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We use some

  • block blobs to store some durable resources and then
  • page blobs to store event data

We need to backup the blobs, so I tried to use AzCopy. It works ok on my dev machine, but it fails on other slow machine with error "The remote server returned an error: (412) The condition specified using HTTP conditional header(s) is not met.." almost every time.
We write to page blobs quite often (might be up to several times in a second, but this is not so common case), so this might be the reason.

Is there any better strategy how to backup the changing blobs? Or is there any way how to bypass the problem with ETag used by AzCopy?

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  • A few questions: 1) Do you get this error only with Page Blobs or does this happen with Block Blobs as well? 2) Are you copying the blobs in the same storage account or across storage accounts? Jan 10, 2017 at 15:29
  • Ad 1. Just with page blobs (that get frequent update), Ad 2. Same storage. I already learned that copying to other storage takes much more time.
    – stej
    Jan 11, 2017 at 7:08
  • Please look at David's answer below. I believe taking a blob snapshot and using that for copying will solve your problem. The question is how you would do that using AzCopy. I think you will need to resort to PowerShell where for each Page Blob you would take a snapshot first and then copy using that snapshot. Jan 11, 2017 at 7:13

1 Answer 1

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A changed ETag will always halt a copy, since a changing ETag signifies that the source has changed.

The general approach to blob backup is subjective, but objectively:

  • blob copies within Azure itself, in the same region, from Storage account to Storage account, are going to be significantly faster than trying to copy a blob to an on-premises location (due to general Internet latency) or even copying from storage account to local disk on a VM.
  • Blobs support snapshots (which take place relatively instantly). If you create a snapshot, the snapshot remains unchanged, allowing you to then execute a copy operation against the snapshot instead of the actual blob itself (using AzCopy in your case) without fear of the source data changing during the copy. Note: You can create as many snapshots as you want; just be careful, since storage size grows as the underlying original blob changes.
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  • +1, One method is to use blob snapshots, and the Snapshot Blob operation creates a read-only snapshot of a blob, more information about blob snapshots, refer to the link: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/rest/api/storageservices/fileservices/…
    – Jason Ye
    Jan 11, 2017 at 6:42
  • If I understand it correctly, I should make a snapshot from the page blob and then copy the snapshot to the backup location as a new page blob. After that I can delete the snapshot, right?
    – stej
    Jan 11, 2017 at 7:19
  • Is there any tool that can work with snapshots? List them and copy them? Or at least PowerShell commandlets?
    – stej
    Jan 11, 2017 at 7:20
  • @stej - this is all documented, and plenty of examples are around for using AzCopy/PowerShell/SDKs with snapshots. I suggest reading up on the docs/examples to see specifics. Jan 11, 2017 at 11:45
  • Honestly, I haven't found "plenty" of examples. I need to copy the snapshot, not the blob itself. E.g. learn.microsoft.com/cs-cz/azure/storage/… is only about copying blob + snapshot together. Anyway, the answer is "snapshots", so I'll accept your response. Thank you.
    – stej
    Jan 12, 2017 at 11:52

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