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Revision as of 07:09, 21 October 2019 by JzG (talk | contribs) (→Standard features: WP:HOWTO)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)For other uses, see Retrospect (disambiguation).
Retrospect is a family of software applications that back up computers running the macOS, Microsoft Windows, and Linux (and until 2019 classic Mac OS) operating systems. It uses the client–server backup model.
The product is used for GUI-scripted backup in "mixed-platform networks", primarily by small and medium-sized businesses.
History
The software was first developed by Dantz Development Corporation in 1989, initially for the Macintosh platform and continuing later for Windows. With sales split evenly between the two variants and the Macintosh variant claiming 90% of its market, Dantz Development Corporation was acquired by EMC Corporation in 2004. In 2006 version 7.5, a refined release of the Windows variant under EMC, added performance features needed by SMEs.
Meanwhile, the Macintosh variant had "languished, receiving only minimal development for some years" at EMC, until "development was revived in 2008 when EMC hired back some of its former engineers"—including ex-Dantz ones. This resulted in the "premature" release of a version 8.0 of Retrospect Macintosh that was temporarily missing key operational features, even though it added the performance features of Retrospect Windows 7.5.
In May 2010, the software was sold to Roxio/Sonic Solutions. In 2011, following Sonic Solutions' sale, development of the software was turned over to privately held Retrospect Inc.. That company—starting with releasing well-received Retrospect Macintosh 9—has continued to sell two variants of backup server software. Retrospect Windows substitutes a view-only Dashboard (upgraded in 2019 into a Web-based Management Console that optionally deploys shared scripts) for Retrospect Macintosh's separate Administration Console, and basically keeps the pre-2009 terminology and GUI .
In June 2019 the holding company StorCentric—which also owns Drobo—announced that it had acquired Retrospect Inc., which it will operate as an independent subsidiary while "a Drobo+Retrospect backup appliance is being considered".
Editions and Add-Ons
Retrospect is sold with varying backup server capability levels, called "Editions", at non-expiring license–code prices that cover one major version. The Edition is dictated by the number of "server OS" computers being backed up; it in turn specifies a maximum number of client computers. The Desktop Edition can be used where only desktop or mobile computers (or Linux servers) are being backed up, non-multithreaded in older major versions, to non-tape devices or to one non-autoloader tape drive. The Solo Edition "protects a single non-server computer and its external hard drives".
"Add-Ons", which activate additional backup server features via Edition-linked license codes, may also be purchased:
- agents which back up Microsoft Exchange servers or Microsoft SQL servers via coordinated snapshots taken with VSS
- non-Desktop-Edition protection of Windows systems NTFS open files, such as for continuously running QuickBooks, via pausing
- backing up to multiple single tape drives simultaneously or to a multiple-drive tape library
- extending the bare-metal Emergency Recovery CD to adjust Windows boot volume drivers
- backing up and restoring more client computers than the maximum the chosen Edition specifies
- upgraded Web-based Management Console to allow deployment of shared scripts and aggregation-drilldown within organizations
See also
Notes
- The terminology was changed in the 2009 Macintosh variant; this article will use whichever variant's term seems more precise, with the other variant's term as a footnote.
References
- ^ Kissell, Joe (2007). Take Control of Mac OS X Backups (PDF) (Version 2.0 ed.). Ithaca, NY: TidBITS Electronic Publishing. pp. 18-20 ("The Archive", meaning information repository, including versioning), 24 (client-server), 82-83 (archive file), 126-141 (old Retrospect terminology and GUI—still used in Windows variant), 127 (Archiving operation in Retrospect), 128 (subvolume—later renamed Favorite Folder in Macintosh variant), 130-132 (Duplicate—later renamed Copy in Macintosh variant), 146(versioning), 165 (client-server). ISBN 978-0-9759503-0-2. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
- ^ Gripman, Stuart (27 March 2012). "Retrospect 9.0: powerful backup for professionals, organizations". MacWorld. Setting it up(Administration Console, Linux, WebDAV), Scheduling scripts(GUI scripting), Restoring(file-level deduplication, Proactive priorities). Retrieved 3 November 2017.
- ^ Engst, Adam (6 November 2012). "Retrospect 10 Reduces Backup Time with Instant Scan Technology". TidBITS. TidBITS Publishing Inc. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
- ^ Engst, Adam (18 June 2010). "Retrospect Backup Software Acquired by Sonic". TidBITS. TidBITS Publishing Inc. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
- ^ Flynn, Laurie (25 September 1989). "Apple Bundles Tape Backup With Retrospect Software". InfoWorld. InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. p. 33. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
...will bundle Dantz Development Corp.s Retrospect backup and archiving software with the Apple Tape Backup 40SC...
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(help) - Engst, Adam (1 July 1991). "Retrospect Conclusion". TidBITS. TidBITS Publishing Inc. Retrieved 25 August 2019.
I've worked with Retrospect for some time now, through versions 1.1, 1.2, and now 1.3, and I have nothing but respect for the program.... The only situation in which I don't recommend Retrospect is for extremely non-technical novice users ....
- "Retrospect Backup Multi Server". SCMagazine. CyberRisk Alliance, LLC. 1 June 2003. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
(We reviewed version 6, but 6.5 is now available.)
- ^ Mitchell, Dave (24 July 2019). "Retrospect Backup 16 review: Virtually useless for virtual machines". ITPro. Dennis Publishing. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
Application support requires optional add-ons with Retrospect offering ones for Microsoft Exchange, SQL Server and IMAP email accounts . You can also add features included in the Multi-Server Premium version such as open file backup and Windows bare metal recovery to dissimilar hardware.... The main console hasn't seen any design changes for over a decade but we found it still works well enough. Your first task is to create backup sets which define destinations and can be anything from a tape or DVD to a local disk vault, removable drive, NAS share or cloud storage with Retrospect's support including Dropbox, Amazon S3 and Google Cloud Storage. ....No need to worry about choosing backup types as all jobs start with a full one followed by progressive backups that only copy new and changed files .... Storage groups function as containers where you add multiple disk vaults as folders and point your backups at the group allowing jobs to run in parallel. Agent-less backup for VMware and Hyper-V hosts is not supported so you'll have to load the client inside each VM and treat them as physical systems. An alternative is to use the Retrospect Virtual solution but this is a completely separate product that has no integration with the Backup software. You'll also need it if you want GRT (granular recovery technology) restores for Exchange 2016 and 2019 hosts as Retrospect Backup only supports this for mail servers up to Exchange 2013. For the latter, we had no problems securing our mail host over the network as Retrospect discovered its client and allowed us to back up the system, database and mailboxes. Management facilities see big improvements as along with the backup host's dashboard utility, Retrospect has an iOS app for monitoring selected backup servers plus a cloud portal service for keeping an eye on multiple, distributed hosts. Real-time host monitoring is free while support for multiple organisations and facilities to remotely deploy backup job scripts requires an add-on ....
- ^ DeLong, Derik (27 March 2012). "Retrospect's long and twisted road". MacWorld. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
- Mitchell, Dave (20 April 2006). "EMC Retrospect 7.5 review". Alphr. Dennis Publishing. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
Along with removable media, Retrospect has always had the ability to back up to hard disk.... The new User Initiated Restore (UIR) feature allows users to retrieve their own files, but only from backup sets stored on hard disks on the backup server.... It takes a full backup only once and then compares this with the source on subsequent runs and copies only changed or newly created files.
- ^ Engst, Adam (23 March 2009). "EMC Ships Modernized Retrospect 8". TidBITS. TidBITS Publishing Inc. Architecture and interface(Engine/Console/Client split, custom reports, better email notifications), Performance(simultaneous operations), New Backup Capabilities(disk grooming, disk-to-disk-to-tape, staged synthetic full), Editions and Upgrades. Retrieved 3 November 2018.
- Friedman, Lex (29 July 2010). "Retrospect 8.2". TidBITS. TidBITS Publishing Inc. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
- ^ Mellor, Chris (2 August 2019). "StorCentric CEO: 'My mission is to build the next world-class storage company'". Blocks & Files. Situation Publishing. Lead, Storage products for the entire bit cycle, The history boys, Technology development. Retrieved 25 August 2019.
... bought Retrospect, a backup software vendor with half a million customers but skinny revenues....The big vendors focus on $30m-per-year customers and 'forget about everyone else,' according to Shah.... a Drobo+Retrospect backup appliance is being considered.
- Gallagher, Emily (25 June 2019). "StorCentric Acquires Retrospect, Inc. to Offer Enhanced Backup and Recovery Software Solutions". Retrospect. Retrospect Inc. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
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External links
- Documentation Page on Retrospect.com
- Knowledge Base Page on Retrospect.com
- User Discussion Forum on Retrospect.com