Executive Summary:
In this comparative review, we examine three disk-imaging solutions: Acronis Snap Deploy 2.0, Paragon Drive Backup Professional 8.5, and Symantec Ghost Solution Suite. Our findings will help you determine which of these products would be best suited to helping you deploy, for example, Windows Vista in your environment. |
Windows Vista has been
available for over a year
now, and as this article
goes to print, Vista
SP1 is just hitting TechNet. Now it’s time to
start thinking about how to deploy this major
upgrade. If your company has only a few computers, the notion of
physically visiting each one is probably reasonable. But if you’re
looking at hundreds or even thousands of machines, a disk-imaging
product is essential for saving hours of valuable time. Instead of
scurrying around to find a copy of the OS, the license key, and someone
to babysit an installation, you can use a disk-imaging product to
quickly lay down a master image of a hard disk to one or more computers.
Of course, to justify the overhead of creating and maintaining
that master image, you need to consider how many computers you
have in your environment and how many you deploy per year. Those
numbers are different for every company, but suffice it to say that an
administrator who oversees only 10 computers probably won’t be
able to justify the expense.
In this comparative review, I examine three disk-imaging solutions:
Acronis Snap Deploy 2.0, Paragon Deployment Manager 8.5
System Builder Edition, and Symantec Ghost Solution Suite. I’m
hoping my findings will help you determine which of these products
would be best suited to helping you deploy Vista in your environment. To test each product, I used built-in feature sets for deploying
a new OS. Each network had a dedicated server running a management
console, from which I could manage remote machines, and
one other Vista and Windows XP client to test remote management.
Each product uses a similar process of copying an entire hard disk to
an image file (or files). This image file serves as a master image that
the product then copies to a new PC’s hard disk. All three products
can utilize a multicast technology with which multiple PCs can
receive the master image simultaneously.
Acronis Snap Deploy 2.0
Like the other two companies in this review, Acronis offers a suite
of products that target complex disk-imaging projects. I narrowed
down to Acronis Snap Deploy for the purposes of this comparative
review.
Installation. On the Acronis.com Web site, I found a useful
Getting Started guide that helped me begin the installation process.
The installation consists of five separate applications, four of
which—Management Console, License Server, OS Deploy Server,
and PXE Server—are typically installed on one dedicated server. The fifth component is the Management Agent,
which you can install on remote clients to
permit remote management.
Installing the Management Console and
License Server is straightforward. However,
be sure to add the licenses you’ve purchased
from Acronis before attempting to install the
OS Deploy Server; if you don’t, the OS Deploy
Server installation will fail when it can’t find
any valid licenses. Applying the licenses to the
server is a relatively simple process of typing
one or more serial numbers. From an email
message I received from Acronis, I had five
25-character licenses to type in, and I discovered
that they weren’t easy to just copy and
paste. Fortunately, I was able to save time by
copying the serial numbers into a simple text
file and importing them.
Installing the OS Deploy application
requires a reboot. If you plan to use a production
server to host this portion of Acronis
Snap Deploy, be sure to take this necessity
into account. The PXE Server element—the
final installation piece—installs very quickly
and is further configured in the Management
Console through a simple wizard. You can
also choose to use the PXE server that comes
with Remote Installation Service (RIS).
New OS deployment. Like most imaging
products, Acronis Snap Deploy recommends
that you use Sysprep on the master
PC before creating a master image. To create
the master image, you can use the Management Agent, but the manual advises against
doing so. I decided to use the built-in PXE
Server to capture a master image of the Vista
PC. I also tried the Create Bootable Media
option to produce a bootable disk, ISO
image, or RIS server file because some PCs
aren’t PXE-enabled. Regardless of whether
you boot using the built-in PXE Server,
the RIS PXE server, or bootable media, the
process is the same: You use the wizard to
choose the hard drive to be imaged, select
a location to store the image file, select the
compression level, and insert any comments
you want to add to the image.
At this point, you can also set the IP
address, subnet mask, default gateway, and
DNS and WINS server if your network
doesn’t use DHCP. Through this wizard, you
can set the Ethernet speed—a useful setting
if, for example, your network engineer sets
the switches to 100/FULL. It’s important that
you configure the same setting (i.e., AUTO
or 100/Full ) on both the network switch
and the PC. If one device is set to AUTO and
the other to 100/FULL, the NIC will default
to 100/Half Duplex and the disk deployment
will take an extremely long time.
After you create the master image, you
can deploy it to other computers. To do so,
you can use the same method you used
for taking the image—by utilizing the PXE
Server, RIS method, or boot disk. You can
also use the Remote Management Console to deploy images. To do so, the target PCs
must already have an OS installed and
running, and the management agent must
be installed. Acronis Snap Deploy also supports
images created by Acronis True Image.
Figure 1 shows remote clients standing by,
ready to accept the new master image.
Additional features. Uniquely, Acronis
Snap Deploy allows automatic transfer
of files to PCs after the image has been
applied. The product’s Acronis Universal
Deploy—an add-on option—permits physical-
to-virtual (P2V) and virtual-to-physical
(V2P) migrations and gives you a great way
to deploy images to dissimilar hardware.
Acronis Snap Deploy also offers remotemanagement
capabilities: After you install
the Snap Deploy Management Agent on
the target PC, you can manage files, execute
applications remotely, and even schedule
tasks through the Management Console.
That being said, I wasn’t terribly impressed
with the product’s remote file-management
capabilities, which I can perform with a
simple UNC path (e.g., \\computername c$). Also, I could perform most of the features
of the Scheduled Tasks tool through
Group Policy. Still, remote management is
a nice addition.
Help and support. Acronis has a limited
support Web site with only a few Knowledge
Base articles relating to Snap Deploy.
The site’s “online chat” services helped me
find answers that I needed, but I endured a
long wait; it took two to three minutes for
a technician to respond. At one point, an
obviously multitasking technician pasted
someone else’s answer in my window.
Acronis Snap Deploy 2.0 for
PC and Server
Pros: It’s the cheapest solution of the three;
clean interface; PXE deployment is easy to set up
and works without a hitch
Cons: Lackluster support Web site; clogged
“online chat” services
Rating:
Price: $19.99 per PC; $99 per server; volume
discounts available
Recommendation: If your budget is tight, I
recommend this inexpensive solution for simple
OS deployments
Contact: Acronis • www.acronis.com •
877-669-9749
|
Paragon Deployment Manager
8.5 System Builder Edition
Paragon Software Group offers quite a few
backup, disk-imaging, and partition-management
products for the business and the
home. There’s even a product for completely
wiping your hard disk—useful when you’re
retiring old systems. A few of the company’s
products tackle disk imaging, but after
careful consideration, I chose to examine
Paragon Deployment Manager 8.5 System
Builder Edition.
Installation. The very clean Paragon
Deployment Manager installation routine
installs five components: Hard Disk Manager,
PXE Server, Infrastructure Server,
Deployment Console, and Boot Media
Builder. You can install all the components
on the same machine or individually onto
separate machines if you want to distribute
the workload. A DHCP server is available if
you don’t already have one on your network.
Be sure to read the DHCP Server installation
screen carefully; the Yes, there is no DHCP
server option can be a bit confusing if you
don’t read the entire screen. If you already
have a DHCP server, the manual provides
step-by-step instructions for how to configure
the correct DHCP server options to permit
the use of the PXE Server component.
Continue to page 2
Could the editor please edit the second paragraph of the Editor's choice to remove the erroneous Copy/Paste operation?
TIA.
JQJ.
janqjans May 29, 2008 (Article Rating: