Veeam Backup & Replication: User Guide For Vmware Vsphere
Veeam Backup & Replication: User Guide For Vmware Vsphere
Veeam Backup & Replication: User Guide For Vmware Vsphere
Version 12
User Guide for VMware vSphere
March, 2023
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Intended Audience
The user guide is intended for anyone who wants to use Veeam Backup & Replication. It is primarily aimed at
VMware administrators, consultants, analysts and any other IT professionals using the product.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides a centralized console for administering backup, restore and replication
operations in all supported platforms (virtual, physical, cloud). Also, the console allows you to automate and
schedule routine data protection operations and integrate with solutions for alerting and generating compliance
reports.
This section contains an overview of Veeam Backup & Replication and solutions integrated with it.
Main Features
Main functionality of Veeam Backup & Replication includes:
• Backup: creating image-level backups of virtual, physical, cloud machines and backups of NAS share files.
• Restore: performing restore from backup files to the original or a new location.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers a number of recovery options for various disaster recovery scenarios,
including Instant Recovery, image-level restore, file-level restore, restore of application items and so on.
• Replication: creating an exact copy of a VM and maintaining the copy in sync with the original VM.
• Continuous Data Protection (CDP): replication technology that helps you protect mission-critical VMs and
reach recovery point objective (RPO) up to seconds.
• Storage Systems Support: backing up and restoring VMs using capabilities of native snapshots created on
storage systems. For more information, see the Integration with Storage Systems section in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
• Tape Devices Support: storing copies of backups in tape devices. For more information, see the Tape
Devices Support section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
Protected Objects
With Veeam Backup & Replication, you can back up and restore the following objects:
• Virtual machines:
• Cloud VMs:
• P hy sical machines. To back up machines running Windows, Linux or macOS operating systems,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses backup agents installed on each computer. Veeam Backup & Replication
operates as a centralized control center for deploying and managing Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows,
Veeam Agent for Linux and Veeam Agent for Mac. For details, see the Veeam Agent Management Guide.
Also, you can use standalone backup agents and integrate them with Veeam Backup & Replication: Veeam
Agent for Oracle Solaris and Veeam Agent for IBM AIX.
Protected Applications
Native functionality of Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to create application-consistent backups for:
• PostgreSQL
• Oracle Database
• Active Directory
• Microsoft Exchange
• Microsoft OneDrive
• Microsoft SharePoint
• Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365: for full protection of Microsoft applications.
• Veeam Plug-ins for Enterprise Applications: for integration of Veeam Backup & Replication with Oracle
RMAN, SAP HANA Backint, and BR*Tools.
• Veeam ONE: a solution that enables real-time monitoring, business documentation and management
reporting for Veeam Backup & Replication, VMware vSphere and Microsoft Hyper-V.
• Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager: a management and reporting component that allows you to manage
multiple Veeam Backup & Replication installations from a single web console.
• Management Pack for Veeam Backup & Replication: a component that integrates
Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure, services and jobs into Microsoft System Center Operations
Manager.
• Veeam Disaster Recovery Orchestrator: a solution that orchestrates disaster recovery processes in VMware
vSphere environments, supports one-click recovery for critical applications and sites, and provides
features for documentation and testing.
You can also use Veeam Backup & Replication to offer cloud repository as a service and disaster recovery as a
service. For details, see Veeam Cloud Connect.
NOTE
The information on this page is valid as of the date of the last page update.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides support for the following versions of the VMware vSphere platform.
Virtual Infrastructure
Sp ecification Requirement
• vSphere 8.0
P la tform
• vSphere 7.0 (up to 7.0 U3)
• vSphere 6.x
• VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF)
For more information on Azure VMware Solution support, see this Veeam KB
article.
• ESXi 8.0
Hy p ervisor
• ESXi 7.0 (up to 7.0 U3)
• ESXi 6.x
Free ESXi is not supported. Veeam Backup & Replication leverages vSphere and
vStorage APIs that are disabled by VMware in free ESXi.
• Minimum 16GB RAM is required for source and target ESXi hosts.
• Backup server, VMware CDP proxies, vCenter Server and ESXi hosts must be able to resolve each other
DNS names.
For more information on Veeam CDP, its requirements and limitations, see Continuous Data Protection (CDP).
VMs
Sp ecification Requirement
• All types and versions of virtual hardware are supported, including 62 TB VMDK.
Virtual Hardware
• Virtual machines with virtual NVDIMM devices, with virtual disks engaged in
SCSI bus sharing or residing on PMem datastores are not supported for host-
based backup, because VMware does not support snapshotting such VMs. To
protect such VMs, use agent-based backup.
• RDM virtual disks in physical mode, independent disks, and disks connected
through in-guest iSCSI initiator are not supported for host-based backup, and
are skipped from processing automatically. If backup of these disks is required,
use agent-based backup.
Network shares and mount points targeted to 3rd party storage devices are also
skipped as these volumes/disks are not visible in the VM configuration file.
RDM virtual disks in virtual mode are supported to create backups based on
VMware Changed Block Tracking technology, although there are some
restrictions on the virtual disk restore operation. To learn more about them, see
Restoring Virtual Disks.
• For Linux operating systems, GLIBC 2.12 or later. GLIBC is used for the following
Software
operations: application-aware processing, file-level restore to Linux guest OS,
installing persistent agent components, and adding VM as a managed server.
• VMware Tools (optional, recommended). VMware Tools are required for the
following operations: application-aware processing, file-level restore from
Microsoft Windows guest OS, and SureBackup testing functions.
• Open VM Tools (OVT, optional). Open VM Tools are a set of services and
modules used by VMware for interaction with VMs running Linux or other
VMware supported Unix-like guest operating systems.
• All latest OS service packs and patches (required for application-aware
processing).
Sp ecification Requirement
• FAT, FAT32
Microsoft Windows
• NTFS
• ReFS (ReFS is supported only if Veeam Backup & Replication is installed on
Microsoft Windows Server 2012 or later).
AD-enabled NSS volumes on Open Enterprise Server 2015 are supported. Besides
restore of standard file and folder permissions, restore of NSS trustee rights on files
and folders is supported.
• UFS
Solaris
• ZFS (except any pool versions of Oracle Solaris)
The helper appliance uses module ZFSonLinux version 2.1.5. For this reason,
Veeam Backup & Replication supports only those versions of pools and features that
are available in ZFSonLinux version 2.1.5.
For other requirements and limitations of guest OS file restore, see Requirements and Limitations.
o CentOS 7.x
• Enterprise NAS systems: NetApp Data ONTAP, Lenovo ThinkSystem DM Series, Dell PowerScale (formerly
Isilon), Nutanix Files Storage
• Only 64-bit versions of operating systems are supported for Microsoft Windows- or Linux-managed server
file share.
• Network shares and files on them targeted to 3rd party storage devices may have difficulties being
restored, or may not be restored at all. Such shares/files often rely upon specific software/OS filters to be
recalled from the alternate storage location, which is not available when performing a file share data
recovery. See your software vendor documentation to learn how to back up such files.
• Anonymous or AD/Kerberos authentication is not supported for access to file shares through NFS.
In NFS settings of the source file share, you must explicitly specify what servers will have access to the file
share.
• SMB file share must run on SMB version 1.x, 2.x or 3.x.
• To support the VSS for SMB File Shares feature, make sure that requirements listed in this Veeam KB
article are met.
• To correctly back up SACL (Ownership) files and folders from the SMB file share and restore them:
a. When you are specifying access settings for the SMB file share, select the This s hare requires access
credentials check box.
b. Make sure that the account you use to access the file share is either added to the Ba ckup Operators
group or has the SeBackupPrivilege and SeRestorePrivilege privileges in Windows Server on the file
share.
Network
Consider the following requirements and limitations:
• Domain names of all managed servers added to the Veeam backup infrastructure and machines you want
to back up must be resolvable into IPv4 addresses.
• VMware NSX-T 2.3 or later is supported with N-VDS for VMware vSphere and VMware Cloud on AWS/Dell.
• VMware NSX-T 3.0 or later is supported with VDS for VMware vSphere and VMware Cloud on AWS/Dell.
• VMware NSX-V is supported (see details on the support of vSphere and VMware Cloud version above).
NOTE
The information on this page is valid as of the date of the last page update.
Domain Member
The machine on which you plan to install Veeam Backup & Replication does not necessarily need to be a domain
member. However, if you plan to restore Microsoft Exchange items from the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
UI, you must install Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager on the domain member server from the Microsoft Active
Directory forest in which Microsoft Exchange mailboxes are located.
Linux Server
To avoid negotiation problems between Veeam Backup & Replication and a Linux server, the latter should use
ciphers, Key Exchange (KEX) algorithms, and MAC algorithms compatible with SSH libraries supported by
Veeam Backup & Replication:
Ensure that your SSH configuration on the Linux server allows to use at least one cipher, KEX algorithm, and
MAC algorithm from the table above. You can run the following command to verify the list of allowed
algorithms:
All-in-One Installations
For all-in-one installations, you can subtract 2 GB of memory resources from each but one role. These 2 GB are
allotted to the OS itself, assuming each component is installed on the dedicated server.
NAS Backup
Each of the following NAS backup components may consume up to 4 GB RAM per task (in case of deduplicating
storage appliances, up to 8 GB RAM): backup repository, backup proxy, cache repository. Make sure you allocate
enough memory resources for your installation. For all-in-one installations, the server where all the components
are installed must have enough memory resources for all components.
• Backup components cannot simultaneously interact with Veeam Backup & Replication of different
versions.
• Adding the same repository to different Veeam Backup & Replication installations may lead to corrupted
backup and data in the database.
Sp ecification Requirement
Memory: 4 GB RAM plus 500 MB RAM for each concurrent job. Memory
consumption varies according to the number of VMs in the job, size of VM metadata,
size of production infrastructure, and so on.
Additionally, for users with tape installations (for file to tape jobs processing more
than 1,000,000 files):
• 1.5 GB RAM for file to tape backup for each 1,000,000 files
• 2.6 GB RAM for file restore for each 1,000,000 files
• 1.3 GB RAM for catalog jobs for each 1,000,000 files
Disk Space: 5 GB1 for product installation and 4.5 GB for Microsoft .NET Framework
4.7.2 installation. 10 GB per 100 VM for guest file system catalog folder (persistent
data). Additional free disk space for Instant Recovery cache folder (non-persistent
data, at least 100 GB recommended).
Network : 1 Gbps or faster for on-site backup and replication, and 1 Mbps or faster
for off-site backup and replication. High latency and reasonably unstable WAN links
are supported.
1
Here and throughout this document GB is considered as 2^30 bytes, TB as 2^40 bytes.
All editions of Microsoft SQL Server are supported. The usage of Microsoft SQL
Server Express Edition is limited by the database size up to 10 GB. If you plan to
have larger databases, use other editions of Microsoft SQL Server.
If you plan to use a database engine other than PostgreSQL 15.1, included in the
Veeam Backup & Replication setup, you must install it yourself.
Veeam Backup & Replication and Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager configuration
databases can be deployed in Microsoft SQL Always On Availability Groups. For
more information, see this Veeam KB article.
1
Veeam Backup & Replication does not support PostgreSQL installations on cloud database
services (for example, Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS).
Software During setup, the system configuration check is performed to determine if all
prerequisite software is available on the machine where you plan to install
Veeam Backup & Replication. If some of the required software components are
missing, the setup wizard will offer you to install missing software automa tically.
This refers to:
The backup server installation also requires the automatic installation of the
prerequisite software for Veeam Cloud Plug-Ins.
• If you plan to back up VMs running Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 or later, and Data Deduplication is
enabled for some VM volumes, it is recommended that you deploy the Veeam Backup & Replication
console and mount server on a machine running same or later version of Microsoft Windows Server with
Data Deduplication feature enabled. Otherwise, some types of restore operations for these VMs (such as
Microsoft Windows File-Level Recovery) may fail.
• Due to its limitations, Microsoft SQL Server Express Edition can only be used for evaluation purposes or in
case of a small-scale production environment. For environments with a lot of VMs, it is necessary to install
a fully functional commercial version of Microsoft SQL Server.
Sp ecification Requirement
Memory: 2 GB RAM
Disk Space: 500 MB for product installation and 4.5 GB for Microsoft .NET
Framework 4.7.2 installation.
Network : 1 Mbps connection to the backup server. High latency and low bandwidth
impact user interface responsiveness.
Software During setup, the system configuration check is performed to determine if all
prerequisite software is available on the machine where you plan to install the
Veeam Backup & Replication Console. If some of the required software components
are missing, the setup wizard will offer you to install missing software
automatically. This refers to:
• Microsoft .NET Framework 4.7.2
• Windows Installer 4.5
• Microsoft PowerShell 5.1
• Microsoft SQL Server Management Objects (for SQL Server only)
• Microsoft SQL Server System CLR Types (for SQL Server only)
• Microsoft Report Viewer Redistributable 2015
• Microsoft Universal C Runtime
Sp ecification Requirement
Ha rdware CPU: x86-64 processor with minimum of 2 cores (vCPUs), plus 1 core (vCPU) for
each 2 additional concurrent tasks. Using faster processors improves data
processing performance. For more information, see Limitation of Concurrent Tasks.
Memory: 2 GB RAM plus 500 MB for each concurrent task. The actual size of
memory required may be larger and depends on the amount of data to back up,
machine configuration, and job settings. Using faster memory (DDR3/DDR4)
improves data processing performance.
Disk Space: 750 MB for Microsoft Windows-based proxies; 400 MB for Linux-based
proxies.
Network : 1 Gbps or faster for on-site backup and replication, and 1 Mbps or faster
for off-site backup and replication. High latency and reasonably unstable WAN links
are supported.
64-bit versions of the following Linux distributions are supported. Note that bash
shell and SSH are required.
• CentOS 7.x
• Debian 10.0 to 11.0
• Oracle Linux 7 (UEK3) to 9 (UEK R7)
• Oracle Linux 7 to 9 (RHCK)
• RHEL 7.0 to 9.1
• SLES 12 SP4 or later, 15 SP1 or later
• Ubuntu: 18.04 LTS, 20.04 LTS, and 22.04 LTS
For more information on the VMware backup proxy, its requirements and limitations, see VMware Backup Proxy.
Sp ecification Requirement
Ha rdware CPU: x86-64 processor with minimum of 2 cores (vCPUs). Using multi-core
processors improves data processing performance and allows for more tasks to be
processed concurrently.
Memory: 4 GB RAM for each concurrent task. Using faster memory (DDR3/DDR4)
improves data processing performance.
Network : High latency and reasonably unstable WAN links are supported.
Backup proxies running Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 or later support the VSS
for SMB File Shares feature. To use it, make sure that all requirements listed in this
Veeam KB article are met.
For more information on using the backup proxy for NAS backup, see Ba ckup Proxy in NAS Backup Support.
Sp ecification Requirement
Ha rdware CPU : x86-64 processor with minimum of 8 cores (vCPUs). Using multi-core
processors improves data processing performance and allows for more tasks to be
processed concurrently.
Memory: 16 GB RAM. Using more memory allows for longer peak write I/O periods
before a CDP policy switches to the disk-based write I/O cache. Using faster memory
improves data processing performance.
Disk Space: 300 MB plus disk-based write I/O cache (non-persistent data, at least
50 GB recommended). Larger cache allows for longer network downtime periods
before a CDP policy switches to the CBT mode.
64-bit versions of the following Linux distributions are supported. Note that bash
shell and SSH are required.
• CentOS 7.x
• Debian 10.0 to 11.0
• Oracle Linux 7 (UEK3) to 8.3 (UEK R6 U2)
• Oracle Linux 7 to 8.5 (RHCK)
• RHEL 7.0 to 9.1
• SLES 12 SP4 or later, 15 SP1 or later
• Ubuntu: 18.04 LTS, 20.04 LTS, and 22.04 LTS
For more information on the VMware CDP proxy, see VMware CDP Proxy.
Sp ecification Requirement
Ha rdware CPU: x86-64 processor. The number of cores depends on the concurrent task
settings. For more information, see Limitation of Concurrent Tasks.
Memory: Not less than 2 GB RAM for each concurrently processed machine disk or
file share. For more information, see Limitation of Concurrent Tasks. For RAM
allocation recommendations for NAS backup, see Limitations and Recommendations
for NAS backup.
Network : 1 Gbps or faster for on-site backup and replication, and 1 Mbps or faster
for off-site backup and replication. High latency and reasonably unstable WAN links
are supported.
• CentOS 7.x
• Debian 10.0 to 11.0
• Oracle Linux 7 (UEK3) to 9 (UEK R7)
• Oracle Linux 7 to 9 (RHCK)
• RHEL 7.0 to 9.1
• SLES 12 SP4 or later, 15 SP1 or later
• Ubuntu: 18.04 LTS, 20.04 LTS, and 22.04 LTS
Bash shell and SSH are required to deploy the management agent (SSH Server can
be disabled afterwards and is not required for updating Veeam components). Perl is
required only for non-persistent Veeam Data Movers. Check the full list of required
Perl modules in this Veeam KB article.
For advanced XFS integration (fast clone), only the following 64-bit Linux
distributions are supported:
For other distributions, XFS integration support is experimental, with kernel version
5.4 or later recommended. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
NOTE
If you plan to use a Microsoft Windows backup repository with Data Deduplication, make sure that you set
up the Microsoft Windows server correctly. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
• Direct attached storage. You can add virtual and physical servers as cache repositories:
• Network attached storage. You can add SMB (CIFS) Share or NFS Share as a cache repository.
For system requirements of backup repository servers that can be used as a cache repository, see Backup
Repository Server.
TIP
As the cache repository processes active metadata that is heavily used during backup and restore
operations, we strongly recommend using a fast storage disk in this role, for example, an SSD.
For more information on the cache repository, see Ca che Repository in NAS Backup Support.
Tape Server
Sp ecification Requirement
Memory : 2 GB RAM plus 200MB for each concurrent task. Depending on the source
of tape jobs, different entities are considered tasks: for machine backup to tape, a
task covers a source job or a source chain if tape paralleling is enabled; for file
backup to tape, a task covers an entire server or a file share. Restoring VMs directly
from tape requires 400MB of RAM per 1TB of virtual disk size. Additionally (for file
to tape jobs processing more than 1,000,000 files):
o 800 MB RAM for file to tape backup for each 1,000,000 files
o 800 MB RAM catalog jobs for each 1,000,000 files
Disk Space: 300 MB, plus 10 GB for temporary data storage for backup and restore
operations.
WAN Accelerator
Sp ecification Requirement
Ha rdware CPU: x86-64 processor. Using multi-core processors improves data processing
performance, and is highly recommended on WAN links faster than 10 Mbps.
Disk Space: Disk space requirements depend on the WAN Accelerator role. Source
WAN Accelerator requires 20 GB per 1 TB of source data to store digests of data
blocks of source VM disks. Disk space consumption is dynamic and changes as
unique VMs are added to (or removed from) jobs with WAN Acceleration enabled.
Target WAN Accelerator requires global cache size as defined by user (fixed
amount). Disk space is reserved immediately upon selecting the WAN Accelerator as
a target one in any job. For more information, see WAN Accelerator Sizing.
Network : 1 Gbps or faster for on-site backup and replication, and 1 Mbps or faster
for off-site backup and replication. High latency and reasonably unstable WAN links
are supported.
NOTE
Global cache is not leveraged by source WAN accelerators, or by WAN accelerators operating in the Hig h
b a ndwidth mode, so it does not need to be allocated and populated in such cases.
Backup Target
Backups can be performed to the following disk-based storage:
• Direct Attached Storage (DAS) connected to the backup repository server, including external
USB/eSATA drives, USB pass through and raw device mapping (RDM) volumes.
• Storage Area Network (SAN). The backup repository server must be connected into the SAN fabric
through hardware or virtual HBA, or software iSCSI initiator.
• Network Attached Storage (NAS) able to present its capacity as NFS share (protocol versions 3.0 and 4.1
only) or SMB/CIFS share (any protocol versions). Using consumer-grade NAS storage without an
enterprise-grade RAID controller with battery-backed write cache (BBWC) is not recommended for
reliability considerations.
• Amazon S3
• Dell Data Domain (DD OS version 6.2 to 7.10) with DDBoost license. Both Ethernet and Fibre Channel
(FC) connectivity is supported.
• Quantum1 (DXi software 3.4.0 or later). Supported Quantum DXi systems include DXi4700 (NAS
configuration), DXi4700 (multi-protocol configuration), DXi 4800, DXi 6900, DXi 6900-S, DXi 9000.
FIPS-compliant operations mode requires DXi software 4.0 or later.
1
These storage systems use the Veeam Transport Service. Make sure that they also meet system requirements for the
backup repository server.
Once backups are created, they can be copied (for redundancy) or offloaded (for long -term retention) to one of
the following hot object storage types using the scale-out backup repository Capacity Tier:
Once backups are copied or offloaded to Amazon S3 or Microsoft Azure Blob storage, they can be further d to
one of the following respective cold object storage classes using the scale-out backup repository Archive Tier:
For the full list of partner-tested solutions including primary backup storage solutions, S3-compatible object
storage solutions and offline storage solutions, see this Veeam page.
For information on NAS backup target, see Ba ckup, Archive, Secondary Repositories in NAS Backup Support.
• VSAN
• VVOL
VVOL is supported for the following vendors: NetApp, HPE Nimble, Pure Storage and HPE 3PAR. For
the list of tested vendor product lines, see this Veeam KB article.
NOTE
VVOL and VSAN of each vendor have limits for the number of storage objects. Once the limit is reached,
CDP starts to fail because creation of new objects cannot be completed. To restore the CDP process,
remove some objects from VSAN/VVOL.
Tape
Sp ecification Requirement
Ha rdware LTO3-LTO9 tape libraries (including VTL) and standalone drives are supported. Tape
device must be directly attached to the backup server, to a tape server via SAS, FC
or iSCSI interface. Note that VMware does not support connecting tape libraries to
ESXi for VM pass-through.
Storage Systems
Veeam Backup & Replication offers integration with the following storage systems:
• HyperFlex 4.0(2x) or later (Backup from Storage Snapshots, Full Integration mode)
• MetroCluster is supported
• ONTAP features application-aware data management and SVM-DR are not supported
• OS version 6.0
HPE Primera
• Fibre Channel (FC) or iSCSI (starting from OS versions 4.3 or later) connectivity
• OS versions 4.x
IBM FlashSystem (formerly Spectrum Virtualize, includes IBM StorWize and IBM
SVC)
IBM N Series
• NFS, Fibre Channel or iSCSI connectivity
• MetroCluster is supported
• ONTAP features application-aware data management and SVM-DR are not supported
Lenovo DM Series
• MetroCluster is supported
• ONTAP features application-aware data management and SVM-DR are not supported
• MetroCluster is supported
Nutanix Files
• Filer integration for NAS backup functionality
DataCore SANsymphony
Dell PowerMax
• Fibre Channel (FC) or iSCSI connectivity
Dell PowerStore
• ETERNUS AF series: AF250 S2, AF650 S2, AF150 S3, AF250 S3, AF650 S3
• ETERNUS DX series: DX60 S4, DX100 S4, DX200 S4, DX500 S4, DX600 S4, DX8900 S4, DX60 S5,
DX100 S5, DX200 S5, DX500 S5, DX600 S5, DX900 S5
HPE XP
• Fibre Channel (FC) or iSCSI connectivity
NOTE
You must add to the backup infrastructure only one of the two InfiniBox storage arrays for which
Active/Active Replication is configured, or exclude the replicating volumes on one of these arrays from
rescan. For details on how to exclude volumes from rescan, see the Rescanning Storage Systems section in
the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
• M120, M320, M320F, M520, M720, M720F (Storage Control Software revision 1234 or later)
NetApp SolidFire/HCI
• iSCSI connectivity
Gateway Server
Sp ecification Requirement
Disk space: 2 GB per TB of data processed during a SOBR offload job for a machine
that acts as a gateway server for an Object Storage Repository. For more
information, see this Veeam KB article.
Note: If a file share backup stored in an object storage does not have metadata in
the cache repository, during the restore or health check operation this metadata will
be downloaded to the gateway server. That can consume up to 80% of the gateway
server disk space.
Network : 1 Gbps or faster for on-site backup and replication, and 1 Mbps or faster
for off-site backup and replication. High latency and reasonably unstable WAN links
are supported.
For the communication with object storage repositories, external repositories and
NFS backup repositories, you can use machines running 64-bit versions of the
following Linux distributions:
o CentOS 7.x
o Debian 10.0 to 11.0
o Oracle Linux 7 (UEK3) to 9 (UEK R7)
o Oracle Linux 7 to 9 (RHCK)
o RHEL 7.0 to 9.1
o SLES 12 SP4 or later, 15 SP1 or later
o Ubuntu: 18.04 LTS, 20.04 LTS, and 22.04 LTS
Mount Server
The mount server role must be assigned to a 64-bit Microsoft Windows machine added to the backup
infrastructure. For the list of supported OSes, see Veeam Backup & Replication Console.
On the mount server machine, Veeam Backup & Replication installs the Veeam Mount Service. The Veeam
Mount Service requires Microsoft .NET Framework 4.7.2. If Microsoft .NET Framework 4.7.2 is not installed on
the machine, Veeam Backup & Replication will install it automatically.
If you plan to restore VM guest OS files from VMs running Microsoft Windows ReFS or from VMs with data
deduplication enabled for some volumes, you must assign the mount server role to machines running specific OS
versions. For more information, see ReFS and Data Deduplication subsections in Restoring VM Guest OS Files
(FAT, NTFS or ReFS).
[For Microsoft Windows 2008R2/7] Make sure that you have SHA-2 code signing support installed. Normally,
this component is included in Microsoft Windows updates. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
The following jobs consume 512 MB RAM per guest VM disk on mount server + 100 MB RAM per VM:
• SureBackup
• Instant Recovery
Veeam Plug-Ins
The machine where you plan to install Veeam plug-ins must meet the following requirements:
For other system requirements of the plug-in, see the Veeam Backup for AWS
Integration with Veeam Backup & Replication Guide.
Microsoft Azure Plug-in for Microsoft .NET Core Runtime 6.0 or later
Veeam Backup & Replication
version 12.0.4.xxx and later Microsoft ASP.NET Core Shared Framework 6.0 or later
For other system requirements of the plug-in, see the Veeam Backup for
Microsoft Azure Integration with Veeam Backup & Replication Guide.
Goog le Cloud Plug-in for Microsoft .NET Core Runtime 6.0 or later
Veeam Backup & Replication
version 12.0.3.xxx and later Microsoft ASP.NET Core Shared Framework 6.0 or later
For other system requirements of the plug-in, see the Veeam Backup for
Google Cloud Integration with Veeam Backup & Replication Guide.
Nuta nix AHV P lug-in for Microsoft .NET Core Runtime 6.0 or later
Veeam Backup & Replication
version 12.0.4.xxx and later Microsoft ASP.NET Core Shared Framework 6.0 or later
For other system requirements of the plug-in, see the Veeam Backup for
Nutanix AHV User Guide.
For other system requirements of the plug-in, see the Veeam Backup for RHV
User Guide.
Ka sten K10 Plug-in for Microsoft .NET Core Runtime 6.0 or later
Veeam Backup & Replication
version 12.0.0.xxx and later Microsoft ASP.NET Core Shared Framework 6.0 or later
For other system requirements of the plug-in, see the Veeam Backup for
Kasten K10 User Guide.
Ap p lication Requirement
Microsoft Active Veeam Backup & Replication supports domain controller backup for the following
Directory operating systems:
o Microsoft Windows Server 2022
o Microsoft Windows Server 2019
o Microsoft Windows Server 2016
o Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2
o Microsoft Windows Server 2012
o Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2
o Microsoft Windows Server 2008
Microsoft SharePoint The following versions of Microsoft SharePoint Server (virtualized either on VMware
or Hyper-V platform) are supported:
o Microsoft SharePoint Server Subscription Edition
o Microsoft SharePoint 2019
o Microsoft SharePoint 2016
o Microsoft SharePoint 2013
Microsoft SQL Server The following versions of Microsoft SQL Server are supported (for application-aware
processing and transaction log backup):
o Microsoft SQL Server 2022 (only for Windows)
o Microsoft SQL Server 2019 (only for Windows)
o Microsoft SQL Server 2017 (only for Windows)
o Microsoft SQL Server 2016 SP2
o Microsoft SQL Server 2014 SP3
o Microsoft SQL Server 2012 SP4
o Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2 SP3
o Microsoft SQL Server 2008 SP4
The database whose logs you want to back up must use the Full or Bulk-logged
recovery model. In this case, all changes of the Microsoft SQL Server state will be
written to transaction logs, and you will be able to replay transaction logs to restore
the Microsoft SQL Server. You can use the Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio
to switch to one of these models. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
Ora cle on Windows Veeam Backup & Replication supports backup of the following Oracle Database
OS versions:
o Ora cle Database 11g Release 2
Ora cle on Linux OS Veeam Backup & Replication supports backup of the following Oracle Database
versions:
o Ora cle Database 11g Release 2
P ostgreSQL Veeam Backup & Replication supports backup of the following PostgreSQL versions
on Linux:
o PostgreSQL 12
o PostgreSQL 13
o PostgreSQL 14
o PostgreSQL 15
NOTE
Consider that 32-bit Oracle running on 64-bit operating systems and Oracle Express Edition (XE) on Linux
are not supported.
Veeam Explorers
• Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Active Directory
Setup Account The account used for product installation must have
the local Administrator permissions on the target
machine.
Veeam Backup & Replication Console Permissions When you open the Veeam Backup & Replication
console for the first time or after a cumulative patch
is installed on the backup server, you must run the
console under an account with the local
Administrator permissions on the machine where the
console is installed. In other cases, you can run it
under an account that is a member of the Users
group on the machine where the console is installed.
However, you may require additional permissions to
recover guest OS files of Microsoft Windows VMs.
Veeam Backup Service Account The account used to run the Veeam Backup Service
must be a LocalSystem account or must have the
local Administrator permissions on the backup
server.
If the vCenter Server is added to the backup infrastructure, an account that has
administrative permissions is required.
You can either grant the Administrator role to the account or configure granular
vCenter Server permissions for certain Veeam Backup & Replication operations in the
VMware vSphere environment. For more information, see the Permissions Reference.
W ind ows Server The user account that you use to add a Microsoft Windows server must be in the local
a d ded to the administrators group (on the server being added).
b a ckup
infrastructure
Linux Server Permissions for the account that you specify when adding a Linux server differ
a d ded to the depending on the role that you plan to assign to this server:
b a ckup
• Roles for which Veeam Data Movers must be persistent (backup proxy,
infrastructure
hardened repository) require root or equivalent permissions. For the full list of
roles, see Veeam Data Movers.
• Gateway server that communicates with NFS share requires root or equivalent
permissions.
• Backup repository requires read and write permissions on the folder where
backups will be stored. You will configure this folder at the Configure Backup
Repository Settings step of the backup repository wizard.
• Other roles require read and write permissions on files and folders with which
the server will work.
All user accounts used for guest processing of Windows VMs must have the following permissions:
Microsoft SQL To back up Microsoft SQL Server data, the user whose account you plan to use must
Server be:
• Local Administrator on the target VM.
• System administrator (has the Sysadmin role) on the target Microsoft SQL
Server.
If you need to provide minimal permissions, the account must be assigned the
following roles and permissions:
• SQL Server instance-level role: public and dbcreator.
• Database-level roles and roles for the model system database:
db_backupoperator , db_denydatareader , public;
for the master system database — db_backupoperator , db_datareader , public;
for the msdb system database — db_backupoperator , db_datareader , public,
db_datawriter.
• Securables: view any definition, view server state, connect SQL .
To back up Microsoft Active Directory data, the account must be a member of the
Microsoft Active built-in Administrators group.
Directory
Microsoft To back up Microsoft Exchange data, the account must have the local Administrator
E x change permissions on the machine where Microsoft Exchange is installed.
Ora cle The account specified at the Guest Processing step must be configured as follows:
• For a Windows-based VM, the account must be a member of both the Local
Administrator group and the ORA_DBA group (if OS authentication is used). In
addition, if ASM is used, then such an account must be a member of the
ORA_ASMADMIN group (for Oracle 12 and higher).
• For a Linux-based VM, the account must be a Linux user elevated to root. The
account must have the home directory created.
To back up Oracle databases, make sure the account specified on the Ora cle tab has
been granted SYSDBA privileges. You can use either the same account that was
specified at the Guest Processing step if such an account is a member of the ORA_DBA
group for a Windows-based VM and OSASM, OSDBA and OINSTALL groups for a Linux-
based VM, or you can use, for example, the SYS Oracle account or any other Oracle
account that has been granted SYSDBA privileges.
To perform guest processing for Oracle databases on Linux servers, make sure that the
/tmp directory is mounted with the exec option. Otherwise, you will get an error with
the permission denial.
Microsoft To back up Microsoft SharePoint server, the account must have the Farm Administrator
Sha rePoint role.
To back up Microsoft SQL databases of the Microsoft SharePoint Server, the account
must have the same privileges as that of Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL Server.
P ostgreSQL The account specified at the Guest Processing step must be must be a Linux user
elevated to root. The account must have the home directory created.
Note: If you back up data using VSphere API, the account specified at the Guest
P rocessing step must be a root Linux user.
To back up PostgreSQL instances, the account must have the superuser privileges for
the PostgreSQL instance. For more information, see PostgreSQL documentation.
• [For guest OS file indexing] For Windows-based workloads, choose an account that has administrator
privileges. For Linux-based workloads, choose an account of a root user or user elevated to root.
• To use networkless guest processing over VMware VIX/vSphere Web Services, you must specify one of the
following accounts at the Guest Processing step of the backup wizard. Check that the account also has
permissions listed in the table.
o If UAC is disabled, specify an account that is a member of the built-in Administrators group.
• [For networkless guest processing over VMware VIX] To be able to perform more than 1000 guest
processing operations, the user that you specify for guest processing must be logged into the VM at least
once.
• [If you plan to use guest processing over network for workloads without listed applications] For Windows -
based workloads, choose an account that has administrator privileges. For Linux-based workloads, choose
an account of a root user or user elevated to root.
• When using Active Directory accounts, make sure to provide an account in the DOMAIN\Username format.
• When using local user accounts, make sure to provide an account in the Username or HOST\Username
format.
• To process a Domain Controller server, make sure that you are using an account that is a member of the
DOMAIN\Administrators group.
• To back up a Read-Only Domain controller, a delegated RODC administrator account is sufficient. For more
information, see Microsoft Docs.
• If you use a new Azure Active Directory (AD) application (select the Create a new account option at the
Subscription step of the wizard) when adding a Microsoft Azure Compute account, the Microsoft Azure AD
user account where the AD application will be created must have the following privileges:
a. To register applications. This can be the Global Administrator privileges assigned to the user or the
Users can register applications option enabled for the user in Azure portal. For details, see Microsoft
Azure Docs.
b. To assign a role on the subscription level for the registered application. This can be the Owner role or
if the Owner role cannot be used, you can create a custom role with minimal permissions. To learn
how to create a custom role, see Creating Custom Role for Azure and Azure Stack Hub Accounts.
• If you use an existing Azure AD application (select the Use the existing account option at the Subscription
step of the wizard) when adding a Microsoft Azure Compute account, the application must have the
Contributor and role Key Vault Crypto User role privileges for the selected subscription. If you restore
workloads to Microsoft Azure and cannot use the Contributor role, you can create a custom role with
minimal permissions. To learn how to create a custom role, see Creating Custom Role for Azure and Azure
Stack Hub Accounts.
The following permissions are required for adding a Microsoft Azure Stack Hub Compute account:
• If you use a new Azure Active Directory (AD) application (select the Create a new account option at the
Subscription step of the wizard) when adding a Microsoft Azure Stack Hub Compute account, the
Microsoft Azure AD user account where the AD application will be created must have the following
privileges:
a. To register applications. This can be the Global Administrator privileges assigned to the user or the
Users can register applications option enabled for the user in Azure portal. For details, see Microsoft
Azure Docs.
b. To assign a role on the subscription level for the registered application. This can be the Owner role or
if the Owner role cannot be used, you can create a custom role with minimal permissions. To learn
how to create a custom role, see Creating Custom Role for Azure and Azure Stack Hub Accounts.
• If you use an existing Azure AD application (select the Use the existing account option at the Subscription
step of the wizard) when adding a Microsoft Azure Stack Hub Compute account, the application must have
tshe Contributor role privilege for the selected subscription. If you restore workloads to Microsoft Azure
and cannot use the Contributor role, you can create a custom role with minimal permissions. To learn how
to create a custom role, see Creating Custom Role for Azure and Azure Stack Hub Accounts.
• Make sure the account you are using has access to Amazon buckets and folders.
• The ListAllMyBuckets permission is not required if you specify the bucket name explicitly at the
Buck et step of the New Object Repository wizard.
The following permissions are required to use Amazon S3 object storage with immutability disabled. A helper
appliance is not used for health check operations.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
The following permissions are required to use Amazon S3 object storage with immutability disabled. For health
check operations a new helper appliance is configured and the Amazon VPC, subnet and sec urity group settings
are set to (Create new) for the helper appliance settings.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs",
"ec2:CreateVpc",
"ec2:CreateSubnet",
"ec2:DescribeAvailabilityZones",
"ec2:CreateRoute",
"ec2:CreateInternetGateway",
"ec2:AttachInternetGateway",
"ec2:ModifyVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateSecurityGroup",
"ec2:DeleteSecurityGroup",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgress",
"ec2:DescribeRouteTables",
"ec2:DescribeInstanceTypes"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
The following permissions are required to use Amazon S3 object storage with immutability disabled. Amazon
VPC, subnet and security group settings for a helper appliance are configured beforehand.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
The following permissions are required to use Amazon S3 object storage with immutability enabled. A helper
appliance is not used for health check operations.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"s3:ListBucketVersions",
"s3:GetObjectVersion",
"s3:GetObjectRetention",
"s3:GetObjectLegalHold",
"s3:PutObjectRetention",
"s3:PutObjectLegalHold",
"s3:DeleteObjectVersion"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
The following permissions are required to use Amazon S3 object storage with immutability enabled. For health
check operations a new helper appliance is configured and the Amazon VPC, subnet and security group settings
are set to (Create new) for the helper appliance settings.
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"s3:ListBucketVersions",
"s3:GetObjectVersion",
"s3:GetObjectRetention",
"s3:GetObjectLegalHold",
"s3:PutObjectRetention",
"s3:PutObjectLegalHold",
"s3:DeleteObjectVersion",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs",
"ec2:CreateVpc",
"ec2:CreateSubnet",
"ec2:DescribeAvailabilityZones",
"ec2:CreateRoute",
"ec2:CreateInternetGateway",
"ec2:AttachInternetGateway",
"ec2:ModifyVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateSecurityGroup",
"ec2:DeleteSecurityGroup",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgress",
"ec2:DescribeRouteTables",
"ec2:DescribeInstanceTypes"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
The following permissions are required to use Amazon S3 object storage with immutability enabled. Amazon
VPC, subnet and security group settings for a helper appliance are configured beforehand.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"s3:ListBucketVersions",
"s3:GetObjectVersion",
"s3:GetObjectRetention",
"s3:GetObjectLegalHold",
"s3:PutObjectRetention",
"s3:PutObjectLegalHold",
"s3:DeleteObjectVersion",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
For example, see this Veeam KB article. For more information on permissions, see AWS Documentation.
The following permissions are required for Amazon S3 Glacier storage with immutability disabled. VPC, subnet
and security group settings set to are set to (Create new) for the archiver appliance settings.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "VisualEditor0",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:RestoreObject",
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:AbortMultipartUpload",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs",
"ec2:CreateVpc",
"ec2:CreateSubnet",
"ec2:DescribeAvailabilityZones",
"ec2:CreateRoute",
"ec2:CreateInternetGateway",
"ec2:AttachInternetGateway",
"ec2:ModifyVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateSecurityGroup",
"ec2:DeleteSecurityGroup",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgress",
"ec2:DescribeRouteTables",
"ec2:DescribeInstanceTypes"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
These permissions apply for Amazon S3 Glacier storage with immutability disabled. Amazon VPC, subnet and
security group settings for an archiver appliance are configured beforehand.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "VisualEditor0",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:RestoreObject",
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:AbortMultipartUpload",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
The following permissions are required for Amazon S3 Glacier storage with immutability enabled. VPC, subnet
and security group settings set to are set to (Create new) for the archiver appliance settings.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "VisualEditor0",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:RestoreObject",
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:AbortMultipartUpload",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"s3:PutObjectRetention",
"s3:GetObjectVersion",
"s3:PutObjectLegalHold",
"s3:GetObjectRetention",
"s3:DeleteObjectVersion",
"s3:ListBucketVersions",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs",
"ec2:CreateVpc",
"ec2:CreateSubnet",
"ec2:DescribeAvailabilityZones",
"ec2:CreateRoute",
"ec2:CreateInternetGateway",
"ec2:AttachInternetGateway",
"ec2:ModifyVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateSecurityGroup",
"ec2:DeleteSecurityGroup",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress",
"ec2:AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgress",
"ec2:DescribeRouteTables",
"ec2:DescribeInstanceTypes"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
These permissions apply for Amazon S3 Glacier storage with immutability enabled. Amazon VPC, subnet and
security group settings for an archiver appliance are configured beforehand.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "VisualEditor0",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:RestoreObject",
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:AbortMultipartUpload",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:GetBucketObjectLockConfiguration",
"s3:PutObjectRetention",
"s3:GetObjectVersion",
"s3:PutObjectLegalHold",
"s3:GetObjectRetention",
"s3:DeleteObjectVersion",
"s3:ListBucketVersions",
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
NOTE
The Owner IAM role does not necessarily grant the permissions required for working with Google Cloud
Storage.
The following permissions are required to use Google Cloud object storage.
{
"storage.buckets.get",
7-Mode
• login-http-admin
• api-system-*
• api-license-* (api-license-list-info)
• api-volume-*
• api-net-*
• api-options-*
• api-vfiler-*
• api-qtree-*
• api-nfs-*
• api-snapshot-*
• api-lun-*
• api-iscsi-*
• api-feature-*
• api-registry-*
• api-fcp-*
• api-file-*
• api-igroup-*
• api-clone-*
• api-snapvault-*
• api-snapmirror-*
• api-cf-*
• cli-options
• security-api-vfiler
DEFAULT readonly
cluster readonly
metrocluster readonly
fcp readonly
file readonly
igroup all
iscsi all
network readonly
node readonly
security readonly
set readonly
snapmirror all
system readonly
version readonly
qtree readonly
lun all
nfs all
snapshot all
volume all
vserver all
DEFAULT none
lun all
network readonly
security readonly
snapmirror all
system readonly
version readonly
volume all
vserver all
DEFAULT readonly
security readonly
vserver all
DEFAULT none
lun readonly
network readonly
security readonly
snapmirror readonly
version readonly
volume readonly
vserver all
cluster readonly
lun all
metrocluster readonly
network readonly
version readonly
volume all
vserver all
lun all
network readonly
version readonly
volume all
vserver all
• For Dell PowerMax, the account must be assigned the Storage Administrator role.
• For Fujitsu ETERNUS, the account must be assigned the Software role.
• For NetApp SolidFire/HCI, the account must have the following permissions:
o Volumes
o Cluster Admins
• For Western Digital IntelliFlash, the account must be assigned the Veeam Admin Role.
o General
o Port
o Host
o Virtual disk
o Snapshot
o Physical disk
• For Hitachi VSP, the account must be assigned the following roles:
• For HPE XP, the account must be assigned the following roles:
• For Dell PowerStore, the account must be assigned the following roles:
o Administrator
o Storage Administrator
o Storage Operator
• For NEC Storage M Series, the account must be assigned the Administrator role.
• For NEC Storage V Series, the account must be assigned the following roles:
For privileges required to integrate the NAS backup feature with Dell PowerScale (formerly Isilon), see
Integration with Dell PowerScale in the NAS Backup Support section.
For storage systems not mentioned above, the account must have Administrator role.
IMP ORTANT
Some Linux distributions require firewall and/or security rules to be created manually. For details, see this
Veeam KB article.
Each Microsoft Windows server that is a backup infrastructure component or a machine for which you enable
application-aware processing must have these ports opened. If you want to use the server as a backup
infrastructure component, you must also open ports that the component role requires.
For example, if you assign the role of a backup proxy to your Microsoft Windows server, you must open ports
listed below and also ports listed in the Backup Proxy section.
The Microsoft Windows server that acts as an NFS file share requires network ports listed below and also ports
listed in the NFS Backup Repository. The Microsoft Windows server that acts as an SMB file share requires
network ports listed below and also ports listed in the SMB Backup Repository.
Backup proxy TCP 6160 Default port used by the Veeam Installer
Service.
Mount server TCP 6162 Default port used by the Veeam Data
Mover.
1
This range of ports applies to newly installed Veeam Backup & Replication starting from version 10.0, without
upgrade from previous versions. If you have upgraded from an earlier version of the product, the range of ports
from 2500 to 5000 applies to the already added components.
Linux Server
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication with Linux
servers.
Each Linux server that is a backup infrastructure component or a machine for which you enable application-
aware processing must have these ports opened. If you want to use the server as a backup infrastructure
component, you must also open ports that the component role requires.
For example, if you assign the role of a backup repository to your Linux server, you must open ports listed below
and also ports listed in the Microsoft Windows/Linux-based Backup Repository section.
The Linux server that acts as an NFS file share requires network ports listed below and also ports listed in the
NFS Backup Repository. The Linux server that acts as an SMB file share requires network ports listed below and
also ports listed in the SMB Backup Repository.
Backup server Linux server TCP 22 Port used as a control channel from the
console to the target Linux host.
Linux server Backup server TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used as data
33001 transmission channels. For every TCP
connection that a job uses, one port from
this range is assigned.
1
This range of ports applies to newly installed Veeam Backup & Replication starting from version 10.0, without upgrade
from previous versions. If you have upgraded from an earlier version of the product, the range of ports from 2500 to 5000
applies to the already added components.
Backup Server
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication of the
backup server with backup infrastructure components.
Virtualization Servers
Backup vCenter Server TCP 443 Default port used for connections to
server vCenter Server.
VMware Cloud Director TCP 443 Default port used for connections to
VMware Cloud Director.
Other Servers
Backup PostgreSQL server hosting TCP 5432 Port used for communication with
server the PostgreSQL server on which the
Veeam Backup & Replication Veeam Backup & Replication
configuration database configuration database is deployed.
Microsoft SQL Server TCP 1433 Port used for communication with
hosting the Microsoft SQL Server on which the
Veeam Backup & Replication Veeam Backup & Replication
configuration database configuration database is deployed (if
you use a Microsoft SQL Server
default instance).
DNS server with UDP 53 Port used for communication with the
forward/reverse name DNS Server.
resolution of all backup
servers
Veeam License Update TCP 443 Default port used for license auto-
Server update.
(vbr.butler.veeam.com,
autolk.veeam.com)
Ba ckup Server
Backup Backup server TCP 9501 Port used locally on the backup server
server for communication between Veeam
Broker Service and Veeam services
and components.
Backup Backup server TCP 6172 Port used to provide REST access to
server the Veeam Backup & Replication
database.
Remote Access
Management Backup server TCP 3389 Default port used by the Remote
client PC Desktop Services. If you use third-
(remote party solutions to connect to the
access) backup server, other ports may need
to be open.
RE ST API
REST client Backup server TCP 9419 Default port for communication with
REST API service.
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication with the
Veeam Backup & Replication console installed remotely.
Veeam Backup & Replication Backup TCP 9392 Port used by the
Console server Veeam Backup & Replication console
to connect to the backup server.
Veeam Backup & Replication Mount TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used as data
Console server (if 33001 transmission channels. For every TCP
the mount connection that a job uses, one port
server is from this range is assigned.
not
located on
the
console)
1
This range of ports applies to newly installed Veeam Backup & Replication starting from version 10.0, without upgrade
from previous versions. If you have upgraded from an earlier version of the product, the range of ports from 2500 to 5000
applies to the already added components.
Backup server Backup proxy Backup proxy can be a Microsoft Windows or Linux server. Depending on
which server you use, the ports listed in Microsoft Windows Server or Linux
Server must be opened.
Backup server Backup proxy TCP 6210 Default port used by the Veeam Backup
VSS Integration Service for taking a VSS
snapshot during the SMB file share
backup.
Backup proxy vCenter TCP 443 Default VMware web service port that can
Server be customized in vCenter settings.
ESXi server TCP 902 Default VMware port used for data
transfer.
NFS backup TCP, UDP 111, 2049 Ports used as a transmission channel from
repository the backup proxy to the target NFS
backup repository.
Gateway SMB (CIFS) TCP 445 Ports used as a transmission channel from
server backup 1351 the gateway server to the target SMB
(if a gateway repository (CIFS) backup repository.
server is
specified
explicitly in
SMB (CIFS)
backup
repository
settings)
Gateway NFS backup TCP, UDP 111, 2049 Ports used as a transmission channel from
server repository the gateway server to the target NFS
(if a gateway backup repository.
server is
specified
explicitly in
NFS backup
repository
settings)
Backup proxy Backup proxy TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used as
3300 transmission channels for replication jobs.
For every TCP connection that a job uses,
one port from this range is assigned.
1
Port 135 is optional to provide faster deployment.
Backup Repositories
• Microsoft Windows/Linux-based Backup Repository
• ExaGrid
• HPE StoreOnce
• Quantum DXi
• Infinidat InfiniGuard
• External Repository
Backup proxy Microsoft Ports listed in Microsoft Windows Server must be opened.
Windows
server
performing
the role of
the backup
repository/file
server
Backup proxy Linux server Ports listed in Linux Server must be opened.
performing
the role of
the backup
repository/file
server
1
This range of ports applies to newly installed Veeam Backup & Replication starting from version 10.0, without upgrade
from previous versions. If you have upgraded from an earlier version of the product, the range of ports from 2500 to 5000
applies to the already added components.
Microsoft NFS backup Ports listed in Microsoft Windows Server must be opened.
Windows server repository/file
performing the share
role of the
gateway
server/backup
proxy
Linux server NFS backup Ports listed in Linux Server must be opened.
performing the repository/file
role of the share
gateway
server/backup
proxy
Gateway NFS backup TCP mountd_port Dynamic port used for mountd service.
server/backup repository/file UDP Can be assigned statically.
proxy share
(Microsoft (for
Windows/Linux) repositories TCP statd_port Dynamic port used for statd service. Can
supporting UDP be assigned statically.
NFS protocol
version 3) TCP lockd_port Dynamic TCP port used for lockd service.
Can be assigned statically.
Gateway NFS backup TCP 111, 2049 Standard NFS ports used as a
server/backup repository/file UDP transmission channel from the gateway
proxy (specified share server to the target NFS share.
in the NFS
repository
settings)
Microsoft SMB (CIFS) Ports listed in Microsoft Windows Server must be opened.
Windows backup
server repository/file
performing share
the role of
the gateway
server/backup
proxy
Gateway SMB (CIFS) TCP 445 Ports used as a transmission channel from
server/backup backup 1351 the gateway server to the target SMB
proxy repository (CIFS) share.
(Microsoft
Windows)
1
Port 135 is optional to provide faster deployment.
Backup server Dell Data TCP 111 Port used to assign a random port for the
or Domain mountd service used by NFS and
Gateway DDBOOST. Mountd service port can be
server statically assigned.
ExaGrid
Backup proxy ExaGrid TCP 2500 to 3300 Default range of ports used for
communication with the backup
proxy.
Backup server HPE TCP 9387 Default command port used for
or StoreOnce communication with HPE StoreOnce.
Gateway
server
9388 Default data port used for communication
with HPE StoreOnce.
Quantum DXi
Backup server Quantum DXi TCP 22 Default command port used for
communication with Quantum DXi.
Backup proxy Quantum DXi TCP 2500 to 3300 Default range of ports used for
communication with the backup
proxy.
Backup proxy Fujitsu TCP 2500 to 3300 Default range of ports used for
ETERNUS communication with the backup
CS800 proxy.
Infinidat InfiniGuard
Backup proxy Infinidat TCP 2500 to 3300 Default range of ports used for
InfiniGuard communication with the backup
proxy.
TCP 443
TCP 80
• Certificate
verification
endpoints
(CRL URLs
and OCSP
servers) are
subject to
change. The
actual list of
addresses
can be found
in the
certificate
itself.
• The *.d-
trust.net
endpoint is
used for the
Germany
region only.
TCP 80
External Repository
The following table describes network ports and endpoints that must be opened to ensure proper
communication with external repositories. For more information, see External Repository.
TCP 80
• ocsp.digicert.com • Certificate
• ocsp.msocsp.com verification
• *.d-trust.net endpoints (CRL
URLs and OCSP
servers) are
subject to
change. The
actual list of
addresses can be
found in the
certificate itself.
• The *.d-trust.net
endpoint is used
for the Germany
region only.
TCP 443
Gateway Amazon TCP 443 (default, adjustable via Amazon S3 If there is no gateway
server EC2 helper Glacier wizard) server selected, VBR
appliance server will be used as a
gateway server.
TCP 22
If you use Amazon S3
Glacier object storage,
HTTPS AW S service endpoints: the gateway server
• Public/private IPv4 addresses of should have direct
connection to AWS
EC2 appliances. service endpoints.
HTTP(S) proxy servers
Microsoft TCP 443 (default, adjustable via Azure are not supported.
Azure Archive wizard)
proxy
appliance
TCP 22
TCP 80
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From To P rotocol P ort/Endpoint Notes
The *.d-trust.net
endpoint is used for the
Germany region only.
Storage Systems
• Dell VNX(e) Storage
Backup server VNX File TCP 22 Default command port used for
communication with VNX File over SSH.
VNX Block TCP 443 Default port used for communication with
Dell VNX Block.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Backup proxy VNX Block TCP 3260 Default iSCSI target port.
VNXe
VNX File TCP, UDP 2049, 111 Standard NFS ports. Port 111 is used by
the port mapper service.
VNXe
Backup server Dell TCP 8080 Default port used for communication with
PowerScale Dell PowerScale over HTTPS and sending
storage REST API calls.
system
Backup proxy Dell TCP, UDP 2049, 111 Standard NFS ports. Port 111 is used by
PowerScale the port mapper service.
storage
system
TCP 445 Standard SMB port.
Backup server HPE 3PAR TCP 8008 Default port used for communication with
StoreServ HPE 3PAR StoreServ over HTTP.
storage
system
TCP 8080 Default port used for communication with
HPE 3PAR StoreServ over HTTPS.
Backup proxy HPE 3PAR TCP 3260 Default iSCSI target port.
StoreServ
storage
system
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HPE Primera/Alletra 9000 Storage
Backup server HPE Lefthand TCP 16022 Default command port used for
storage communication with HPE Lefthand.
system
Backup proxy HPE Lefthand TCP 3260 Default iSCSI target port.
storage
system
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IBM Spectrum Virtualize Storage
Backup server IBM Spectrum TCP 22 Default command port used for
Virtualize communication with IBM Spectrum
storage Virtualize over SSH.
system
Backup proxy IBM Spectrum TCP 3260 Default iSCSI target port.
Virtualize
storage
system
Backup server NetApp Data TCP 80 Default command port used for
ONTAP communication with NetApp Data ONTAP
storage over HTTP.
system
Backup proxy NetApp Data TCP, UDP 2049, 111 Standard NFS ports. Port 111 is used by
ONTAP the port mapper service.
storage
system
TCP 445 Standard SMB port.
Backup server Nutanix Files TCP 9440 Default port used for communication with
storage Nutanix Files and sending REST API calls.
system
Backup proxy TCP, UDP 2049, 111 Standard NFS ports. Port 111 is used by
the port mapper service.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
• DataCore SANsymphony
• Dell SC Series
• Dell PowerMax
• INFINIDAT InfiniBox
• NetApp SolidFire/HCI
DataCore SANsymphony
Dell SC Series
Backup server Dell SC TCP 3033 Default command port used for
Series storage communication with Dell SC Series over
system HTTPS.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Dell PowerMax
Backup server Dell TCP 8443 Default command port used for
PowerMax communication with Dell PowerMax over
storage HTTPS.
system
INFINIDAT InfiniBox
Backup server INFINIDAT TCP 443 Default command port used for
InfiniBox communication with INFINIDAT InfiniBox
storage over HTTPS.
system
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
NetApp SolidFire/HCI
Backup server NetApp TCP 443 Default command port used for
SolidFire/HCI communication with NetApp
storage SolidFire/HCI over HTTPS.
system
Backup server Pure Storage TCP 443 Default command port used for
FlashArray communication with Pure Storage
system FlashArray over HTTPS.
Backup proxy Pure Storage TCP 3260 Default iSCSI target port.
FlashArray
system
Backup server Tintri TCP 443 Default command port used for
IntelliFlash communication with Tintri IntelliFlash
system over HTTPS.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Tintri TCP, UDP 2049, 111 Standard NFS ports. Port 111 is used by
IntelliFlash the port mapper service.
system
Gateway Server
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication with
gateway servers.
Backup server Microsoft Ports listed in Microsoft Windows Server must be opened.
Windows
server
performing
the role of
the gateway
server
Backup server Linux server Ports listed in Linux Server must be opened.
performing
the role of
the gateway
server (if a
gateway
server is
specified
explicitly in
NFS backup
repository
settings)
Gateway SMB (CIFS) TCP 445 Ports used as a transmission channel from
server share 1351 the gateway server to the target SMB
(if a gateway (CIFS) share.
server is
specified
explicitly in
SMB (CIFS)
backup
repository
settings)
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Gateway NFS share TCP, UDP 111, 2049 Ports used as a transmission channel from
server the gateway server to the target NFS
(if a gateway share.
server is
specified
explicitly in
NFS backup
repository
settings)
1
Port 135 is optional to provide faster deployment.
Tape Server
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication with tape
servers.
Backup server Tape server Tape server is a Microsoft Windows server, and it requires the ports listed in
Microsoft Windows Server to be opened.
Tape server Backup server TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used as data
33001 transmission channels. For every TCP
connection that a job uses, one port from
this range is assigned.
Backup Tape server is a Microsoft Windows server, and it requires the ports listed in
repository, Microsoft Windows Server to be opened.
gateway
server or
proxy server
1
This range of ports applies to newly installed Veeam Backup & Replication starting from version 10.0, without upgrade
from previous versions. If you have upgraded from an earlier version of the product, the range of ports from 2500 to 5000
applies to the already added components.
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WAN Accelerator
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication between
WAN accelerators used in backup copy jobs and replication jobs.
Backup server WAN WAN accelerator is a Microsoft Windows server, and it requires the ports
accelerator listed in Microsoft Windows Server to be opened.
(source and
target)
TCP 6160 Default port used by the Veeam Installer
Service.
1
This range of ports applies to newly installed Veeam Backup & Replication starting from version 10.0, without upgrade
from previous versions. If you have upgraded from an earlier version of the product, the range of ports from 2500 to 5000
applies to the already added components.
Backup server VM guest TCP 22 Default SSH port used as a control channel.
OS (Linux)
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Guest ESXi server TCP 443 Default port used for connections to ESXi
interaction host.
proxy [For VMware vSphere earlier than 6.5] Not
required if vCenter connection is used. In
VMware vSphere versions 6.5 and later, port
443 is required by VMware web services.
Network ports described in the table below are NOT required when working in networkless mode over VMware
VIX/vSphere Web Services.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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Connections with Persistent Agent Components
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication of the
backup server with the persistent agent components deployed inside the VM guest OS for application-aware
processing and indexing.
Backup server VM guest TCP 6160 Default port used by the Veeam Installer
OS (Linux) Service for Linux.
Guest VM guest TCP 6160 Default port and failover port used by the
interaction OS 11731 Veeam Installer Service.
proxy
Backup server Log TCP 445 Required for deploying Veeam Backup &
shipping 135 Replication components.
server
Note: Port 135 is optional to provide faster
deployment.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Log shipping Backup TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used for
server repository 3300 communication with a backup repository
and transfer log backups.
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MS SQL Guest OS Connections
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
CDP Components
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication of Veeam
CDP components with other backup components.
ESXi host CDP proxy TCP 33032 Default port used as a transmission
(source) (source) channel to the source CDP proxy.
ESXi host TCP 33033 Port used locally on the source ESXi host
(source) for data transfer between I/O filter
components.
ESXi host TCP 33036 Port used locally on the source ESXi host
(source) for communication between CDP
components over HTTPS without HTTP
Reverse Proxy.
ESXi host TCP 33038 Port used locally on the source ESXi host
(source) for communication between CDP
components over HTTPS.
CDP proxy CDP proxy TCP 33033 Default port used as a transmission
(source) (target) channel to the target CDP proxy.
