Currently, we have an SAP server that is doing the snapshot. We use Veeam Agent to avoid the snapshot from freezing on the server.
Backup Engineer at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees
Reliable, good support, and allows us to work with individual files
Pros and Cons
- "The most valuable feature is the ability to pick up individual files."
- "We are very satisfied with Veeam's technical support."
- "The integration needs improvement. It should be easier for my admins."
What is our primary use case?
What is most valuable?
The most valuable feature is the ability to pick up individual files.
What needs improvement?
The integration needs improvement. It should be easier for my admins.
For how long have I used the solution?
We have used Veeam for 10 years and added Veeam Agent for Linux recently because we had a need for it.
We started using this solution a couple of months ago.
We are using the latest version.
Buyer's Guide
Veeam Agent for Linux [EOL]
May 2026
Learn what your peers think about Veeam Agent for Linux [EOL]. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: May 2026.
900,747 professionals have used our research since 2012.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The stability is pretty good. We are satisfied.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
We have a new project that is coming up in the next couple of months with 100 servers with agents. It will be very good.
We are in France, Vietnam, Mauritius, Canada, and Hong Kong. Globally, we have 800 users.
How are customer service and support?
We are very satisfied with Veeam's technical support.
How was the initial setup?
My colleagues have installed the agent on the server. After that, we chose to deploy the agent from the Veeam VBR server, which is more practical for use and more available.
I am a part of a team with 50 people who deploy and maintain this solution.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Licensing costs are monthly.
What other advice do I have?
I would recommend this solution to others who are interested in using it.
I would rate Veeam Agent for Linux an eight out of ten.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
On-premises
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
System Engineer at a computer software company with 201-500 employees
Very good, simple to use, and fits the purpose
Pros and Cons
- "It's simple to use."
- "It is very good, and it fits the purpose."
- "There isn't much to improve. They just need to follow the trend or the development of other Linux products. Follow in terms of making the product compatible with new versions of Linux. They just need to include as many versions for Linux as possible."
What is our primary use case?
We sell the latest version of Veeam Agent for Linux.
What is most valuable?
It's simple to use.
What needs improvement?
There isn't much to improve. They just need to follow the trend or the development of other Linux products. Follow in terms of making the product compatible with new versions of Linux. They just need to include as many versions for Linux as possible.
For how long have I used the solution?
It depends on the customer, but we have been using Veeam Agent for Linux for some years now, and we have no problem.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
It's stable. You just have to deploy the updates regularly, and that's it.
How are customer service and technical support?
I don't have direct experience but one of our customers had. He was quite positively surprised. He opened a support case with level 3, which means it's not so urgent. After a few days, when there was no response for him, he opened a new case with level 1. Then they called him straight away and solved the problem.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup is straight forward. It's simple to install, but then you have to configure it. There are always some specific situations to be considered and put into the plan and then accordingly, consider the solution.
The deployment depends on the configuration, that is, whether you have big environments or small environments. If you have just a few servers, then deployment takes two to three hours altogether, but if you have a big environment, then it takes a couple of days.
What other advice do I have?
If you have a Linux environment and you need to protect it via an agent, that's when you have to use it. Otherwise, you just don't use it. You back up this little machine without initiation.
It is very good, and it fits the purpose. That's a 10 out of 10.
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer. Partner
Buyer's Guide
Veeam Agent for Linux [EOL]
May 2026
Learn what your peers think about Veeam Agent for Linux [EOL]. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: May 2026.
900,747 professionals have used our research since 2012.
CTO at Pronet Security
Easy to install and manage but it needs to support physical machine backup
Pros and Cons
- "The most valuable feature is the instant restore option."
- "We are currently waiting for the continuous backup process."
- "At the moment, this solution is not good enough."
What is most valuable?
The most valuable feature is the instant restore option.
What needs improvement?
We are currently waiting for the continuous backup process.
The continuous backup process is not applied to Veeam.
Veeam must have a good solution for physical backup. On the Linux side, it is using an NFS folder sharing for files, but there are some security difficulties when using NFS, so we have issues using Linux file restore.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using this solution for two years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
This solution is stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
This solution easy enough to scale.
System administrators only use Veeam with one backup administrator.
How are customer service and technical support?
We are satisfied with technical support.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was easy and straightforward.
The deployment model is on a private cloud.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
The pricing is fair and comparable with other backup solutions.
What other advice do I have?
If the production site has physical computers they will not be able to use Veeam, but if they have virtual machines then it’s very good to manage, install, and the reporting is also very good.
