2011 (Windows)

Table Of Contents
The following morning, you plug the drive back in to the computer. Symantec
System Recovery detects the presence of the offsite copy destination drive and
automatically begins copying your recovery points.
Offsite Copy is designed to use very few system resources so that the copying
process is done in the background. This feature lets you continue to work at your
computer with little or no impact on system resources.
If an offsite copy destination runs out of disk space, Offsite Copy identifies the
oldest recovery points and removes them to make room for the most current
recovery points. Offsite Copy then copies the current recovery points to the offsite
copy destination.
See About using external drives as your offsite copy destination on page 101.
See About using a network server as your offsite copy destination on page 103.
See About using an FTP server as your offsite copy destination on page 104.
See Defining a drive-based backup on page 74.
See Editing backup settings on page 122.
About using external drives as your offsite copy destination
You can use an external drive as your offsite copy destination. This method lets
you take a copy of your data with you when you leave the office. By using two
external hard disks, you can be certain that you have a recent copy of your data
both on site and off site.
For example, suppose on a Monday morning you define a new backup job of your
system drive. You choose a recovery point set as your backup job type. You set up
an external drive (A) as the first offsite copy destination, and another external
drive (B) as the second offsite copy destination. You schedule the backup job to
run every midnight except on the weekends. You also enable recovery point
encryption to protect the data from unauthorized access.
See About recovery point encryption on page 89.
Before you leave the office on Monday evening, you plug in drive A and take drive
B home with you.
101Backing up entire drives
How Offsite Copy works