Veritas™ System Recovery 18 User's Guide
- Introducing Veritas™ System Recovery 18
- Installing Veritas System Recovery
- Installing Veritas System Recovery
- Ensuring the recovery of your computer
- Creating a new Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Creation Options
- Storage and Network Drivers Options
- Customizing an existing Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About restoring a computer from a remote location by using LightsOut Restore
- Creating a new Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Getting Started
- Setting up default general backup options
- File types and file extension
- Best practices for backing up your data
- Backing up entire drives
- Backing up files and folders
- Running and managing backup jobs
- Running an existing backup job immediately
- Backing up remote computers from your computer
- Monitoring the status of your backups
- About monitoring backups
- Monitoring the backup status of remote computers using Veritas System Recovery Monitor
- Adding a remote computer to the Computer List
- Exploring the contents of a recovery point
- Managing backup destinations
- About managing file and folder backup data
- Managing virtual conversions
- Managing cloud storage
- Recovering files, folders, or entire drives
- Recovering a computer
- Booting a computer by using the Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About using the networking tools in Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Copying a hard drive
- Using the Veritas System Recovery Granular Restore Option
- Best practices when you create recovery points for use with the Granular Restore Option
- Appendix A. Backing up databases using Veritas System Recovery
- Appendix B. Backing up Active Directory
- Appendix C. Backing up Microsoft virtual environments
- Appendix D. Using Veritas System Recovery 18 and Windows Server 2008 Core
Direct to cloud
You can now enable cloud storage as the primary destination when you define backups and during restore.
You are not required to maintain large amounts of data on-premise. Cloud storage gives you the flexibility of maintaining large amounts of data. You can access data from anywhere, at any time.
If a disaster occurs, as all your data is maintained in the cloud, there is no data loss and you can recover your data at any time.
For backups you can specify the OpenStorage destination when you define a drive based backup, a one time backup, and also when you backup using Veritas System Recovery Disk.
For restores, you can specify the OpenStorage destination when you restore files and folders, drives, and use the Veritas System Recovery Disk for restore.
Note:
Although cloud storage is a part of OpenStorage, Veritas System Recovery 18 refers to cloud storage as OpenStorage.
You can provide OpenStorage as a primary destination. The path for OpenStorage logical storage unit must be:
Microsoft Azure storage path: Azure:azure:azure.com/container name
Amazon S3 Storage path: S3:amazon:amazon.com/bucket name
Note:
In Veritas System Recovery, a bucket and container are referred to as a logical storage unit.
The Direct to cloud feature is supported only on a 64-bit operating system.
You cannot restore recovery points from the cloud storage using the Granular Restore Option.
You cannot directly create a .vhd or .vhdx file to cloud and cannot use a .v2i file as a source for physical to virtual conversions.
See Defining a drive-based backup.
See Running a one-time backup from Veritas System Recovery.
See Running a backup from Veritas System Recovery Disk.
See Running an existing backup job immediately.
See Opening and restoring files within a recovery point browser.
See Recovering files and folders.
See Recovering a secondary drive.
See Recovering a drive.
See Recovering files and folders by using Veritas System Recovery Disk .