Veritas CloudPoint Administrator's Guide
- Getting started with CloudPoint
- Section I. Installing and configuring CloudPoint
- Preparing for installation
- Deploying CloudPoint
- Deploying CloudPoint in the AWS cloud
- Using plug-ins to discover assets
- Configuring off-host plug-ins
- AWS plug-in configuration notes
- Google Cloud Platform plug-in configuration notes
- Microsoft Azure plug-in configuration notes
- HPE RMC plug-in configuration notes
- NetApp plug-in configuration notes
- Hitachi plug-in configuration notes
- InfiniBox plug-in configuration notes
- About CloudPoint plug-ins and assets discovery
- Configuring the on-host agents and plug-ins
- Oracle plug-in configuration notes
- Protecting assets with CloudPoint's agentless feature
- Preparing for installation
- Section II. Configuring users
- Section III. Protecting and managing data
- User interface basics
- Indexing and classifying your assets
- Protecting your assets with policies
- Tag-based asset protection
- Replicating snapshots for added protection
- Managing your assets
- About snapshot restore
- Single file restore requirements and limitations
- Additional steps required after a SQL Server snapshot restore
- Monitoring activities with notifications and the job log
- Protection and disaster recovery
- Section IV. Maintaining CloudPoint
- CloudPoint logging
- Troubleshooting CloudPoint
- Working with your CloudPoint license
- Managing CloudPoint agents and plug-ins
- Upgrading CloudPoint
- Uninstalling CloudPoint
- Section V. Reference
About single file restore (granular restore)
You can use CloudPoint to restore individual files within a snapshot. This process is known as "granular restore" (each single file in the snapshot is considered as a granule) or more commonly referred to as "single file restore" (SFR). CloudPoint makes an inventory of all the files within a snapshot using a simple indexing process. You can restore specific files from a snapshot only if that snapshot has been indexed by CloudPoint.
CloudPoint also supports a deeper and more intelligent scan of the snapshot files using a process known as Classification. This process goes a little further into the data than indexing. During classification, CloudPoint first indexes a snapshot and then identifies items that contain tags that describe the type of the data in the snapshot files. Tags indicate the type of information in a file, but not the actual data. For example, if a snapshot file contains credit card data, the tag indicates that the file includes information about a credit card, but does not identify the actual credit card number in the file. To classify individual files within a snapshot, CloudPoint uses a built-in set of data tags that are predefined in Veritas Information Classifier (VIC).
Both indexing and classification are two independent processes. You can choose to index a snapshot without classifying or to index and classify a snapshot.