We do not have a business relationship with Veeam, we are customers.
I am certified with Veeam.
At the moment, this solution is not good enough.
I would rate this solution a six out of ten.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Consultant at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
Single file restore capability works well, but I would like to be able to install directly on Linux
Pros and Cons
- "The user interface is good."
- "I haven't explored all of what this solution has to offer as I have only been using it for four months, but so far it's good and I would recommend it."
- "I would like to be able to install Veeam directly to Linux instead of having to go through a Windows server."
What is our primary use case?
The primary use case of this solution is for backup and recovery.
What is most valuable?
The most valuable feature is that I can restore single files.
The user interface is good.
What needs improvement?
I would like to be able to install Veeam directly to Linux instead of having to go through a Windows server.
If I can make the VBR (Veeam Backup Replication) a proxy on Linux instead of Windows it would be an improvement in regards to security.
Also, I would like to see Veeam take a backup for shares. If they can take backups from storage then they should be able to backup up for just shares.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using this solution for four months.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
This solution is stable.
I haven't been using it heavily in the four months that I have been using this solution, but so far I would say that it stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
I haven't tried to scale this solution yet, but I would say that it is easy.
How are customer service and technical support?
I have not contacted technical support yet.
I have only had one issue but I was able to solve it.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was straightforward, not difficult.
The documentation available is good.
What about the implementation team?
I did not implement this solution through a vendor, I implemented it myself for a medium-sized company.
What other advice do I have?
I haven't explored all of what this solution has to offer as I have only been using it for four months, but so far it's good and I would recommend it.
In the next release, I would like to see Veeam installed in Linux instead of Windows, that is the main concern for me. Some locations avoid using Veeam because of this, being installed on a Windows Server and not Linux. This would be a huge improvement.
I would rate this solution a seven out of ten.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Senior Solutions Architect at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Offers good monitoring, analytics, and data management
Pros and Cons
- "What I find most valuable about this solution, is that the user experience is very simple."
- "In the next version, I would like to see an increase in the locations online. I have found that other products have good pickup location."
What is most valuable?
What I find most valuable about this solution, is that the user experience is very simple. The support is great. There is a feature for this type of category and for replication and there is also good monitoring and analytics. I also like intelligent testing and intelligence recovery. The solution offers good data management.
What needs improvement?
I am really satisfied with this solution and I don't see anything that needs to improve.
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been using the solution for about two years now.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The solution is very stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
We have about 500 users and it is very simple to scale. Veeam comes with all the software to scale, so it is just the license that is an issue. Now they have better hardware to go full scalability.
How are customer service and technical support?
The technical support is good.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
The costing is very competitive.
What other advice do I have?
Everything works well and the solution is user-friendly, so I will rate it nine out of ten. In the next version, I would like to see an increase in the locations online. I have found that other products have good pickup location. I would recommend Veeam to others.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
BSS Platform Team Leader at a comms service provider with 1,001-5,000 employees
Good backup features and useful integration
Pros and Cons
- "The technical support is good."
- "I like the backup features of this solution and the integration is very useful."
- "The solution is rather expensive and I think the price is too high."
What is most valuable?
I like the backup features of this solution and the integration is very useful.
What needs improvement?
In the next version, I would like to see inclusion for functionality and an improved operating system.
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been using the solution for three to four years now on premises.
How are customer service and technical support?
The technical support is good.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was easy and straightforward. The deployment was done by myself and it was not difficult at all.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
The solution is rather expensive and I think the price is too high. There are also additional costs that are not included in the standard licensing.
What other advice do I have?
On a scale of one to ten, I will rate this solution an eight. Something that needs to improve is compatibility with all the operating systems so that they operate smoothly. That will improve the backup function.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Technical Presales Consultant/ Engineer at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
Has good instant VM recovery features and helps migrate physical to virtual or physical to cloud
Pros and Cons
- "The really amazing feature about Veeam Agent is that when you're using the central deployment model, you can actually use the instant VM recovery feature, which is really a pain point that I find some days."
- "Veeam Agent for Linux works like a charm and after-sales support is amazing, so I can only say that the product is very new."
- "It would be much better if more applications were supported on the Linux side. For example, their agent for Windows not only can back up the Windows machine, but it can also back up Active Directory for granular restore, SQL servers, Exchange, Oracle, SharePoint, etc. When it comes to Linux, only Oracle databases are supported. There are workarounds, though."