ESXi host TCP 902 Default VMware port used for data
(source and transfer. Used during the initial
target) synchronization.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
vCenter TCP 443 Default VMware web service port that can
Server be customized in vCenter settings. Used
(source and during the initial synchronization.
target)
CDP proxy ESXi host TCP 33032 Default port used as a transmission
(target) (target) channel to the target ESXi host.
ESXi host TCP 902 Default VMware port used for data
(source and transfer. Used during the initial
target) synchronization.
vCenter TCP 443 Default VMware web service port that can
Server be customized in vCenter settings. Used
(source and during the initial synchronization.
target)
ESXi host ESXi host TCP 33034 Port used locally on the target ESXi host
(target) (target) for communication between the I/O filter
components during failover.
ESXi host TCP 33036 Port used locally on the target ESXi host
(target) for communication between CDP
components over HTTPS without HTTP
Reverse Proxy.
ESXi host TCP 33038 Port used locally on the target ESXi host
(target) for communication between CDP
components over HTTPS.
Backup server ESXi host TCP 443 Port used as a control channel.
(source and
target)
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Backup server TCP 9509 Port used locally on the backup server for
communication between Veeam Backup
Service and Veeam CDP Coordinator
Service.
ESXi host Backup server TCP 33034 Port used for communication with Veeam
(source and CDP Coordinator Service.
target)
vCenter Backup server TCP 33034 Port used for communication with Veeam
Server CDP Coordinator Service.
(source and
target)
CDP proxy Backup server TCP 33034 Port used for communication with Veeam
(source and CDP Coordinator Service.
target)
Recovery Components
• Guest OS File Recovery
• Veeam U-AIR
• Microsoft Active Directory Domain Controller Connections During Application Item Restore
• Azure Stack
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• Guest OS Connections
Mount server Backup server TCP 9401 Used for communication with the Veeam
Backup Service.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Helper host Backup TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used for
repository 3300 communication with a backup repository.
Backup server Helper host TCP 22 Default SSH port used as a control
channel.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Mount server Helper host TCP 22 Default SSH port used as a control
channel.
Guest OS Connections
Helper VM guest OS TCP 20 Default port used for data transfer if FTP
appliance (Linux/Unix) server is enabled.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Helper host VM guest OS TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used for
(Linux/Unix) 3300 communication with a VM guest OS.
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
Backup server VM guest OS TCP 2500 to Default range of ports used for
3300 communication with a VM guest OS.
Backup server Microsoft TCP 6160 Default port used by the Veeam Installer
Windows Service.
server
running
vPower NFS TCP 6161 Default port used by the Veeam vPower
Service NFS Service.
ESXi host Microsoft TCP 111 Standard port used by the port mapper
Windows UDP service.
server
running
vPower NFS TCP 1058+ or Default mount port. The number of port
Service UDP 1063+ depends on where the vPower NFS
Service is located:
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From To P rotocol P ort Notes
1
This range of ports applies to newly installed Veeam Backup & Replication starting from version 10.0, without upgrade
from previous versions. If you have upgraded from an earlier version of the product, the range of ports from 2500 to 5000
applies to the already added components.
ESXi server TCP 443 Default port used for connections to ESXi
host.
Not required if vCenter connection is
used.
Internet- VMs in the TCP 8080 Port used to let VMs in the virtual lab
facing proxy virtual lab access the Internet.
server
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Veeam U-AIR
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication of U -AIR
wizards with other components.
U-AIR wizards Veeam TCP 9394 Default port used for communication with
Backup Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. Can
Enterprise be customized during Veeam Backup
Manager Enterprise Manager installation.
Backup server Microsoft TCP 135 Port required for communication between
Active the domain controller and backup server.
Directory VM
guest OS
TCP, 389 LDAP connections.
UDP
1
If you use default Microsoft Windows firewall settings, you do not need to configure dynamic RPC ports: during setup,
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically creates a firewall rule for the runtime process. If you use firewall settings other
than default ones or application-aware processing fails with the “RPC function call failed” error, you need to configure
dynamic RPC ports. For more information on how to configure RPC dynamic port allocation to work with firewalls, see this
Microsoft KB article.
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Microsoft Exchange Server Connections During Application Item Restore
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication of the
Veeam backup server with the Microsoft Exchange Server system during application-item restore.
Backup server Microsoft TCP 1433, Port used for communication with the
SQL VM guest 1434 and Microsoft SQL Server installed inside the
OS other VM.
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Azure Restore Proxy Appliance (former Azure Proxy)
Backup Azure restore TCP 443 Default management and data transport
server/ proxy port required for communication with the
Backup appliance Azure restore proxy appliance. The port
repository (former Azure must be opened on the backup server and
proxy) backup repository storing VM backups.
Azure Stack
Backup server Azure Stack TCP 443, 30024 Default management and data transport
port required for communication with the
Azure Stack.
Veeam Explorers
• Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Active Directory Connections
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• Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint and Veeam Explorer for Microsoft OneDrive for Business
Connections
Veeam Agents
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
• Connections for Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows Operating in Managed Mode
• Connections for Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows Operating in Standalone Mod e
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Kasten K10
Veeam Plug-ins for Kasten K10
Other Connections
NDMP Server
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication with NDMP
servers.
Gateway NDMP server NDMP 10000 Port used for data transfer between the
server components.
Mail Server
The following table describes network ports that must be opened to ensure proper communication of the
backup server with mail servers.
Microsoft Graph REST API TCP 443 Used to communicate with Microsoft
(graph.microsoft.com, Exchange Online organizations.
login.microsoftonline.com)
Internet Connections
If you use an HTTP(S) proxy server to access the Internet, make sure that WinHTTP settings are properly
configured on Microsoft Windows machines with Veeam backup infrastructure components. For information on
how to configure WinHTTP settings, see Microsoft Docs.
NOTE
Tenants cannot access Veeam Cloud Connect infrastructure components through HTTP(S) proxy servers.
For information on supported protocols for Veeam Cloud Connect, see the Ports section in the Veeam
Cloud Connect Guide.
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Infrastructure Planning
Infrastructure of Veeam Backup & Replication depends on business needs and resources of your company. There
are a number of things to consider before you start deploying Veeam Backup & Replication. In this section, you
will find tips and recommendations that may help you design your backup infrastructure.
Before you deploy Veeam Backup & Replication, consider the following steps:
3. Select Veeam Backup & Replication features that you will need.
4. Plan how many copies of your data you need to store (3-2-1 rule).
After defining the protection scope, calculate how much of the total amount of data is actually changing on a
daily basis. This information is required because of the mechanism of how Veeam Backup & Replication creates a
backup chain. At the first run, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a full backup file; at the second and further
runs, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an incremental backup file that contains only the blocks that has been
changed since the last backup. As a result, the daily change rate has a significant impact on the backup window
and the storage capacity needed to store the backups. As Veeam Backup & Replication creates image-level or
block level backups, you need to know the daily change rate on the block level. For VMware vSphere or
Microsoft Hyper-V, you can use Veeam ONE to measure and generate a report on the daily change rate of VMs.
As a result of this step, you can make a list of machines to be protected, including the data on which of the
machines contain databases, which of the machines host business critical applications, and how much of the
total amount of data is changing on these machines on a daily basis. This information will help you in further
steps of deployment planning.
• RP O defines a period during which you may accept to lose data. Basically, it is the age of the latest backup
that will be used for recovery in case of a failure. It means that your company accepts that in case of a
failure you may lose the data that has been accumulated since the latest restore point. RPO set by the
policy of your company defines how often you need to create a recovery point. This will help you estimate
how much storage you will need to store backups, how many copies of your data you need, and which
Veeam Backup & Replication features are the most suitable for business needs of your company.
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• RTO is related to downtime. RTO represents the amount of time from the beginning of an incident until all
services are back online and available to users.
Define a list of your workloads grouped and organized by how fast they must be recoverable. Divide the list into
categories. The higher the recovery priority, the lower the RTO will be required relative to the rest of your
workloads.
Apart from backup and replication options, the RTO also depends on the method of recovery and recovery
verification. Veeam Backup & Replication offers a number of recovery options for various disaster recovery
scenarios, including Instant Recovery, image-level restore, file-level restore, restore of application items and so
on. For details, see the following sections:
• Restore: performing restore from backup files to the original or a new location.
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Step 4. Plan How Many Copies of Data You Need (3-2-1 rule)
To build a successful data protection and disaster recovery plan, we recommend that you follow the 3 -2-1 rule:
• 3: You must have at least three copies of your data: the original production data and two backups. The
first copy of your data is the original production data. The second copy of your data is a backup created by
a backup job. To create the third copy of data you can use Backup Copy or Backup to Tape jobs. Also, if
you use cloud repositories (S3, Azure Blob, Google Cloud, IBM Cloud), you can copy backups to a capacity
tier.
• 2: You must use at least two different types of media to store the copies of your data.
• 1: You must keep at least one backup off-site. For example, in the cloud or in a remote site. One of the
repositories must be offline, air-gaped or immutable.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides integration with various types of repositories. Select where you want to
store your backup files. For the full list of supported backup repositories, see Backup Repository, Tape Devices
Support, Storage Systems Support.
To plan the required space on repositories, you might also need to analyze for how long will you store the
backups. Veeam Backup & Replication provides short-term and long-term (GFS) retention policies to effectively
store the backup files.
NOTE
Consider general security recommendations and recommendations for hardening specific backup
infrastructure components when designing Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure.
Before you install Veeam Backup & Replication, familiarize yourself with common deployment scenarios and
plan your backup infrastructure layout. For details, see Deployment Scenarios.
The easiest way to start is to deploy a Veeam Backup & Replication server, one dedicated server for a backup
proxy and one repository. While you keep adding backup jobs, add more proxies and repositories. Each backup
infrastructure component has its own specifics and requirements that are described in the corresponding
sections of this guide:
• Backup Repository
Also, note that in most cases, it is recommended to deploy Veeam Backup & Replication, Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager and Veeam ONE on separate servers.
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Naming Conventions
Do not use Microsoft Windows reserved names for names of the backup server, managed servers, backup
repositories, jobs, tenants and other objects created in Veeam Backup & Replication: CON, PRN, AUX, NUL,
COM1, COM2, COM3, COM4, COM5, COM6, COM7, COM8, COM9, LPT1, LPT2, LPT3, LPT4, LPT5, LPT6, LPT7,
LPT8 and LPT9.
If you plan to store backups on a repository operating in the per-machine mode, do not use Microsoft Windows
reserved names for names of the virtual machines to back up.
If you use a reserved name, Veeam Backup & Replication may not work as expected. For more information on
naming conventions in Microsoft Windows, see Microsoft Docs.
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Security Guidelines
When you set up the backup infrastructure, one thing that you must not overlook is security. The backup
infrastructure can be potentially used as a backdoor to gain access to your systems and data. This section
includes a number of security features and recommendations that will help you prevent potential security issues
and reduce the risk of compromising sensitive data.
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General Security Considerations
General security considerations include best practices which help you to harden backup infrastructure, build a
more secure environment, and mitigate risks of being compromised. Ensure that your backup infrastructure
meet the common recommendations listed below. For more information about hardening specific backup
infrastructure components, see Securing Backup Infrastructure.
Network
To secure the communication channel for backup traffic, consider the following recommendations:
• Use network segmentation. Create network segmentation policies to define network boundaries, control
traffic between subnets and limit access to security-sensitive backup infrastructure components. Also,
ensure that only ports used by backup infrastructure components are opened.
• Isolate backup traffic. Use an isolated network to transport data between backup infrastructure
components — backup server, backup proxies, repositories and so on.
• Disable outdated network protocols. Check that the following protocols are disabled:
o SSL 2.0 and 3.0 as they have well-known security vulnerabilities and are not NIST-approved. For more
information, see NIST guidelines.
o TLS 1.0 and 1.1 if they are not needed. For more information, see NIST guidelines.
o LLMNR and NetBIOS broadcast protocols to prevent spoofing and man-in-the-middle (MITM) attacks.
o SMB 1.0 protocol as it has a number of serious security vulnerabilities including remote code
execution. For more information, see this Microsoft article.
Security Audit
Perform regular security audits to estimate your backup infrastructure by security criteria and understand if it is
compliant with best practices, industry standards, or federal regulations.
The most possible causes of a credential theft are missing operating system updates and use of outdated
authentication protocols. To mitigate risks, ensure that all software and hardware running backup infrastructure
components are updated regularly. If the latest security updates and patches a re installed on backup
infrastructure servers, this will reduce the risk of exploiting vulnerabilities by attackers. Note that you should
work out an update management strategy without a negative impact on production environment.
NOTE
You can subscribe to Veeam security advisories published in the Veeam Knowledge Base to stay up to date
with the latest security updates.
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Microsoft Windows Server
To secure Microsoft Windows-based backup infrastructure components, consider the following
recommendations:
• Use operating system versions with Long Term Servicing Channel (LTSC). For these versions Microsoft
provides extended support including regular security updates. For more information, see this Microsoft
article.
• Turn on Microsoft Defender Firewall with Advanced Security . Set up rules for inbound and outbound
connections according to your infrastructure and Microsoft best practices. For more information, see this
Microsoft article.
o Remote PowerShell
NOTE
Linux Server
To secure Linux-based backup infrastructure components, consider the following recommendations:
• Use operating system versions with long-term support (LTS). LTS versions of popular community-based
and commercial Linux distributions have extended support including regular security updates.
• Choose strong encryption algorithms for SSH . To communicate with Linux servers deployed as a part of
the backup infrastructure, Veeam Backup & Replication uses SSH. Make sure that for the SSH tunnel you
use a strong and proven encryption algorithm, with sufficient key length. For more information, see this
section. Also, ensure that private keys are kept in a highly secure place and cannot be uncovered by a
third-party.
NOTE
For the Linux hardened repository, instead of SSH Veeam Backup & Replication uses SHA256RSA
self-signed certificates with 2048-bit RSA key.
• Avoid using password authentication to connect to remote servers over SSH . Using key-based SSH
authentication is generally considered more secure than using password authentication and helps averting
man-in-the-middle (MITM) attacks. The private key is not passed to the server and cannot be captured
even if a user connects to a fake server and accepts a bad fingerprint.
NOTE
A Linux hardened repository requires a specific security configuration described in this section.
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Securing Backup Infrastructure
This section includes recommendations for hardening specific backup infrastructure components in addition to
general security considerations.
Infrastructure Planning
For large environments, adding the backup server and other backup infrastructure components to a
management domain in a separate Active Directory forest is the best practice for building the most secure
infrastructure.
For medium-sized and small environments, backup infrastructure components can be placed to a separate
workgroup. If you want to use specific Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager features, for example, SAML
authentication or restore of Microsoft Exchange items, you can add this component to the domain.
In both cases, backup infrastructure components should be placed to a separate network where applicable. Also,
it is recommended to use the hardened backup repository.
Backup Server
To secure the backup server, consider the following recommendations:
• Restrict outbound connections. To enable product update check, automatic license update, and license
usage reporting, the backup server must be connected to the internet and be able to send requests to
servers on the internet. Allow only HTTPS connections to the Veeam Update Notification Serv er
(dev.veeam.com), Veeam License Update Servers (vbr.butler.veeam.com, autolk.veeam.com),
and Microsoft WSUS servers or Microsoft Update sites.
• Restrict inbound connections. Inbound connectivity to backup servers from the internet must not be
allowed. If you want to manage backup servers remotely over the Internet, you can deploy the
Veeam Backup & Replication console on a jump server. Service providers who want to manage backup
servers remotely can use the Veeam Backup Remote Access functionality. For more information, see the
Using Remote Access Console section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
NOTE
The account used for RDP access must not have local Administrator privileges on the jump server,
and you must never use the saved credentials functionality for RDP access or any other remote
console connections. To restrict users from saving RDP credentials, you can use Group Policies. For
more information, see this article.
• E ncrypt backup traffic. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication encrypts network traffic transferred
between public networks. To ensure secure communication of sensitive data within the boundaries of the
same network, encrypt backup traffic also in private networks. For more information, see Enabling
Network Data Encryption.
• Use self-signed TLS certificates generated by Veeam Backup & Replication. This type of certificates is
recommended for establishing a secure connection from backup infrastructure components to the bac kup
server. For more information, see Generating Self-Signed Certificates.
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• Red uce the number of user sessions opened for a long time. Set the idle timeout to automatically log off
users. To do this, go to Users a nd Roles, select the E na ble auto log off after <number> min of inactivity
check box, and set the number of minutes.
• Restrict untrusted Linux VMs and Linux servers to connect to the backup server . Enable a manual SSH
fingerprint verification for machines that do not meet specific conditions. For more information, see Linux
Host Authentication.
• Use the recommended Access Control List (ACL) for the custom installation folder . If you specify a custom
installation folder for Veeam Backup & Replication, use the recommended ACL configuration to prevent
privilege escalation and arbitrary code execution (ACE) attacks. Remove all inherited permissions from this
folder. Then, add the following permissions:
o Users: Read & Execute, applies to this folder, subfolders and files
To secure the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database, consider the following recommendations:
• Restrict user access to the database. Check that only authorized users can access the backup server and
the server that hosts the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database (if the database runs on a
remote server).
• E ncrypt data in configuration backups. Enable data encryption for configuration backup to secure
sensitive data stored in the configuration database. For details, see Creating Encrypted Configuration
Backups. Also, ensure that the repository for configuration backups is not located in the same network
with the backup server.
Backup Repositories
To secure data stored in backups and replicas, consider the following recommendations:
• Follow the 3-2-1 rule. To build a successful data protection, use the 3-2-1 rule when designing your
backup infrastructure. For more information, see Step 4. Plan How Many Copies of Data You Need (3-2-
1 rule).
• E nsure physical security of all data storage components. All devices including backup repositories,
proxies, and gateway servers must be physically located in an access-controlled area.
• Restrict user access to backups and replicas. Check that only authorized users have permissions to
access backups and replicas on target servers.
• E ncrypt data in backups. Use Veeam Backup & Replication built-in encryption to protect data in
backups. For more information, see Encryption Best Practices.
• E ncrypt SMB traffic. If you use SMB shares in your backup infrastructure, enable SMB signing to prevent
NTLMv2 relay attacks. Also, enable SMB encryption.
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• E na ble immutability for backups. To protect backup files from being modified or deleted, you can make
them immutable. The feature is supported for any tier of scale-out backup repository.
• Use offline media to keep backup files i n addition to virtual storages. For more information, see Backup
Repositories with Rotated Drives and Tape Devices Support.
• E nsure security of mount servers. Machines performing roles of mount servers have access to the
backup repositories and ESXi hosts which make them a potential source of vulnerability. Check that all
required security recommendations are applied to these backup infrastructure components.
• Install Veeam Backup & Replication server and Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager on different
ma chines. Deploy Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager on a server different from the
Veeam Backup & Replication server to prevent a key change attack. Even if passwords are lost due to
unauthorized access, you can restore lost data with the help of Enterprise Manager. For more
information, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
• E na ble encryption password loss protection . To improve data loss protection, provide an alternative
way to decrypt the data if a password for encrypted backup or tape is los t. For more information, see
Managing Encryption Keys.
o Use the recommended Access Control List (ACL) for the custom installation folder . If you specify a
custom installation folder for Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, use the recommended ACL
configuration to prevent privilege escalation and arbitrary code execution (ACE) attacks. Remove all
inherited permissions from this folder. Then, add the following permissions:
o Users: Read & Execute, applies to this folder, subfolders and files
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Best Practices Analyzer
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to check your backup server configuration with a built-in tool to ensure
it follows security best practices for Microsoft Windows Server operating system and Veeam backup
infrastructure components.
To perform a security check, click Best Practices Analyzer on the Home tab. Configuration parameters set up as
recommended will have the Passed status.
Parameters that have the Not implemented status should be revised in terms of your backup infrastructure. You
can set them up as recommended or exclude specific parameters from the checklist.
TIP
Run the Best Practices Analyzer tool regularly, especially after you made significant changes in the backup
infrastructure.
Configuration Parameters
The Best Practices Analyzer tool checks the following configuration parameters:
P a rameter Notes
Remote Desktop Service (TermService) Remote services should be disabled if they are not needed. Note
should be disabled that for the Veeam Cloud Connect infrastructure, this parameter
must be enabled if the SP uses Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)
to connect to the tenant backup server. For more information,
see Remote Desktop Connection to Tenant.
Remote Registry service Remote services should be disabled if they are not needed.
(RemoteRegistry) should be disabled
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P a rameter Notes
Windows Firewall should be enabled Microsoft Defender Firewall with Advanced Security should be
turned on. Also, rules for inbound and outbound connections
should be set up according to your infrastructure and Microsoft
best practices. For more information, see this Microsoft article.
MFA for the backup console should be Multi-factor authentication (MFA) should be enabled for the
enabled Veeam Backup & Replication console to protect user accounts
with additional user verification. For more information, see
Multi-Factor Authentication.
Immutable or offline (air gapped) media Immutable repositories should be used to protect backup files
should be used from being modified or deleted.
Password loss protection should be Password loss protection should be enabled on Veeam Backup
enabled Enterprise Manager to provide an alternative way to decrypt the
data if a password for encrypted backup or tape is lost. For more
information, see Managing Encryption Keys.
Configuration backup should be enabled Configuration backup should be enabled to reduce the risk of
data loss and manage the Veeam Backup & Replication
configuration database easier. For more information, see
Configuration Backup and Restore.
Configuration backup should be Data encryption for configuration backup should be enabled to
encrypted secure sensitive data stored in the configuration database. For
more information, see Creating Encrypted Configuration
Backups.
Backup server should not be a part of the Adding the backup server and other backup infrastructure
production domain components to a management domain in a separate Active
Directory forest is the best practice for building the most secure
infrastructure. For medium-sized and small environments,
backup infrastructure components can be placed to a separate
workgroup.
Note that this parameter will have the Passed status only if the
backup server is not joined to any domain. In other cases, it will
have the Unable to detect status because there is no way to
identify the production domain automatically.
If you set up parameters as recommended, click Ana lyze to perform a security check again and ensure that the
status changed to Passed .
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NOTE
To pass the check for the service that should be disabled, ensure that in the service properties the Sta rtup
ty p e is set to Disabled .
2. [Optional] Leave a comment in the Note field. The default comment contains information about the user
who made changes, date and time when the parameter was suppressed.
3. Click OK.
All excluded parameters are shown in the Sup pressed section. To restore the default settings and return all
parameters to the checklist, click Reset All.
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Trusted Root Certificates
There are several root certificates necessary for the Veeam Backup & Replication to operate correctly.
In most cases, these certificates are already installed on Microsoft Windows machines. Some Microsoft Windows
installations do not contain needed root certificates authority as trusted root certificates, or have non-current
certificates. This may happen on servers with locked down security settings, or servers with no internet acce ss
or if the latest updates are not installed.
Removal of these certificates from the backup server may limit the functionality of Veeam Backup & Replication
or may cause it to fail.
Make sure the following root certificates are installed on the backup server:
• https://support.globalsign.com/customer/portal/articles/1426602-globalsign-root-certificates (install R1
and R3 certificates)
If your backup server does not have internet access, download certificate files from another computer.
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Data Encryption
Data security is an important part of the backup strategy. You must protect your information from unauthorized
access, especially if you back up sensitive VM data to off-site locations or archive it to tape. To keep your data
safe, you can use data encryption.
Data encryption transforms data to an unreadable, scrambled format with the help of a cryptographic algorithm
and a secret key. If encrypted data is intercepted, it cannot be unlocked and read by the eavesdropper. Only
intended recipients who know the secret key can reverse encrypted information back to a readable format.
• Backup job
• VeeamZIP
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the block cypher encryption algorithm. Encryption works at the source side.
Veeam Backup & Replication reads VM or file data, encodes data blocks, transfers them to the target side in the
encrypted format and stores the data to a file in the backup repository or archives the data to tape. Data
decryption is also performed on the source side: Veeam Backup & Replication transfers encrypted data back to
the source side and decrypts it there.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication will pass encryption keys to the target backup repository or cloud repository
in the following cases:
Beside the job-level encryption, Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to encrypt network traffic going
between the primary site and the disaster recovery site. Network traffic encryption is configured as part of
global network traffic rules that are set for backup infrastructure components. For network traffic encryption,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the 256-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES).
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Data Encryption and Deduplication
Data encryption has a negative effect on the deduplication ratio if you use a deduplicating storage appliance as a
target. Veeam Backup & Replication uses different encryption keys for every job session. For this reason,
encrypted data blocks sent to the deduplicating storage appliances appear as different though they may conta in
duplicate data. If you want to achieve a higher deduplication ratio, you can disable data encryption. If you still
want to use encryption, you can enable the encryption feature on the deduplicating storage appliance itself.
Note, however, that if the Decompress backup data blocks before storing check box is selected in the backup
repository settings, Veeam Backup & Replication does not compress VM data before encryption. Therefore, in
the job statistics, you may observe a higher amount of transferred data (the Tra nsferred counter) as compared
to a job for which encryption is disabled. For details on job statistics, see Viewing Real-Time Statistics.
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Encryption Standards
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following industry-standard data encryption algorithms:
Data Encryption
For data encryption consider the following:
• To encrypt data blocks in backup files, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the 256-bit AES with a 256-bit
key length in the CBC-mode. For more information, see Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). This type of
encryption is also supported for backup files stored in the following locations:
o Backup files archived to tape devices. For more information, see the Tape Devices Support Guide.
o Backup files stored in archive tier. For more information, see Archive Tier.
o Backup files stored in capacity tier. For more information, see Capacity Tier.
• To generate a key based on a password, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Password-Based Key
Derivation Function, PKCS #5 version 2.0. Veeam Backup & Replication uses 10,000 HMAC-SHA1
iterations and a 512-bit salt. For more information, see Recommendation for Password-Based Key
Derivation.
• To generate Enterprise Manager keys required for data restore without a password,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the RSA algorithm with a 4096-bit key length.
• To generate a request for data restore from a backup server, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the RSA
algorithm with a 2048-bit key length.
Hashing Algorithms
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following hashing algorithms:
• For random number generation: OpenSSL, cryptographic libraries provided by the oper ating system
Encryption Libraries
For Linux-based components and services, Veeam Backup & Replication uses Veeam Cryptographic Module.
For Veeam Data Movers installed on Microsoft Windows-based machines, Veeam Backup & Replication also uses
Veeam Cryptographic Module. For other Microsoft Windows-based components and services,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses Microsoft Crypto API.
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Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following cryptographic service providers:
• Microsoft Base Cryptographic Provider. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
• Microsoft Enhanced RSA and AES Cryptographic Provider. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
• Microsoft Enhanced Cryptographic Provider. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
If you need Veeam Cryptographic Module and Microsoft Crypto API to be compliant with the Federal
Information Processing Standards (FIPS 140), enable FIPS compliance as described in FIPS Compliance.
Veeam Backup & Replication encrypts stored credentials using the Data Protection API (DPAPI ) mechanisms. For
more information, see Microsoft Docs.
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Encryption Algorithms
To encrypt data in backups and files, Veeam Backup & Replication employs a symmetric key encryption
algorithm.
The symmetric, or single-key encryption algorithm, uses a single, common secret key to encrypt and decrypt
data. Before data is sent to target side, it is encoded with a secret key. To restore encrypted data, you must have
the same secret key. Users who do not have the secret key cannot decrypt data and get access to it.
Veeam Backup & Replication relies on a hierarchical encryption scheme. Each layer in the hierarchy encrypts the
layer below with a key of specific type.
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Encryption Keys
An encryption key is a string of random characters that is used to bring data to a scrambled format and back to
unscrambled. Encryption keys encode and decode initial data blocks or underlying keys in the key hierarchy.
o Session key
o Metakey
o Storage key
• Enterprise Manager keys — a pair of keys used for data recovery without a password.
• Backup server keys — a pair of keys used for identity verification of the backup server.
Veeam Backup & Replication generates a new session key for every job session. For example, if you have created
an encrypted backup job and run 3 job sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce 3 backup files that
will be encrypted with 3 different session keys:
The session key is used to encrypt only data blocks in backup files or files archived to tape. To encrypt backup
metadata, Veeam Backup & Replication applies a separate key — metakey. Use of a metakey for metadata raises
the security level of encrypted backups.
For every job session, Veeam Backup & Replication generates a new metakey. For example, if you have run 3 job
sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication will encrypt metadata with 3 metakeys.
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In the encryption process, session keys and metakeys are encry pted with keys of a higher layer — storage keys.
Cryptograms of session keys and metakeys are stored to the resulting file next to encrypted data blocks.
Metakeys are additionally kept in the configuration database.
Storage Keys
Backup files in the backup chain often need to be transformed, for example, in case you create a reverse
incremental backup chain. When Veeam Backup & Replication transforms a full backup file, it writes data blocks
from several restore points to the full backup file. As a result, the full backup file contains data blocks that are
encrypted in different job sessions with different session keys.
To restore data from such “composed” backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication would require a bunch of
session keys. For example, if the backup chain contains restore points for 2 months, Veeam Backup & Replication
would have to keep session keys for a 2-month period.
In such situation, storing and handling session keys would be resource consuming and complicated. To facilitate
the encryption process, Veeam Backup & Replication introduces another type of service key — a storage key.
For storage keys, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the AES algorithm. A storage key is directly associated with
one restore point in the backup chain. The storage key is used to encrypt the following keys in the encryption
hierarchy:
• All session keys for all data blocks in one restore point
During the restore process, Veeam Backup & Replication uses one storage key to decrypt all session keys for one
restore point, no matter how many session keys were used to encrypt data blocks in this restore point. As a
result, Veeam Backup & Replication does not need to keep the session keys history in the configuration
database. Instead, it requires only one storage key to restore data from one file.
In the encryption process, storage keys are encrypted with keys of a higher layer — user keys and optionally a
public Enterprise Manager key. Cryptograms of storage keys are stored to the resulting file next to encrypted
data blocks, and cryptograms of session keys and metakeys.
Storage keys are also kept in the configuration database. To maintain a set of valid storage keys in the database,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses retention policy settings specified for the job. When some restore point is
removed from the backup chain by retention, the storage key corresponding to this restore point is also
removed from the configuration database.
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User Keys
When you enable encryption for a job, you must define a password to protect data processed by this job, and
define a hint for the password. The password and the hint are saved in the job settings. Based on this password,
Veeam Backup & Replication generates a user key.
The user key protects data at the job level. In the encryption hierarchy, the user key encrypts storage keys for all
restore points in the backup chain.
During the encryption process, Veeam Backup & Replication saves a hint for the password to the encrypted file.
When you decrypt a file, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a hint for the password that you must provide.
After you enter a password, Veeam Backup & Replication derives a user key from the password and uses it to
unlock the storage key for the encrypted file.
According to the security best practices, you must change passwords for encrypted jobs regularly. When you
change a password for the job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new user key and uses it to encrypt new
restore points in the backup chain.
IMP ORTANT
You must always remember passwords set for jobs or save these passwords in a safe place. If you lose or
forget the password, you can restore data from a backup file by issuing a request to Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager. For more information, see How Decryption Without Password Works.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers you a way to restore encrypted data even if you do not have a password. For
this purpose, Veeam Backup & Replication employs an additional pair of keys in the encryption process —
Enterprise Manager keys.
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Enterprise Manager keys is a pair of matching RSA keys: a public key and a private key. The public Enterprise
Manager key is used to encrypt data, while the private Enterp rise Manager key is used to decrypt data encrypted
with the public key.
In the encryption process, Enterprise Manager keys perform a role similar to the user key: the public Enterprise
Manager key encrypts storage keys and the private Enterprise Manager key decrypts them. Technically,
Enterprise Manager keys offer an alternative to the user key. When you create an encrypted backup file or
archive encrypted data to tape, Veeam Backup & Replication encrypts storage keys with two types of keys
simultaneously:
• User key
When you decrypt a file and the password is lost, Veeam Backup & Replication cannot derive the user key from
the password. In this situation, you can send a request to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager will employ the private Enterprise Manager key instead of the user key to unlock storage
keys and decrypt the file content. For more information, see How Decryption Without Password Works.
Enterprise Manager keys take part in the encryption process if the following two conditions are met:
1. If you are using a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required. Note that
Enterprise Manager keys functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License.
2. You have Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager installed and your backup servers are connected to Veeam
Backup Enterprise Manager.
Enterprise Manager keys make up a pair of matching keys — a keyset. Enterprise Manager keysets are created
and managed on the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server. During installation of Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager, the setup automatically generates a new keyset containing a public Enterprise Manager key and a
private Enterprise Manager key. You can use Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager to create new Enterp rise
Manager keysets, activate them, import and export keysets and specify retention for their lifetime.
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The public Enterprise Manager key is made publicly available to backup servers. When you connect backup
servers to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, the public Enterprise Manager key is automatically propagated to
these backup servers.
Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager acts as a manager for public Enterprise Manager keys but does not store
these keys. After the public Enterprise Manager key is propagated to the backup server, it is kept in the
configuration database.
Private Enterprise Manager keys, on the contrary, are not distributed anywhere: they are kept only on Veeam
Backup Enterprise Manager.
To protect you against the “man-in-the-middle” attack, Veeam Backup & Replication uses backup server keys.
Backup server keys are a pair of RSA keys, public and private, that are generated on the backup server.
• The public backup server key is sent to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager to which the backup server is
connected, and saved in the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager configuration database.
• The private backup server key is kept on the backup server in the Veeam Backup & Replication
configuration database.
Backup server keys are used to authenticate the identity of the request sender. When the backup server
generates a request to unlock a file, it adds a signature encrypted with the private backup server key to this
request.
When Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager processes the request, it uses the public backup server key to decrypt
the signature and identify the request sender. If the backup server used for request generation is not added to
Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager will not find a matching public key in its
database. As a result, Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager will not be able to identify the sender and the storage
key decryption process will fail.
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Encrypted Objects
The encryption algorithm works at the job level and media pool level. You can enable encryption for the
following objects:
• Backup job
• VeeamZIP
• Tape
The backup job processing with encryption enabled includes the following steps:
2. Veeam Backup & Replication generates the necessary keys to protect backup data.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication encrypts data blocks in the backup proxy, either the dedicated or default
one, and transfers them to the backup repository already encrypted.
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4. On the backup repository, encrypted data blocks are stored to a resulting backup file.
1. You import a backup file and define a password to decrypt the backup file. If the password has changed
once or several times, you need to specify the password in the following manner:
o If you select a metadata file (VBM) for import, you must specify the latest password that was used to
encrypt files in the backup chain.
o If you select a full backup file (VBK) for import, you must specify the whole set of passwords that
were used to encrypt files in the backup chain.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the provided passwords to generate user keys and unlock the
subsequent keys for backup file decryption.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves data blocks from the backup file, sends them to the source side and
decrypts them on the backup proxy, either the dedicated or default one.
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Backup Copy Job Encryption
Encryption for a backup copy job is configured in the advanced job settings. You should enable the encryption
option and specify a password to protect data in backup files produced by the backup copy job.
The workflow of the encrypted backup copy job depends on the path for data transfer:
1. You enable encryption for a backup copy job and specify a password.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication generates the necessary keys to protect backup files produced by the backup
copy job.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication encrypts data blocks on the source side and transfers them to the target
backup repository.
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4. On the target backup repository, encrypted data blocks are stored to a resulting backup file.
An encrypted backup copy job may use an encrypted backup file as a source. In this situation,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform double encryption. The backup copy job includes the following
steps:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication decrypts data blocks of the encrypted source backup file. For the decryption
process, it uses the storage key and metakeys stored in the configuration database.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication generates the necessary keys to protect backup files produced by the backup
copy job.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication encrypts data blocks on the source side using these keys and transfers
encrypted data blocks to the target backup repository.
4. On the target backup repository, encrypted data blocks are stored to a resulting backup file.
NOTE
Even if encryption is disabled in the backup copy job, Veeam Backup & Replication will decrypt data blocks
of the encrypted source backup files.
The restore process for backups produced by backup copy jobs does not differ from that for backup jobs.
The backup copy job processing over WAN accelerators includes the following steps:
1. You enable encryption for a backup copy job and specify a password.
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2. Veeam Backup & Replication generates necessary keys to protect backup files produced by the backup
copy job.
3. Data blocks are passed to the target backup repository in the unencrypted format.
4. Received data blocks are encrypted on the target site and stored to a resulting backup file in the target
backup repository.
The restore process in this case does not differ from that for backup jobs. Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves
data blocks from the backup file in the target backup repository, sends them to the source side and decrypts
them on the source side.
When transporting data between WAN accelerators that face external networks, Veeam Backup & Replication
encrypts the network traffic by default. For network traffic encryption, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the
256-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). For more information, see Enabling Network Data Encryption.
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VeeamZIP Encryption
If you want to create an encrypted VeeamZIP file, you should enable the encryption option and specify a
password in VeeamZIP task options.
Data processing during VeeamZIP file creation and restore from a VeeamZIP file does not differ from that of a
backup job.
Tape Encryption
Veeam Backup & Replication supports two types of encryption for tape media:
• Hardware level: library- and driver-managed encryption mechanisms provided by the tape vendor
• Software level: the encryption mechanism provided by Veeam Backup & Replication
Hardware encryption has a higher priority. If hardware encryption is enabled for the tape media,
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically disables its software encryption mechanism for such tape libraries.
The Veeam encryption mechanism can only be used if hardware encryption is disabled at the tape device level or
not supported.
To use the Veeam encryption mechanism, you need to enable encryption at the level of media pool. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will encrypt data for all jobs that use tapes from this media pool. Encryption is
supported for both types of tape jobs:
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• File to tape jobs
2. You select the media pool as a target for a backup to tape or file to tape job.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication generates the necessary keys to protect data archived to tape.
4. During the backup to tape or file to tape job, the key is passed to the target side. In case of hardware
encryption, Veeam Backup & Replication passes the key to the tape device, and the tape device uses its
mechanism to encrypt data on tapes. In case of software encryption, Veeam Backup & Replication passes
the keys to the tape server, and encrypts data when it is archived to tape.
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Backup to tape jobs allow double encryption. The backup to tape job uses a backup file as a source of data. If the
backup file is encrypted with the initial backup job and the encryption option is enabled for the backup to tape
job, too, the resulting backup file will be encrypted twice. To decrypt such backup file, you will need to
subsequently enter two passwords:
1. You insert tape with encrypted data into the tape drive and perform tape catalogization. The
catalogization operations lets Veeam Backup & Replication understand what data is written to tape.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the provided password to generate a user key and unlock the
subsequent keys for data Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves data blocks from encrypted files on tapes
and decrypts them.
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How Data Encryption Works
Data encryption is performed as part of backup, backup copy or archiving to tape processes. Encryption works at
the source side, before data is transported to the target. Encryption keys are not passed to the target side,
unless you run a backup copy job over WAN accelerators or perform health check for the encrypted backup files.
NOTE
The procedure below describes the encryption process for backup, backup copy jobs and VeeamZIP tasks.
For more information about encrypting data on tapes, see Tape Encryption.
1. When you create a new job, you enable the encryption option for the job and enter a password to protect
data at the job level.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication generates a user key based on the entered password.
3. When you start an encrypted job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a storage key and stores this key to
the configuration database.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a session key and a metakey. The metakey is stored to the
configuration database.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication processes job data in the following way:
a. The session key encrypts data blocks in the backup file. The metakey encrypts backup metadata.
b. The storage key encrypts the session key and the metakey.
d. If you use the Veeam Universal License, (or, for legacy-based license, Enterprise or higher edition),
and the backup server is connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, the Enterprise Manager key
also encrypts the storage key.
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6. Encrypted data blocks are passed to the target. The cryptograms of the public Enterprise Manager key (if
used), user key, storage key, session key and metakey are stored to the resulting file next to encrypted
data blocks.
If you use the Enterprise or Enterprise Plus edition of Veeam Backup & Replication and the backup server
is connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, Veeam Backup & Replication saves two cryptograms of
the storage key to the resulting file: one encrypted with the user key (c) and one encrypted with the
Enterprise Manager key (d). Saving the cryptogram twice helps Veeam Backup & Replication decrypt the
file even if a password is lost or forgotten. For more information, see How Decryption Without Password
Works.
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How Data Decryption Works
When you restore data from an encrypted backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication performs data decryption
automatically in the background or requires you to provide a password.
• If encryption keys required to unlock the backup file are available in the Vee am Backup & Replication
configuration database, you do not need to enter the password. Veeam Backup & Replication uses keys
from the database to unlock the backup file. Data decryption is performed in the background, and data
restore does not differ from that from an unencrypted one.
a. You encrypt and decrypt the backup file on the same backup server using the same
Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database.
b. [For backup file] The backup is not removed from the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
• If encryption keys are not available in the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database, you need
to provide a password to unlock the encrypted file.
Data decryption is performed at the source side, after data is transported back from the target side. As a result,
encryption keys are not passed to the target side, which helps avoid data interception.
NOTE
The procedure below describes the decryption process for backup, backup copy jobs and VeeamZIP tasks.
For more information about decrypting tape data, see Tape Encryption.
The decryption process includes the following steps. Note that steps 1 and 2 are required only if you decrypt the
file on the backup server other than the backup server where the file was encrypted.
1. You import the file to the backup server. Veeam Backup & Replication notifies you that the imported file is
encrypted and requires a password.
2. You specify a password for the imported file. If the password has changed once or several times, you need
to specify the password in the following manner:
o If you select a .vbm file for import, you must specify the latest password that was used to encrypt
files in the backup chain.
o If you select a full backup file for import, you must specify the whole set of passwords that were used
to encrypt files in the backup chain.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication reads the entered password and generates the user key based on this
password. With the user key available, Veeam Backup & Replication performs decryption in the following
way:
a. Veeam Backup & Replication applies the user key to decrypt the storage key.
b. The storage key, in its turn, unlocks underlying session keys and a metakey.
After the encrypted file is unlocked, you can work with it as usual.
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If you have lost or forgotten a password for an encrypted file, you can issue a request to Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager and restore data from an encrypted file using Enterprise Manager keys. For more
information, see Enterprise Manager Keys and How Decryption Without Password Works.
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How Decryption Without Password Works
When you import an encrypted backup file or tape media to the backup server, you need to enter a password to
decrypt data. In some cases, however, a password can be lost or forgotten. Veeam Backup & Replication offers a
way to restore data from encrypted backups or tapes even if a password is not available.
You can restore data from encrypted backups or tapes without a password only if your backup infrastructure
meets the following conditions:
1. You use Veeam Universal License (or a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition).
2. The backup servers on which you encrypted data is added to Veeam Backup Enterprise M anager.
3. The backup server on which you generate a request for data decryption is added to Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager.
If the backup server on which you encrypt data is added to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager,
Veeam Backup & Replication employs the public Enterprise Manager key in the encryption process. To decrypt
backups or tapes encrypted with the public Enterprise Manager key, you can apply a matching private Enterprise
Manager key, instead of a password. The private Enterprise Manager key unlocks the underlying storage keys
and lets you access the content of an encrypted file.
The restore process is accomplished with the help of two wizards that run on two servers:
2. The P a ssword Recovery wizard on the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
1. You start the E ncryption Key Restore wizard on the backup server to issue a request for data recovery.
2. The E ncryption Key Restore wizard generates a request to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. The request
has the format of a text document and contains cryptograms of storage keys that must be decrypted,
together with information about the public Enterprise Manager key that was used to encrypt data. At the
end of the request, the backup server adds a signature encrypted with a private backup server key.
3. You send the request to the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Administrator, for example, using email.
4. The Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Administrator starts the P a ssword Recovery wizard on Veeam
Backup Enterprise Manager and inserts the text of the request to the wizard.
5. Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager finds a matching public backup server key in Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager configuration database and decrypts the signature with this key.
6. Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager decrypts storage keys with the private Enterprise Manager key
available on Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, and generates a response in the P a ssword Recovery
wizard. The response has the format of a text document and contains decrypted storage keys.
7. The Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Administrator sends the response to you, for example, using email.
8. You input the request to the E ncryption Key Restore wizard. Veeam Backup & Replication processes the
response, retrieves the decrypted storage keys and uses them to unlock encrypted backups or tapes and
retrieve their content.
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IMP ORTANT
You can recover data only if Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager has a private Enterprise Manager key
matching the public Enterprise Manager key that was used for data encryption. If a matching private
Enterprise Manager key is not found in the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager configuration database, the
P a ssword Recovery wizard will fail. In such situation, you can import a necessary private Enterprise
Manager key using the import procedure. For more information, see Exporting and Importing Enterprise
Manager Keys in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager User Guide.
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Encryption Best Practices
To guarantee the flawless process of data encryption and decryption, consider the following recommendations.
Password
Mind the following recommendations when you create a password:
o The password must significantly differ from the password you used previously.
o The password must not contain any real information related to you, for example, date of birth, your
pet’s name, your logon name and so on.
2. Provide a meaningful hint for the password that will help you recall the password. The hint for the
password is displayed when you import an encrypted file or tape to the backup server and attempt to
unlock it.
3. Keep passwords in the safe place. If you lose or forget your p assword, you will not be able to recover data
from backups or tapes encrypted with this password, unless you use Enterprise Manager keys in the
encryption process.
4. Change passwords for encrypted jobs regularly. Use of different passwords helps increase the encryption
security level.
1. Create and activate new Enterprise Manager keysets regularly. When you activate a keyset, the public
Enterprise Manager key is automatically propagated to backup servers connected to Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager and is used for encrypted jobs on these servers.
2. Create backup copies of Enterprise Manager keysets and keep them in a safe place. If your installation of
Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager goes down for some reason, you will lose private Enterprise Manager
keys. As a result, you will not be able to use the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager functionality to
recover data from backups and tapes without a password.
For more information on data decryption without a password, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
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Encryption is not retroactive. If you enable encryption for an existing job, Veeam Backup & Replication does not
encrypt the previous backup chain created with this job. If you want to start a new chain so that the
unencrypted previous chain can be separated from the encrypted new chain, follow this Veeam KB article.
If you change the password for the already encrypted job, during the next job session
Veeam Backup & Replication will create a new incremental backup file. The created backup file and subsequent
backup files in the backup chain will be encrypted with the new password.
NOTE
To unlock a backup encrypted with several passwords, you must decrypt it in the following manner:
• If you import a metadata file (VBM), provide the latest password that was used to encrypt files in
the backup chain.
• If you import a full backup file (VBK), provide the whole set of passwords that were used to encrypt
files in the backup chain.
If you change encryption settings for an existing backup copy job, you will need to create an active full backup
manually. For more information, see Creating Active Full Backups.
If you disable encryption for an existing job, except the backup copy job, during the next job session
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically create a full backup file.
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Restoring Data from Encrypted Backups
When you restore data from an encrypted backup, Veeam Backup & Replication performs data decryption
automatically in the background or requires you to specify a password.
• If encryption keys required to unlock the backup file are available in the configuration database, you do
not need to specify the password. Veeam Backup & Replication uses keys from the database to unlock the
backup file. Data decryption is performed in the background, and data restore from the encrypted backup
does not differ from that from an unencrypted one.
Automatic backup file decryption is performed if the following conditions are met:
a. You encrypt and decrypt the backup file on the same backup server that uses the same configuration
database.
b. The backup is not removed from the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
• If encryption keys are not available in the configuration database, you can restore data from the encrypted
backup with the following methods:
o You can provide a password or a set of passwords to unlock an encrypted file. For more information,
see Decrypting Data with Password.
o You can use Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager to unlock an encrypted file without a password. For
more information, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
1. Import an encrypted backup file to the Veeam Backup & Replication console. After the import, the
encrypted backup will appear under the Ba ckups > Disk (encrypted) node in the inventory pane.
3. In the working area, select the imported backup and click Sp ecify Password on the ribbon or right-click the
backup and select Sp ecify password.
4. In the Description field of the Sp ecify Password window, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a hint for
the password that was used to encrypt the backup file. Use the hint to recall the password.
5. In the P a ssword field, enter the password for the backup file.
If you changed the password one or several times while the backup chain was created, you must enter
passwords in the following manner:
• If you select a metadata file (VBM) for import, you must specify the latest password that was used to
encrypt files in the backup chain.
• If you select a full backup file (VBK) for import, you must specify the whole set of passwords that were
used to encrypt files in the backup chain.
If you enter correct passwords, Veeam Backup & Replication will decrypt the backup file. The backup will be
moved under the Ba ckups > Disk ( Imported) node in the inventory pane. You can perform restore operations
with the backup file in a regular manner.
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NOTE
You can recover data from encrypted backups even if the password is lost. Restoring data without a
password is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise
or higher edition is required. Also, your backup server must be connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager. For more information, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
You can restore data without a password only if the following conditions are met:
1. You use Veeam Universal License (or a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition).
2. The backup server on which you encrypted data is connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager.
3. The backup server on which you generate a request for data decryption is connected to Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager.
4. Password loss protection is enabled on Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager (enabled by default). You can
check the configured settings as described in the Managing Encryption Keys section in the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager Guide.
IMP ORTANT
Backup servers that you use for data decryption must be connected to the same instance of Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager. If you connect the backup server to several instances of Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager, this may cause unexpected behavior, and the decryption process may fail.
The restore process is accomplished with the help of two wizards that run on two servers:
2. The P a ssword Recovery wizard on the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
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3. Complete the key restore process
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Step 1. Create Request for Data Restore
This procedure is performed by the Veeam Backup Administrator on the backup server.
2. Select the imported backup and click Sp ecify Password on the ribbon or right-click the backup and select
Sp ecify password.
3. In the Sp ecify Password window, click the I ha ve lost the password link.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the E ncryption Key Restore wizard. At the Request step of the
wizard, review the generated request for data recovery. Use buttons at the bottom of the wizard to copy
the request to the Clipboard or save the request to a text file.
5. Send the copied request by email or pass it in any other way to the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
Administrator.
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TIP
You can close the E ncryption Key Restore wizard on the backup server and start it anew when you receive a
response from the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Administrator.
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Step 2. Process Request in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
This procedure is performed by the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Administrator on the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager server.
2. In Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, go to the Configuration > Key Management section.
3. Click P a ssword Recovery at the top of the section to open the P a ssword Recovery wizard.
4. Paste the request that you have received from the Veeam Backup Administrator. You can use the
[CTRL+V] key combination or click P a ste at the bottom of the wizard.
5. Follow the next steps of the wizard. At the Response step of the wizard, copy the text displayed in the
wizard to the Clipboard.
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6. Send the copied response by email or pass it in any other way to the Veeam Backup Administrator working
on the backup server.
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Step 3. Complete Key Restore Process
This procedure is performed by the Veeam Backup Administrator on the backup server.
1. In Veeam Backup & Replication, get back to the E ncryption Key Restore wizard.
2. Enter the copied response to the text window at the Response step of the E ncryption Key Restore wizard.
3. Follow the next steps of the wizard. At the last step, click Finish. Veeam Backup & Replication will retrieve
the decrypted storage keys from the response, apply them to the encrypted file and unlock the file
content.
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Restoring Encrypted Data from Tapes
When you restore data from encrypted tapes, Veeam Backup & Replication performs data decryption
automatically in the background or requires you to provide a password.
• If encryption keys required to unlock the tape are available in the Veeam Backup & Replication database,
you do not need to enter the password to decrypt the tape. Veeam Backup & Replication uses keys from
the database to unlock the encrypted tape. Data decryption is performed in the background and data
restore from encrypted tapes does not differ from that from an unencrypted ones.
o You encrypt and decrypt tapes on the same Veeam backup server.
o The tape is loaded to the tape library and information about this tape is available in the catalog.
o The password specified in the settings of the media pool to which the tape belongs is the same as the
password that was used for tape encryption.
• If encryption keys are not available in the Veeam Backup & Replication database, you can restore data
from encrypted tapes with the following methods:
o You can provide a password or a set of passwords to unlock the encrypted tape. For more information,
see Decrypting Tapes with Password.
o You can use Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager to unlock the encrypted tape without a password. For
more information, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
2. Catalog the tapes so that Veeam Backup & Replication can read data archived on tape. After you perform
catalogization, encrypted tapes will be displayed under the Med ia > E ncrypted node in the corresponding
tape library. On the cataloged tape, Veeam Backup & Replication displays the key icon to mark it as
encrypted.
3. In the inventory pane, select the E ncrypted node under Med ia node.
4. In the working area, select the imported tape and click Sp ecify password on the ribbon or right-click the
tape and select Sp ecify password.
5. In the Description field of the Sp ecify Password window, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a hint for
the password that was used to encrypt the tape. Use the hint to recall the password.
7. If the imported tape is a part of a backup set but is not the last tape in this set, perform catalogization
once again.
When Veeam Backup & Replication creates a backup set, it writes catalog data to the last tape in this set.
o If the imported group of tapes contains the last tape in the backup set, Veeam Backup & Replication
retrieves catalog data from the last tape during the initial catalogization process (see point 2 of this
procedure).
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o If the imported group of tapes does not contain the last tape in the backup set,
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to additionally catalog files on imported tapes.
If you enter a correct password, Veeam Backup & Replication will decrypt the tape media. The tape will be
moved under the corresponding media pool in the inventory pane. You can perform restore operations for data
archived to tape as usual.
If you import a backup file from tape and the backup file was encrypted twice, with the initial backup job and
with the backup to tape job, you must sequentially specify two passwords:
After you enter the first password, backups from the tape will be moved under the Ba ckup > E ncrypted node in
the inventory pane. You must then enter the second password to decrypt the backup and get access to its
content.
NOTE
You can recover data from encrypted backups even if the password is lost. Restoring data without a
password is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise
or higher edition is required. Also, your backup server must be connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager. For more information, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
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You can restore data from tapes without a password only if your backup infrastructure meets the following
conditions:
1. You use Veeam Universal License (or a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition).
1. Veeam backup server on which you encrypted tapes is added to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager.
2. Veeam backup server on which you generate a request for data decr yption is added to Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager.
The restore process is accomplished with the help of two wizards that run on two servers:
2. The P a ssword Recovery wizard on the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
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Step 1. Create Request for Data Restore
This procedure is performed by the Veeam Backup Administrator on the Veeam backup server.
2. Select the imported tape and click Sp ecify Password on the ribbon or right-click the tape and select
Sp ecify password.
3. In the Sp ecify Password window, click the I ha ve lost the password link.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the E ncryption Key Restore wizard. At the Request step of the
wizard, review the generated request for data recovery. Use buttons at the bottom of the wizard to copy
the request to the Clipboard or save the request to a text file.
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5. Send the copied request by email or pass it in any other way to the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
Administrator.
TIP
You can close the E ncryption Key Restore wizard on the Veeam backup server and start it anew when you
receive a response from the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Administrator.
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Step 2. Process Request in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
This procedure is performed by the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Administrator on the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager server.
2. In Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, go to the Configuration > Settings > Key Management section.
4. Use the [CTRL+V] key combination to paste the request that you have received from the Veeam Backup
Administrator. You can also use the Imp ort from File link to import the request from a text file.
5. Follow the next steps of the wizard. At the Response step, copy the text displayed in the wizard to the
Clipboard.
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6. Send the copied response by email or pass it in any other way to the Veeam Backup Administrator working
on the Veeam backup server.
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Step 3. Complete Key Restore Process
This procedure is performed by the Veeam Backup Administrator on the Veeam backup server.
1. In Veeam Backup & Replication, get back to the E ncryption Key Restore wizard.
2. Enter the copied response to the text window at the Response step of the E ncryption Key Restore wizard.
3. Follow the next steps of the wizard. At the last step, click Finish. Veeam Backup & Replication will retrieve
the decrypted storage keys from the response, apply them to the encrypted tape and unlock the tape
content.
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Multi-Factor Authentication
Veeam Backup & Replication supports multi-factor authentication (MFA) for additional user verification. A one-
time password (OTP) generated in the mobile authenticator application is used as a second verification method.
Combined with login and password credentials, it creates a more secure environment and protects user accounts
from being compromised.
• Only users with the Veeam Backup Administrator role can manage MFA.
• MFA is not supported in the Veeam Backup & Replication Community Edition.
• MFA is not natively supported for Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. It can be used with a third party
identity provider specified in the SAML authentication settings.
• User groups are not supported. You can enable MFA only for user accounts.
• MFA is not supported for non-interactive connections used by the following applications and backup
infrastructure components:
o Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager (for communication with the Veeam Backup & Replication server)
o Veeam ONE agent (for communication with the Veeam Backup & Replication server)
o Remote Console for VCC service providers (for more information, see this KB article)
To avoid connection issues, you must disable MFA for the accounts used to run these applications and
backup infrastructure components. For more information, see Disabling MFA for Service Accounts.
• MFA is not supported for PowerShell (either interactive logon or non-interactive connections). To use
PowerShell cmdlets with Veeam Backup PowerShell Module or Microsoft Windows PowerShell, run the
Veeam Backup & Replication console or Microsoft Windows PowerShell under the service account with
disabled MFA.
• MFA also must be disabled for the account in the following cases:
o To restore the configuration database properly, run the Veeam Backup & Replication console or
Veeam Backup Configuration Restore application under the service account with disabled MFA.
o To upgrade the remote Veeam Backup & Replication console properly, run it under the service
account with disabled MFA.
• Mobile push notifications are not supported. You can get an OTP code only in the mobile authenticator
application.
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How MFA Works
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following scenario for MFA:
o Veeam Backup & Replication checks if MFA is enabled and configured for the user:
a. MFA is enabled but not configured. The user gets the instruction how to set up MFA.
Veeam Backup & Replication generates a secret key which is used once for the initial setup in the
mobile authenticator application. The hash of the secret key is also saved in the configuration
database.
b. MFA is enabled and configured. Each time the user logs in they should enter a 6-digit confirmation
code generated in the mobile authenticator application. Veeam Backup & Replication checks if the
code is valid and, in case of success, starts a user session.
If there are more than 5 unsuccessful attempts, the user can reopen the console and try to log in
again after waiting for at least one minute. If the problem persists, the backup administrator can
reset MFA by request.
NOTE
The code confirmation works when there is no time shifting between the mobile authenticator application
and the Veeam Backup & Replication server. Ensure that they are synchronized with the UTC time.
If Veeam Explorers and other applications (except for Veeam Backup PowerShell Module) are started from the
console, they do not require additional authentication.
Enabling MFA
To enable the feature for all users:
3. Remove user groups from the list if there are any. Leave only specific users.
4. Select the Require two-factor authentication for interactive logon check box.
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5. Click OK.
3. Select the user and click Reset MFA. The next time the user logs in they will get the instruction how to
set up MFA.
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Disabling MFA
To disable the feature for all users:
3. Deselect the Require two-factor authentication for interactive logon check box.
4. Click OK.
4. Select the This is a service account (disable two-factor authentication) check box.
5. Click OK.
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Kerberos Authentication
Veeam Backup & Replication supports Kerberos authentication for all components of the backup infrastructure
including Veeam Explorers, Veeam Agents, Veeam Plug -ins, and Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. You can
build the backup infrastructure in the following environments:
• Kerberos authentication is the primary domain authentication protocol, NTLM is supported for
compatibility. This configuration is used by default starting from Microsoft Windows 2000 Server.
• Kerberos is the only domain authentication protocol, NTLM is disabled (more secure).
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the standard Kerberos authentication scenario:
1. A client sends a request to the KDC, which is located on a domain controller and uses Microsoft Active
Directory as the account database. The request contains user details and information about the Veeam
service the client wants to access.
3. The client uses the TGT to send a request to the KDC Ticket Granting Service (TGS) and get a TGS ticket.
The request also contains the Service Principal Name (SPN) of the service.
4. The client uses the TGS ticket to send a request to the server.
5. The server verifies the client's request and provides access to the service for a limited period s pecified in
the Kerberos configuration.
For more information about Kerberos authentication, see this Microsoft article.
• The client and the server must belong to the same domain, or a trust relationship must exist between
domains.
• All backup infrastructure components must be added to the Veeam Backup & Replication console using
FQDN.
• FQDN must be used when connecting to the remote Veeam Backup & Replication console.
• The hostname length for all Windows-based backup infrastructure components and VM guest OSes must
not exceed 15 characters.
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• Veeam Backup Service (VeeamBackupSvc) and Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Service
(VeeamEnterpriseManagerSvc) must run under the LocalSystem account (default installation settings).
The following services can run under the LocalSystem account or a dedicated Active Directory service
account:
• The maximum time difference between the client and the domain controller must be 5 minutes to protect
the backup infrastructure from replay attacks.
o Local accounts do not support Kerberos authentication. To authenticate with Microsoft Windows
guest OS using Kerberos, specify an Active Directory account.
o If you use networkless application-aware guest processing through VIX API/vSphere Web Services,
the guest OS must still have access to the domain controller. Otherwise, Kerberos authentication
will not work.
o Each Veeam service must have two SPNs registered with the Active Directory in the f ollowing formats:
• For the following services, SPNs are registered automatically each time they start:
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o Veeam Backup VSS Integration Service (VeeamFilesysVssSvc)
For services running under the LocalSystem account, SPNs are mapped to the Active Directory
computer objects. For services, running under a dedicated Active Directory service account, SPNs are
mapped to the Active Directory user objects.
Note that If for any reason the SPN registration fails, the service will continue working, but there
might be authentication issues in Kerberos-only environments.
• If you want to register SPN manually, you can use the setspn tool. For more information about
manual SPN registration, see this Microsoft article. To disable automatic SPN registration, contact
Veeam Customer Support.
Note that Veeam Platform Services (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud) and Veeam Explorer Recovery
Service do not need to be registered as they do not have SPNs.
• If you want to use another account for running a Veeam service, you must manually remove the existing
SPN from the Active Directory beforehand. Otherwise, the SPN registration with the new account will
fail.
IMP ORTANT
If you use persistent agents for guest OS processing and want to upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication to
version 12, there might be issues with application-aware processing in a Kerberos-only environment. To
mitigate risks, register SPNs for Guest Helper Service using the following format:
{VeeamGuestHelperSvc}/{FQDN} and {VeeamGuestHelperSvc}/{NetBIOSName}. For more
information, see this KB article.
NOTE
Using NTLM increases the attack surface of your backup infrastructure. To build a more secure
environment, disable NTLM and leave Kerberos the only domain authentication protocol.
o E na ble an NTLM audit. Start to collect and analyze NTLM audit events to determine which applications
and services send NTLM requests. Reconfigure or update them to use Kerberos. If an application or
service does not support Kerberos, replace it with an alternative one. For more information about
auditing NTLM usage, see this Microsoft article.
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o E na ble Kerberos extended logging mode. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication saves logs only for
failed SPN registrations. It is recommended to collect information about all SPN registrations during
initial Veeam Backup & Replication deployment and NTLM audit troubleshooting. To enable extended
logging for SPNs used for Kerberos authentication between backup infrastructure components, see this
KB article.
o Restrict NTLM traffic. When all applications and services are configured to use Kerberos and there are
no NTLM audit events, apply Network Security: Restrict NTLM Active Directory group policies to restrict
NTLM traffic and authentication. You can also configure exclusions for specific hosts if they still require
NTLM authentication to work properly. For more information about restricting NTLM usage, see this
Microsoft article.
NOTE
o Make sure that you use strong encryption algorithms allowed for Kerberos. For more information,
see this Microsoft article.
o Prevent Kerberos change password that uses RC4 secret key s. For more information, see this
Microsoft article.
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Using Group Managed Service Accounts
A Group Managed Service Account (gMSA) is the type of domain account configured on the server. It does not
need the administrator to manage the password as this role is performed by the Microsoft Windows operating
system. Randomly generated complex passwords are automatically changed every 30 days which reduce the risk
of brute force and dictionary attacks. For more information about gMSAs, see this Microsoft article.
NOTE
For application-aware processing, using a gMSA is supported for backups or replicas of VMs that run
Microsoft Active Directory (domain controllers), Microsoft Exchange, Microsoft SQL Server, and Oracle 12c
Release 2 and later. You cannot back up or replicate VMs that run Microsoft SharePoint with the gMSA.
• gMSAs are applicable to Microsoft Windows Server 2012 and later. For more information about operating
system and Microsoft Active Directory requirements, see this Microsoft article.
• gMSAs are not supported for backups of the Linux target machines joined to the Active Directory domain.
• Since gMSAs require a connection to the domain controller, these accounts work only over network.
• If you use gMSAs to manage the restore process of VM guest OS files, consider Requirements and
Limitations.
• If you back up a machine using a gMSA, both the guest interaction proxy and the target machine must
have access to the domain controller to obtain the gMSA password. On the target machine the gMSA must
be added to the Administrators group (local or domain). Domain Administrator permissions are only
required for Microsoft Active Directory backups, for other supported applications local Administrator
permissions are sufficient.
IMP ORTANT
Consider that granting Domain Administrator permissions to gMSAs makes them a potential source
of vulnerability.
1. The domain controller requires a root key to generate gMSA passwords. Ensure that the Key Distribution
Service is enabled on the domain controller and run the following command in Microsoft Windows
PowerShell to generate a root key:
Add-KdsRootKey -EffectiveImmediately
Wait until the Active Directory replication is finished or force it manually. For more information about
creating KDS root keys, see this Microsoft article.
2. To enable gMSA support in Microsoft Windows PowerShell, run the following commands:
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Add-WindowsFeature NET-Framework,RSAT-ADDS 2>&1 | Out-Null;
Import-Module ServerManager;
Install-WindowsFeature -IncludeAllSubFeature RSAT | Out-Null;
Import-Module ActiveDirectory;
Creating gMSA
To create a gMSA, use the New-ADServiceAccount cmdlet on the domain controller. In the DNSHostName
parameter, specify the FQDN of the gMSA. For the PrincipalsAllowedToRetrieveManagedPassword
parameter specify the computer accounts separated by comma which will use the gMSA or the AD group
containing these computer accounts. For more information about all cmdlet parameters, see this Microsoft
article.
$gMSAName = 'DOMAIN\gmsa01'
$gMSAGroupName = 'gMSAComputerAccountsGroup'
$gMSADNSHostName = 'gmsa01.srv.local'
New-ADServiceAccount -Name $gMSAName -DNSHostName $gMSADNSHostName -PrincipalsA
llowedToRetrieveManagedPassword $gMSAGroupName -Enabled $True
NOTE
To provide a more secure environment, use separate gMSAs for critical backup infrastructure components.
By default, created gMSAs are shown in the Ma naged Service Accounts container.
Installing gMSA
To install a gMSA on the server or the target machine, perform the following steps:
Install-ADServiceAccount "DOMAIN\gmsa01$"
Test-ADServiceAccount "DOMAIN\gmsa01$"
NOTE
For domain controller VMs, add the gMSA to the domain Administrators group or
BUILTIN\Administrators group on the domain controller.
For guest processing, install the gMSA on the guest OS machine and the guest interaction proxy.
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Using gMSA
To run guest processing tasks with the gMSA, add this account type to the Credentials Manager and choose it
when specifying guest processing settings for jobs or policies.
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Licensing
To work with Veeam Backup & Replication, you must obtain a license key and install it on the backup server. If
you do not install the license key, the product will operate in the Veeam Backup & Replication Community (free)
Edition. For more information, see Veeam Backup & Replication Community Edition.
Veeam licenses Veeam Backup & Replication in two ways: per instance and per socket.
You can use both instance and socket licenses. For more information, see Merging Licenses.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication consumes licenses only to back up data. Backup restores do not require
licenses. You can restore VMs and data no matter how many free licenses you have or how many VMs you
are restoring.
Instance Licensing
Veeam Backup & Replication can be licensed by the number of instances. Instances are units (or tokens) that you
can use to protect your virtual, physical or cloud-based workloads. For more information, see Veeam Licensing
Policy.
You must obtain a license with the total number of instances for workloads that you plan to protect in
Veeam Backup & Replication.
Workloads that have been processed in the past 31 days are considered protected. Every protected workload
consumes instances from the license scope. The number of instances that a workload requires depends on the
workload type and product edition.
This licensing model allows you to obtain a license with a certain number of instances without knowing in
advance what types of workloads you plan to protect. When a need ar ises, you can revoke instances from a
protected workload, and reuse them to protect other workloads regardless of the workload type.
Veeam Backup & Replication keeps track of instances consumed by protected workloads. If the number of
consumed instances exceeds the license limit, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning when you open
the Veeam Backup & Replication console. For more information, see Exceeding License Limit.
• VMs and NAS shares processed with backup copy and tape jobs are not regarded as protected VMs and
NAS shares and do not consume license instances. These types of jobs provide an additional protection
level for VMs and NAS shares that are already protected with backup jobs.
• VMs processed by snapshot-only jobs are regarded as protected VMs and consume license instances.
Veeam Backup & Replication will revoke instances from these VMs if you re-add a storage array to the
backup infrastructure.
• For more information on how Veeam Backup & Replication calculates license instances to consume when
protecting NAS file shares, see License Instance Calculation for NAS Backup.
Socket Licensing
With the socket licensing model, Veeam Backup & Replication is licensed by the number of CPU sockets on
protected hosts. For more information, see Veeam Licensing Policy.
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A license is required for every occupied motherboard socket as reported by the hypervisor API.
License is required only for source hosts — hosts on which VMs that you back up or replicate reside. Target hosts
(for replication and migration jobs) do not need to be licensed.
NOTE
If you use a socket license that was obtained for an earlier version of Veeam Backup & Replication, Veeam
Software adds up to 6 instances free of charge to your license scope. You can use these instances to
protect any type of supported workloads except VMware and Hyper-V VMs — they are covered by the
licensed CPU sockets on virtualization hosts.
If the number of licensed sockets is less than 6, you can use the number of instances that equals the
number of licensed sockets. For example, if the number of licensed sockets is 5, you can use 5 instances. If
the number of licensed sockets is 100, you can use 6 instances.
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Types of Licenses
Veeam Software offers the following types of licenses for Veeam Backup & Replication:
Paid Licenses
• Sub scription license — license that expires at the end of the subscription term. The Subscription license
term is normally 1-3 years from the date of license issue.
• P erpetual license — permanent license. The support and maintenance period included with the license is
specified in months or years. Typically, one year of basic support and maintenance is included with the
Perpetual license.
• Rental license — license with the license expiration date set according to the chosen rental program
(normally 1-12 months from the date of license issue). The Rental license can be automatically updated
upon expiration.
Rental licenses are provided to Veeam Cloud & Service Provides (VCSPs) only. For more information, see
the Rental License section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
Free Licenses
• E valuation license — license used for product evaluation. The Evaluation license is valid for 30 days from
the moment of product download.
• NFR license — license used for product demonstration, training and education. The person to whom the
license is provided agrees that the license is not for resell or commercial use.
• P romo license — license that grants additional instances. You can install it only on top of an existing
Perpetual or Subscription license (primary license). The primary license can have any units (only sockets,
only instances, or both). Number of additional instances and duration of promo period are decided by a
sales representative.
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Instance Consumption for NAS Backup and
File to Tape Jobs
For file share backup and file backup to tape, there are the following peculiarities in calculating the number of
license instances to consume:
• Veeam Backup & Replication rounds the protected amount of data for each file share down to 500 GB.
• When your files and folders are protected with file backup to tape jobs, Veeam backup files are excluded
from instance consumption calculation.
• If different file shares are protected by different file share backup jobs or by different file backup to tape
jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication rounds the protected amount to 500 GB separately for each file share
and calculates the number of instances required to protect each of them. After that, it sums up the total
number of license instances to consume for NAS backup or for file backup to tape.
• Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the protected amount of data for each NAS during every run of the
file share backup job that protects file shares on this NAS and keeps the result for 30 days. To calculate
the number of license instances to consume for the file share protection, Veeam Backup & Replication
takes the largest protected amount of data on file shares within the last 30 days.
If the size of the file share reduces and does not increase or the file share is removed from the file share
backup job, after 30 days Veeam Backup & Replication recalculates the protected amount of data and
automatically revokes the excessively consumed license instances.You can manually revoke the licenses
without waiting for 30 days, as described in Revoking License. During the next NAS backup job run,
Veeam Backup & Replication will recalculate the license instance consumption as of the current date.
• If the same file share is protected by more than one file share backup job, to calculate the size of the
protected amount of data Veeam Backup & Replication first sums the size of the file share data protected
by all the jobs. After that, it rounds the overall protected amount of data down to 500 GB and calculates
the number of license instances to consume for NAS backup support.
• If a file share backup job protects several file shares residing on the same NAS device (the same share root
or NAS filer), the approach to calculating license consumption depends on how the file shares are added
to the infrastructure:
o If you have added the whole share root (\\root\) to the infrastructure and the file share backup job
protects shares \\root\share1 and \\root\share2, Veeam Backup & Replication first sums the
protected amount of both file shares, rounds it down to 500 GB, and then calculates the number of
license instances to consume for NAS backup support.
o If you have separately added shares \\root\share1 and \\root\share2 to the infrastructure and
the file share backup job protects both of them, Veeam Backup & Replication first rounds the
protected amount for each file share down to 500 GB, separately calculates the number of license
instances to consume for each file share, and then sums the license instances to calculate the total
number of license instances to consume for NAS backup support.
• File share backup to an object storage requires a license. Thus, this feature is not supported in the
Veeam Backup & Replication Community (free) Edition. For details, see Veeam Editions Comparison.
• File share restore from an object storage does not require a license. Thus, this feature is supported in the
Veeam Backup & Replication Community (free) Edition. For details, see Veeam Editions Comparison.
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Examples
Ca se 1
If the protected amount of data for the file share is 499 GB or less, Veeam Backup & Replication rounds it down
to 0 GB. In this case, protection of this file share will not consume license instances.
If the protected amount of data for the file share is 590 GB or 990 GB, Veeam Backup & Replication rounds it
down to 500 GB. In this case, protection of this file share will consume 1 license instance.
Ca se 2
If the protected amount of data for the file share is 1000 GB after rounding, Veeam Backup & Replication
divides this amount by 500 GB to calculate the number of instances to consume:
Ca se 3
You have 2 file shares File Share 1 (990 GB) and File Share 2 (890 GB) each protected by a separate file share
backup job. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication rounds the protected amount of each file share down to
500 GB, calculates the number of license instances required to protect each of the file shares. After that, it
sums the calculated number of license instances required to protect the shares:
1 + 1 = 2 — protection of 2 file shares with separate file share backup jobs consumes 2 license instances.
Ca se 4
You have a file share with the protected amount of data 1490 GB. Veeam Backup & Replication runs the file
share backup job and after rounding down the amount, it calculates that it will consume 2 license instances for
protecting this file share:
Two days later, the size of the file share increases to 1510 GB. Veeam Backup & Replication runs the file share
backup job and recalculates the number of license instances to consume based on the increased size of the NAS
share:
Two days later, the size of the file share decreases back to 1490 GB and does not increase any more. Although
the protected amount of data decreases, for the next 30 days Veeam Backup & Replication uses value 1510 GB
as a basis to calculate the consumption of license instances.
30 days later, Veeam Backup & Replication runs the file share backup job and recalculates the number of
instances to consume taking into account that the largest protected amount of data within the last 30 days is
1490 GB. After that, protection of the file share starts consuming 2 instances again.
Ca se 5
You have a file share (100 GB) protected by 2 file share backup jobs (1 and 2). During the 1st run of job 1,
Veeam Backup & Replication rounds the protected amount down to 500 GB (0 GB) and calculates that the
protection of this file share with job 1 does not consume license instances. After that the file share size increases
to 270 GB. During the 1st run of job 2 which is scheduled after the increase of the file share,
Veeam Backup & Replication calculates amount of data protected by all file share backup jobs protecting this
file share:
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Veeam Backup & Replication rounds the protected amount down to 500 GB (0 GB) and calculates that the
protection of this file share with backup job 1 and 2 does not consume license instances. After that the file share
size remains 270 GB. During the 2nd run of job 1, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates amount of data
protected by all file share backup jobs protecting this file share:
Veeam Backup & Replication rounds the protected amount down to 500 GB (500 GB) and calculates that the
protection of this file share with backup job 1 and 2 now consumes 1 license instance.
Ca se 6
You have a single NAS device with 2 NFS file shares residing on it: \\root\share1 (490 GB) and
\\root\share2 (600 GB). You have added the root server folder (\\root\) of this NAS device as an NFS file
share to the infrastructure. The file shares \\root\share1 and \\root\share2 are added to one file share
backup job. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication sums the protected amount of both file shares, rounds it
down to 500 GB, and then calculates the number of license instances:
490 GB + 600 GB = 1090 GB ~ 1000 GB = 2 — protection of 2 file shares in this case consumes 2 license
instances.
Ca se 7
You have a single NAS device, but you have added 2 of its shared folders \\root\share1 (490 GB) and
\\root\share2 (600 GB) as separate file shares to the inventory. The file shares \\root\share1 and
\\root\share2 are added to one file share backup job. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication first rounds
the protected amount for each file share down to 500 GB, separately calculates the number of license instances
to consume for each file share, and then sums the license instances:
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Obtaining and Renewing License
You can obtain an Evaluation or paid license for the product when you download the product from the Veeam
website.
1. Sign in to veeam.com.
3. In the Get trial key section, click the Request Trial Key link to download the Evaluation license.
Renewing License
To renew your maintenance plan, contact Veeam Renewals Team at [email protected].
If you have a Perpetual or Subscription license, you can also renew your license contract online.
Veeam Backup & Replication will forward you to the Renewals page of Veeam website, where you can select
your new maintenance plan. When your contract is renewed, you have to update your license.
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Note that the Renew option is subject to restrictions. If online renewal is not possible for your account, you will
be redirected to the Renewal Request page. There you will be able to submit a request for Veeam Renewals
Team.
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Installing License
When you install Veeam Backup & Replication, you are asked to specify a path to the license file. If you do not
specify a path to the license file, Veeam Backup & Replication will run in the Veeam Backup & Replication
Community (free) Edition. For more information, see Veeam Backup & Replication Community Edition.
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You can install or change the license after product installation:
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2. In the License Information window, click Install.
For information on Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager license, see the Licensing section of the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager Guide.
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Merging Licenses
Merging licenses is an option for customers who have a Perpetual Socket license. If you have a Perpetual Socket
license, and want to also protect, for example, your cloud or physical workloads, or work with Veeam plug -ins,
you can obtain an instance license and merge it with the socket license.
TIP
Merging licenses is a built-in mechanism that allows you to merge two different license types (socket and
instance). If you want to merge several licenses of the same type (socket and socket, instance and
instance) to obtain a single license key file, you can use the merge tool in the Customer Portal. For more
information on merging licenses in the Customer Portal, see this Veeam KB article. For more information on
merge rules and exceptions for the Customer Portal merging process, see the License Key Merge section of
the Veeam Licensing Policy.
Under the merged license, the following workloads are processed per socket:
• VMs
• Veeam Plug-ins if the application servers are added to Veeam Backup & Replication
• Veeam Agents if the machines are added to Veeam Backup & Replication.
E ssentials
Instance
Ba ckup
Instance
Suite
Instance
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Ty p e of license E ssentials Ba ckup Suite ONE
Sock et Sock et Sock et Sock et
ONE
Instance
Merging Licenses
Before you merge licenses, check the following prerequisites:
• The company names are identical in both licenses. Company name check is case sensitive.
To merge licenses, install a new license over the already installed license. For more information, see Installing
License.
IMP ORTANT
If the license types do not allow merging, the newly installed license will replace the previous license.
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Viewing License Information
You can view details of the installed license in the License Information window.
To open the License Information window, from the main menu select License.
• Sta tus — license status ( Valid , Invalid , Expired , Not Installed , Warning , Error).
• Cloud Connect Provider — shows if you can use Veeam Backup & Replication to offer cloud repository as a
service and disaster recovery as a service to your customers (Enterprise, Yes, No) . For more information on
Veeam Cloud Connect, see Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
• Sock ets — number of sockets that you can use to protect workloads.
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• Sup port expiration date — date when the support expires. Valid for Perpetual Socket and Perpetual
Instance licenses.
• Tota l instances including promo — number of all available instances, regular and promo added up.
• Ca pacity — protected front end capacity (in TiB) for NAS backup.
1
Starting from version 11, the Starter pack license is replaced with Essentials pack. If you were using Starter pack
license, you will need either to agree to update the license during the VBR upgrade to version 11 or to dow nload
the Essential pack license file from Veeam Customer portal and install it manually.
To enable automatic license update, select the Up date license automatically check box. For more information,
see Updating License Automatically.
To view to which objects the license is currently applied, open the Sock ets tab.
To view to which objects the license is currently applied, open the Instances tab.
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By default, Veeam Backup & Replication allows Veeam Agents to connect to the Veeam backup server and
consume instances in the license. If you do not want Veeam Agents to consume instances, clear the Allow
unlicensed agents to consume instances check box. For more information on Veeam Agents licensing, see
Veeam Agent Management Guide.
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Revoking License
You can revoke licenses from protected workloads or licensed hosts, and re -apply them to other objects that
you plan to protect. License revoking can be helpful, for example, if a licensed host goes out of service or you
do not want to protect some workloads anymore.
NOTE
If you manually revoke license instances allocated for a NAS share source, the next run of the NAS backup
job that protects this file share will trigger the recalculation of the NAS share protected size and
reallocation of license instances that Veeam Backup & Replication will consume.
o For protected workloads, open the Instances tab and click Ma nage.
o For licensed hosts, open the Sock ets tab and click Ma nage.
3. In the displayed window, select a protected workload or a licensed host and click Revoke.
Veeam Backup & Replication will revoke the license from the selected object, and the license will be freed
for other objects in the backup infrastructure.
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Removing License
You can remove the installed license. When you remove a license, Veeam Backup & Replication will switch to the
Veeam Backup & Replication Community Edition. For more information, see Veeam Backup & Replication
Community Edition.
You can also remove a part of merged license. If you do so, Veeam Backup & Replication will operate under the
other part of the merged license. For more information, see Merging Licenses.
To remove a Promo license, remove the license on top of which it was installed.
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2. In the License Information window, click Remove.
If you have both socket and instance licenses, you will be asked which license you want to remove.
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3. Select the license you want to remove and confirm the removal.
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Exceeding License Limit
For Veeam Universal Licenses, Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to protect more workloads than covered
by the number of instances specified in the license. An increase in the number of protected workloads is allowed
throughout the duration of the contract (license key).
The license limit can be exceeded by a number of instances, or a percentage of the total number of instances
specified in the license (depends on which number is greater). The exceeding limit varies according to the
license type.
Sock et license Not allowed Workloads that are exceeding the license limit
are not processed.
Veeam Universal Less than 10 instances (or 10% of the All protected workloads are processed normally,
License (VUL) total instance count) Veeam Backup & Replication does not display a
warning message.
License
a utoupdate
E NABLED 10–20 instances (or 10%–20% of the All protected workloads are processed normally.
total instance count)
Once a week when you open the
Veeam Backup & Replication console, a warning
message is displayed notifying that you are out
of compliance with the Veeam Licensing Policy.
More than 20 instances (or 20% of Workloads that are exceeding the license limit
the total instance count) beyond 20 instances (or 20% of the total
instance count) are not processed.
Veeam Universal Less than 5 instances (or 5% of the All protected workloads are processed normally,
License (VUL) total instance count) Veeam Backup & Replication does not display a
warning message.
License
a utoupdate
DISABLED 5–10 instances (or 5%–10% of the All protected workloads are processed normally.
total instance count)
Once a week when you open the
Veeam Backup & Replication console, a warning
message is displayed notifying that you are out
of compliance with the Veeam Licensing Policy.
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License Type E x ceeding Limit Description
More than 10 instances (or 10% of Workloads that are exceeding the license limit
the total instance count) beyond 10 instances (or 10% of the total
instance count) are not processed.
Rental license See the Rental License section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
For example, you have a Subscription license with 500 instances to protect your workloads. According to the
table above, you are allowed to use up to 10 instances or 10% of the total instance count (whichever number is
greater) over the license limit. As the number of instances in your license is 500, you are allowed to use
additional 50 instances (50 makes 10% of 500, and 50 is greater than 10). Consider the following:
• Until the license limit is not exceeded by more than 5% of the total instance count (up to 25 instances),
Veeam Backup & Replication processes all protected workloads with no restrictions.
• When the license limit is exceeded by 5%–10% (25 to 50 instances), Veeam Backup & Replication
processes protected workloads, and displays a warning message once a week when you open the
Veeam Backup & Replication console. In the message, Veeam Backup & Replication provides information
on the number of exceeded instances and the number of instances by which the license can be further
exceeded.
• If the license limit is exceeded by more than 10% (50 instances and more), Veeam Backup & Replication
does not process the workloads exceeding the limit, and displays a warning message every time you open
the Veeam Backup & Replication console. In the message, Veeam Backup & Replication provides
information on the number of instances by which the license is exceeded.
When the license limit is exceeded, the logs will include the number of instances necessary to finish the job
successfully.
NOTE
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License Expiration
When the license expires, Veeam Backup & Replication behaves in the following way depending on the license
type:
• Evaluation and NFR licenses: Veeam Backup & Replication will stop processing workloads.
• Paid licenses: Veeam Backup & Replication will switch to the grace period.
• Promo license: Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the granted instances and stop processing
workloads for them. Promo license does not have a grace period. Upon expiration of the primary license,
the promo license will also expire, regardless of its own expiration date.
Perpetual Socket and Perpetual Instance licenses do not expire. However, such licenses have support expiration
date. Veeam Backup & Replication will inform you about the support expiration date.
Grace Period
To ensure a smooth license update and provide sufficient time to install a new license file,
Veeam Backup & Replication offers a grace period. Grace period is available for paid licenses.
During the grace period, you can perform all types of data protection and disaster recovery operations.
However, Veeam Backup & Replication will inform you about the license expiration when you open the
Veeam Backup & Replication console. The license status in the License Information window will appear as
Expired .
You must update your license before the end of the grace period. If you do not update the license,
Veeam Backup & Replication stops processing workloads. All existing jobs fail with the Error status. However,
you will be able to restore machine data from existing backups.
The number of days for notification and grace period depends on the type of license:
P erpetual n/a
14 days before Support expiration date
Instance
P erpetual n/a
14 days before Support expiration date
Sock et
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License Type License Expiration Notification Gra ce Period
To do so, remove your license. For more information, see Removing License.
If you merged licenses with different expiration dates, the merged license will expire on the date that is closer.
For example, if you merged a Perpetual license and a Subscription license, the expiration date will be inhe rited
from the Subscription license.
In such case, you can update your Subscription license or continue using the Perpetual license. To continue using
the Perpetual license, remove the Subscription license. For more information, see Removing License.
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Updating License
To be able to use all data protection and disaster recovery features, you must update your license upon expiry.
There are two methods to update the license in Veeam Backup & Replication:
NOTE
When updating the license, Veeam Backup & Replication requires internet access to connect to the Veeam
License Update Server. If your network is not connected to the internet, instead of update you can
download a new license file from my.veeam.com and then install it. For more information on license
installation, see Installing License.
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Updating License Manually
You can update the license manually on demand. When you update the license manually,
Veeam Backup & Replication connects to the Veeam License Update Server, downloads a new license from it (if
the license is available) and installs it on the backup server.
The new license key differs from the previously installed license key in the license expiration date or support
expiration date. If you have obtained a license for a greater number of instances, counters in the new license
also display the new number of license instances.
Statistics on the manual license update process is available under the Sy stem node in the History view. You can
double-click the License key auto-update job to examine session details for the license update operation.
• Op eration is successful. A new license key is successfully generated, downloaded and installed on the
backup server or Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
• A new license is not required. The currently installed license key does not need to be updated.
• The Veeam License Update Server has failed to g enerate a new license . Such situation can occur due to
some error on the Veeam License Update Server side.
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• Veeam Backup & Replication has received a n invalid answer. Such situation can occur due to connectivity
issues between the Veeam License Update Server and Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Licensing by the contract has been terminated. In such situation, Veeam Backup & Replication
automatically disables automatic license update on the backup server or Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager server.
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Updating License Automatically
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically update the license installed on the backup server
or Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server. With automatic license update, you do not need to download and
install the license manually each time when you purchase the license extension. If the automatic update option
is enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication proactively communicates with the Veeam License Update Server to
obtain and install a new license before the current license expires.
• Only licenses that contain a real contract number in the Support ID can be updated with the Up d ate
license key automatically option.
• If you are managing backup servers with Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, all license management tasks
must be performed in the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager console. Automatic update settings
configured in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager override automatic update settings configured in
Veeam Backup & Replication.
For example, if the automatic update option is enabled in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager but disabled
in Veeam Backup & Replication, automatic update will be performed anyway. For more information, see
the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager User Guide.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not automatically update an existing per-VM or socket license that was
obtained for an earlier version of the product to a new instance license.
To overcome this issue, after you upgrade to Veeam Backup & Replication 11, you must obtain in the Veeam
Customer Support Portal a new instance license and install it on the backup server manually.
1. After you enable automatic license update, Veeam Backup & Replication starts sending requests to the
Veeam License Update Server on the web (autolk.veeam.com) and checks if a new license key is available.
Veeam Backup & Replication sends requests once a week. Communication with the Veeam License Update
Server is performed over the HTTPS protocol.
2. Seven days before the expiration date of the current license, Veeam Backup & Replication starts sending
requests once a day.
3. When a new license key becomes available, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically downloads it and
installs on the backup server or Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
The new license key differs from the previously installed license key in the license expiration date and support
expiration date. If you have obtained a license for a greater number of instances, counters in the new license
also display the new number of license instances.
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Automatic License Update Results
Automatic license update can complete with the following results:
• Op eration is successful. A new license key is successfully generated, downloaded and installed on the
backup server or Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
• A new license is not required. The currently installed license key does not need to be updated.
• The Veeam License Update Server has failed to g enerate a new license. Such situation can occur due to
some error on the Veeam License Update Server side.
• Veeam Backup & Replication has received a n invalid answer. Such situation can occur due to connectivity
issues between the Veeam License Update Server and Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Licensing by the contract has been terminated. In such situation, Veeam Backup & Replication
automatically disables automatic license update on the backup server or Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager server.
Veeam Backup & Replication retries to update the license key in the following way:
• If Veeam Backup & Replication fails to establish a connection to the Veeam License Update Server, retry
takes place every 60 min.
• If Veeam Backup & Replication establishes a connection but you are receiving the “ General license key
generation error has occurred ” message, the retry takes place every 24 hours.
The retry period ends one month after the license expiration date or the support expiration date (whichever is
earlier). The retry period is equal to the number of days in the month of license expiration. For example, if the
license expires in January, the retry period will be 31 day; if the license expires in April, the retry period will be
30 days.
If the retry period is over but the new license has not been installed, the automatic update feature is
automatically disabled.
For more information about error cases, see the License Update Session Data section in the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager Guide.
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2. In the License Information window, select the Up date license automatically (enabled usage reporting)
check box.
During the installation of a Subscription or Rental license, you will see a pop-up dialog window with a
suggestion to enable automatic license update.
Statistics on the automatic license update process is available under the Sy stem node in the History view. You
can double-click the License k ey auto-update job to examine session details for the scheduled or ad -hoc
automatic license update.
NOTE
[For Rental, Subscription, Perpetual licenses] Enabling license auto update activates Automatic License
Usage Reporting.
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Automatic License Usage Reporting
When license auto update is enabled for Rental, Subscription, Perpetual licenses, Veeam Backup & Replication
performs automatic license usage reporting.
