Veritas NetBackup™ for Hyper-V Administrator's Guide
- Introduction
- Notes and prerequisites
- Configure NetBackup communication with Hyper-V
- Configure NetBackup policies for Hyper-V
- Backup options on the Hyper-V tab
- Hyper-V - Advanced Attributes
- Browse for Hyper-V virtual machines
- Configure Hyper-V Intelligent Policies
- NetBackup Hyper-V for SCVMM
- Windows Server failover cluster support
- Virtual machine maintenance after a restore
- Back up and restore Hyper-V
- Restoring individual files to a shared location on the virtual machine
- Use Accelerator to back up Hyper-V
- Best practices and more information
- Troubleshooting
- NetBackup logs for Hyper-V and how to create them
- Errors during policy creation
- NetBackup status codes related to Hyper-V
- Appendix A. VSS backup method: Hyper-V online and offline backups
- Appendix B. Hyper-V pass-through disks
- Appendix C. NetBackup commands to back up and restore Hyper-V virtual machines
- Examples of nbrestorevm for restoring VMs to Hyper-V
The BAR interface may list Hyper-V snapshot files when you browse to restore Hyper-V VM files
On Windows 2012 R2 Hyper-V servers, the NetBackup Backup, Archive, and Restore interface may list Hyper-V snapshot files when you browse to restore VM files.
For example:
In this example, apvm-AutoRecovery.avhd
is a Hyper-V snapshot file (apvm.vhd
is the parent vhd file).
NetBackup automatically uses or ignores the snapshot data as appropriate when you restore the VM to its original location or to a different location.
However, in the following case you must decide whether to restore the Hyper-V snapshot file or to exclude it from the restore:
In the BAR interface you select Restore from Virtual Machine Backup.
And on the Restore Marked Files dialog, you select .
In this case, use the following criteria (based on Hyper-V server version) to identify the snapshot file and to decide whether to restore it:
For VMs with a Windows 2008 or Linux guest OS: The Hyper-V snapshot file is ChildVhd.avhd
or ChildVhd.avhdx
. The data in this snapshot is not application consistent. In most instances it is best not to restore this file.
Note:
If you select
or , NetBackup automatically excludes the snapshot file.Note:
In the snapshot's parent file (apvm.vhd in the example) and in the other VM files, the data is complete. To restore the VM data, you should restore those files.
For VMs with a Windows 2008 or Linux guest OS: The Hyper-V snapshot file is named vmname_guid.avhd
or vmname_guid.avhdx
. The data in this snapshot is not application consistent. In most instances it is best not to restore this file.
Note:
If you select
or , NetBackup automatically excludes the snapshot file.Note:
In the snapshot's parent file (apvm.vhd in the example) and in the other VM files, the data is complete. To restore the VM data, you should restore those files.
For VMs with a Windows 2008 R2/2012/2012 R2 guest OS: The Hyper-V snapshot file is AutoRecovery.avhd
or AutoRecovery.avhdx
. The data in this snapshot is application consistent. To restore the VM data, you should restore this file along with the parent vhd(x) file.
Note:
If you select
or , NetBackup automatically incorporates the snapshot data in the restore.