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DL4300 Appliance
About restoring data with Rapid Recovery
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NOTE:
Without removing existing recovery points, you cannot change repositories for a protected
machine.
5. Create a new repository for the migrated recovery points, or ensure a new destination repository exists. For
•
If you want to use an existing repository, continue to
.
6. Change the repository for each machine that you paused by completing the following steps:
a. On the Core Console, click the protected machine in the navigation tree.
b. On the Summary page of the protected machine, click Settings.
c. On the Settings page, in the General pane, click the Repository drop-down list, and then select in
the name of the repository you created in
.
▪
If you want to use an existing repository, select the name of an existing repository.
NOTE:
When migrating recovery points to an existing repository, ensure that the existing
repository has enough free space to contain the migrated recovery points.
d. Click OK.
7. Resume protection for the machine or machines that you paused. For more information, see
.
8. Take a new base image for each of the protected machines you moved. For more information, see
and use the Force Base Image option.
9. Import the archived data for the machines you want to migrate. For more information, see
.
Parent topic
Restoring data
This section describes how to restore backed up data.
Parent topic
About restoring data with Rapid Recovery
The Rapid Recovery Core can instantly restore data or recover machines to physical or virtual machines
from recovery points. The recovery points contain agent volume snapshots captured at the block level. These
snapshots are application aware, meaning that all open transactions and rolling transaction logs are completed
and caches are flushed to disk before creating the snapshot. Using application-aware snapshots in tandem with
Verified Recovery enables the Core to perform several types of recoveries, including:
•
Recovery of files and folders
•
Recovery of data volumes, using Live Recovery
•
Recovery of data volumes for Microsoft Exchange Server and Microsoft SQL Server, using Live Recovery
•
Bare metal restore, using Universal Recovery
•
Bare metal restore to dissimilar hardware, using Universal Recovery
•
Ad-hoc and continual export to virtual machines