As part of reporting, Veeam Backup & Replication collects statistics on the current license usage and sends it
periodically to the Veeam License Update Server. The report provides information about the contract ID,
product installation ID, and the maximum number of licensed ob jects that were managed by
Veeam Backup & Replication over the past week (high watermark). The reporting process runs in the background
mode, once a week at a random time and day.
The type of reported objects is defined by the product and the installed license. The report can include
information about VMs, workstations or servers protected with Veeam backup agents, and so on.
The collected data does not include information on the usage of Veeam Backup & Replication by any individual
person identifiable for Veeam, or any data protected by Veeam Backup & Replication.
The collected data allows our back-end system to automatically approve your monthly usage reports as long as
they do not deviate from the high watermark value significantly. This helps to keep our report processing costs
low, thus allowing us to maintain low rental prices for our solution. Veeam may also use collected data for any
other internal business purposes it deems appropriate, including (but not limited to) evaluation, improvement
and optimization of Veeam licensing models.
By enabling license auto update you agree with collection, transmission and use of the reporting data. You must
not enable license auto update in case you do not agree with such collection, transmission and use.
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Getting to Know Veeam Backup &
Replication
After you install Veeam Backup & Replication, you can get familiar with the product UI, learn about job
priorities.
• Job Priorities
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Veeam Backup & Replication UI
The user interface of Veeam Backup & Replication is designed to let you quickly find commands that you need
and perform data protection and disaster recovery tasks.
• Main Menu
• Navigation Pane
• Views
• Working Area
• Job Filter
TIP
To open online help, press [F1] in any Veeam Backup & Replication wizard or window. You will be
redirected to the corresponding section of the user guide.
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Main Menu
The main menu in Veeam Backup & Replication contains commands related to general application settings. You
can perform the following operations using the main menu:
• Manage credentials
• Manage passwords
• Start PuTTy and Microsoft PowerShell consoles, and open a remote desktop connection to the backup
server
• View Veeam Backup & Replication help and export program logs
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Navigation Pane
The navigation pane, located on the left of the window, provides centralized navigation and lets you easily
access Veeam Backup & Replication items organized in views.
• The upper pane, or the inventory pane, displays a hierarchy or list of items relevant for a specific view.
Items displayed in the inventory pane differ depending on the active view. For example, in the Ba ckup
Infrastructure view, the inventory pane displays a list of backup infrastructure components —
virtualization servers, backup proxies, backup repositories and so on. In the Inventory view, the inventory
pane displays a list of servers added to the backup infrastructure.
• The lower pane contains a set of buttons that let you switch between views. For more information on
views and how to show/hide a view button, see Views.
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Ribbon and Tabs
Operation commands in Veeam Backup & Replication are organized in logical groups and displayed under tabs
on the ribbon. The ribbon is displayed at the top of the main application window.
• The Home tab provides quick access to the most common operations. It lets you configure different types
of jobs, perform restore and import operations. This tab is always available, no matter which view is
currently active.
• Other tabs contain commands specific for certain items and appear when these items are selected. For
example, if you open the Home view and select a backup job in the working area, the Job tab containing
buttons for operations with jobs will appear on the ribbon. If you open the Files view and select a file or
folder, the File Tools tab containing buttons for operations with files will appear on the ribbon.
TIP
Commands for operations with items in Veeam Backup & Replication are also available from the shortcut
menu.
You can minimize the ribbon. To do so, right-click anywhere on the ribbon and select Minimize the Ribbon. To
restore the ribbon, right-click on the minimized ribbon and clear the Minimize the Ribbon option.
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Views
Veeam Backup & Replication displays its items in views. When you click the button of a specific view in the
navigation pane, the view content is displayed in the working area of Veeam Backup & Replication.
• The Home view is intended for work with jobs. It also displays a list of created backups and replicas that
can be used for various restore operations, and provides statistics for recently performed jobs. For more
information about job statistics, see Reporting.
• The Inventory view displays the inventory of the virtual infrastructure. The inventory can be presented
from different perspectives: Computer, Storage, VM Folders, VM Tags and vCloud. You can use this view
to work with VMs, and VM containers or groups.
• The Ba ckup Infrastructure view displays a list of backup infrastructure components: servers, hosts, backup
proxies, backup repositories and so on. You can use this view for backup infrastructure setup — here you
can configure backup infrastructure components that will be used for data protection and disaster
recovery tasks.
• The Storage Infrastructure view displays a list of storage systems, volumes and snapshots. You can use
this view to restore VM data from storage snapshots.
• The Ta p e Infrastructure view displays a hierarchy of tape libraries connected to the tape server. You can
use this view to archive data to tapes and restore data from tapes.
• The Cloud Connect Infrastructure view displays components of the Veeam Cloud Connect infrastructure.
This view can be used by SP to manage TLS certificates, configure cloud gateways and create accounts for
users who plan to work with cloud resources.
• The Files view displays a file tree of servers added to the backup infrastructure. You can use this view for
file copying operations.
• The History view displays statistics on operations performed with Veeam Backup & Replication.
In some situations, some views may not be displayed. Consider the following:
• Right after installation, Veeam Backup & Replication displays only Ba ck up Infrastructure and History
views. To display other views, you must add at least one server or virtualization host to the backup
infrastructure.
• Right after installation, Veeam Backup & Replication does not save changes that you make to the
navigation pane or views: for example, if you resize panes, display or hide specific views. After you restart
the Veeam Backup & Replication console, the main window settings are back to default ones. To save
these settings, you must add at least one server or virtualization host to the backup infrastructure.
• To display the Cloud Connect Infrastructure view, you must install a valid license that supports the Veeam
Cloud Connect functionality.
You can hide views that you do not plan to use. For example, if you do not use tape s for data archiving, you can
hide the Ta p e Infrastructure view.
To hide a view:
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2. Click the view in the list.
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Working Area
The working area of Veeam Backup & Replication displays a list of items relating to a specific view.
The working area looks different depending on the view that is currently active. For example, if you open the
History view, the working area will display a list of job sessions and restore tasks performed with
Veeam Backup & Replication. If you open the Inventory view, the working area will display a list of VMs that
reside on servers connected to Veeam Backup & Replication.
Every item is described with a set of properties that are presented as column headers. You can click column
headers to sort items by a specific property. For example, to sort VMs by the amount of provisioned storage
space, click the P rovisioned Size header.
To hide or display properties, right-click a column header and, in the opened menu, clear or select check boxes
near property names.
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Job Filter
A job filter allows you to filter jobs by different parameters. For example, you can create a filter that will show
only VM backup copy jobs.
2. In the inventory pane, select the Job s node. At the top of the working area, click the filter icon ant then
Ad d new. Alternatively, right-click the Job s node and select Ad d view.
3. In the Ad d View window, specify a filter name. The name must be up to 200 characters long.
4. If you want to show this filter as a subnode of the Job s node in the inventory pane, select the Ad d this
view to the job management tree check box.
o Ap p lication — Veeam Backup & Replication will show Veeam Plug-in jobs and jobs in which SQL
transaction log backup, Oracle archive log backup or PostreSQL WAL files backup is enabled.
o Cloud VM — Veeam Backup & Replication will show jobs that process VMs stored in clouds.
o File — Veeam Backup & Replication will show jobs that process files.
o Server — Veeam Backup & Replication will show Veeam Agent jobs that process servers. For more
information on processed computer types, see Selecting Protected Computer Type.
o W orkstation — Veeam Backup & Replication will show Veeam Agent jobs that process workstations.
For more information on processed computer types, see Selecting Protected Computer Type.
o VM — Veeam Backup & Replication will show jobs that process VMs.
o Ba ckup — backup jobs. For example, VM backup jobs or file share backup jobs.
o Ba ckup copy — backup copy jobs. For example, VM backup copy jobs or file share backup copy jobs.
o Cop y — copy jobs. For example, file copy jobs or VM copy jobs.
o Ta p e — tape jobs. For example, backup to tape jobs or file to tape jobs. For more information, see the
Creating Backup to Tape Jobs and Creating File to Tape Jobs sections in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
7. In the La st result section, select statuses with which jobs must finish: Success, Warning or Failed .
8. In the Sta tus section, select states of jobs: Running , Inactive or Disabled .
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9. If you want to show jobs with manually set Hig h priority flag, select the Hig h priority job check box. For
more information on job priorities, see Job Priorities.
10. If you want to show jobs that were inactive for some period of time, select the La st run is over N days ago
check box and specify the period in days.
11. If you want to show jobs whose names include specific keywords, select the Job name includes check box
and enter keywords.
To show jobs that include any of the specified keywords, separate these keywords by a semicolon without
a space. For example, if you enter "Backup Job;Daily" , Veeam Backup & Replication will show all jobs that
include "Backup Job" or "Daily" keywords in their names.
NOTE
Only the user who creates filters can access them — that is, other users cannot use these filters.
4. Hover the mouse over a filter that you want to edit or delete.
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If you have added the filter as a subnode of the Job s node in the inventory pane, you can right-click the subnode
and then click E d it view or Delete view.
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Changing Color Theme
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a ‘Veeam Green’ color theme for the UI. If necessary, you can
change the color theme. Changing the color theme can be helpful, for example, if you connect to different
backup servers from one remote machine on which the Veeam Backup & Replication console is installed. In this
case, you will be able to easily differentiate with which backup server you are currently working.
2. Choose one of color themes: Grass Green, Veeam Green, Marine Blue, Ocean Graphite.
NOTE
Color theme settings are applicable for a specific combination of a backup server and user account. For
example, the color theme is initially set to the default one. You log on to the Veeam Backup & Replication
console under some user account and change the color theme to Ma rine Blue . If you log on to the same
backup server under the same account next time, the color theme will be set to Ma rine Blue. If you log on
to the same backup server under another account, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the color theme
that was previously set for this account — that is, the default color theme.
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Restore Points Icons
Restore points icons display the information about a current state of a restore point. There are 2 types of icons,
for backup repository restore points and for scale-out backup repository restore points.
Icon Sta te
Icon Sta te
Full restore point; on capacity tier and partially downloaded to performance tier
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Icon Sta te
Incremental restore point; on capacity tier and partially downloaded to performance tier
Rollback restore point; on capacity tier and partially downloaded to performance tier
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Hypervisor Infrastructure Icons
VMware vSphere Icons
These user interface icons represent the hypervisor objects of VMware vSphere workloads and servers, added to
the backup infrastructure.
Icon Description
Cluster
Datacenter
Datastore
Datastore cluster
ESX host
Provider VDC
Resource pool
Tape Server
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Icon Description
vCenter
VM
Deleted VM
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Job Priorities
Resources in the backup infrastructure are limited. To make sure that the most crucial jobs are the first to get
free resources to provide the reliable data protection, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the system of priorities
to allocate resources to different jobs.
The resource scheduler within Veeam Backup & Replication uses several stages to prioritize jobs and provide
free resources to them:
1. Ty p e — at the first stage, the resource scheduler identifies the priority of the jobs awaiting free resources
based on their type:
a. Ba ckup restore jobs — these jobs have the highest priority (800) and are the first to get free system
resources.
e. Hig h priority jobs — jobs with the enabled Hig h p riority option have priority (400). You can enable the
Hig h priority option for the following jobs: backup jobs, replication jobs, agent jobs managed by
backup server, file share backup jobs.
NOTE
When the Hig h priority option is enabled for the job, it is marked with a red flag in the list of
jobs under the Job s node in the Home view.
f. Reg ular backup and replication jobs — these jobs have priority (300).
h. Archive jobs — these jobs have the lowest priority (100) and are the last to get free system resources.
These are the jobs that move backups to capacity and archive tiers.
2. P riority — at the second stage, the resource scheduler identifies the priority of the jobs within each type
group from the first stage based on their startup type:
a. Scheduled VSS proxy jobs — the jobs with the configured job schedule and using a VSS proxy have the
highest priority (40) within the group and are the first to get free system resources.
b. Scheduled jobs — the jobs with the configured job schedule have priority (30) within the group.
c. Ma nually started VSS proxy jobs — the manually started jobs using a VSS proxy have priority (20)
within the group.
d. Ma nually started jobs — the manually started jobs have the lowest priority (10) within the group and
are the last to get free system resources.
3. Sta rt time — if the jobs have the same type and priority, resources are first allocated to jobs that were
started earlier.
NOTE
The resource scheduler does not take into account the start time for tape jobs.
You can check the job type and priority of a certain job in service logs. For more information on logs, see
Logging.
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Deployment
To start working with Veeam Backup & Replication, you must configure a backup server — install
Veeam Backup & Replication on a machine that meets the system requirements. To do this, you can use the
setup wizard or install the product in the unattended mode.
When you install Veeam Backup & Replication, the Veeam Backup & Replication console is automatically
installed on the backup server. If you want to access Veeam Backup & Replication remotely, you can install the
Veeam Backup & Replication console on a dedicated machine.
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Installing Veeam Backup & Replication
Before you install Veeam Backup & Replication, check prerequisites. Then use the Veea m Backup & Replication
setup wizard to install the product.
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Before You Begin
Before you install Veeam Backup & Replication, check the following prerequisites:
• A machine on which you plan to install Veeam Backup & Replication must meet the system requirements.
For more information, see System Requirements.
• A user account that you plan to use for installation must have sufficient permissions. For more
information, see Permissions.
• Backup infrastructure components communicate with each other over specific ports. These ports must be
open. For more information, see Ports.
• You must remove Veeam Backup & Replication components of versions that are not supported by the
upgrade procedure from the target machine. You may also need to remove earlier versions of other Veeam
products and components.
• Before deploying Veeam Backup & Replication, define where the Veeam Backup & Replication server will
be located. Depending on what kind of protection are you planning to use, the
Veeam Backup & Replication server should be located on the source site or the Disaster Recovery site.
o W hen replication or CDP is used: If you plan to use replication or Continuous Data Protection (CDP),
the Veeam Backup & Replication server should be deployed in the disaster recovery site. In this case,
if the production host crashes, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically fail over to the replica
without any manual operations. The source backup infrastructure still can be managed with the same
Veeam Backup & Replication server with the help of backup proxies deployed in the source site.
o W hen only backup features are used: If you plan to use Veeam Backup & Replication for backup jobs
only, the backup server should be placed in the production site.
Configuration Database
Before deploying Veeam Backup & Replication, decide which database engine and version you need to use:
• If you do not prepare a database engine in advance, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically install
PostgreSQL 15.1 locally on the backup server.
• Decide if you need the database engine installed on the same server as Veeam Backup & Replication or on
a remote server. Veeam Backup & Replication requires a database engine deployed either locally on the
backup server or remotely.
It is recommended to run the database engine instance locally to eliminate latency issues. However, in
some scenarios a remote instance can be the better choice:
o High Availability. SQL Clustering and Always On Availab ility Group on external SQL Servers can be
used for high availability of the configuration database. To learn about the configuration details, see
this Veeam KB article.
o Licensing. Some enterprises have dedicated virtual clusters for SQL Servers due to licensing
constraints. In such cases, you can place the Veeam configuration database on an existing instance to
lower the total cost of ownership.
• If you prefer to use an Express Edition of Microsoft SQL Server as your database engine, note that its
usage is limited by 10 GB of configuration database. The Express Edition is enough for evaluation purposes
and not very large environments (<500 VMs). If your infrastructure is large (more than 500 VMs), you may
consider to install a Microsoft SQL Server in advance.
• If Microsoft SQL Server is installed by the previous product version, Veeam Backup & Replication will
connect to the existing configuration database, upgrade it (if necessary) and use it for work.
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Related Topics
Infrastructure Planning
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Step 1. Start Setup Wizard
To start the setup wizard:
1. Download the latest version of the Veeam Backup & Replication installation image from the Download
Veeam Products page.
2. Mount the installation image to the machine on which you plan to install Veeam Backup & Replication or
burn the image file to a flash drive or other removable storage device. If you plan to install
Veeam Backup & Replication on a VM, use built-in tools of the virtualization management software to
mount the installation image to the VM.
To extract the content of the ISO, you can also use the latest versions of utilities that can properly extract
data from ISOs of large size and can properly work with long file paths.
3. After you mount the image or insert the disk, Autorun will open a splash screen. If Autorun is not available
or disabled, run the Setup.exe file from the image or disk.
IMP ORTANT
It is strongly recommended that you install Veeam Backup & Replication using Autorun or the Setup.exe
file. If you run other installation files from the ISO folders, you may miss some components that need to be
installed, and Veeam Backup & Replication may not work as expected.
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Step 2. Select Component
At the Select Veeam Backup & Replication Component step of the wizard, select Install
Veeam Backup & Replication.
To open Veeam Help Center from the setup wizard, click View Documentation.
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Step 3. Read and Accept License Agreement
At the License Agreement step of the wizard, read Veeam License Agreement and licensing policy as well as
license agreements of 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates and license agreements of required
software. To accept the license agreements and continue installing Veeam Backup & Replication, click I Accept.
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Step 4. Provide License File
At the P rovide License step of the wizard, specify what license you want to install for
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Licensing.
If a valid license is already installed on the machine, the setup wizard will inform you about it. In this case, you
can skip the P rovide License step and move to the next step of the wizard.
If you do not install a license, the product will operate in the Veeam Backup & Replication Community (free)
Edition. For more information, see Veeam Backup & Replication Community Edition.
To install a license:
3. To install new licenses automatically when you renew or expand your contract, select the Up date license
a utomatically check box. If you enable the automatic license update, and therefore enable usage
reporting, you will double the number of workloads by which you can exceed your installed license. For
more information, see Exceeding License Limit.
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Step 5. Install Missing Software
At the Sy stem Configuration Check step of the wizard, the setup wizard checks if the required software is
installed on the machine. If some of the required components are missing, the setup will try to install them
automatically. After the components are successfully installed, reboot is required. To reboot the machine, click
Reb oot.
If the setup wizard cannot install some of the required software components automatically, install them
manually and click Retry.
NOTE
If all required software is already installed on the machine, the Sy stem Configuration Check step will be
skipped. For more information on the necessary software, see System Requirements.
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Step 6. Review Default Installation Settings
At the Rea dy to Install step of the wizard, you can select to install Veeam Backup & Replication with default
installation settings or specify custom installation settings.
• To use custom installation settings, click Customize Settings. The setup wizard will include additional
steps that will let you configure installation settings.
Installation C:\Program Files\Veeam\Backup and Folder where Veeam Backup & Replication will
folder Replication be installed.
Service LOCAL SYSTEM Account under which the Veeam Backup Service
a ccount runs.
SQL server <host_name>:5432 The local host name and port number to be used
by SQL server.
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Setting Default Value Description
Check for Automatically Veeam Backup & Replication will check for
up d ates product updates weekly. When a new product
build is published on the Veeam update server, a
notification is displayed in the Windows Action
Center.
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Step 7. Specify Service Account Settings
The Service Account step of the wizard is available if you have selected to configure installa tion settings
manually.
You can select an account under which you want to run the Veeam Backup Service:
The user name of the custom account must be specified in the DOMAIN\USERNAME format.
NOTE
The user account must have the following rights and permissions:
• The account must be a member of the Administrators group on the machine where
Veeam Backup & Replication is installed.
• The account must have db_owner rights for the configuration database.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically grants the Log on as service right to the specified user account.
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Step 8. Specify Database Engine and Instance
The Da tabase step of the wizard is available if you have selected to configure installation settings manually.
At this step of the wizard, you can choose a database engine (PostgreSQL or Microsoft SQL Server) for the
Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database, specify a new or existing instance where you want to
deploy the configuration database, and specify the authentication mode.
NOTE
1. Select one of the following database engines that you want to use for the configuration database:
o PostgreSQL
o [For PostgreSQL] You can use an already installed PostgreSQL instance or install a new one.
▪ To install a new PostgreSQL instance, select the Install a new instance option. The setup will
install PostgreSQL 15.1 on the Veeam Backup & Replication server and create a database with
the VeeamBackup name.
▪ To use an already installed PostgreSQL instance, select the Use the existing instance option.
Enter the instance name in the HOSTNAME:PORT format. In the Da tabase name field, specify a
name for the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database.
IMP ORTANT
If you use the already installed PostgreSQL instance or make any changes in the machine
hardware, perform the additional configuration of the PostgreSQL instance. To do that:
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o [For Microsoft SQL Server] You can use an already installed Microsoft SQL Server database only.
i. In the SQL Server instance field, enter the instance name in the HOSTNAME\INSTANCE format or
select an instance from the drop-down list. You can also click Browse to choose a Microsoft SQL
Server on a remote machine.
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ii. In the Da tabase name field, specify a name for the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration
database.
3. Select an authentication mode to connect to the database server instance: Microsoft Windows
authentication or native database server authentication. If you select the native authentication, enter
credentials of the database account.
If a configuration database with the specified name already exists (for example, it was created by a previous
installation of Veeam Backup & Replication), the setup wizard will notify about it. To connect to the detected
database, click Y es . If necessary, Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager will automatically upgrade the database to
the latest version.
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Step 9. Specify Data Locations
The Da ta Locations step is available if you have selected to configure installation settings manually and to
install a new instance of the database server.
At this step of the wizard, you can specify the installation folder and where the write cache and indexing data
must be stored.
1. To change the default installation folder, click Browse next to the Installation path field.
By default, the setup wizard uses the following installation folder: C:\Program Files\Veeam\Backup
and Replication.
2. To change the path to the folder where index files will be stored, click Browse next to the Guest file
sy stem catalog field.
By default, the setup wizard creates the VBRCatalog folder on a volume with the maximum amount of free
space, for example: C:\VBRCatalog.
3. [For VMware environments] The instant recovery cache folder stores the write cache for machines that are
started from backups during recovery verification or restore operations. To change the path to the IR
cache folder, click Browse next to the Instant recovery write cache field. Make sure that you have at least
10 GB of free disk space to store the write cache.
By default, the setup wizard creates the IR cache folder on a volume with the maximum amount of free
space, for example: C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\IRCache.
You do not need to configure this data location for Microsoft Hyper-V environments.
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Step 10. Specify Service Ports
The P ort Configuration step of the wizard is available if you have selected to configure installation settings
manually.
At this step of the wizard, you can customize port number values that will be used for communication between
backup infrastructure components. For more information about Veeam Backup & Replication ports, see Ports.
• Ca talog service port. This port is used by the Veeam Guest Catalog Service to replicate catalog data from
backup servers to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. By default, port 9393 is used.
• Veeam Backup service port. This port is used by Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager to collect data from
backup servers. In addition to it, the Veeam Backup & Replication console uses this service port to connect
to the backup server. By default, port 9392 is used.
• Secure connections port. This port is used by the mount server to communicate with the backup server. By
default, port 9401 is used.
• RE ST API service port. This port is used to communicate with the Veeam Backup & Replication REST API.
By default, port 9419 is used.
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Step 11. Begin Installation
The Ready to Install step of the wizard is available if you have selected to configure installation settings
manually.
At this step of the wizard, you can review the Veeam Backup & Replication installation settings and start the
installation process:
1. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to check for product updates weekly, select the Check for
p roduct updates automatically check box. When a new product build is published on the Veeam update
server, a notification will be displayed in the Windows Action Center.
3. Wait for the installation process to complete and click Finish to exit the setup wizard.
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Upgrading to Veeam Backup & Replication
12
To perform upgrade of Veeam Backup & Replication to version 12, you must be running version 10a (build
10.0.1.4854) or later on the supported operating system (refer to the System Requirements section of this
document). For information on upgrade from earlier versions, see this Veeam KB article.
Before you upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication, check prerequisites. Then use the Veeam Backup & Replication
upgrade wizard to install the product.
After you upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication, perform the finalizing steps.
Unattended Upgrade
To correctly upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication in the unattended mode, perform the following steps:
1. When upgrading Veeam Backup & Replication in the unattended mode, most of the system checks that are
performed during the manual upgrade are omitted. Therefore, before performing the upgrade in the
unattended mode, make sure that you have checked all the p rerequisites specified in the Upgrade
Checklist. Also ensure that all the components of your infrastructure correspond to the System
Requirements.
2. Install a later version of the product in the unattended mode. You must connect to the configuration
database that was used by the previous product version.
For information on how to install Veeam Backup & Replication in the unattended mode, see Installing
Veeam Backup & Replication in Unattended Mode.
Related Topics
• Backup Server
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Upgrade Checklist
Use the following checklist to ensure that your infrastructure is ready for Veeam Backup & Replication upgrade.
Some of the checks are performed by the built-in configuration check mechanism of the
Veeam Backup & Replication Upgrade wizard, but you can control them manually before starting the upgrade
procedure.
Licensing
1. Veeam Backup & Replication 12 uses the same license file format introduced with version 10, so you can
use your existing version 10 or 11 license file to install version 12. Your support contract must be active as
of the date when the product version you are installing was built.
2. Your support contract must be active as of the date when the product build you are installing was built.
This is determined by the support expiration date in the installed license. If required, you can install a new
license during the upgrade procedure.
3. Are you using Veeam Backup Starter? This edition has been discontinued, so Veeam Backup & Replication
12 will not accept such a license file. Please download a replacement license file from the Customer Portal
before upgrading.
System Requirements
1. Check if the backup server to be upgraded is installed on the supported operating system version
according to System Requirements. If it is not, create a configuration backup, install
Veeam Backup & Replication 12 on the supported OS first, then restore the configuration backup created
earlier. For information on how to perform the migration, see Migrating Veeam Backup & Replication to
Another Backup Server.
2. Make sure that other servers that you plan to use as backup infrastructure components meet the system
requirements listed in the System Requirements section of this document. In particular, ensure all backup
infrastructure servers are based on 64-bit operating systems.
3. Make sure that the environment you are going to protect with Veeam Backup & Replication meets the
requirements listed in the Platform Support section of this document. In particular:
o Make sure that VMware ESXi and VMware vCenter server are upgraded to the minimum supported
version 6.0 or remove these servers from the backup server configuration to continue.
o Make sure that VMware Cloud Director is upgraded to the minimum supported version 10.1 or remove
the hosts from the backup server configuration to continue.
4. Backup infrastructure components communicate with each other over specific ports. These ports must be
open. For more information, see Ports.
5. Make sure that all necessary permissions are granted. For information on permissions, see Permissions for
VMware vSphere.
6. Are you using a hardened repository? If yes, make sure that any Linux server associated with the hardened
repository is configured to use a non-root account. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
7. Do you have any jobs using the Transform previous backup chains into rollbacks option? This option has
been removed from the product and such jobs are no longer supported. For more information, see this
Veeam KB article.
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8. Are you using File to Tape jobs? They have been reengineered for scalability and are no longer free with
Veeam Backup & Replication 12. You will have a grace period of 3 months following the upgrade to
Veeam Backup & Replication 12 during which your existing jobs will not consume a license. For more
information, see Instance Consumption for NAS Backup and File to Tape Jobs.
9. Are you using installations of Veeam Backup & Replication and Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365 on the
same machine? First upgrade Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365, second upgrade
Veeam Backup & Replication.
10. Are you using integration with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure? If yes, after upgrade to
Veeam Backup & Replication 12, select the existing Microsoft Azure Compute account in the Manage Cloud
Credentials, click Edit, and go through the Microsoft Azure Compute Account to update account
permissions. Otherwise, you can face problems when adding an external repository with backups created
by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure 3.0.
11. Are you using Server 2019 based ReFS backup repositories? If yes, avoid upgrad ing them to Server 2022
and/or mounting ReFS volumes from Server 2019 to new Server 2022 installs until you read this thread on
Veeam R&D forums. Microsoft has addressed the known regression in the ReFS format upgrade code, the
fix is now publicly available.
2. Are you using Veea m Backup Enterprise Manager? If yes, consider the following:
o Imp ortant! Starting with Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager 12, a new port ( port 9405) is used for
certificate communication between Enterprise Manager and Veeam Backup & Replication. Ensure that
your firewalls are configured to take into account this new port to avoid communication issues
between Enterprise Manager and Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Start the upgrade procedure with this component. Note that Enterprise Manager 12 supports backup
servers version 10a or later, so you can run both old and new product versions side by side if required.
3. Are you using Veea m Backup Enterprise Manager server added to Veeam ONE? If yes, first upgrade Veeam
ONE, second upgrade Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, third upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication.
4. Are you using Cloud Connect? If yes, check with your Cloud Connect service provider if they have already
upgraded their system to at least the version you are upgrading to.
5. [For upgrade from Veeam Backup & Replication earlier than version 11a build 11.01.1261] Are you using
Veeam Backup & Replication within the infrastructure of Nuta nix Mine version 2.0.1 or earlier? If yes,
upgrade Nutanix Mine to version 3.0, then upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication to version 12.
6. Are you using Veea m Disaster Recovery Orchestrator? If yes, note that Veeam Disaster Recovery
Orchestrator 5.0 is compatible with Veeam Backup & Replication 11 and 11a, Veeam Disaster Recovery
Orchestrator 6.0 — with Veeam Backup & Replication 11a and 12. If necessary, upgrade Veeam Disaster
Recovery Orchestrator before upgrading to Veeam Backup & Replication 12.
• Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV: plugin for this product is included into the Veeam Backup & Replication
12 package. During the upgrade to version 12, the plugin for this product will be automatically upgraded
to the required version.
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• Veeam Backup for Red Hat Virtualization: plugin for this product is included into the
Veeam Backup & Replication 12 package. During the upgrade to version 12, the plugin for this product will
be automatically upgraded to the required version.
o If you use Veeam Agent for Microsoft W indows or Veea m Agent for Linux 4.0, they will stop working
after upgrading to Veeam Backup & Replication 12. In this case, we strongly recommend that you
immediately upgrade Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent for Linux to 6.0. If you
use Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent for Linux 5.0 or later, they will continue
working after upgrading to Veeam Backup & Replication 12, but new features implemented in
Veeam Backup & Replication 12 will not be supported. In this case, you can upgrade Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent for Linux to 6.0 later if the support of new features is not critical
for you.
o If you use Veeam Agent for Mac 1.0, it will stop working after upgrading to
Veeam Backup & Replication 12. In this case, we strongly recommend that you immediately upgrade
Veeam Agent for Mac to 2.0. If you use Veeam Agent for Mac 1.0.1, it will continue working after
upgrading to Veeam Backup & Replication 12, but new features implemented in
Veeam Backup & Replication 12 will not be supported. In this case, you can upgrade Veeam Agent for
Mac to 2.0 later if the support of new features is not critical for you.
o If you use Veeam Agent for IBM AIX or Veea m Agent for Oracle Solaris 3.0 or later, they will continue
working after upgrading to Veeam Backup & Replication 12, but new features implemented in
Veeam Backup & Replication 12 will not be supported. In this case, you can upgrade Veeam Agent for
IBM AIX or Veeam Agent for Oracle Solaris to 4.0 later if the support of new features is not critical for
you.
