
DL4300 Appliance
Performing a bare metal restore for Linux machines
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To inject drivers to the operating system, you have already completed the following tasks:
•
Created a boot CD using the Boot CD Builder in the Rapid Recovery Core Console. For more information, see
•
Loaded the boot CD in the BMR target. For more information, see
Loading the boot CD and starting the target machine
•
Loaded any necessary drivers or controllers for storage and networking. For more information, see
the Universal Recovery Console
.
•
Performed a restore using either the Restore Machine Wizard in the Rapid Recovery Core Console or an archive from
the Universal Recovery Console (URC). For more information, see
Performing a bare metal restore using the Restore
Performing a BMR from an archive
.
After you perform a Restore, the process is not complete until you inject the drivers to the operating system on the
bare metal restore (BMR) target. This task is in addition to loading drivers in the URC.
1. After you click Restore in the BMR procedure of your choice (see prerequisites), click the Existing Windows
driver management tab.
2. From the drop-down list, select an operating system.
The URC searches for available drivers.
3. To load additional drivers, click Force Load.
4. Navigate through the filing system to locate the compressed driver file, and then select the file.
5. Click OK.
The URC loads the driver into the operating system you selected.
6. Repeat
for each additional driver you need to load.
7. Restart the BMR target machine.
The BMR is complete. If you experience an issue when you restart, see
.
Parent topic
Performing a bare metal restore for Linux
machines
In Rapid Recovery you can perform a Bare Metal Restore (BMR) for a Linux machine, including a restore of the
system volume. When you restore a Linux machine, you will roll back to the boot volume recovery point. BMR
functionality is supported using the command line
local_mount
utility and from within the Core Console UI.
CAUTION:
Before you begin the BMR process, be sure that any Linux machine you want to restore does
not include an ext2 boot partition. When BMR is performed on a machine with ext2 partition type, the
process typically results in a machine that does not start. To perform a BMR in this case, you would have
needed to convert any ext2 partitions to ext3, ext4, or XFS before you began protecting and backing up the
machine.
CAUTION:
When you boot a restored Linux machine for the first time after a BMR, Rapid Recovery takes a
base image of the restored machine. Depending on the amount of data on the machine, this process takes
more time than taking an incremental snapshot. For more information about base images and incremental
snapshots, see