DL4300 Appliance
About restoring volumes from a recovery point
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You cannot restore a volume that contains the operating system directly from a recovery point, because the
machine to which you are restoring is using the operating system and drivers that are included in the restore
process. If you want to restore from a recovery point to a system volume (for example, the C drive of the agent
machine), you must perform a Bare Metal Restore (BMR). This involves creating a bootable image from the
recovery point, which includes operating system and configuration files as well as data, and starting the target
machine from that bootable image to complete the restore. The boot image differs if the machine you want to
restore uses a Windows operating system or a Linux operating system. If you want to restore from a recovery
point to a system volume on a Windows machine, see
Performing a bare metal restore for Windows machines
. If
you want to restore from a recovery point of a system volume on a Linux machine, see
.
Finally, in contrast to restoring entire volumes, you can mount a recovery point from a Windows machine, and
browse through individual folders and files to recover only a specific set of files. For more information, see
Restoring a directory or file using Windows Explorer
. If you need to perform this while preserving original file
permissions (for example, when restoring a user’s folder on a file server), see
Restoring a directory or file and
preserving permissions using Windows Explorer
.
The topics in this section describe information about restoring data on physical machines. For more information
on exporting protected data from Windows Machines to virtual machines, see
NOTE:
When recovering data on Windows machines, if the volume that you are restoring has Windows
data deduplication enabled, you will need to make sure that deduplication is also enabled on the Core
server.
Rapid Recovery supports Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10, Windows Server 2012, and Windows
Server 2012 R2 for normal transfers (both base and incremental) as well as with restoring data, bare metal
restore, and virtual exports.
For more information on the types of volumes supported and not supported for backup and recovery, see
Support for dynamic and basic volumes
.
Parent topic
About restoring volumes from a recovery point
You can restore the volumes on a protected machine from the recovery points stored in the Rapid Recovery Core.
NOTE:
In previous releases, this process was referred to as performing a rollback.
NOTE:
Rapid Recovery supports the protection and recovery of machines configured with EISA partitions.
Support is also extended to Window 8, Windows 8.1, Windows Server 2012, and Windows Server 2012 R2
machines that use Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE).
You can begin a restore from any location on the Rapid Recovery Core Console by clicking the Restore icon in
the Rapid Recovery button bar. When you start a restore in this manner, you must specify which of the machines
protected on the Core you want to restore, and then drill down to the volume you want to restore.
Or you can go to Recovery Points page for a specific machine, click the drop-down menu for a specific recovery
point, and then select Restore. If you begin a restore in this manner, then follow this procedure starting with
If you want to restore from a recovery point to a system volume, or restore from a recovery point using a boot
CD, you must perform a Bare Metal Restore (BMR). For information about BMR, see
, and for prerequisite information for Windows or Linux operating systems, see
Prerequisites for performing a bare metal restore for a Windows machine
Prerequisites for performing a
bare metal restore for a Linux machine
, respectively. You can access BMR functions from the Core Console as
described in the roadmap for each operating system. You can also perform a BMR from the Restore Machines
Wizard. This procedure will direct you at the appropriate point in the wizard to the procedure