- "It would be much better if more applications were supported on the Linux side."
What is our primary use case?
I'm a pre-sales engineer, so I'm basically supporting our partner. We're an IT distributor. There are many inquiries these days looking for backup solutions for Linux, so we made it for Linux. This tool already uses Linux, instead of a backup administrator needing manual workloads to backup the Linux machine. You can deploy this agent remotely, from a backup server. You just have to enable flash and pull and check the compatibility of Linux with big machines and you can remotely deploy it and start backing up in no time.
Our backup is pretty plain and simple. We can back up the entire machine so that you can be able to restore from bare metal in case of loss of the entire machine. You have the option also to restore single files, including backup of the Oracle database. It supports a wide range of Linux distributions but because Linux is an entire world on its own, with many distributions and cable versions, there will always be some Linux distribution with kernel versions that are not supported. However, there is a big, diverse sets of Linux kernel versions that are supported.
I used both deployment models, the stand-alone mode model and the one deployed from the backup server.
How has it helped my organization?
The product has drastically improved. Veeam never used to have any Agents, whether for Linux or Windows. They were strictly focusing on virtual environments. Even within virtual environments, they were strictly focused on Hyper-V VMware. Now, however, with the addition of agents, it helps a lot. Many environments, due to constraints with the received design or performance, prefer to go with certain workloads to be physical. Now the trend in Saudi Arabia is to migrate workloads to Linux since they somehow think it's more secure, although that's a debatable argument. There are also a lot of Oracle databases being deployed on Linux nowadays, so it does come of value there.
What is most valuable?
The really amazing feature about Veeam Agent is that when you're using the central deployment model, you can actually use the instant VM recovery feature, which is really a pain point that I find some days. Here in Saudi Arabia, the market mentality is a bit different. Many customers are still running physical environments. They do not have virtual environments and they're not really keen towards going towards the virtual environment.
They always want to back up their systems every day. In the event of a disaster, they want to be able to restore in less than an hour, which is impossible on a physical environment, due to a lot of constraints, such as networking and other issues. However, Windows gives a feature that if you have a Hyper-V environment, for example, added to the Veeam backup infrastructure, you can choose to restore a backup of a physical server instantly into Hyper-V. The way that works is that they mount the backup to the Hyper-V as storage and just boot it up directly from the backup. That is an amazing feature, and it actually was useful for one customer, whose IT manager was pretty old. He didn't want to migrate his infrastructure to VMware or any virtualized platforms. He was looking for a way to backup these physical servers and at the event, he has a disaster, he'll be able to restore in time.
So that feature doesn't just help with restoring that server in no time inside a Hyper-V server or cluster. It also helps migration for customers who are trying to migrate from physical to virtual or from physical to cloud. The good part is that you can actually restore any backup to Microsoft Azure as well, or to Amazon AWS, almost instantaneously. As long as your bandwidth is sufficient enough, you can restore your workloads to the cloud or to a virtual environment.
That is not to mention the flexibility provided, as it gives you the ability to perform the three to one rule, which is the really necessary part of any backup solution. Being able to have a solution that will help you achieve the three to one rule. The rule basically means having three different backup copies of your data, inside two different mediums. For example, one disc-based storage and one tape or cloud, keeping one copy offsite. I prefer offline because offline backups are the latest backups in terms of a cyber attack, ransomware, or advanced malware attack.
What needs improvement?
It would be much better if more applications were supported on the Linux side. For example, their agent for Windows not only can back up the Windows machine, but it can also back up Active Directory for granular restore, SQL servers, Exchange, Oracle, SharePoint, etc. When it comes to Linux, only Oracle databases are supported. There are workarounds, though. There are other ways to perform application consistency or transaction consistent backups. For example, you can configure having a backup job to run a script to save the laws of the database and store them on specific storage. So more applications support would definitely be of great value because not everyone is using Oracle. Some people are using MySQL or MongoDB and they would like to see a plug and play native integration built into the tool as well. There are plenty of applications in the market these days that are becoming mainstream. People are not only using vendor projects, but they may also use open source projects, which are gaining a lot of popularity.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
It's really important to note that Veeam Agents for Linux is the software that is installed inside the Linux machines, but Veeam Agent integrates with Veeam Backup Server. Backup Server is pretty scalable, but as for the Agents part, I can only tell you about the components that are related to the agent. The main components of Veeam are: Veeam Backup Server, Veeam Repository, Veeam Distribution Server, and Veeam Agents. Agents are going to be deployed on the clients. The Distribution Server is responsible for deploying Agents and monitoring them. The Repository is where you store your backups. Finally, the Backup Server is basically the big brain, so you can distribute and deploy as much of these components as you want across an environment. The distribution architecture is pretty scalable.
