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The plug-in creates a snapshot named “BKB_SNAP” on the virtual machine. |
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If the Working Directory contains the mount folder for the virtual machine, remove it. |
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If you were using an advanced transport mode, such as san or hotadd, navigate to the <system_drive>/windows/temp/vmware-system directory. |
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If you were using the hotadd transport mode, remove any disks of the target virtual machine — the virtual machine mounted for a backup — that were hotadded to the NetVault Backup Client Virtual Machine — the virtual machine where the Plug‑in for VMware is running. |
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Go to the Snapshot Manager in vSphere Client, and remove the snapshot named BKB_SNAP, if it still exists. |
The image-level backups can be used to perform the following types of restores:
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Recover a full virtual machine or specific virtual disks: You can use image-level backups to recover a full virtual machine to a previous known state or to restore one or more virtual disks for a virtual machine. This method is useful when there is data loss due to hardware failure, data corruption, or accidental deletion of virtual machine disk files. The virtual machine can be restored to the same or an alternate VMware® ESXi™ Server Host. |
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Restore individual files and directories: You can use image-level backups to restore individual files and folders. This method is useful when there is data loss due to user errors, data corruption, or accidental deletion of files. The individual files and directories can be restored to a specified directory on the NetVault Backup Client. |
NOTE: To use an image-level backup for file-level restores, you must select the Perform File Level Indexing check box during backup. |
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Restore virtual machine disk and configuration files: You can use the image-level backups to restore the virtual machine disk and configuration files to a specified directory on the NetVault Backup Client. With these restored files, you can then recover a virtual machine with the same or modified settings using Virtual Infrastructure Client or any other utility that lets you create a virtual machine using existing .vmdk files. |
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