2011 (Windows)

Table Of Contents
Creates a complete, independent copy of the drives that you
select. This backup type typically requires more storage
space than a recovery point set.
Independentrecovery point
(.v2i)
Includes a base recovery point. A base recovery point is a
complete copy of your entire drive, and is similar to an
independent recovery point. The recovery point set also
includes recovery points. These recovery points capture
only the changes that were made to your computer since
the creation of the base recovery point.
Recovery point set (.iv2i)
Although you can recover files and folders from a drive-based backup, you cannot
select a specific set of files or folders to back up. Your entire hard drive is backed
up.
See
About backup methods on page 172.
See About backing up files and folders on page 107.
About file and folder backups
You can edit or create a select set of personal documents and folders, and then
define a backup for those files and folders. For example, you might want to define
a backup to capture one or more folders. Within those folders contain the files
that you change on a regular basis. This kind of backup is useful because you do
not need to use additional hard disk resources to back up your entire computer.
File and folder backups let you select individual files or folders to back up. You
can also specify a file type to back up. Then Symantec System Recovery can locate
and back up all files of the type you specified. For example, suppose you have
Microsoft Word documents stored at several locations on your computer. Symantec
System Recovery locates all Word documents (files that end with .doc) and includes
them in your backup. You can even edit the list of file types to include the types
that are unique to the software you use.
Symantec System Recovery also keeps multiple versions of the same files for you.
This redundancy means you can restore the version of a file that contains the
changes you need to restore. You can even set a limit to the number of versions
that are kept so that you can control the use of disk space.
See About backup methods on page 172.
See About defining a drive-based backup on page 73.
173Managing backup destinations
About backup methods