Veritas™ System Recovery 18 Service Pack 3 Management Solution Administrator's Guide
- Introducing Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- Installing Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- Getting started with Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- About managing recovery point destinations
- About viewing filters
- About organizational views
- About managing Veritas System Recovery license policies
- Managing backups
- About backup policies
- Creating a basic backup policy
- Creating an advanced backup policy
- Managing recovery points
- Managing the conversion of recovery points to virtual disks
- Managing Cloud Storage
- Remote recovery of drives and computers
- Local recovery of files, folders, drives, and computers
- About recovering lost data locally
- Starting a computer locally by using Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Recovering files and folders locally by using Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About using the networking tools in Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Monitoring computers and processes
- Appendix A. About backing up databases
- Appendix B. About Active Directory
- Appendix C. Backing up Microsoft virtual environments
- Appendix D. About Veritas System Recovery 18 Management Solution and Windows Server 2008 Core
About backing up Microsoft virtual hard disks
Microsoft Windows 7/Server 2008 R2 now support the use of Virtual Hard Disks (VHDs). Microsoft does not support backing up a physical disk and a VHD on that physical disk in the same backup job. This limitation also applies to Veritas System Recovery 18 Management Solution. You cannot back up a physical disk and its VHD counterpart in the same backup job using Veritas System Recovery 18 Management Solution. Also not supported is the ability to back up a VHD that is hosted on or "nested" within another VHD. If you want to back up a physical disk and a VHD on that disk, you must create separate backup jobs for each disk.
Backing up a physical disk that hosts a VHD is supported as long as it is not included as another volume in the same backup. When a physical disk hosting a VHD is backed up, the VHD is treated as another file that is part of the physical disk backup.
VHDs can be attached and detached from their physical disk hosts (volumes). Microsoft recommends that you detach a VHD that is stored on a host volume before you back up. Not detaching a VHD before you back up a host volume can result in an inconsistent copy of the VHD in the backup. After you restore a host volume, you can re-attach the VHD file.
https://www.veritas.com/support/en_US/search-results.html?keyword=V-306-2*
You can find more information on backing up VHDs on the Microsoft website.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd440865(WS.10).aspx
Find information about backing up and restoring Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines:
See About backing up and restoring Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines.