The dialog box for this method of restoring files is made up of the following three panes:
• |
Savepoint pane: In this area, all the files or folders connected to a savepoint are nested. When you click the file or folder that you want to restore, the path is listed above it. |
• |
Destination pane: This pane includes a tree structure of all possible destinations for the restored file or folder you select. |
• |
Restore Status pane: This area of the dialog box contains data after the restore process starts. It includes a column that indicates the percentage of the job that has completed. The dialog box also features a Stop link that, when clicked, ends the restore process. When a job is stopped or it has completed, a View in Explorer link appears. |
1 |
In the main vRanger UI, click My Repositories. |
2 |
In the Working Repository pane, right-click the savepoint for which you want an FLR and select File Level Restore. |
3 |
In the Select the Files/Folders to Restore pane, expand the archive to view the file structure. |
5 |
In the Destination pane, select the destination to which the selected files should be recovered. |
6 |
Click Restore. |
7 |
In the Restore Status pane, view the status of the restore activity and the value in the Percent Finished column. |
9 |
To view the restored file or folder, click the View in Explorer link. |
FLR from Linux® server savepoints requires that a vRanger virtual appliance (VA) is deployed and configured for Linux FLR. For instructions on deploying and configuring the vRanger VA, see the Quest vRanger Installation/Upgrade Guide.
After you configure the vRanger VA, the FLR process for a Linux VM is the same as the manual FLR process — meaning the process not using a catalog search — for a Windows® VM. For more information, see Performing a manual FLR.
There are several limitations and requirements that apply to FLRs from Linux® VMs.
NOTE: The following summarizes the limitations; for more information, see the Quest vRanger Installation/Upgrade Guide. |
• |
Linux: FLR from Linux servers requires the use of the vRanger VA. For more information, see Performing an FLR on Linux. |
• |
Linux: Not all Linux file systems are supported for FLR. For a list of supported Linux platforms and file systems, see the Quest vRanger Installation/Upgrade Guide. |
• |
Permissions: vRanger requires you to recover the Linux files to an intermediate Windows® machine. When you recover Linux files to a Windows machine, you lose the file permissions. |
• |
Source VM Configuration: The source VM properties need to show the operating system (OS) type as Linux. If this setting is not configured properly, vRanger does not identify the savepoint as a Linux VM. |
You may perform three different operations when restoring from a manifest file:
To perform a full restore from manifest for VMs, complete the following tasks:
NOTE: The procedures in this topic apply to restoring from a VMware VM savepoint manifest. For information on restoring a Hyper-V VM from manifest, see Performing a full restore from manifest for Hyper-V VMs. For information on restoring a physical server from a savepoint manifest, see Performing a full restore from manifest for a physical machine. |
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 利用規約 プライバシー Cookie Preference Center