BrightStor ARCserve has a very detailed log... its that detailed it gets a bit.. yawn... boring
On the Bright side (ho ho) it hasnt failed us once- even when doing disaster recovery on 49 Win2K servers, 6 Nt 4.0 boxes and various other bits and bobs. Same applies for regular backups and restores.
It isnt actually that pricey considering it is (i suppose) an industry standard.
I guess my point here is that by all means do something like an annual disaster recovery routine just to prove that your methods are still valid and work. Of course this can mean the odd bit of downtime. However, assuming the worst, another box is well worth it since if the restore fails then u r stuck considering you've just done it on a production server!
I feel a bit useless here since ive only every worked in big organisations.. ...which can have its faults.
We have a contract with a 3rd party that deals with the real bad stuff. So thats anything from a fried CPU on a production box all the way to fire, flood etc. With that is bundled remote working so that we can all work from a completely different location using the 3rd party's servers.
Scaling this down to a shop- maybe you can rent an identical server to restore to? That would prove the concept. Then maybe you can find a company that you can pay to get you out of the poop if something does go wrong. A failover plan could be as simple as renting a server..... or it could be more formal depending on the suits' preferences.
Regards,
Scin