System Center Data Protection Manager (DPM) is an established backup product for protecting Microsoft on-premise workloads. As our customers move some or all of their infrastructure to Azure, a key ask is the ability to back up workloads now running in Azure. In order to cater to this need, we now support DPM running in an Azure IaaS VM, to protect Azure IaaS workloads .
Figure 1: Supported deployment of DPM in Azure for workload protection
The supported configuration is illustrated in the above diagram. The DPM installation prerequisites remain the same, as described in the TechNet documentation.
DPM VM size |
Max. number of protected workloads |
Avg. workload size |
Avg. workload churn |
Sample workload |
A2 |
20 |
100 GB |
Net 5% churn daily |
SQL, File server |
A3 |
40 |
150 GB |
Net 10% churn daily |
SQL, File server |
A4 |
60 |
200 GB |
Net 15% churn daily |
SQL, File server |
Use the console in the DPM virtual machine to perform all the standard backup operations like installing the DPM agent, setting up the protection group, recovering data, and monitoring backup and recovery jobs. DPM running as an Azure virtual machine also works seamlessly with the Azure Backup service to protect certain supported workloads. See the documentation on TechNet for more information .
Supported workloadsOnly a subset of the workloads supported by DPM on-premise are supported for protection in an Azure deployment . The table below summarizes the backup support for Azure-supported workloads. Workloads that are not supported in Azure are not included in the table.
DPM 2012 R2 | DPM 2012 with SP1 | DPM 2012 | Protection and Recovery | |
Windows Server 2012 R2 – Datacenter and Standard | Y | N | N | Volumes, Files, Folders |
Windows Server 2012 – Datacenter and Standard | Y | Y | N | Volumes, Files, Folders |
Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 – Standard and Enterprise | Y | Y | Y | Volumes, Files, Folders |
SQL Server – 2012, 2008 R2, 2008 | Y | Y | Y | SQL Server Database |
SharePoint – 2013, 2010 | Y | Y | Y | Farm, Database, Frontend web server content |
Update: A list of FAQs around DPM in an Azure IaaS virtual machine have been posted to the DPM blog.
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