DL4300 Appliance
Restoring a directory or file using Windows Explorer
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NOTE:
Rapid Recovery supports FAT32 and ReFS partitions. Only full restore and BMR are
supported as a driver limitation exists with ReFS. Restore is implemented in user mode, VM export,
and so on. If a Core is protecting at least one agent volume that contains the ReFS file system,
it should be installed on Windows 8/2012, which provides native support of ReFS. Otherwise,
functionality is limited and operations that involve such things as mounting a volume image do not
work. The Rapid Recovery Core Console presents applicable error messages in these occurrences.
Bare metal restore of Storage Spaces disks configuration (a feature of Windows 8.1) is also not
supported in this release. For details, see the Rapid Recovery Installation and Upgrade Guide.
9. On the Volume Mapping page, for each volume in the recovery point that you want to restore, select the
appropriate destination volume. If you do not want to restore a volume, in the Destination Volumes column,
select Do not restore.
10. Select Show advanced options and then do the following:
•
For restoring to Windows machines, if you want to use Live Recovery, select Live Recovery.
Using the Live Recovery instant recovery technology in Rapid Recovery, you can instantly recover or
restore data to your physical machines or to virtual machines from stored recovery points of Windows
machines, which includes Microsoft Windows Storage Spaces. Live Recovery is not available for
Linux machines or VMs using agentless protection.
•
If you want to force the selected volumes to dismount before the restore begins, select Force Dismount.
CAUTION:
If you do not force a dismount before restoring data, the restore may fail with an
error stating that the volume is in use.
11. Click Next.
12. On the Dismount Databases page, if the volumes you want to restore contain SQL or Microsoft Exchange
databases, you are prompted to dismount them.
If you want to remount these databases after the restore is complete, select Automatically remount all
databases after the recovery point is restored.
13. Click Next.
The Warning page may appear and prompt you to close all programs on the volumes that you want to
restore. If it does, click Next again.
14. On the Summary page, select the option IMPORTANT! I understand that this operation will overwrite
selected volumes with the data from the selected recovery pointto acknowledge that you understand the
consequences of a volume restore.
WARNING:
This option emphasizes the consequence that any data that was saved on the selected
volume after the date and time of the selected recovery point is lost upon restore.
15. Click Finish.
Parent topic
Restoring a directory or file using Windows Explorer
You can use Windows Explorer to copy and paste directories and files from a mounted recovery point to any
Windows machine. This can be helpful when you want to distribute only a portion of a recovery point to your
users.
When you copy directories and files, the access permissions of the user who is performing the copy operation are
used and applied to the pasted directories and files. If you want to restore directories and files to your users while