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Luca Dell'Oca Principal Cloud Architect @Veeam
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Virtualization blog, the italian way.

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Virtual To The Core
Virtual To The Core

Virtualization blog, the italian way.

Author: Luca Dell'Oca

Luca Dell’Oca, 2011/2012/2013 VMware vExpert,works in IT since 2000. Since 2006, he’s working as a virtualization consultant and architect, specialized in the design and management of VMware infrastructures. He is also a co-founder and board member of the Italian VMware User Group, and author of the blog www.virtualtothecore.com, where he regularly publishes articles on everything related to virtualization.
Tech

Veeam Availability Console and agent automatic installation

Luca Dell'Oca, September 11, 2019September 10, 2019

Last week, I explained how to manually connect standalone computers to Veeam Availability Console. This time we will try to automate this process as much as possible.

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Tech

Veeam Availability Console and standalone computers

Luca Dell'Oca, August 27, 2019August 25, 2019

Veeam Availability Console has been designed for multiple use cases, and one of them is to manage large fleets of computers. But what about those standalone machines we have lying around? It could be the last physical server we have in the datacenter, or a laptop of a consultant that is always travelling around. How can we deal with those? I involved my family’s computers to find out.

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News

I wrote another book! This time, about Veeam Availabiliy Console

Luca Dell'Oca, July 23, 2019July 18, 2019

If you are subscribed to this blog via RSS, you may have noticed that May and June have been two empty months in terms of writing, and tobe honest the entire 2019 has not been so prolific as usual. This is because I worked, and I’m still working, on some large projects that took a big chunk of my time. I’m still writing these days, but the outcome is coming out in big pieces instead of weekly posts. The first one is this, about Veeam Availability Console.

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Tech

Building my own virtual lab in vCloud Director with Terraform

Luca Dell'Oca, July 9, 2019July 5, 2019

In a previous blog post I started to study Terraform, and how to connect it to vCloud Director. This time, I will build my entire lab using the same automation tool.

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Tech

Configure Veeam N2WS copies to S3 and export them via backup copies

Luca Dell'Oca, May 2, 2019April 20, 2019

In my previous post, I talked about Veeam N2WS Backup and Recovery (known previously as CPM) and how to configure it to protect different AWS accounts. Now that the configuration is ready, it’s time to protect the virtual machines, and to export them into S3 so that we can have an offsite copy using Veeam Backup & Replication.

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Tech

Protect external AWS accounts with Veeam N2WS Backup & Recovery

Luca Dell'Oca, April 23, 2019April 20, 2019

One of the main focus of this year for me as a cloud architect at Veeam, is to learn as much as possible about public cloud technologies, and how our software solutions can interact with them. I started a few weeks ago to deep dive into our solutions for Amazon Web Services, using N2WS Backup & Recovery. One of the things I’ve learned is how to create a dedicated account to protect other accounts.

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Tech

Learning how to use terraform in vCloud Director

Luca Dell'Oca, April 2, 2019April 3, 2019

Lately, I took the decision to do not have anymore a physical lab, even if it was already hosted and managed at a service provider, but to completely nest it inside a vCloud Director tenancy. But while I was planning the rebuild operation, I also decided it was time to make its creation process as automated as possible, and while doing so, I learned a bit about how to use Terraform.

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Tech

Automatic restore of multiple machines from Veeam to AWS

Luca Dell'Oca, February 26, 2019February 25, 2019

A couple of weeks ago I presented to a customer Veeam's integration with AWS services, specifically the Direct Restore to EC2 feature. He was really interested, but he also immediately thought about possible large scenarios of this feature. This solution is not a Disaster Recovery technology, since a machine is not replicated into EC2, ready to be powered on, but it's rather a backup that is uploaded and then imported into EC2. But still, massive migrations or the creation of dev/test environments from a production copy were really nice use cases.

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