week 21

K1.21 The purpose, criteria and types of back-up involved in risk mitigation:

To maintain an up-to-date copy of data that can be used to restore systems or information in the event of:

  • Full disaster recovery (e.g. flood, ransomware attack)

  • Partial data loss (e.g. accidental deletion, corrupted file)

Back-ups help organisations recover quickly and continue operating with minimal disruption.

 

Back-Up Criteria

When designing a back-up strategy, organisations must consider the following key criteria:

Criterion Explanation Example
Frequency How often data is backed up Hourly, daily, weekly, monthly
Source What is being backed up Individual files, folders, databases, entire systems
Destination Where the data is being backed up to Local disk, external hard drive, remote server, cloud
Storage What kind of storage device or system is used Cloud storage, LTO (Linear Tape Open), USB, external disk

 

The more frequent and reliable the back-up, the less data the organisation will lose in a disaster.

Types of Back-Up

Organisations use different types of back-up depending on how much data they have, how often it changes, and how fast they need to recover.

Full Back-Up

A complete copy of all selected data is made every time a back-up is run.

Pros Cons
Easy and fast to restore Takes up the most storage space
Simple to manage Takes longer to complete

 

Best for weekly back-ups or before big changes.

Incremental Back-Up

Only backs up data that has changed since the last back-up (whether full or incremental).

Pros Cons
Saves time and storage Slower to restore (requires all previous incremental files)

 

✅ Good for daily/hourly back-ups where storage space is limited.

Differential Back-Up

Backs up all changes made since the last full back-up (ignores previous differential back-ups).

Pros Cons
Faster restore than incremental Slower back-up than incremental
Only need last full + one differential Takes more space than incremental

 

Balances speed and space — often used mid-week between full back-ups.

Mirror Back-Up

Creates an exact real-time duplicate (mirror) of the source data.

Pros Cons
Instant restore Cannot recover deleted or corrupted files if they mirror immediately
Real-time back-up Higher cost, more technical setup

 

Ideal for systems that require near-zero downtime (e.g. financial services).

Example Scenario

A college IT department backs up student data as follows:

  • Sunday: Full back-up to cloud

  • Monday to Friday: Incremental back-up to network-attached storage (NAS)

  • Every hour: Mirror back-up of assessment system for real-time restoration

This layered strategy balances storage, recovery speed, and security.

 

Design a Back-Up Strategy

Scenario:
You are responsible for designing a back-up solution for a small business that uses cloud systems, in-house servers, and allows remote work.

Task:
1. Choose a combination of back-up types (e.g. full + incremental).

2. Decide on:
  - Frequency of each back-up
  - Source data (files, systems, email)
  - Destination (e.g. cloud, external hard drive)
  - Storage method (e.g. LTO, disk)

3. Justify why your strategy will protect the business in case of:
  - Accidental deletion
  - Cyberattack
  - Hardware failure

Extension: Create a diagram to visually show the back-up schedule.

 


Last Updated
2025-07-14 13:40:19

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