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 managing recovery point destinations
You can define destinations where you want to store recovery points that managed computers create.
By defining recovery point destinations separate from backup policies and computers, you can see how many computers have backed up to a given destination. You can view this information in the Destination Web Part, on the Home page. You can also optimize the network load balance during a backup.
When you specify a local folder path as a recovery point destination, the path corresponds to the drive that is found on the client computer. It is not the path on the computer where the Symantec Management Console runs.
See Creating default recovery point destinations.
You can change an existing recovery point destination's network credentials. The change takes effect when the existing connection on the client computer is closed (usually by restarting).
To edit the destination path, you must define a new destination.
See Editing network credentials for a recovery point destination .
You can delete previously-defined destinations no longer used.
Note:
Before you delete a recovery point destination, edit any backup policies that use the recovery point destination to specify a new destination. You cannot delete a recovery point destination that existing recovery points reference.
See Deleting recovery point destinations.
You can also assign a computer the task of copying recovery point sets from a recovery point destination to an Offsite Copy destination.