To launch the Restore wizard, do one of the following:
▪ On the Home tab, click Restore and select Hyper-V. In the Restore from backup section, select Guest files (Windows).
▪ Open the Backup & Replication view and select the Backups node. In the working area, expand the necessary backup job, select the VM whose guest OS files you want to restore and click Guest Files > Guest Files (Windows) on the ribbon.
▪ Open the Backup & Replication view and select the Backups node. In the working area, expand the necessary backup job, right-click the VM whose guest OS files you want to restore and select Restore guest files (Windows).
At the Virtual Machine step of the wizard, select the VM whose guest OS files you want to restore:
1. Expand the necessary backup job in the Virtual machine list.
2. Select the necessary VM.
To quickly find a VM, you can use the search field at the bottom of the window.
1. Enter a VM name or a part of it in the search field.
2. Click the Start search button on the right or press [ENTER]. 作者: 愚生 時間: 2015-9-18 09:26
At the Restore Point step of the wizard, select the necessary restore point from which you want to restore the VM guest OS files.
作者: 愚生 時間: 2015-9-18 09:27
Step 4. Specify Restore Reason
At the Restore Reason step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring VM guest OS files. The information you provide will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
TIP:
If you do not want to display the Reason step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this page again check box.
作者: 愚生 時間: 2015-9-18 09:28
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of VM guest OS files restore.
1. Review details for the configured restore task.
2. Click Finish to start restoring VM guest OS files from the backup.
作者: 愚生 時間: 2015-9-18 09:30
Once the restore process is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication opens the Veeam Backup browser displaying the file system tree of the restored VM. Note that names of the restored VM hard disks may differ from the original ones.
You can perform the following operations with VM guest OS files in the Veeam Backup browser:
▪ Save files and folders to the original location
▪ Save files and folders to a folder on the Veeam backup server or network shared folder
▪ Launch Veeam Explorers for application item restore
▪ Open files in Microsoft Windows Explorer
After you finish restoring files, you can close the Veeam Backup browser.
Saving Files to Original Location
To save files or folders to their original location, right–click the necessary file or folder in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right and select one of the following commands:
▪ To overwrite the original file on the VM guest OS with the file restored from the backup, select Restore > Overwrite.
▪ To save the file restored from the backup next to the original file, select Restore > Keep. Veeam Backup & Replication will add the RESTORED- prefix to the original file name and store the restored file in the same folder where the original file resides.
IMPORTANT!
Restore to the initial location may fail if you have excluded the system disk from the VM backup. To restore guest OS files in such situation, you can use 1-click file-level restore or copy files to the selected folder and then move them to the original location.
Saving Files to New Location
To save restored files or folders on the local machine or in a network shared folder:
1. Right–click the necessary file or folder in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right and select Copy To.
2. Choose to preserve their original NTFS permissions or not:
▪ Select the Preserve permissions and ownership check box to keep the original ownership and security permissions for restored objects. Veeam Backup & Replication will copy selected files and folders along with associated Access Control Lists, preserving granular access settings.
▪ Leave the Preserve permissions and ownership check box not selected if you do not want to preserve the original ownership and access settings for restored objects. Veeam Backup & Replication will change security settings: the user who launched the Veeam Backup & Replication console will be set as the owner of the restored object, while access permissions will be inherited from the folder to which the restored object is copied.
3. If prompted, in the Credentials window specify settings of the user account to access the destination location.
Launching Veeam Explorers
If you are restoring VM guest OS files of the virtualized Microsoft Active Directory Server, Microsoft Exchange Server, Microsoft SharePoint Server or Microsoft SQL Server, you can launch a Veeam Explorer for the necessary application directly from the Veeam Backup browser.
▪ To start Veeam Explorer for Active Directory, browse to the Microsoft Active Directory database file (DIT) in the Veeam Backup browser, select it and click Active Directory Items on the Home tab or simply double-click the DIT file.
▪ To start Veeam Explorer for Exchange, browse to the Microsoft Exchange database file (EDB) in the Veeam Backup browser, select it and click Exchange Items on the Home tab or simply double-click the EDB file.
▪ To start Veeam Explorer for SharePoint, browse to the Microsoft SharePoint content database (MDF) in the Veeam Backup browser, select it and click SharePoint Items on the Home tab or simply double-click the MDF file.
▪ To start Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL, browse to the Microsoft SQL database file in the Veeam Backup browser, select it and click SQL Server Databases on the Home tab or simply double-click the Microsoft SQL database file. To learn about default locations of Microsoft SQL database files, see http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms143547.aspx.
Working with Windows Explorer
You can use Microsoft Windows Explorer to work with restored files and folders.
1. Click Explore on the ribbon in the Veeam Backup browser or right-click the necessary folder and select Explore.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication will launch Microsoft Windows Explorer. Browse to the necessary VM guest OS files.
You can also start Microsoft Windows Explorer from the Start menu of Microsoft Windows and browse to the necessary VM guest OS files. VM disks are mounted under the C:\veeamflr\<vmname>\<volume n> folder of the Veeam backup server.
It is recommended that you use the Veeam Backup browser instead of Microsoft Windows Explorer for file-level restore. Use of the Veeam Backup browser has the following advantages:
1. You can browse the VM guest OS file system ignoring the file system ACL settings.
2. You can preserve permissions and ownership during file-level restore.
If you open the VM file system via the Microsoft Windows Explorer, these capabilities will not be available.
You can browse to VM guest OS files mounted to the Veeam backup server only while the Veeam Backup browser is open. After the Veeam Backup browser is closed, Veeam Backup & Replication unmounts VM disks from the Veeam backup server.
It is recommended that you close the Veeam Backup browser after you have finished restoring VM guest OS files. When the Veeam Backup browser is open on the Veeam backup server, the backup file whose VM guest OS file system is displayed in the browser is locked on the backup repository. As a result, some scheduled operations that use this backup file may fail.
Veeam Backup & Replication checks if there is any activity in the Veeam Backup browser with an interval of 5 minutes. If the user or Veeam Backup & Replication components and services have not performed any actions for 30 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning that the Veeam Backup browser is to be closed within 5 minutes.
After the warning is displayed, you can perform one of the following actions:
▪ You can close the Veeam Backup browser manually.
▪ You can click Cancel to postpone the close operation. In this case, the Veeam Backup browser will remain open for 5 minutes. After this period expires, Veeam Backup & Replication will display the warning again.
▪ You can perform no action at all. In this case, the Veeam Backup browser will be automatically closed in 5 minutes.