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Windows Home Server Power Pack 1 In Depth: External Backup

Mon, Jan 7, 2008

CES 2008, Windows Home Server

One of the most requested features (or should that be “biggest missings”? Smile) in Windows Home Server is the ability to backup the server itself. Sure, WHS is looking after all of your home computers, but who’s looking after WHS? If your home server fails - what happens to your backups? If there’s a fire, or your house is burgled your data is still at risk. 

Online backup services from KeepVault and Jungle Disk allow you to backup your files to online servers, which is great but comes at a price, takes a while to upload and download and hits your bandwidth. Going forward, I’m sure we’ll all store a lot of our data up in the cloud but right now, we need a simple solution.

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1 brings new external backup capabilities to WHS, allowing you to regularly backup both your shared folders and your home computer backups to an external USB drive, which can then be safely stored offsite. Here’s how you do it:

Step 1: Add an External Hard Drive to Windows Home Server

 Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Add a Hard Drive Wizard Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Add a Hard Drive Wizard Help

Whilst the external hard drive won’t be a part of the storage pool, you do need to let WHS know it’s there. So we fire up the Add a Hard Drive Wizard from the Server Storage Tab. The help file gives you a little more basic information.

Step 2: Select How You Wish to Use the Hard Drive

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: How Do You Want to Use the Hard Drive? Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Tell Me More About Backing Up My Home Server Help

Okay, we just need to tell WHS that this drive is for backups, rather than adding the drive to the storage pool. If you check out the linked Help file here, there’s a few things to note:

  • Windows Home Server pulls its Single Instance Storage trick here again, so after your first server backup, subsequent backups only save changed files to the hard drive, saving valuable space.
  • Advice is given not to backup your server frequently, as the backup database has many large files that change regularly (and therefore will fill up your drive quickly). However, no advice is given as to how regularly you should backup the server - is it a monthly thing? Quarterly? How frequent is “frequent”?
  • As you’ll see from the next few steps, you can backup different folders to different drives should you wish - this allows you to manage your backups efficiently if you run out of space on one external drive.   

Step 3: Choose to Format or Not Format the Hard Drive

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Format Your Hard Drive?

Unlike adding a hard drive to the home server storage pool (which mandates you formatting the drive), you are given the option whether to format the hard drive or not, which gives you much greater flexibility if you need to utilise the hard drive for other purposes.

Step 4: Give the Hard Drive a Name

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Name the Hard Drive

Okay, we now just need to name the hard drive (maybe with something more imaginative than “EXTERNAL_BACKUP” - okay, I was in a rush here Smile) - note the handy hint to also write the name of the hard drive on the hard drive itself so you can identify it easily should you need to restore.

Step 5: Confirm What You Just Configured

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Confirm Your Selections

You may be about to format, so WHS gives you a warning to make sure your happy with your selections.

Step 6: Preparing the Hard Drive

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Preparing the Hard Drive Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Hard Drive Added

I chose to format the drive, so that’s the first job WHS needs to do to prepare the drive. After a short while, adding the hard drive is complete.

Step 10: Your External Drive Appears In the Server Storage Tab

 Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Hard Drive Listing

Your external hard drive now appears in the list of drives in the Server Storage Tab, listed under Server Backup Hard Drives.

Step 11: Your Home Server Appears in the Computers and Backup Tab

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Computers and Backup Tab

Click on over to the Computers and Backup Tab, and you’ll see that your home server is now listed. From here we can run an external backup. Let’s take a look at it.

Step 12: Click on Your Server and Select Backup Now

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Backup Your Home Server

Here you can configure which of your shared folders you’d like to back up to your external drive, as well as backing up the Home Computer Backup database. Simply select your drive from the dropdowns and click Backup Now. If you check the box, WHS will remember your settings.

Step 13: Click Yes to Begin Your Backup

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Start the Backup

Note that the backup can take a few hours and most importantly, that your home computer backups are suspended whilst you’re backing up your backups :)

Step 14: Your Backup Begins

Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Backup Progress

Your backup begins and you can keep an eye on progress whilst it runs.

Step 15: Backup Complete

 Windows Home Server Power Pack 1: Backup Complete

After a while, the external backup completes, and you can view details of your last backup in the Computers and Backup Tab.

Find out more about Power Pack 1:

Power Pack 1: Coming Your Way

Power Pack 1 In Depth - Remote Access

Power Pack 1 In Depth - External Backup

Power Pack 1 In Depth - WHS Connector Walkthrough

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This post was written by:

Terry Walsh - who has written 573 posts on We Got Served.

Hi - I'm Terry and I'm the Owner of We Got Served. The site's been covering everything to do with Windows Home Server since February 2007. I live in Silverstone, UK with my wife and when I'm not working on We Got Served, I have a career as an Innovation Consultant to contend with.

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13 Comments For This Post

  1. David Says:

    Is there a link to download this??

  2. Mark Says:

    Finally, this would reduce my last (current) worries about my WHS!
    You say USB drive, but could this be an eSATA drive as well?

  3. kc Says:

    how does the backup work? is it intelligent enough to just backup the differences?

  4. DanB Says:

    This look fine, and well integrated. However, there is no information about how you recover from a system disc failure? Is there another recovery CD for the server? How does this work?

  5. joe m. Says:

    So what about the SYS (C:) volume? Can we backup this up to an external drive (easily) now?

  6. whatsthatnoise Says:

    It appears that backup of WHS can only be to locally attached drives. Have you tried getting WHS to backup to a network share (\\otherPC\WHS_Backup) ?

    Thanks!

  7. Corey Says:

    Can you backup the server automatically? It seems like all the tutorials out there make you click BACKUP NOW to initiate the backup of the server. This is a great start, but if I haven’t backed up in a while and my house is on fire, I don’t see myself waiting for a backup to complete before running out the door.

  8. Terry Walsh Says:

    Yep, it’s a manual backup.

    Terry

  9. Zilch Says:

    Yeah same question - is eSATA supported? (I don’t see why it shouldn’t be)

  10. Miles Says:

    Isn’t it ironic that, while WHS backs up all client PCs over a network automatically, the proposed backup facility for the WHS device itself is to a USB attached HDD and is manual only.

  11. François Says:

    How does it handle the initial size of a shared folder and its growth?
    1/ WHS is configured to back up my videos folder (200GB) to an external HDD (500GB). After few days/weeks/months, the size of my videos folder become > 500GB.
    2/ My videos folder size is already > 1TB and I want my WHS to backup this shared folder.

    Thx.

  12. Terry Walsh Says:

    Miles

    External USB backup means that you can take your drive off-site to protect against physical damage such as fire or theft….

    Francois

    The only option here for you is to split your Videos folder into a number of smaller folders. Different folders can be backed up to different drives.

    Terry

  13. François Says:

    Thanks Terry. As the Videos folder is the only top folder shareable via WHS Media Connect without tweaking my WHS, this new feature is worthless for me. So using a sync tool (SyncToy, Robocopy, etc…) on Videos sub-folders seems to be the only solution. Right?

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    [...] to release a public beta of Power Pack 1, officials said. (Some Most Valuable Professionals, like the We Got Served crew, have the Power Pack 1 test code and are putting it through its paces, however.) Also — no word still on when Microsoft is [...]

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