Disaster Recovery As A Service

All-in-one backup and disaster recovery solution

Easy extension of networks to the cloud recovery site

Under 15-minute RPOs and RTOs

Disaster recovery for virtual and physical workloads

Disaster recovery orchestration with runbooks

A secure DRaaS solution
Disaster Recovery As A Service




Simplify disaster recovery
Get back to business faster
Disaster recovery orchestration with runbooks
Backup-based replication of production machines
Instant off-site failover to the cloud recovery site
Minimize incidents and improve productivity
Instant Availability


Runbook Orchestration
Complete Protection

Ensure the instant availability of critical business workloads

Protection for on-premises and cloud workloads

Multiple recovery point times

Application-level replication

Isolated testing environment

Intuitive web based console

Easy Network Configuration
Stay ahead of cyberattacks with a comprehensive DRaaS solution

Fast Recovery
Three Click Setup


Easy Management
Disaster recovery for physical and virtual workloads
Production failover
Site-to-site VPN connection
Test DR readiness
Execution monitoring
Point-in-time recovery
IPsec multisite VPN support
Custom DNS configuration
Deliver complete cyber protection
Features | Cyber Defense | With Advanced Disaster Recovery |
---|---|---|
File, image, and applications backup | ||
Local recovery with Instant Restore | ||
Test failover | ||
Cloud-only VPN connection | ||
Production and test failover to CAL Cloud: Ensure quick and easy automated failover of the client’s production environment | ||
VPN-less deployment option: Connect clients’ quickly and easily with point-to-site connectivity | ||
IPsec Multisite VPN support, L2 site-to-site open VPN: Easily support clients with multiple sites that are hosting critical workloads | ||
Multiple templates: Set up disaster recovery plans for your clients quickly and easily | ||
Runbooks: Simplifies and speeds up failover of multiple machines to a cloud recovery site | ||
Embedded eSigning |
Deliver complete cyber protection
Physical and virtual machines
Virtualization platforms
Applications
Cost-efficient and scalable Hybrid Disaster Recovery (DR)
GDPR, data sovereignty, and regulatory compliance
When the cloud is just not fast enough
Economic optimization
FAQ
Disaster recovery solutions allow companies to quickly resume business-critical workloads after cyber-attacks, natural disasters or server failures. The disaster recovery process normally involves a separate physical or cloud site to restore data. Every disaster recovery solution aims to help businesses operate as usual. Since business continuity depends on high availability, disaster recovery strategies depend on RTOs and RPOs.
Backups are simple; they are copy of your corporate systems and data that can be used to bring a failed system back online. Disaster recovery refers to a more advanced form of system copies that include processing capabilities.
To be able to failover your critical workloads, you should back up your data to to our Cloud Storage (or, cold storage for backups). As the disaster occurs, your workload will be failed-over to the off-site server running in the Disaster Recovery Storage (or, hot storage in the Cloud).
Your business has its own unique data requirements, so a good plan will minimize the complexity of the disaster recovery process. To define the correct approach to creating a disaster recovery plan for your business, you will need to assess the applications, process, and cost versus risk.
For reliable disaster recovery, you need to look beyond simply copying all of your databases and files. Your entire infrastructure – servers, PCs, NAS, SAN, hypervisors, and endpoints – contains vital production data. You’ll need to capture application settings, operating system configurations, bookmarks, and registry data for a full recovery.
A Recovery Point Objective (RPO) is the point in time that data, systems, and applications will be recovered to. A Recovery Time Objective (RTO) is how much time can pass before your business must be restored.
There are three different ways you can store business-critical data: local data center, in the cloud, or you can take a hybrid approach.
With a data center, your critical data is stored off-site in a physical location, but disaster recovery can take days or weeks. Although this is considered the most secure storage option, it is also the most expensive as facilities, and additional systems and staff are required.
Cloud disaster recovery is the most cost-effective and scalable option. With this option, you leverage a cloud data center to store your critical systems (whether physical or virtual), data, and applications. Cloud disaster recovery allows you to keep entire virtual environments at the ready, reducing recovery from a disaster or business outage to minutes or even seconds.
A hybrid cloud disaster recovery method uses a public cloud and private data center (physical or cloud). This provides a great degree of flexibility, keeps costs down, while also meeting any regulatory and compliance needs.
With all three methods, be sure to evaluate the pros and cons of each against your individual business requirements.
You can access the management console everywhere the internet connection is available. The Disaster Recovery add-on is available globally .
The success of your disaster recovery plan depends on preparedness of people and processes as much as the backup tools used. Ideally, you should test your disaster recovery procedures every 3 months (but no less than once a year). Do not forget to amend and extend your disaster recovery plan during and after these exercises.
To start using Disaster Recovery Add-on, you will need to have subscription license to access the management console in the cloud. This new cloud installation will allow you to protect new systems so you will need to configure settings accordingly (i.e. the system will not include your previous on-premises backup configurations.)