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DL4300 Appliance
Restoring from an attached archive
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Performing a restore for SCC (Exchange, SQL) clusters
Complete the steps in this procedure to perform a restore for SCC (Exchange, SQL) clusters.
1. Turn off all nodes except one.
2. Perform a restore using the standard Rapid Recovery procedure for the machine as described in
restoring volumes from a recovery point
Restoring volumes for a Linux machine using the command
3. After the restore is finished, mount all databases from the cluster volumes.
4. Turn on all other nodes one-by-one.
NOTE:
You do not need to roll back the quorum disk. It can be regenerated automatically or by using
cluster service functionality.
Parent topic
Restoring from an attached archive
There are two ways you can restore data from an archive: You can use an archive as a source for a bare metal
restore (BMR); or you can attach an archive, mount a recovery point from the archive, and then restore the
archived data.
When you attach an archive, it appears under Attached Archives on the Archives page of the Core Console, while
the contents of the archive become accessible from the left navigation area. The contents appear under the name
of the archive. Machines that were archived appear as recovery-points-only machines so that you can access
the recovery points in the same way that you would for a currently protected machine: by mounting a recovery
point, locating the item that you want to recover, and using Windows Explorer to copy and paste the item to your
destination.
There are advantages to restoring from an attached archive rather than importing an archive to a repository.
•
Restoring from an attached archive saves the time you may spend importing an entire archive to a repository.
•
Also, when you import an archive, the archived recovery points are added to the repository.
Because these archived recovery points are likely the oldest items in the
repository, they may be rolled up according to your retention policy during the
next nightly job. (Although, this action does not delete them from the archive; you
could re-import them the next day.)
•
Lastly, the Core remembers the attachment association with archives, even after you detach an archive, making it easier
and faster to attach the archive again later.
You can remove the association by deleting the attachment.
To restore data from an attached archive, complete the following steps using the related links:
NOTE:
The procedure for restoring from an attached archive assumes that you already have an archive of
rolled-up recovery points.
1. Attach the archive.
2. Mount the recovery point that contains the data that you want to recover.
3. Restore data using any of the following methods:
◦
Restore data, such as file or folder, from the recovery point .
◦
Restore the entire recovery point.
◦
Export the recovery point to a virtual machine.
Parent topic
Related concepts