2011 (Windows)

Table Of Contents
Within a mounted recovery point, programs that you run cannot rely on any
registry values. The programs also cannot rely on COM interfaces, dynamic
link libraries (DLLs), or other similar dependencies.
You can set up a mounted drive as a shared drive. Users on a network can connect
to the shared drive and restore files and folders from the recovery point.
You can mount one or more recovery points at a time. The drives remain mounted
until you unmount them or you restart the computer. Mounted drives do not take
up extra hard-disk space.
All security on the NTFS volumes remains intact when they are mounted.
You do not need to mount a drive to restore the files or folders from within a
recovery point.
Note: Any data that is written to a mounted recovery point is lost when the
recovery point is unmounted. This data includes any data that is created, edited,
or deleted at the time.
See
Exploring a recovery point through Windows Explorer on page 164.
See Dismounting a recovery point drive on page 167.
See Viewing the drive properties of a recovery point on page 167.
Exploring a recovery point through Windows Explorer
When you explore a recovery point, Symantec System Recovery mounts the
recovery point as a drive letter and it opens in Windows Explorer.
For each drive that is included in the recovery point, a new mounted drive letter
is created. For example, if your recovery point contains backups of drives C and
D, two newly mounted drives appear (for example, E and F). The mounted drives
include the original drive labels of the drives that were backed up.
To explore a recovery point through Windows Explorer
1
On the Tasks menu, click Manage Backup Destination.
2
Select the recovery point or recovery point set that you want to explore, and
then click Explore.
3
If you select a recovery point set that contains more than one recovery point,
in the Range column, select a recovery point, and click OK.
See
About exploring recovery points on page 163.
Exploring the contents of a recovery point
Exploring a recovery point through Windows Explorer
164