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Score: 0.9712552679834555; Reported for: String similarity Open both answers

Possible Plagiarism

Reposted on 2019-03-18
by SimonGoldstone

Original Post

Original - Posted on 2019-03-18
by SimonGoldstone



            
Present in both answers; Present only in the new answer; Present only in the old answer;

I have used **Azure Data Factory** to backup Azure storage with great effect. It's really easy to use, cost effective and work very well.
Simply create a Data Factory (v2), set up data connections to your data sources (it currently supports Azure Tables, Azure Blobs and Azure Files) and then set up a data copy pipeline.
The pipelines can merge, overwrite, etc. and you can set up custom rules/wildcards. Once you've set up the pipeline, you should then set up a schedule trigger. This will kick off the backup at an interval to suit your needs.
I've been using it for months and it's perfect. No code, no VMS, no custom PowerShell scripts or third party software. Pure Azure solution.
I have used **Azure Data Factory** to backup Azure storage with great effect. It's really easy to use, cost effective and work very well.
Simply create a Data Factory (v2), set up data connections to your data sources (it currently supports Azure Tables, Azure Blobs and Azure Files) and then set up a data copy pipeline.

The pipelines can merge, overwrite, etc. and you can set up custom rules/wildcards.

Once you've set up the pipeline, you should then set up a schedule trigger. This will kick off the backup at an interval to suit your needs.
I've been using it for months and it's perfect. No code, no VMS, no custom PowerShell scripts or third party software. Pure Azure solution.

        
Present in both answers; Present only in the new answer; Present only in the old answer;