2. Are you using Veea m Plug-In for Oracle RMAN, Veeam Plug-In for SAP HANA or Veeam Plug-In for SAP on
Ora cle? If yes, you must upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication first, then you can upgrade Veeam Plug-ins.
o Hua wei: storage systems of this vendor are not supported. Remove the storage arrays from the
backup server configuration.
o Cisco HyperFlex: the minimum supported version of the operating system is v4.0(2x). Upgrade to it or
remove the storage arrays from the backup server configuration.
o HP E 3PAR W SAPI: the minimum supported version of the WSAPI is 1.5. Upgrade to it or remove the
storage arrays from the backup server configuration.
o HP E Nimble: the minimum supported version of the operating system is 5.0. Upgrade to it or remove
the storage arrays from the backup server configuration.
o Dell Data Domain: the supported version of the operating system is 6.2 to 7.10. Upgrade to it or the
backup jobs pointed to this repository will fail to start.
o HP E StoreOnce: the minimum supported version of the operating system is 3.18.18 for Gen3 and 4.2.3
for Gen4. Upgrade to it or the backup jobs pointed to this repository will fail to start.
2. Select the secondary destination for IBM HyperSwap configurations explicitly in the backup job.
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Other Changes
1. Veeam Backup & Replication 12 supports protecting NAS backups with Backup to Tape jobs. If you have
entire repositories added as sources for backup to tap e jobs, make sure these repositories contain only
backups that you want to protect with backup to tape jobs.
2. If you use persistent agents for guest OS processing in a Kerberos-only environment, perform the steps
listed in this Veeam KB article.
3. If you use Kerberos authentication for Guest OS processing with persistent guest agent components,
create several Service Principal Names in Active Directory before upgrading to
Veeam Backup & Replication 12. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
4. Note that background retention is now applied to daily backups belonging to disabled backup jobs, as well
as to orphaned backups. Background retention is still applied to GFS backups belonging to disabled
backup jobs, as well as to orphaned backups.
Upgrade Process
1. Make sure the latest run for all existing jobs has completed successfully. Rerun the failed jobs.
2. Ensure there are no running jobs, restore sessions, Instant Recovery sessions, and SureBackup jobs. We
recommend that you do not stop running jobs and let them complete successfully.
3. Disable any periodic and backup copy jobs temporarily to prevent them from starting during the upgrade.
4. Disable CDP policies, otherwise the CDP filter will not be upgraded.
Ensure you have configuration backup encryption enabled, otherwise stored credentials will not be
included in it. For more information, see Creating Encrypted Configuration Backups.
Before Veeam Backup & Replication version 11, Veeam Backup & Replication created GFS candidates on days
when GFS was scheduled and only then transformed them into full GFS restore points according to the short -
term retention. For more information on how restore points were transformed, see Synthetic Weekly Full
Backups. Starting from Veeam Backup & Replication version 11, Veeam Backup & Replication creates GFS restore
points according to a new schedule and creates them right on the scheduled days. For more information, see
Changes in GFS Retention. After the upgrade, Veeam Backup & Replication no longer transforms previous GFS
candidates into full GFS restore points. This means, that all GFS candidates lose their GFS status, they become
regular incremental restore points and are deleted according to the short-term retention policy.
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Step 1. Start Upgrade Wizard
To start the upgrade wizard, take the following steps:
1. Download the latest version of the Veeam Backup & Replication installation image from the Veeam
Product Downloads page.
2. Mount the installation image to the machine where Veeam Backup & Replication is installed, or burn the
image file to a flash drive or other removable storage device. If you plan to upgrade
Veeam Backup & Replication on a VM, use built-in tools of the virtualization management software to
mount the image to the VM.
To extract the content of the ISO, you can also use the latest versions of utilities that can properly extract
data from ISO files of large size and can properly work with long file paths.
3. After you mount the image or insert the disk, Autorun opens a splash screen. If Autorun is not available or
disabled, run the Setup.exe file from the image or disk.
4. Click Up grade.
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Step 2. Select Component
At this step of the wizard, select Up g rade Veeam Backup & Replication.
To open Veeam Help Center from the upgrade wizard, click View Documentation.
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Step 3. Read and Accept License Agreement
At the License Agreement step of the wizard, read Veeam License Agreement and licensing policy as well as
license agreements of 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates and license agreements of required
software. To accept the license agreements and continue installing Veeam Backup & Replication, click I Accept.
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Step 4. Review Components
At the Up g rade step of the wizard, you can review the components that will be upgraded.
To also upgrade the the remote components after the Veeam Backup & Replication server is upgraded, select
the Up d ate remote components automatically check box.
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Step 5. Provide License File
At the License step of the wizard, specify what license you want to install for Veeam Backup & Replication. You
can leave the license file used in the previous version of Veeam Backup & Replication or install a new one.
To install a license:
3. To install new licenses automatically when you renew or expand your contract, select the Up date license
a utomatically check box. If you enable the automatic license update, and therefore enable usage
reporting, you will double the number of workloads by which you can exceed your installed license. For
more information, see Exceeding License Limit.
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Step 6. Specify Service Account Settings
The Service Account step of the wizard is available if you have selected to configure installation settings
manually.
You can select an account under which you want to run the Veeam Backup Serv ice:
The user name of the custom account must be specified in the DOMAIN\USERNAME format.
NOTE
The user account must have the following rights and permissions:
• The account must be a member of the Administrators group on the machine where
Veeam Backup & Replication is installed.
• The account must have db_owner rights for the configuration database.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically grants the Log on as service right to the specified user account.
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Step 7. Specify Database Engine and Instance
At the Da tabase step of the wizard, select the Microsoft SQL server instance and database that were used by the
previous version of Veeam Backup & Replication, and specify the authentication mode.
NOTE
After you upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication, you can migrate its configuration database to PostgreSQL.
For more information, see Migrating Configuration Database to PostgreSQL.
o In the SQL Server instance field, enter the instance name in the HOSTNAME\INSTANCE format or
select an instance from the drop-down list. You can also click Browse to choose a Microsoft SQL
Server on a remote machine.
o In the Da tabase name field, specify a name for the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration
database.
2. Select an authentication mode to connect to the database server instance: Microsoft Windows
authentication or native database server authentication. If you select the native authentication, enter
credentials of the database account.
3. If the configuration database is in use by another Veeam Backup & Replication server, the wizard will
notify about it. To continue the installation, click Y es.
4. If the wizard detects a configuration database with the specified name (for example, it was created by a
previous installation of Veeam Backup & Replication), the wizard will notify about it. To connect to the
detected database, click Y es.
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically upgrade the database to the latest version.
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Step 8. Perform Configuration Check
At the Configuration Check step of the wizard, the setup checks the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration.
If the check returns errors, solve their causes before continuing the upgrade. After you solve them, click Retry
to check if there are any issues left.
If the check returns warning or information messages, you can continue the upgrade and address them late r.
However, we recommend that you closely investigate warning and information messages: if not properly
addressed, their causes may lead to serious problems with further system operation.
To view the details of a certain message, point the cursor to the line with the message. The pop-up box will
display the detailed description.
To copy a list of detected issues with detailed descriptions for further investigation, click Cop y list to clipboard.
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Step 9. Begin Upgrade
At the Rea dy to Upgrade step of the wizard, review the upgrade settings and start the upgrade process.
Wait for the installation process to complete and click Finish to exit the wizard.
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After Upgrade
After you upgrade Veeam Backup & Replication to version 12, perform the following steps:
1. If you use remote backup consoles, upgrade them to version 12. If you use remote backup consoles version
11a, you can upgrade them to version 12 automatically when connecting to backup server version 12. If you
use remote backup consoles version 10a or 11, upgrade them manually using the product ISO file.
2. Download and install the latest available update from the Veeam Updates page.
3. Open the Veeam Backup & Replication console. If necessary, the automated upgrade wizard will
automatically appear, prompting you to upgrade the product components running on remote servers.
Follow the wizard to complete the upgrade process.
4. If some remote servers are unavailable at the time of upgrade, you can run the upg rade wizard at any time
later from the main product menu, or by closing and re-opening the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
Note that the out-of-date product components cannot be used by jobs until they are updated to the
backup server version.
5. Azure compute accounts based on Azure Active Directory user credentials (created with the Use existing
a ccount option selected) are obsolete. Replace these accounts with new ones to restore workloads to
Microsoft Azure and use Azure archive storage or the Microsoft Azure Plug-In for
Veeam Backup & Replication appliance.
6. If you use the Virtual Labs functionality, please open settings of each Virtual Lab, and click through the
wizard to redeploy each virtual lab with the new proxy appliance version.
7. If you are using Linux servers for your backup infrastructure components, the process of upgrade to
version 12 will automatically deploy the new persistent data mover only to Linux servers with the VMware
Backup Proxy role. To deploy it on other Linux servers, click through the Linux server properties, or use
Set-VBRLinux PowerShell cmdlet to mass-deploy. Until you do this, those Linux servers will continue
using the legacy run-time data mover to avoid issues with backup repository not meeting the persistent
data mover requirements.
8. Enable any scheduled jobs that you have disabled before the upgrade.
Note that immediately after the upgrade, the backup server performance may decrease. This happens due to the
maintenance job that optimizes the configuration database. The process may take up to an hour depending on
the database size.
IMP ORTANT
You must upgrade Veeam components on all remote servers with which the backup server communicates
during data protection and disaster recovery tasks. If you do not upgrade components on remote servers,
Veeam Backup & Replication jobs will fail. For more information, see Server Components Upgrade.
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Updating Veeam Backup & Replication 12
Apart from major version releases of Veeam Backup & Replication (e.g. 11, 11a, 12), Veeam Software provides
cumulative patches (e.g. Cumulative Patch P20210525 for v11, Cumulative Patch 20220302 for v11a, Cumulative
Patch P20230223 for v12). Cumulative patches contain bug fixes, performance enhancements and introduce
new features.
Prerequisites
Before you install a cumulative patch for Veeam Backup & Replication 12, check the following prerequisites:
• Make sure you have Veeam Backup & Replication 12 (build 12.0.0.1420) of any earlier patch level
installed.
For information on how to upgrade from product version 10a or later, see Upgrading to Veeam Backup &
Replication 12.
• Stop all restore processes in the Veeam Backup & Replication Console.
• Stop all jobs and disable them in the Veeam Backup & Replication Console.
• Close the Veeam Backup & Replication Console for all users.
Performing Update
To install the latest update for Veeam Backup & Replication 12, perform the following steps:
2. In the Download Information section of the Veeam KB article, click DOW NLOAD PATCH.
For information on how to update Veeam Backup & Replication in the unattended mode, see Installing Updates
in Unattended Mode.
After you install updates on the backup server, the first connection to it from a remote
Veeam Backup & Replication console may require running it once as administrator. Elevated privileges are
required to update the Veeam Backup & Replication console binaries.
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Uninstalling Veeam Backup & Replication
To uninstall Veeam Backup & Replication:
1. From the Sta rt menu, select Control Panel > Programs a nd Features.
2. In the programs list, right-click Veeam Backup & Replication and select Uninstall. If you have Veeam
Backup Enterprise Manager installed on this machine, Veeam Backup & Replication will uninstall both
components. Wait for the process to complete.
3. If the program list contains additional Veeam Backup & Replication components, right-click the remaining
components and select Uninstall.
The Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database is not removed during the uninstall process. All
configuration data stored in the database remains as well.
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Installing Veeam Backup & Replication
Console
By default, the Veeam Backup & Replication console is installed on the backup server automatically when you
install Veeam Backup & Replication. You do not need to install the console manually.
However, in addition to the default console, you can install the Veeam Backup & Replication console on a
dedicated machine to access the backup server remotely. You can install as many remote consoles as you need.
For more information, see Backup & Replication Console.
Before you install the Veeam Backup & Replication console, check prerequisites. Then use the
Veeam Backup & Replication Console Setup wizard to install the console.
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Before You Begin
Before you install the Veeam Backup & Replication console, check the following prerequisites:
• The Veeam Backup & Replication console must be of the same version as Veeam Backup & Replication
installed on the backup server.
• A machine on which you plan to install the Veeam Backup & Replication console must meet the system
requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• A user account that you plan to use for installation must have sufficient permissions. For more
information, see Permissions.
• Backup infrastructure components communicate with each other over specific ports. These ports must be
open. For more information, see Ports.
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Step 1. Start Setup Wizard
To start the setup wizard:
1. Download the latest version of the Veeam Backup & Replication installation image from the Download
Veeam Products page.
2. Mount the installation image to the machine on which you plan to install the Veeam Backup & Replication
console or burn the image file to a flash drive or other removable storage device. If you plan to install the
Veeam Backup & Replication console on a VM, use built-in tools of the virtualization management
software to mount the installation image to the VM.
To extract the content of the ISO, you can also use the latest versions of utilities that can properly extract
data from ISOs of large size and can properly work with long file paths.
3. After you mount the image or insert the disk, Autorun will open a splash screen. If Autorun is not available
or disabled, run the Setup.exe file from the image or disk.
IMP ORTANT
It is strongly recommended that you install the Veeam Backup & Replication console using Autorun or the
Setup.exe file. If you run other installation files from the ISO folders, you may miss some components that
need to be installed, and the Veeam Backup & Replication console may not work as expected.
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Step 2. Select Component
At the Select Veeam Backup & Replication Component step of the wizard, select Install
Veeam Backup & Replication Console.
To open Veeam Help Center from the setup wizard, click View Documentation.
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Step 3. Read and Accept License Agreement
At the License Agreement step of the wizard, read Veeam License Agreement and licensing policy as well as
license agreements of 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates and license agreements of required
software. To accept the license agreements and continue installing the Veeam Backup & Replication console,
click I Accept.
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Step 4. Install Missing Software
At the Sy stem Configuration Check step of the wizard, the setup wizard checks if the required software is
installed on the machine. If some of the required components are missing, the setup will tr y to install them
automatically. After the components are successfully installed, reboot is required. To reboot the machine, click
Reb oot.
If the setup wizard cannot install some of the required software components automatically, install them
manually and click Retry.
NOTE
If all required software is already installed on the machine, the Sy stem Configuration Check step will be
skipped. For more information on the necessary software, see System Requirements.
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Step 5. Review Default Installation Settings
At the Rea dy to Install step of the wizard, you can select to install the Veeam Backup & Replication console with
default installation settings or specify custom installation settings.
• To use custom installation settings, click Customize Settings. The setup wizard will include additional
steps that will let you configure installation settings.
Installation folder C:\Program Folder where the Veeam Backup & Replication
Files\Veeam\Backup and console will be installed.
Replication
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Step 6. Specify Installation Path
The Da ta Locations step is available if you have selected to configure installation settings manually.
At this step of the wizard, you can choose the installation folder for the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
2. In the Select Folder window, select the installation folder for the product. The default folder is
C:\Program Files\Veeam\Backup and Replication\.
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Step 7. Begin Installation
The Ready to Install step of the wizard is available if you have selected to configure installation settings
manually.
At this step of the wizard, you can review the Veeam Backup & Replication console installation settings and start
the installation process
2. Wait for the installation process to complete and click Finish to exit the setup wizard.
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Installing Veeam Backup & Replication in
Unattended Mode
You can install Veeam Backup & Replication in the unattended mode using the command line interface. The
unattended installation mode does not require user interaction. You can use it to automate the installation
process in large deployments.
IMP ORTANT
When upgrading Veeam Backup & Replication in the unattended mode, most of the system checks that are
performed during the manual upgrade are omitted. Therefore, before performing the upgrade in the
unattended mode, make sure that you have checked all the prerequisites specified in the Upgrade
Checklist. Also ensure that all the components of your infrastructure correspond to the System
Requirements.
Installation Order
Veeam Backup & Replication components must be installed in the order specified below. The order depends on
the type of server that you plan to deploy: backup server or Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
Backup Server
If you want to deploy the backup server (server running Veeam Backup & Replication), you must install
components in the following order:
3. Veeam Explorers:
o Veeam Explorer for SharePoint and Veeam Explorer for Microsoft OneDrive for Business
o [Optional] Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Teams (required for self-service Veeam Backup for Microsoft
365 restores that take place through Cloud Connect Service Provider)
4. [Optional] If you are planning to use the Agent Management feature, install the following components
(depending on the management OS):
For more information about Veeam Agents, see the Veeam Agent Management Guide.
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5. [Optional] If you are planning to use AWS Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication, Microsoft Azure Plug-
in for Veeam Backup & Replication or Google Cloud Plug -in for Veeam Backup & Replication, you must
install Veeam cloud plug-ins components.
6. [Optional] If you are planning to use Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV, you must install Veeam Backup for
Nutanix AHV components.
7. [Optional] If you are planning to use Veeam Backup for RHV, you must install Veeam Backup for RHV
components.
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Before You Begin
Before you start unattended installation, perform the following steps:
1. [For backup server] Manually install Microsoft SQL Server and software components required for the
backup server operation. For more information, see Ba ckup Server in System Requirements.
2. [For Veeam Explorers] Make sure that the version of a Veeam Explorer that you plan to install matches the
version of the Veeam Backup & Replication console on the target machine.
3. [For Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server] Manually install Microsoft SQL Server and software
components required for the operation of the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server. For more
information, see the System Requirements section of the Enterprise Manager User Guide.
4. Download the Veeam Backup & Replication installation image from the Veeam website. You can burn the
downloaded image to a flash drive or mount the image to the target machine using disk image emulation
software.
5. Log on to the target machine under the account that has the local Administrator permissions on the
machine. For more information, see Permissions.
6. Obtain a license file. The license file is required for Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager installa tion and is
optional for Veeam Backup & Replication installation. If you do not specify a path to the license file during
Veeam Backup & Replication installation, Veeam Backup & Replication will operate in the Community
Edition mode.
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Installation Command-Line Syntax
You can install the following Veeam Backup & Replication components in the unattended mode:
• Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint and Veeam Explorer for Microsoft OneDrive for Business
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The command has the following parameters:
P a ramet Requir
Op tion Description
er ed
Example: ACCEPTEULA="1"
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
Example: ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFTWARE="1"
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P a ramet Requir
Op tion Description
er ed
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Catalog\"
The component will be installed to the
C:\Catalog\Backup Catalog folder.
Example: VM_CATALOGPATH="C:\Backup\"
Index files will be stored to the
C:\Backup\VBRCatalog folder.
Example:
VBRC_SERVICE_USER="BACKUPSERVER\Administra
tor"
Example: VBRC_SERVICE_PASSWORD="1234"
Example: VBRC_SERVICE_PORT="9393"
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Example
Suppose you want to install Veeam Backup Catalog with the following configuration:
• No user interaction
The command to install Veeam Backup Catalog with such configuration will have the following parameters:
NOTE
This command does not install the Veeam Backup & Replication console and the Veeam PowerShell
module. To install the Veeam Backup & Replication console, run the command specified in Veeam Backup &
Replication Console. The Veeam PowerShell module will be installed with the Veeam Backup & Replication
console.
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The command has the following parameters:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\Backu
p.txt"
/q n Yes Sets the user interface level to “no”, which means no user
interaction is needed during installation.
/i setup file Yes Installs the Veeam Backup & Replication server. Specify a
full path to the setup file as the parameter value.
Example: /i "E:\Backup\Server.x64.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LI 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement for
CE NSES 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates. Specify 1
to accept the license agreement and proceed with
installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLI 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam licensing
CY policy. Specify 1 to accept the licensing policy and
proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLICY="1"
ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFT 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreements for
W ARE each of the required software that Veeam will install.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreements and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFTWARE="1"
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Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Backup\"
The component will be installed to the
C:\Backup\Backup folder.
VBR_LICENSE_FILE license No Specifies a full path to the license file. If you do not
path specify this parameter, Veeam Backup & Replication will
operate in the Community Edition mode.
Example:
VBR_LICENSE_FILE="C:\Users\Administrator\De
sktop\enterprise -
veeam_backup_trial_0_30.lic"
Example: VBR_LICENSE_AUTOUPDATE="1"
VBR_SERVICE_USER user No Specifies the account under which the Veeam Backup
Service will run. The account must have full control NTFS
permissions on the VBRCatalog folder where index files
are stored and the Database owner rights for the
configuration database on the Microsoft SQL Server
where the configuration database is deployed.
Example:
VBR_SERVICE_USER="BACKUPSERVER\Administrato
r"
VBR_SERVICE_PASSWOR password No This parameter must be used if you have specified the
D VBR_SERVICE_USER parameter.
Example: VBR_SERVICE_PASSWORD="1234"
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Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
VBR_SERVICE_PORT port No Specifies a TCP port that will be used by the Veeam
Backup Service.
Example: VBR_SERVICE_PORT="9395"
Example: VBR_SECURE_CONNECTIONS_PORT="9402"
Example: VBR_SQLSERVER_ENGINE="1"
If VBR_SQLSERVER_ENGINE=1,
VBR_SQLSERVER_SERVER specifies a PostgreSQL server
and port on which the configuration database will be
deployed in the following format: SQL Server:port.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses
(local):5432 for machines running PostgreSQL.
Examples:
VBR_SQLSERVER_SERVER="BACKUPSERVER\VEEAMSQL
2016_MY"
VBR_SQLSERVER_SERVER="(local):5432"
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Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
Example:
VBR_SQLSERVER_DATABASE="VeeamBackup"
VBR_SQLSERVER_ 0/1 No Specifies if you want to use the SQL Server authentication
AUTHE NTICATION mode to connect to the Microsoft SQL Server where the
Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database is
deployed.
Example: VBR_SQLSERVER_AUTHENTICATION="1"
VBR_SQLSERVER_ user No This parameter must be used if you have specified the
USE RNAME VBR_SQLSERVER_AUTHENTICATION parameter.
Example: VBR_SQLSERVER_USERNAME="sa"
VBR_SQLSERVER_ password No This parameter must be used if you have specified the
P ASSWORD VBR_SQLSERVER_AUTHENTICATION parameter.
Example: VBR_SQLSERVER_PASSWORD="1234"
VBR_IRCACHE path No Specifies the folder to which the instant recovery cache
will be stored. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication
uses the folder on a volume with the maximum amount of
free space, for example,
C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\IRCache\.
Example:
VBR_IRCACHE="C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\IR
Cache2\"
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Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
Example: VBR_CHECK_UPDATES="0"
Example: VBR_AUTO_UPGRADE="1"
Example
Suppose you want to install Veeam Backup & Replication with the following configuration:
• No user interaction
The command to install Veeam Backup & Replication with such configuration will have the following
parameters:
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msiexec.exe /L*v "C:\logs\log1.txt" /qn /i "E:\Backup\Server.x64.msi" ACCEPT_EU
LA="1" ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1" ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLICY=1 ACCEPT_REQUIRED
_SOFTWARE=1 INSTALLDIR="D:\Program Files\Veeam" VBR_LICENSE_FILE="C:\License\ve
eam_license.lic" VBR_SERVICE_USER="VEEAM\Administrator" VBR_SERVICE_PASSWORD="1
234" VBR_IRCACHE="D:\IRCache"
NOTE
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\Cons
ole.txt"
Example: /i "E:\Backup\Shell.x64.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
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Op tion P a ramet Requir Description
er ed
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICE 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement for
NSE S 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates. Specify
1 to accept the license agreement and proceed with
installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLIC 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam licensing
Y policy. Specify 1 to accept the licensing policy and
proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLICY="1"
ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFTW 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreements
ARE for each of the required software that Veeam will install.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreements and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFTWARE="1"
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Backup\"
The component will be installed to the
C:\Backup\Console folder.
Example
Suppose you want to install the Veeam Backup & Replication console with the following configuration:
• No user interaction
The command to install the Veeam Backup & Replication console with such configuration will have the following
parameters:
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Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Active Directory
To install Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Active Directory, use a command with the following syntax:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VEAD
.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Explorers\VeeamExplorerforActiveDirect
ory.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICE 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement for
NSE S 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates. Specify
1 to accept the license agreement and proceed with
installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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msiexec.exe [/L*v "<path_to_log>"] /qn /i "<path_to_msi>" ACCEPT_EULA="1" ACCEP
T_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VEX
.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Explorers\VeeamExplorerforExchange.ms
i"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICEN 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
SE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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To install Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint and Veeam Explorer for Microsoft OneDrive for Business, use
a command with the following syntax:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VES
P.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Explorers\VeeamExplorerforSharePoint.
msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICE 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
NSE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL Server
To install Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL Server, use a command with the following syntax:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VES
QL.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Explorers\VeeamExplorerforSQL.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICE 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
NSE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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msiexec.exe /L*v "C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VET.txt" /qn /i "F:\Expl
orers\VeeamExplorerForTeams.msi" ACCEPT_EULA="1" ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VET
.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Explorers\VeeamExplorerForTeams.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICEN 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
SE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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The command has the following parameters:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VEO
.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Explorers\VeeamExplorerforOracle.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICEN 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
SE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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The command has the following parameters:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VEO
.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Explorers\VeeamExplorerforPostgreSQL.
msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICEN 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
SE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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The command has the following parameters:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VAL
.txt"
Example: /i "F:\Packages\VALRedist.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICEN 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
SE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
317 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
The command has the following parameters:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VAM
.txt"
Example: /i "F:\Packages\VAMRedist.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICEN 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
SE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
318 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
The command has the following parameters:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\VAW
.txt"
Example: /i "F:\Packages\VAWRedist.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement
and proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICEN 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement
SE S for 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
319 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
msiexec.exe [/L*v "<path_to_log>"] /qn /i "<path_to_msi>" ACCEPT_EULA="1" ACCEP
T_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1" ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLICY=1 ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFTWARE=1
[INSTALLDIR="<path_to_installdir >"] VBREM_LICENSE_FILE="<path_to_license_file>
" [VBREM_LICENSE_AUTOUPDATE="1"] [VBREM_SERVICE_USER="<Veeam_EM_Service_account
>"][VBREM_SERVICE_PASSWORD="<Veeam_EM_Service_account_password>"] [VBREM_SERVIC
E_PORT="<Veeam_EM_Service_port>"] [VBREM_SQLSERVER_ENGINE=1]
[VBREM_SQLSERVER_SERVER="<SQL_server>"] [VBREM_SQLSERVER_DATABASE="<database_na
me>"][VBREM_SQLSERVER_AUTHENTICATION="0"] [VBREM_SQLSERVER_USERNAME="<SQL_auth_
username>"] [VBREM_SQLSERVER_PASSWORD="<SQL_auth_password>"] [VBREM_TCPPORT="<T
CP_port_for_web_site>"] [VBREM_SSLPORT="<SSL_port_for_web_site>”]>"] [VBREM_THU
MBPRINT="<certificate_hash>"] [VBREM_RESTAPISVC_PORT="<TCP_port_for_RestApi_ser
vice>"] [VBREM_RESTAPISVC_SSLPORT="<SSL_port_for_RestApi_service>"][VBREM_CHECK
_UPDATES="1"]
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\EM.txt
"
/q n Yes Sets the user interface level to “no”, which means no user
interaction is needed during installation.
Example: /i
"C:\Veeam\EnterpriseManager\BackupWeb_x64.ms
i"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and
proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_ 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement for
LICENSES 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates. Specify 1
to accept the license agreement and proceed with
installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
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Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
ACCEPT_LICENSING_PO 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam licensing policy.
LICY Specify 1 to accept the licensing policy and proceed with
installation.
Example: ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLICY="1"
ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SO 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreements for
FTW ARE each of the required software that Veeam will install.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreements and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFTWARE="1"
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Backup\"
The component will be installed to the
C:\Backup\Enterprise Manager folder.
VBRE M_LICENSE_FILE license Yes Specifies a full path to the license file.
path
Example:
VBREM_LICENSE_FILE="C:\Users\Administrator\D
esktop\enterprise -
veeam_backup_trial_0_30.lic"
VBRE M_LICENSE_AUTO 0/1 No Specifies if you want to update the license automatically
UP DATE (enables usage reporting). If you do not specify this
parameter, the automatic update will be enabled. For
Community Edition and NFR it must be set to 1. For licenses
without license ID information it must be set to 0.
Example: VBREM_LICENSE_AUTOUPDATE="1"
321 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
VBRE M_SERVICE_USER user No Specifies the account under which the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager Service will run. The account must have
full control NTFS permissions on the VBRCatalog folder
where index files are stored and the Database owner rights
for the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager configuration
database on the Microsoft SQL Server that you plan to use.
Example:
VBRC_SERVICE_USER="BACKUPSERVER\Administrato
r"
VBRE M_SERVICE_PASS password No Specifies a password for the account under which the
W ORD Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Service will run.
Example: VBREM_SERVICE_PASSWORD="1234"
VBRE M_SERVICE_PORT Port No Specifies a TCP port that will be used by the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager Service.
VBRE M_SQLSERVER_EN 0/1 No Specifies the SQL engine to be used to deploy the
GINE configuration database.
Example: VBREM_SQLSERVER_ENGINE="1"
322 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
If VBREM_SQLSERVER_ENGINE=1,
VBREM_SQLSERVER_SERVER specifies a PostgreSQL server
and port on which the configuration database will be
deployed in the following format: SQL Server:port. By
default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses (local):5432
for machines running PostgreSQL.
Examples:
VBREM_SQLSERVER_SERVER="BACKUPSERVER\VEEAMSQ
L2016_MY"
VBREM_SQLSERVER_SERVER="(local):5432"
VBRE M_SQLSERVER_D database No Specifies a name of the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
ATABASE database.
Example:
VBREM_SQLSERVER_DATABASE="VeeamBackupReporti
ng01"
VBRE M_SQLSERVER_ 0/1 No Specifies if you want to use the Microsoft SQL Server
AUTHE NTICATION authentication mode to connect to the Microsoft SQL
Server where the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager is
deployed.
Example: VBREM_SQLSERVER_AUTHENTICATION="1"
323 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
VBRE M_SQLSERVER_US user No This parameter must be used if you have specified the
E RNAME VBREM_SQLSERVER_AUTHENTICATION parameter.
Example: VBREM_SQLSERVER_USERNAME="sa"
VBRE M_SQLSERVER_PA password No This parameter must be used if you have specified the
SSW ORD VBR_SQLSERVER_AUTHENTICATION parameter.
Example: VBREM_SQLSERVER_USERNAME="1234"
VBRE M_TCPPORT port No Specifies a TCP port that will be used by the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager website.
