4 1 Travan-20
15 DLT 1 VXA
1 DLT-80 1 VXA V-23
7 DLT-IV 1 VXA-2

Tape Changers/Libraries Used at AMANDA Installations

[Surveyor's Note] A total of 28 of 72 respondents reported having using
tape changer or library. Several of those reported having more than one.
Surprisingly, the 28 respondents reported 26 distinct models of changer/
library.
The table below shows the models reported by 28 respondents. Where multiple
reports for the same model existed, only one entry is show. Where the
multiple reports showed different configurations (eg. 1 drive vs 2 drive),
only the larger configuration is shown.
BRAND MODEL # of # of total
drives tapes capacity
ADIC ?? 1 4 200 GB
ADIC FastStor DLT 1 7 245 GB
Compaq MSL5126 1 25 4000 GB
Compaq SSL2020 2 20 1000 GB
Dell Powervault 122T 1 8 320 GB
Hewlett-Packard A4845A 5 588 20000 GB
Hewlett-Packard C1557A 1 6 72 GB
Hewlett-Packard ESL9595 2 595 70000 GB
Hewlett-Packard MSL5026S2 2 26 4160 GB
Hewlett-Packard SureStore 6x40 1 6 120 GB
Hewlett-Packard SureStore 6x24 1 6 72 GB
Overland Data LXB 4120 1 10 150 GB
Overland Data Library Pro 1 19 1900 GB
Overland Data LoaderXpress 1 15 525 GB
Qualstar 6220 2 20 700 GB
Qualstar TLS-4200 2 20 2000 GB
Quantum DLT7000 2560 1 8 320 GB
Segate CTL-96/4586N 1 4 14 GB
Sony TSL-9000 1 8 96 GB
SpectraLogic Bullfrog 10000 3 40 10000 GB
SpectraLogic Treefrog 2000 1 15 750 GB
StorageTek Timberwolf 9730 2 30 1000 GB
Straightline Harrier/830 2 30 1500 GB
Sun L20 2 20 2000 GB
Sun L40 2 40 1600 GB
Sun Storedge L9 1 9 360 GB

Special Feature Usage

What follows is a summarization of the responses describing the
use of two special features of recent versions of AMANDA, the
"file:driver" to use a hard disk drive as a backup device and
RAIT (Redundant Array of 'Inexpensive' Tapedrives) to allow
mirroring or striping of backups across multiple drives.

The file:driver

Do you use the <file:driver>?
53 no
11 yes
5 what is the <file:driver>
If not, do you expect to?
32 no
14 yes
8 maybe

RAIT

Do you use RAIT?
68 no
0 yes
If not, do you expect to?
40 no
8 yes
3 maybe
[Surveyor's Note] I was mildly surprised, and amused, by the 5 "what is the
<file:driver> responses. And considering those responses, but the lack of
similar responses to the RAIT question.
[Surveyor's Note] No respondent uses RAIT! Disappointing. I wonder if any
site is currently using this feature.

Non UNIX Clients

What follows is a summarization of the responses describing the
various methods to backup 'non-unix' clients, mostly PC's running
versions of Windows.

PC's Backed Up Using SAMBA Connections to AMANDA Clients

A total of 22 survey respondents (of 72) report
they use amanda and samba to backup PC clients.
10 have 1 PC client
10 have 2 - 5 PC clients
1 has 15 PC clients
1 has 40 PC clients
[Surveyor's Note] From these results it seems to me that amanda/samba
is seldom a first choice for backing up PC's. Instead it seems to be
used when a site has an existing amanda installation and would like
to implement some form of PC backup.
The respondents mentioned the following Operating Systems
were being run on the PC clients. The number is the number
of mentions, not number of PC's.
1 Windows 95 2 Windows 2000 Server
1 Windows 98 5 Windows XP
3 Windows NT 1 Windows XP Pro
2 Windows NT 4 1 Snap Server
9 Windows 2000
[Surveyor's Note] Of interest to users running Lotus Domino:
One respondent reported using "The Open File Manager"
from http://www.stbernard.com to create online backups of
their Lotus Domino database files which then could be
backed up to their amanda host using samba.

PC's Backed Up Using Cygwin/AMANDA Client Software

A total of 4 survey respondents (of 72) report
they use a cygwin/amanda client to backup PC clients.
2 have 1 PC client
1 has 3 PC clients
1 has 15 PC clients
The only PC operating systems mentioned were
Windows 2000 and Windows 2000 Server.

PC's Backed Up by AMANDA Using Other Techniques

A variety of techniques, other than samba or cygwin,
were described by respondents to backup PC's
1. Two respondents installed an NFS server on Windows 2000
and then NFS mounted the PC disks on the amanda host
and backed them up as local file systems.
2. Similarly, two respondents mounted PC shares of Windows 95,
Windows NT, and Windows 2000 on the amanda host using 'smbmount'
and backed them up as local 'smbfs' file systems.
3. Several respondents reported they first backed up their PC's
(Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows 2000 Server)
to disk files on the PC's and then backed that file up using
amanda; presumably using samba or some file transfer technique.
One mentioned that the backup stream was sent directly to a
Linux host and backed up there as a local file.
The backup programs the respondents mentioned included:
'Windows backup program'
'BackupPC', a Linux opensource program
'Win2000 Backup Tool'
'Backup Exec'
4. One respondent noted their firewall was a PC running linux.
That system was mirrored using rsync and the mirror was backed up.

Other Backup Techniques Mentioned

Five respondents described backing up systems using "non-traditional"
methods. These methods were used to backup systems running either
MacOS or Windows. They included:
1. MacOS 9, mounted (NFS?) onto a Linux host and backing up the mounts as
local filesystems.
2. Backing up 37 MacOS 8 and MacOS 9 systems using the program Retrospect.
The output of Retrospect was transferred to a Linux host using ftp and
preserved with amanda.
3. Build a native amanda client on MacOS X and use hfstar instead of gnutar.
4. Backup 6 Windows XP hosts using a native windows amanda client.
5. Backup 12 Windows 2000 Server hosts using a native windows amanda client.
This respondent also noted their intention to switch to a cygwin/amanda
client in the near future.
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