We'd like to see native support for clusters in Veeam, as well as other agents for Linux. For example, Microsoft has support for its clusters, which is amazing. There are many people that like Microsoft and really like their clusters, so they want to be able to have their backup solution to be clustered aware. Veeam Agent for Linux has no specific cluster support, however, it still can be used to backup Linux clusters. There is no native support as there is with Veeam Agents for Windows and Microsoft failover cluster support.
How are customer service and technical support?
It's as simple as just opening a support ticket online and calling the toll free number. An engineer engaged remotely within five to ten minutes. They're really responsive and very supportive when it comes to support. Somehow, they love to achieve a higher customer satisfaction rate. Support is a big deal for them.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I'll try not to be as biased as possible regarding Unitrends and Arcserve.
These are backup vendors that have been in the physical backup industry for quite some time. Unitrends has wide Linux distribution and cabinet supports like Veeam, but it goes way too far with Unitrends. It goes even to legacy systems, which Veeam is currently releasing software that supports. With Unitrends, you can back up a Windows NT or a really old Linux machine, but Veeam it's only the most mainstream Linux distributions that are supported. For that and for the physical part, I can say that they are improving drastically. They're on the way, but when it comes to all the legacy systems and cross-platform support, they're a bit backward, compared to other vendors. Veeam started in 2006 as a company, I believe, and the agents were first released in 2015. Still, the pace that they're growing at is pretty fast. It's faster than the other vendors were, but when it comes to physical support, all of these other vendors were much younger, so they've had this experience way before.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was really straightforward and easy. Veeam solutions, in general, are really easy to configure and deploy and they have amazing after-sales support. Veeam can be a nightmare, however, when people are trying to size and design a solution. It's not exactly a nightmare, but it's the phase that is really important and everybody puts an emphasis on. So long as that phase is done correctly, everything should be good to go. Basically, make sure to check compatibility and be sure that the solution is going to fit the customer's required needs. So long as that has been clear from the start, there's no cost to the solution whatsoever.
The time I dealt with Veeam Agent, I tried it in a home lab. At that time, it was pretty new to me. However, when I looked at the installation guide online, which is elaborated thoroughly, I basically installed the Windows machine in which I installed the Veeam Backup Server. I already had a Linux machine, for which I enabled the SSH. I went back to the Backup Server and simply added the IP address and the root account of the machine. Then all of a sudden the agent was already deployed without even a reboot and I managed to do the backup. All of that happened in less than an hour and a half from installing the Backup Server to deploying the Agent to performing the actual backup.
You should try it out to see it for yourself. It's really easy and straightforward.
The maintenance needed for Agent for Linux at our company would be hard to quantify, but it's a huge number because we deal with resellers and systems integrators that deal with end-users. We're not talking about less than 1,000 agents.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
It's a subscription-based license, which is started on a yearly basis.
Currently, the licensing is split between three editions: standard, enterprise, and enterprise plus. As long as you check the comparison between the additions and make sure that you have what you need, there are no extra costs with Veeam. You can have Veeam Agent for Linux installed and start doing backups locally, to the cloud, or to tape. There are plenty of options available.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Veeam provides the software solution, as does Arcserve and Unitrends. However, for the most part, they pitch their backup appliances. Some people may prefer to go with a backup appliance. Others may prefer a software solution. The main reason why people go with Veeam is because of its ease of use and configuration. It just works. Veeam is much easier to use and configure than a software solution that can run on your existing infrastructure. This is better than having to buy all the backup appliances and be tied to that appliance. When it fills up, you need to go buy another appliance, which is not exactly a scalable solution.
What other advice do I have?
Check the compatibility, in detail. Generally speaking, there are many distributions and kernel versions supported, but it's important to be very picky about the kernel and distribution version that they are running. First, to check the agent that's compatible with them or not. For example, the most known Linux distribution is Red Hat. There have been many releases of Red Hat, many of which are being used in production. Right now, there is a version from Red Hat 5 through Red Hat 8, which I think is the latest. At the moment, I think Veeam supports 6 to 7.5 and it had 8 which is a new release, but still not supported. I imagine it will be supported very soon. However, many people are using Red Hat 5 and that's not supported yet.
