Figure 76 Regular synthetic backup
Figure 76
on page 262 shows a situation where a synthetic backup was performed
after each incremental backup. This strategy enables the simplest and quickest restore
to the latest possible state, or to any earlier point in time that was backed up. Only
one element is required for restore, namely the synthetic full backup of the desired
point in time.
Figure 77 Synthetic backup and object copy
In
Figure 77
on page 262, a synthetic backup was performed and then copied. This
provides additional safety. The restore to the latest possible state can use any of the
three different restore chains shown. By default, Data Protector selects the optimum
restore chain, which normally includes the synthetic full backup or its copy. In case
of missing media, a media error, or similar, an alternative restore chain is used.
How data protection periods affect restore from synthetic backup
Data protection of a conventional full backup and all incremental backups that precede
synthetic full backup does not compromise a successful restore.
Synthetic backup
262
Summary of Contents for B6960-96035
Page 17: ...Overview of backup and automated media copy sessions 340 105 Concepts guide 17 ...
Page 20: ...20 ...
Page 22: ...Publication history 22 ...
Page 132: ...Planning your backup strategy 132 ...
Page 182: ...Media management and devices 182 ...
Page 186: ...Users and user groups 186 ...
Page 204: ...The Data Protector internal database 204 ...
Page 218: ...Figure 62 Direct SIP integration example Service management 218 ...
Page 242: ...Integration with database applications 242 ...
Page 264: ...Synthetic backup 264 ...
Page 274: ...Split mirror concepts 274 ...
Page 288: ...Snapshot concepts 288 ...
Page 344: ...Further information 344 ...
Page 402: ...Glossary 402 ...