Administrator Guide
Table Of Contents
- Replay Manager Version 8.0 Administrator’s Guide
- About this Guide
- Overview
- Installing Replay Manager Components
- Licensing for Replay Manager
- Install Replay Manager Service for Windows
- Installing Replay Manager Service for VMware
- Install Replay Manager Management Tools
- Install Replay Manager Service for Windows on Windows Server Core
- Installing and Configuring the Verification Service for Exchange
- Using Replay Manager Service on Clustered Servers
- Configure an HTTP Proxy Service
- Getting Started
- Backing Up and Restoring Data
- Using the Replay Manager Explorer
- Understanding Backup Types
- Summary of Backup Set Actions
- Summary of Backup Set Options
- Creating and Running Backups
- Managing Existing Backup Sets
- Managing Restore Points and Restoring Data
- Restoring Data
- Display Restore Points for a Component
- Restore Data to its Original Location
- Restore SQL Server Components without Recovering the Database
- Rename and Restore SQL Server Components Stored on a Volume
- Rename and Restore SQL Server Components Stored on an SMB File Share
- Expose a Restore Point (Windows Extensions Only)
- Expose a Restore Point (VMware Extensions Only)
- Expose a Restore Point Stored on an SMB File Share
- Resync a Restore Point (Windows Extensions Only)
- Make an Exposed Restore Point Writable (Windows Extensions Only)
- Unmanage an Exposed Restore Point (VMware Extensions Only)
- Unexpose an Exposed Restore Point
- Add a Note to a Restore Point
- Edit a Note for a Restore Point
- Unimport a Restore Point
- Delete a Restore Point
- Prevent a Restore Point from Expiring (Force Keep)
- Allow a Restore Point to be Automatically Expired (Allow Auto-Deletion)
- Transport a Restore Point
- Advanced Recovery Scenarios for SQL Server
- Locating Replays on a Storage Center
- Working with Backup Set Jobs
- Viewing Backup Job Reports
- Replay Manager Best Practices
- Using Replay Manager Cmdlets
- Troubleshooting
Display Restore Points for a Component
When components are selected, the available restore points are displayed on the right side of the explorer.
1. In the Server Connections area of the navigation pane, connect to a server or host.
2. In the Backup Extensions area of the navigation pane, select a data source.
3. Select a component. Right‐click the name of a server or host and click Select All to select all listed components or Select
All Children to select all its components.
Restore point details are displayed in the Restore Point Details and Restore Point Report tabs in the bottom pane of the
display.
Restore Data to its Original Location
Use the Restore Snapshot dialog box to recover (overwrite) the original data with the selected restore point data.
The Restore action restores data to its original location, overwriting existing data with the restore point data. To prevent losing
any data at the original location, make sure to take a backup after all changes are made to a database before using Restore or
use Expose (rather than Restore) and then manually merge Replay data with the existing data.
NOTE: For VMware Virtual Machines restore points only: Under some conditions, restore operations do not retain the
thin-provisioned state of the original component; that is, a restore operation may allocate all virtual disk space, resulting in
greater than expected space consumption.
NOTE: The Restore action is not available for the Local Volumes backup extension. This action includes all restore points
that have been transported to another server.
NOTE: The Restore action is not available for the VMware Datastores backup extension.
1. In the Server Connections area of the navigation pane, connect to a server or host.
2. In the Backup Extensions area of the navigation pane, select a data source.
3. In the explorer pane, select a component. Restore points for the component are displayed in the right side of the explorer.
4. Select a restore point.
5. In the Restore Points area of the action pane, click Restore.
The Restore Snapshot dialog box opens.
6. In the Components area, select the components to restore.
7. For Microsoft SQL Server components only: To restore a database component so that you can then apply transaction logs or
differential database backups to the restored database, click Do Not Recover Databases.
8. Review the restore point details, and click Restore.
NOTE: When restoring a live Hyper-V virtual machine, the following message is displayed in Hyper-V Manager:
The virtual machine [name] has been deleted. Click Exit to exit Virtual Machine
Connection.
During a restore operation, the Hyper-V VSS writer deletes virtual machines before restoring them. This message does not
indicate a problem. Click Exit to acknowledge the message.
Restore SQL Server Components without Recovering the Database
Use the Do Not Recover Databases option if you want to apply transaction logs or differential backups to the restored
database.
1. In the Server Connections area of the navigation pane, connect to a server or host.
2. In the Backup Extensions area of the navigation pane, select the SQL Server Databases backup extension.
3. Select a component. Restore points for the component are displayed in the right side of the explorer.
4. Select a restore point.
5. In the Restore Points area of the action pane, click Restore.
The Restore Snapshot dialog box opens.
6. In the Components area, select or clear the check boxes next to the components to choose which components to restore.
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Backing Up and Restoring Data