In addition, make sure you plan your backups in general. This is not just tied to Veeam Agent for Linux, but tied to any backup solution. You need to know what kind of expectations you are looking for. Some people already have their backup strategy planned and want to backup their server every day and keep a retention policy of one month, for example. Because Veeam is a software solution and works with almost any storage, they come into the situation where they don't know how much storage they need. So they just make some assumptions instead of properly sizing it and they get the backup storage. Either it exceeds what they need, which is okay, or it's lower than what they need and they run into an issue at the end of the month, where the backups are failing because the storage is too full. This is the situation with any backup solution.
It's also really important to set up the antivirus and anti-malware exceptions and firewall ports. If you know about them before deployment, set up the exceptions for the firewall port and anti-malware, then you won't have any issues to worry about during deployment.
I'll give this a nine out of ten because it's really easy and straightforward. I haven't faced any issues with it yet to this day and I've done many proof of concepts and demos for clients. Veeam Agent for Linux works like a charm and after-sales support is amazing, so I can only say that the product is very new. If there is room for improvement, that would be specifically with application support, instead of just supporting Oracle databases. They should be more open to supporting other open-source AWS backups as well, however that can be done. In the backup job, you have the option either to specify your application work processing to backup Oracle databases or to use a script. This basically means whoever is administering the database can provide a script that Veeam will execute before running the backup, after running the backup, or freezing the database so that when the backup is taken the database is in a consistent state.
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer. Reseller.
Chief Technology Officer at Triana Business Solutions Lda
An easy-to-manage solution that offers fast recovery and good stability
Pros and Cons
- "The solution is very user-friendly and has an easy to use interface. We can manage it easily. It allows for a simple backup."
- "I would advise others to go ahead and implement it; this is a good solution for disaster recovery, easy to implement and operate, and very fast at recovering the entire environment."
- "In terms of the physical environment, I'd like them to integrate it with other kinds of solutions. We don't just work with Microsoft or Linux, but other kinds of infrastructure data as well."
What is our primary use case?
We primarily use the solution for disaster recovery purposes. We replicate from one site to another from our environment.
What is most valuable?
The solution is very user-friendly and has an easy to use interface. We can manage it easily. It allows for a simple backup.
The speed that you get backing up huge amounts of data from virtual machines is impressive.
What needs improvement?
I would like to be able to take care of more than just the virtual environment with this solution.
In terms of the physical environment, I'd like them to integrate it with other kinds of solutions. We don't just work with Microsoft or Linux, but other kinds of infrastructure data as well.
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been using the solution for at least two years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The stability of the solution is good. I've been satisfied with it so far.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
If you are in a hybrid environment and have only one solution, which is Veeam, then you may have a problem with the integration of other kinds of preparatory solutions.
The scalability in a virtualization environment is very easy and it's quick to implement. However, when you have a lot of other solutions, then you have to redesign this solution to integrate with them. The scalability, if you talk about virtualization environments, is very nice.
At the end of the day, it's pretty scalable. In our environment, we provide a host environment for a lot of companies that belong to the government.
How are customer service and technical support?
Technical support is very good. They're very interactive and you can tell they care. When we need them, it's very easy to communicate with them and they make sure to solve the problem.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Previously, we were using Oracle Security Backup. We switched because Oracle Security Backup does not allow you to make a backup of a virtual machine at all.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was not so complex, but not so straight forward either. We had to design specifically for it because our infrastructure is quite complex. To be able to integrate Veeam with our infrastructure was pretty straightforward. We are also providing some services for hosting and co-location.
At the end of the day, Veeam was mostly straightforward and easy to implement.
Deployment took about 21 days. After deployment, you need about two to three people to take care of the environment.
What about the implementation team?
70% of the implementation we did by ourselves. The rest we had the help of a partner service provider.
What was our ROI?
I don't have exact numbers, but you get an ROI very quickly with this solution due to your ability to get to market very fast.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
We tried NetBackup, among other solutions prior to implementing this current product.
What other advice do I have?
We are using the on-premises deployment model.
I would advise others to go ahead and implement it. This is a good solution for disaster recovery. It's easy to implement and easy to operate. Veeam is a good solution for the second phase of a disaster which is basically recovering all of the environment. It's also very fast.
I would rate the solution nine out of ten.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
System Administrator at Bakhresa Group of companies
A scalable backup solution with a straightforward setup and easy to manage and restore backup
Pros and Cons
- "The initial setup was straightforward. It's not complicated. It takes around half an hour to implement, but it depends on the performance of the server that you are installing the backup software on."
