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Automated Backup for SQL Server in Azure Virtual Machines (Classic)

Automated Backup automatically configures Managed Backup to Microsoft Azure for all existing and new databases on an Azure VM running SQL Server 2014 Standard or Enterprise. This enables you to configure regular database backups that utilize durable Azure blob storage. Automated Backup depends on the SQL Server IaaS Agent Extension.

Important

Azure has two different deployment models for creating and working with resources: Resource Manager and Classic. This article covers using the Classic deployment model. Microsoft recommends that most new deployments use the Resource Manager model. To view the Resource Manager version of this article, see Automated Backup for SQL Server in Azure Virtual Machines Resource Manager.

Prerequisites

To use Automated Backup, consider the following prerequisites:

Operating System:

  • Windows Server 2012
  • Windows Server 2012 R2
  • Windows Server 2016

SQL Server version/edition:

  • SQL Server 2014 Standard
  • SQL Server 2014 Enterprise

Note

Automated Backup for SQL Server 2016 is supported with Resource Manager virtual machines. For more information, see Automated Backup v2 for SQL Server 2016 Azure Virtual Machines (Resource Manager).

Database configuration:

  • Target databases must use the full recovery model.

Azure PowerShell:

SQL Server IaaS Extension:

Settings

The following table describes the options that can be configured for Automated Backup. For classic VMs, you must use PowerShell to configure these settings.

Setting Range (Default) Description
Automated Backup Enable/Disable (Disabled) Enables or disables Automated Backup for an Azure VM running SQL Server 2014 Standard or Enterprise.
Retention Period 1-30 days (30 days) The number of days to retain a backup.
Storage Account Azure storage account (the storage account created for the specified VM) An Azure storage account to use for storing Automated Backup files in blob storage. A container is created at this location to store all backup files. The backup file naming convention includes the date, time, and machine name.
Encryption Enable/Disable (Disabled) Enables or disables encryption. When encryption is enabled, the certificates used to restore the backup are located in the specified storage account in the same automaticbackup container using the same naming convention. If the password changes, a new certificate is generated with that password, but the old certificate remains to restore prior backups.
Password Password text (None) A password for encryption keys. This is only required if encryption is enabled. In order to restore an encrypted backup, you must have the correct password and related certificate that was used at the time the backup was taken.
Backup system databases Enable/Disable (Disabled) Take full backups of Master, Model, and MSDB
Configure backup schedule Manual/Automated (Automated) Select Automated to automatically take full and log backups based on log growth. Select Manual to specify the schedule for full and log backups.

Configuration with PowerShell

In the following PowerShell example, Automated Backup is configured for an existing SQL Server 2014 VM. The New-AzureVMSqlServerAutoBackupConfig command configures the Automated Backup settings to store backups in the Azure storage account specified by the $storageaccount variable. These backups will be retained for 10 days. The Set-AzureVMSqlServerExtension command updates the specified Azure VM with these settings.

$storageaccount = "<storageaccountname>"
$storageaccountkey = (Get-AzureStorageKey -StorageAccountName $storageaccount).Primary
$storagecontext = New-AzureStorageContext -StorageAccountName $storageaccount -StorageAccountKey $storageaccountkey
$autobackupconfig = New-AzureVMSqlServerAutoBackupConfig -StorageContext $storagecontext -Enable -RetentionPeriod 10

Get-AzureVM -ServiceName <vmservicename> -Name <vmname> | Set-AzureVMSqlServerExtension -AutoBackupSettings $autobackupconfig | Update-AzureVM

It could take several minutes to install and configure the SQL Server IaaS Agent.

To enable encryption, modify the previous script to pass the EnableEncryption parameter along with a password (secure string) for the CertificatePassword parameter. The following script enables the Automated Backup settings in the previous example and adds encryption.

$storageaccount = "<storageaccountname>"
$storageaccountkey = (Get-AzureStorageKey -StorageAccountName $storageaccount).Primary
$storagecontext = New-AzureStorageContext -StorageAccountName $storageaccount -StorageAccountKey $storageaccountkey
$password = "P@ssw0rd"
$encryptionpassword = $password | ConvertTo-SecureString -AsPlainText -Force  
$autobackupconfig = New-AzureVMSqlServerAutoBackupConfig -StorageContext $storagecontext -Enable -RetentionPeriod 10 -EnableEncryption -CertificatePassword $encryptionpassword

Get-AzureVM -ServiceName <vmservicename> -Name <vmname> | Set-AzureVMSqlServerExtension -AutoBackupSettings $autobackupconfig | Update-AzureVM

To disable automatic backup, run the same script without the -Enable parameter to the New-AzureVMSqlServerAutoBackupConfig. As with installation, it can take several minutes to disable Automated Backup.

Note

Disabling and uninstalling the SQL Server IaaS Agent does not remove the previously configured Managed Backup settings. You should disable Automated Backup before disabling or uninstalling the SQL Server IaaS Agent.

Next steps

Automated Backup configures Managed Backup on Azure VMs. So it is important to review the documentation for Managed Backup to understand the behavior and implications.

You can find additional backup and restore guidance for SQL Server on Azure VMs in the following topic: Backup and Restore for SQL Server in Azure Virtual Machines.

For information about other available automation tasks, see SQL Server IaaS Agent Extension.

For more information about running SQL Server on Azure VMs, see SQL Server on Azure Virtual Machines overview.