- "It's scalable, but it's not scalable on every platform."
What is our primary use case?
Agent is installed to our VMs virtualized with Oracle VM virtual machines and backup them to our NAS storage over the LAN.
This is managed by VBR which was installed for our VMware VMs
How has it helped my organization?
Now we are able to include other virtual servers which are virtualized with Oracle VM to our backup plan, and other standalone servers
What is most valuable?
Disk, File or entire server restore is the best as you can choose from these restore options depending on your recovery requirement
What needs improvement?
I would appreciate if Veeam Agent for particular platforms, like Linux, Windows or iOS, is integrated on the same Veeam B&R console.
For example, if someone wants to use the agent to backup the physical server or standalone server, the option should be there on the Veeam B&R installation software and available on the Veeam Availability Console as well, for simple and easy Agent installation
Also during the Agent Backup, the progress status not displayed on VBR console until job is finished, we should be able to monitor the progress on the console rather than on standalone server only
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been using the solution for four months.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The solution is very stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
It's scalable, but it's not scalable on every platform.
How are customer service and technical support?
I would rate technical support 9 out of 10.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Veritas Backup Exec, we changed to VBR because of compression capability and simple backup and restore procedures
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was straightforward. It's not complicated. It takes around half an hour to implement, but it depends on the performance of the server that you are installing the backup software on.
What about the implementation team?
We have implemented on our own in house
What was our ROI?
We have not calculated yet as we just added to our existing licenses for Veeam B&R
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
The pricing model makes it so that it's not too expensive. You only need to license the machines that use it. You don't need to license the calls, the processor, or the physical server.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Symantec Backup Exec (Veritas)
What other advice do I have?
We are using the on-premises deployment model.
I would recommend that anyone who needs to run a backup platform should use this solution.
I would rate the solution nine out of ten.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
IT Manager at Jawwal Pay
An excellent solution that's quick to install, easy to manage, and able to restore even single files
Pros and Cons
- "It's most compatible with VMware. It can restore single files instead of having to restore the whole machine, once again leading to savings for the company."
- "The solution saved time and money."
- "Scalability, if you are talking about Linux, is good. However, if you need to backup more types of solutions or Unix systems, like HP/UX, AIX, etc., it's not compatible."
What is our primary use case?
The solution is primarily used to backup data.
How has it helped my organization?
If you compare the Veeam Backup Solution with EMC NetWorker, EMC NetWorker is very complex to manage and deploy. With Veeam you can deploy it in one hour or as little as thirty minutes. For EMC NetWorker, you need days or even weeks. In 2012 I led a project for an EMC Networker deployment. It took around two months at my previous company. In comparison, in January we deployed Veeam and it took around one hour, and it was quick and easy. The solution saved time and money.
Also, management is very simple. It's most compatible with VMware. It can restore single files instead of having to restore the whole machine, once again leading to savings for the company.
What is most valuable?
Generally, Veeam is very robust. It's completely compatible with Linux. The most valuable feature in Veeam is its compatibility with VMware. The solution provides a lot of features, including backing up of images. You can restore VM itself. You can also restore a single file. There's a feature called instant recovery. You can run VMware in the background without restoring it. It's a very valuable backup solution.
What needs improvement?
In the future, the solution should make sure it's compatible with Unix versions like HP/UX and AIX.
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been using the solution for seven months.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The solution is very stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
The solution is very scalable. I do intend to expand usage in the future.
How are customer service and technical support?
I've never needed to contact technical support.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was very straightforward. It takes under an hour.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Veeam is very inexpensive. We have a bi-monthly licensing plan.
What other advice do I have?
I'm using the hybrid deployment model.
The backup for Veeam is very fast, especially in comparison to EMC Network.
Scalability, if you are talking about scaling on Linux, is good. However, if you need to backup more types of solutions or Unix systems, like HP/UX, AIX, etc., it's not compatible. In this case, EMC NetWorker is more compatible with different types of Unix operating systems. That's something a new user should keep in mind if they are considering implementing Veeam.
I would rate the solution nine out of ten.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Buyer's Guide
Download our free Veeam Agent for Linux [EOL] Report and get advice and tips from experienced pros
sharing their opinions.
Updated: May 2026
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Buyer's Guide
Download our free Veeam Agent for Linux [EOL] Report and get advice and tips from experienced pros
sharing their opinions.
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