Example: VBREM_TCPPORT="9080"
VBRE M_SSLPORT port No Specifies a port that will be used by the Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager website.
Example: VBREM_SSLPORT="9443"
Example:
VBREM_THUMBPRINT="0677d0b8f27caccc966b15d807
b41a101587b488"
VBRE M_RESTAPISVC_P port No Specifies a TCP port that will be used by the Veeam Backup
ORT Enterprise Manager RESTful API Service.
Example: VBREM_RESTAPISVC_PORT="9399"
324 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
VBRE M_RESTAPISVC_S port No Specifies a port that will be used by the Veeam RESTful API
SLP ORT Service.
Example: VBREM_RESTAPISVC_SSLPORT="9398"
VBRE M_CONFIG_SCHA 0/1 No Specifies if the TLS 1.2 protocol will be used for secure
NNE L communication with the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
website.
VBRE M_CHECK_UPDAT 0/1 No Specifies if you want Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager to
ES automatically check for new product versions and updates.
Example: VBREM_CHECK_UPDATES="0"
Example
Suppose you want to install Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager with the following settings:
• No user interaction
• Certificate: default
325 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
The command to install Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager with such configuration will have the following
parameters:
To install Veeam Cloud Connect Portal, use a command with the following syntax:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Logs\CloudP
ortal.txt"
/q n Yes Sets the user interface level to “no”, which means no user
interaction is needed during installation.
/i setup Yes Installs the Veeam Cloud Connect Portal. Specify a full
file path to the setup file as the parameter value.
Example: /i "C:\Cloud
portal\BackupCloudPortal_x64.msi"
ACCEPT_EULA 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam license
agreement. Specify 1 to accept the license agreement and
proceed with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
326 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Op tion Paramet Requir Description
er ed
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LIC 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreement for
E NSES 3rd party components that Veeam incorporates. Specify 1
to accept the license agreement and proceed with
installation.
Example: ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLI 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the Veeam licensing policy.
CY Specify 1 to accept the licensing policy and proceed with
installation.
Example: ACCEPT_LICENSING_POLICY="1"
ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFT 0/1 Yes Specifies if you want to accept the license agreements for
W ARE each of the required software that Veeam will install.
Specify 1 to accept the license agreements and proceed
with installation.
Example: ACCEPT_REQUIRED_SOFTWARE="1"
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Backup\".
The component will be installed to the
C:\Backup\CloudPortal folder
VBCP _SSLPORT port No Specifies a port that will be used by the Veeam Cloud
Connect Portal website.
Example: VBREM_SSLPORT="7443"
Example
Suppose you want to install Veeam Cloud Connect Portal with the following configuration:
• No user interaction
327 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
The command to install Veeam Cloud Connect Portal with such configuration will have the following
parameters:
Note that if you want to manage cloud plug-ins in the Veeam Backup & Replication interface, you must install
both the cloud plug-in service and the cloud plug-in UI.
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\L
ogs\Backup.txt"
Example: /i
"C:\Veeam\Server.x64.msi"
328 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Requi Description
red
• AWSPlugin.msi
msi Yes AWSPlugin.msi: Installs the AWS Plug-in for
• AWSPluginUI.msi
Veeam Backup & Replication services.
•
MicrosoftAzurePl AWSPluginUI.msi: Installs the AWS Plug-in
for Veeam Backup & Replication UI.
ugin.msi
• MicrosoftAzurePlugin.msi: Installs the
MicrosoftAzurePl Microsoft Azure Plug-in for Veeam Backup &
Replication services.
uginUI.msi
• GCPPlugin.msi MicrosoftAzurePluginUI.msi: Installs
• GCPPluginUI.msi the Microsoft Azure Plug-in for Veeam Backup
& Replication UI.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
Example:
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Backup\"
The component will be installed to the
C:\Backup\Backup folder.
329 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Examples
Installing AWS Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication Service and UI
To install the AWS Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication service and the AWS Plug -in for Veeam Backup &
Replication UI to Veeam Backup & Replication, perform the following steps:
1. Run the following command to install the AWS Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication service.
2. Run the following command to install the AWS Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication UI.
To install Nutanix AHV Plug-in, use a command with the following syntax:
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\L
ogs\Backup.txt"
330 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Requi Description
red
Example: /i
"C:\Veeam\Server.x64.msi"
•
msi Yes NutanixAHVPlugin.msi: Installs the
NutanixAHVPlugi
Nutanix AHV Plug-in services.
n.msi
• NutanixAHVPluginProxy.msi: Installs the
Nutanix AHV Plug-in appliance VM image
NutanixAHVPlugi
files.
nProxy.msi
• NutanixAHVPluginUI.msi: Installs UI
components of the Nutanix AHV Plug-in.
NutanixAHVPlugi
nUI.msi
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
Example:
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Backup\"
The component will be installed to the
C:\Backup\Backup folder.
331 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Examples
Installing Nutanix AHV Plug-in Service and UI
To install the Nutanix AHV Plug-in service and UI components to Veeam Backup & Replication, perform the
following steps:
1. Run the following command to install the Nutanix AHV Plug -in service.
2. Run the following command to install the Nutanix AHV Plug -in appliance VM image files.
3. Run the following command to install UI components of Nutanix AHV Plug -in.
Example: /L*v
"C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Setup\Temp\Log
s\Backup.txt"
332 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Requir Description
ed
/i setup file Yes Installs the Veeam Backup & Replication server.
Specify a full path to the setup file as the
parameter value.
Example: /i "C:\Veeam\Server.x64.msi"
• RHVPlugin.msi
msi Yes RHVPlugin.msi: Installs the RHV Plug-in
•
services.
RHVPluginPr
oxy.msi RHVPluginProxy.msi: Installs the RHV Plug-
in proxy VM image files.
•
RHVPluginUI. RHVPluginUI.msi: Installs UI components of
msi the RHV Plug-in.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA="1"
Example:
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES="1"
Example: INSTALLDIR="C:\Backup\"
The component will be installed to the
C:\Backup\Backup folder.
333 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Examples
Installing RHV Plug-in Service and UI
To install the RHV Plug-in service and UI components to Veeam Backup & Replication, perform the following
steps:
2. Run the following command to install the RHV Plug-in proxy VM image files.
To install Veeam Plug-in for Kasten K10, use a command with the following syntax:
334 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Op tion P a rameter Require Description
d
Example: /i
C:\Veeam\Server.x64.msi
• VeeamKastenPlugin.msi
msi Yes VeeamKastenPlugin.msi:
•
Installs the Veeam Plug-in for
VeeamKastenPluginUI. Kasten K10 services.
msi
VeeamKastenPluginUI.msi:
Installs UI components of Veeam
Plug-in for Kasten K10.
Example: ACCEPT_EULA=1
Example:
ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENS
ES=1
Examples
Installing Veeam Plug-in for Kasten K10 Service and UI
To install the Veeam Plug-in for Kasten K10 service and UI components to Veeam Backup & Replication, perform
the following steps:
1. Run the following command to install the Veeam Plug-in for Kasten K10 service.
2. Run the following command to install UI components of Veeam Plug -in for Kasten K10.
335 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
msiexec /qn /i VeeamKastenPluginUI.msi ACCEPT_THIRDPARTY_LICENSES=1 ACCEPT
_EULA=1
336 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Installing Updates in Unattended Mode
Veeam Backup & Replication updates can be installed in the unattended mode.
To install a Veeam Backup & Replication update, perform the following steps:
1. Download the update installation archive and extract the executable file.
IMP ORTANT!
The script that installs Veeam Backup & Replication updates must be run with elevated privileges (run as
Administrator).
1. Download the installation archive for the Veeam Backup & Replication update from the Release Notes
page for a certain update/patch. For example, for v12 updates, download the latest patch from this Veeam
KB article.
3. Save the extracted file locally on the backup server where you plan to install the update, or place it in a
network shared folder.
Alternatively, you can get the update/patch executable file from the Up dates folder on the downloaded ISO
image.
P a ramet Require
Op tion Description
er d
silent — Yes Sets the user interface level to “no”, which means no user
interaction is needed during installation.
337 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
P a ramet Require
Op tion Description
er d
Example: C:\Logs\veeam.log
Example: VBR_AUTO_UPGRADE="1"
For example:
You want to install the Veeam Backup & Replication update with the following options:
• Noreboot: enabled
The command to install the Veeam Backup & Replication update will be the following:
Installation Results
You can use the last exit code to verify if the installation process has completed successfully.
• In cmd.exe, use the %ERRORLEVEL% variable to check the last exit code.
• In Microsoft Windows PowerShell, use the $LastExitCode variable to check the last exit code.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not provide any confirmation about the results of automatic components
upgrade. To check if components have been successfully upgra ded, use the Veeam Backup & Replication
console.
338 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Backup Infrastructure
Veeam Backup & Replication is a modular solution that lets you build a scalable backup infrastructure for
environments of different sizes and configuration. The installation package of Veeam Backup & Replication
includes a set of components that you can use to configure the backup infrastructure. Some components are
mandatory and provide core functionality; some components are optional and can be installed to provide
additional functionality for your business and deployment needs. You can co-install Veeam Backup & Replication
components on the same machine, physical or virtual, or you can set them up separately for a more scalable
approach.
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Backup Infrastructure Components
The Veeam backup infrastructure comprises a set of components. Some components can be deployed with the
help of the setup file. Other components can be deployed using the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
340 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Backup Server
The backup server is a Windows-based physical or virtual machine on which Veeam Backup & Replication is
installed. It is the core component in the backup infrastructure that fills the role of the “configuration and
control center”. The backup server performs all types of administrative activities:
• Is used to set up and manage backup infrastructure components as well as specify global settings for the
backup infrastructure
In addition to its primary functions, a newly deployed backup server also performs the roles of the default
VMware backup proxy and the backup repository (it manages data handling and data storing tasks).
• Veeam Backup Service is a Windows service that coordinates all operations performed by
Veeam Backup & Replication such as backup, replication, recovery verification and restore tasks. The
Veeam Backup Service runs under the LocalSystem account or account that has the local Administrator
permissions on the backup server.
• Veeam Broker Service interacts with the virtual infrastructure to collect and cache the virtual
infrastructure topology. Jobs and tasks query information about the virtual infrastructure topology from
the broker service, which accelerates job and task performance.
• Veeam Guest Catalog Service manages guest OS file system indexing for VMs and replicates system index
data files to enable search through guest OS files. Index data is stored in the Veeam Backup Catalog — a
folder on the backup server. The Veeam Guest Catalog Service running on the backup server works in
conjunction with search components installed on Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager and (optionally) a
dedicated Microsoft Search Server.
• Mount Service mounts backups and replicas for file-level access, browsing the VM guest file system and
restoring VM guest OS files and application items to the original location.
• VMwa re Backup P roxy Services In addition to dedicated services, the backup server runs a set of Veeam
Data Movers. For details, see VMware Backup Proxy.
• Veeam CDP Coordinator Service communicates with vCenter, assigns continuous data protection (CDP)
tasks and manages the infrastructure components involved in CDP. For more information on CDP, see
Continuous Data Protection (CDP).
• Veeam Backup & Replication Configuration Database stores data about the backup infrastructure, jobs,
sessions and other configuration data. The database instance can be located on a SQL Server installed
either locally (on the same machine where the backup server is running) or remotely. For more
information, see the following guidelines: Veeam Backup & Replication Best Practices.
Veeam Backup & Replication maintains the configuration database. Veeam Backup & Replication runs the
DatabaseMaintenance system job once a week and when the Veeam Backup Service is restarted. The job
updates the database internal statistics, defragments indexes and clears unused data. For details, see the
Job.DatabaseMaintenance log file in the %ProgramData%\Veeam\Backup folder.
• Veeam Backup & Replication Console provides the application user interface and allows user access to the
application functionality.
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• Veeam Backup P owerShell Module is an extension for Microsoft Windows PowerShell that adds a set of
cmdlets to allow users to perform backup, replication and recovery tasks through the command -line
interface of PowerShell or run custom scripts to fully automate operation of Veeam Backup & Replication.
For more information on the Microsoft Windows PowerShell module, see the Getting Started section of
Veeam PowerShell Reference.
Credentials Manager
You can use the Credentials Manager to create and maintain a list of credentials records that y ou plan to use to
connect to components in the backup infrastructure.
The Credentials Manager lets you create the following types of credentials records:
• Standard account
Standard Accounts
You can create a credentials record for an account that you plan to use to connect to a Microsoft Windows
server, a VM running Microsoft Windows OS or a storage system.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Da tacenter Credentials.
3. In the Username field, enter a user name for the account that you want to add. You can also click Browse
to select an existing user account.
4. In the P a ssword field, enter a password for the account that you want to add. To view the entered
password, click and hold the eye icon on the right of the field.
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5. In the Description field, enter a description for the created credentials record. As there can be a numbe r of
similar account names, for example, Administrator, it is recommended that you provide a meaningful
unique description for the credentials record so that you can distinguish it in the list. The description is
shown in brackets, following the user name.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Da tacenter Credentials.
3. In the Username field, enter a gMSA that you want to add. Note that the name of the account must be
specified in the following format: DOMAIN\User or [email protected].
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4. In the Description field, enter a description for the created credentials record. As there can be a number of
similar account names, for example, gmsa01, it is recommended that you provide a meaningful unique
description for the credentials record so that you can distinguish it in the list. The description is shown in
brackets, following the user name.
To create a new credentials record with a user name and password for a Linux server:
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Da tacenter Credentials.
3. In the Username field, enter a user name for the account that you plan to add.
4. In the P a ssword field, enter a password for the account that you want to add. To view the entered
password, click and hold the eye icon on the right of the field.
5. In the SSH p ort field, specify the SSH port over which you want to connect to a Linux server. By default,
port 22 is used.
6. If you specify data for a non-root account that does not have root permissions on a Linux server, you can
use the Non-root account section to grant sudo rights to this account.
a. To provide a non-root user with root account privileges, select the E levate account privileges
a utomatically check box.
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b. To add the user account to sudoers file, select the Ad d account to the sudoers file check box. In the
Root password field, enter the password for the root account.
If you do not enable this option, you will have to manually add the user account to the sudoers file.
c. If you plan to use the account to connect to Linux servers where the sudo command is not available
or fails, you have an option to use the su command instead. To enable the su command, select the
Use "su" if "sudo" fails check box and in the Root password field, enter the password for the root
account.
Veeam Backup & Replication will first try to use the sudo command. If the attempt fails,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the su command.
7. In the Description field, enter a description for the created credentials record. As there can be a number of
similar account names, for example, Root, it is recommended that you provide a meaningful unique
description for the credentials record so that you can distinguish it in the list. The description is shown in
brackets, following the user name.
IMP ORTANT
• You can create a separate user account intended for work with Veeam Backup & Replication on a
Linux-based VM, grant root privileges to this account and specify settings of this account in the
Credentials Manager. It is recommended that you avoid additional commands output for this user
(like messages echoed from within ~/.bashrc or command traces before execution) because they may
affect Linux VM processing.
• Cases when root password is required to elevate account rights to root using sudo are no longer
supported.
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To use the Identity/Pubkey authentication method, you must generate a pair of keys — a public key and private
key:
• Public key is stored on Linux servers to which you plan to connect from the backup server. The key is kept
in a special authorized_keys file containing a list of public keys.
• Private key is stored on the client machine — backup server. The private key is protected with a
passphrase. Even if the private key is intercepted, the eavesdropper will have to provide the passphrase to
unlock the key and use it.
For authentication on a Linux server, the client must prove that it has the private key matching the public key
stored on the Linux server. To do this, the client generates a cryptogram using the private key and passes this
cryptogram to the Linux server. If the client uses the "correct" private key for the cryptogram, the Linux server
can easily decrypt the cryptogram with a matching public key.
Veeam Backup & Replication has the following limitations for the Identity/Pubkey authentication method:
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not support keys that are stored as binary data, for example, in a file of
DER format.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports only keys whose passphrase is encrypted with algorithms supported
by PuTTY:
o AES (Rijndael): 128-bit, 192-bit and 256-bit CBC or CTR (SSH-2 only)
TIP
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following key types: RSA, DSA, ECDSA, ED25519. For these key types
you can use the corresponding key formats:
E DDSA
Key Formats \ Key Types RSA DSA E CDSA
( E D25519)
PEM
private
private-openssh
sshcom
PKCS8
RDC4716 (private-openssh-new)
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E DDSA
Key Formats \ Key Types RSA DSA E CDSA
( E D25519)
IMP ORTANT
To add a credentials record using the Identity/Pubkey authentication method, do the following:
1. Generate a pair of keys using a key generation utility, for example, ssh-keygen.
2. Place the public key on a Linux server. To do this, add the public key to the authorized_keys file in the
.ssh/ directory in the home directory on the Linux server.
3. Place the private key in some folder on the backup server or in a network shared folder.
4. In Veeam Backup & Replication, from the main menu select Credentials and Passwords > Da tacenter
Credentials.
6. In the Username field, specify a user name for the created credentials record.
7. In the P a ssword field, specify the password for the user account. The password is required in a ll cases
except when you use root or a user with enabled NOPASSWD:ALL setting in /etc/sudoers .
8. In the P rivate key field, enter a path to the private key or click Browse to select a private key.
9. In the P a ssphrase field, specify a passphrase for the private key on the backup server. To view the entered
passphrase, click and hold the eye icon on the right of the field.
10. In the SSH p ort field, specify a number of the SSH port that you plan to use to connect to a Linux server.
By default, port 22 is used.
11. If you specify data for a non-root account that does not have root permissions on a Linux server, you can
use the Non-root account section to grant sudo rights to this account.
a. To provide a non-root user with root account privileges, select the E levate specified account to root
check box.
b. To add the user account to sudoers file, select the Ad d account to the sudoers file automatically
check box. In the Root password field, enter the password for the root account.
If you do not enable this option, you will have to manually add the user account to the sudoers file.
c. When registering a Linux server, you have an option to failover to using the su command for distros
where the sudo command is not available.
To enable the failover, select the Use "su" if "sudo" fails check box and in the Root p assword field,
enter the password for the root account.
12. In the Description field, enter a description for the created credentials record. As there can be a number of
similar account names, for example, Root, it is recommended that you supply a meaningful unique
description for the credentials record so that you can distinguish it in the list. The description is shown in
brackets, following the user name.
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IMP ORTANT
Cases when root password is required to elevate account rights to root using sudo are no longer supported.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Da tacenter Credentials.
3. If the credentials record is already used for any component in the backup infrastructure,
Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning. Click Y es to confirm your intention.
2. Select the credentials record in the list and click Remove. You cannot delete a record that is already used
for any component in the backup infrastructure.
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NOTE
You cannot delete these credentials records. However, you can edit them: change a password and record
description.
The Cloud Credentials Manager lets you create the following types of credentials records:
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Veeam Cloud Connect Accounts
You can add a credentials record for a tenant account — an account that you plan to use to connect to a service
provider (SP).
Before you add a credentials record, the SP must register a tenant account on the SP Veeam backup server.
Tenants without accounts cannot connect to the SP and use Veeam Cloud Connect resources. For more
information, see the Registering Tenant Accounts section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
3. In the Username field, enter a user name for the account that the SP has provided to you.
NOTE
If the SP used VMware Cloud Director to allocate replication resources to you, you must enter a user
name for the VMware Cloud Director tenant account in the following format:
Organization\Username. For example: TechCompanyOrg\Administrator.
4. In the P a ssword field, enter a password for the account that the SP has provided to you. To view the
entered password, click and hold the eye icon on the right of the field.
5. In the Description field, enter a description for the created credentials record.
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To access AWS resources, you can use Identity and Access Management (IAM) user credentials or AWS account
root user credentials. However, AWS recommends that you use the IAM user credentials. For details, see the
AWS Account Root User Credentials vs. IAM User Credentials section in the AWS General Reference. The
permissions that you must provide to the user are listed in the Permissions section.
Since Veeam Backup & Replication uses AWS CLI commands to perform operations in AWS, instead of a user
name and password you must specify an AWS access key. AWS access keys are long-term user credentials that
consists of two parts: an access key ID and a secret access key. For details, see the Managing Access Keys for
IAM Users section in the AWS IAM User Guide.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
4. In the Secret key field, enter a secret access key. To view the entered secret key, click and hold the eye
icon on the right of the field.
5. In the Description field, enter a description for the created credentials record.
IMP ORTANT
It is recommended that the user whose credentials you plan to use to connect to AWS S3 has administrative
permissions — access to all AWS S3 actions and resources.
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The following types of storage accounts are supported.
Storage account Sup ported Sup ported Sup ported access tiers
ty p e services p erformance
tiers
For more information about the types of storage accounts in Azure, see Microsoft Docs.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
4. In the Sha red key field, enter the storage account shared key. To view the entered key, click and hold the
eye icon on the right of the field.
NOTE
The Allow storage a ccount key access option for Shared Key authorization must be enabled in the
storage account. For more information on how to find this option, see Microsoft Docs.
5. In the Description field, enter an optional description for the credentials record.
TIP
If you do not have a Microsoft Azure storage account, you can create it in the Azure portal, as described in
the Azure Storage Documentation.
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Microsoft Azure Compute Accounts
To restore workloads to Microsoft Azure, add Azure archive storage or add a Microsoft Azure Plug-in for Veeam
Backup & Replication appliance, you must add a Microsoft Azure Compute account to
Veeam Backup & Replication.
When you add a Microsoft Azure Compute account, Veeam Backup & Replication imports information about
subscriptions and resources associated with this account. During the restore process,
Veeam Backup & Replication accesses these resources and uses them to register new VMs in Microsoft Azure.
To add a Microsoft Azure Compute account, use the Microsoft Azure Compute Account wizard.
Before you add a Microsoft Azure Compute account to Veeam Backup & Replication, check the following
prerequisites:
• If you plan to use a new Azure Active Directory (AD) application to access Microsoft Azure (at the Account
Type step), make sure that you already have a user account in Microsoft Azure AD. This account must have
privileges listed in the Permissions section.
• If you plan to use an existing Azure AD application to access Microsoft Azure (at the Account Type step),
consider the following:
o Make sure that you already have an AD application. For more information on how to create it, s ee
Microsoft Docs. Note that you do not need to configure redirect URI.
• [If you plan to restore Linux workloads using helper appliances] Veeam Backup & Replication uses its
built-in credentials record to work with all helper appliances. For security reasons, we recommended that
you change a password for this account before you set up the helper appliances. Changing credentials is
required only once. For more information, see Changing Credentials for Helper Appliances.
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• On the backup server, you must set the correct time according to the timezone where the backup server is
located. Otherwise, you may not be able to add a Microsoft Azure user account to
Veeam Backup & Replication.
• When the internet access is possible only through HTTP/HTTPS proxy, you must configure the proxy
settings for the Local System account or account under which the Veeam Backup Service is running. For
more information, see this Microsoft article.
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Step 1. Launch Microsoft Azure Compute Account Wizard
1. In the main menu, click Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
2. In the Ma nage Cloud Credentials window, click Ad d and select Microsoft Azure compute account.
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Step 2. Specify Account Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name under which this credentials record will be shown in the Cloud
Credential Manager.
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Step 2. Select Deployment Type and Region
To select a deployment type and a region where your Microsoft Azure Compute account is located:
1. At the Dep loyment Type step of the wizard, select Microsoft Azure.
2. From the Reg ion drop-down list, select a Microsoft Azure region.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication no longer supports Azure Germany since Microsoft closed Microsoft Cloud
Deutschland.
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Step 3. Select Access Type
At the Account Type step of the wizard, choose whether you want to connect to Microsoft Azure using an
existing or newly created Azure AD application. In the latter case, Veeam Backup & Replication will create the
new Azure AD application automatically.
a. Paste the code that you have copied and click Nex t. Note that the code will expire in 15 minutes.
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b. Specify an Azure AD user account that will be used to create an application. Note that the user name
must be specified in the user principal name format (username@domain). The account must have
permissions described in Permissions.
Veeam Backup & Replication will retrieve information about subscriptions to which the Azure AD user
has access and will create Azure AD application in the tenant of the account.
4. Back to the Ad d Azure Account wizard, check whether any errors occurred during the authentication
process.
The created Azure AD application is assigned the Owner role privileges and the Key Vault Crypto User role
privileges for the subscriptions to which the Azure user account has access. You can limit the subscriptions to
which Veeam Backup & Replication assigns the privileges as described in this Veeam KB article. For more
information on roles, see Microsoft Azure Docs.
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2. In the Ap p lication ID field, specify the ID of the necessary application.
3. In the Select authentication type area, choose whether you want to use password-based authentication
(application secret) or certificate-based authentication. Then provide the necessary information.
For more information on how to get tenant and application IDs, secret and certificate, see Microsoft Docs.
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Step 4. Configuring Helper Appliance
This step is available if you have selected E na ble direct restore of Linux-based computers at the Sub scription
step of the wizard.
If you plan to restore Linux workloads to multiple loca tions, you must configure a helper appliance in each
location.
2. From the Sub scription list, select a subscription whose resources you want to use to configure the helper
appliance. The subscription list contains all subscriptions that are associated with the Azure Compute
account.
To be displayed in the Sub scription list, a subscription must be created in advance and associated to the
Azure account as described in Microsoft Docs.
3. From the Location list, select a location where you want to configure the helper appliance. Make sure that
you select a geographic region with which at least one storage account of the subscription is associated.
4. From the Storage account list, select a storage account whose resources you want to use to store disks of
the helper appliance.
To be displayed in the Storage account drop-down list, a storage account must be created in advance as
described in Microsoft Docs.
NOTE
You cannot use a storage account with the ZRS or GZRS replication option. For details, see Microsoft
Docs.
5. Click Choose if you do not want Veeam Backup & Replication to create a new resource group and select
the required group.
To be displayed in the Resource group drop-down list, a resource group must be created in advance as
described in Microsoft Docs.
6. From the Virtual network list, select a network to which the helper appliance must be connected.
To be displayed in the Virtual network drop-down list, a virtual network must be created in advance as
described in Microsoft Docs.
7. From the Sub net list, select a subnet for the helper appliance.
To be displayed in the Sub net drop-down list, a subnet must be created in advance as described in
Microsoft Docs.
8. At the SSH p ort field, specify a port over which Veeam Backup & Replication will communicate with the
helper appliance.
9. Click OK.
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After you have configured all the helper appliances, click Ap p ly and wait while Veeam Backup & Replication
deploys the configured helper appliances.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of configured settings and click Finish to close the wizard.
If necessary, you can add different Azure Stack Hub Compute accounts to Veeam Backup & Replication. In this
case, Veeam Backup & Replication will import information about all subscriptions and resources associated with
provided accounts, and you will be able to use these resources for restore.
Information about subscriptions and resources is saved to the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration
database. You can re-import this information at any time.
Prerequisites
Before restoring workloads to Microsoft Azure Stack Hub, mind the following:
• [For restore to Microsoft Azure Stack Hub version 1808 and later] You must configure the backup server
as described in this Veeam KB article.
• [If you plan to restore Linux workloads using helper appliances] Veeam Backup & Replication uses its
built-in credentials record to work with all helper appliances. For security reasons, we recommended that
you change a password for this account before you set up the helper appliances. Changing credentials is
required only once. For more information, see Changing Credentials for Helper Appliances.
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• If you plan to use an existing Azure AD application to access Microsoft Azure (at the Account Type step),
only subscriptions that belong to the selected tenant will be added.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
2. In the Ma nage Cloud Credentials window, click Ad d and select Microsoft Azure compute a ccount.
3. At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name under which this credentials record will be shown in the
Cloud Credential Manager.
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4. At the Dep loyment Type step of the wizard, select Microsoft Azure Stack. In the Azure Stack resource
ma nager endpoint field, specify the virtual IPv4 address of Azure Resource Manager in the following
format: management.<region>.<FQDN>. Note that IPv6 addresses are not supported.
To learn about Azure Stack Hub virtual IP addresses, see Microsoft Docs.
5. The rest of the procedure for adding the Azure Stack account does not differ from the procedure for
adding the Microsoft Azure account. Follow the steps described in Microsoft Azure Compute Account.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
3. In the Access Key and Secret key fields, specify the Hash-based Message Authentication Code (HMAC) key
associated with the Google Cloud account. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the HMAC key to
authenticate requests to the Google Cloud Storage. To view the entered key, click and hold the eye icon
on the right of the field. For more information on Google Cloud accounts, see the Google Cloud
documentation.
If you have not created the HMAC key beforehand, you can do one of the following:
o Create the HMAC key in the Google Cloud console, as described in the Google Cloud documentation.
o Create the HMAC key in the Veeam Backup for Google Cloud Platform Web UI, as described in the
Veeam Backup for Google Cloud User Guide.
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4. In the Description field, enter an optional description for the credentials record.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
3. At the Ty p e step of the wizard, select if you want to create a new service account automatically or use an
existing service account.
NOTE
If you select Create a new service account, the created service account will be granted the Owner
IAM role with a wide scope of permissions and capabilities. If you want to limit the list of permissions
granted to the service account, create a user-managed service account, as described in the Google
Cloud documentation, with the limited set of permissions:
• For the information on permissions required to restore to Google Compute Engine, see Google
Compute Engine IAM User Permissions.
• For the information on permissions required to deploy GCP Plug -in for
Veeam Backup & Replication, see the Permissions section in the Integration with Veeam
Backup for Google Cloud Platform Guide.
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4. At the Account step of the wizard, specify credentials required for accessing the service account:
i. Log into your Google Cloud account. Read and accept the Google Terms of Service and the
Google Privacy Policy.
ii. Allow Veeam Backup & Replication to access your Google account. After that,
Veeam Backup & Replication can manage your Identity and Access Management (IAM) policies,
and see, edit, configure and delete your Google Cloud Platform data.
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iii. Return to the wizard and select the project with which you want the created service account to
work.
o If you have selected Use the existing service account , do the following:
i. Download the service account key in the JSON format, created as described in Google Cloud
documentation.
IMP ORTANT
Depending on the scenarios that the service account will be used for, make sure that the
service account meets all requirements and limitations.
For restoring virtual workloads from backups to Google Cloud, consider the requirements
and limitations listed in Restore to Google Compute Engine.
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ii. At the Account step of the wizard, select the downloaded service account key.
5. At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the configured account and click Finish to close the
wizard.
Editing Credentials
To edit a credentials record:
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > Cloud Credentials.
TIP
You can use the Cloud Credentials Manager to change the password for a tenant account provided by the
SP. For more information, see the Changing Password for Tenant Account section in the Veeam Cloud
Connect Guide.
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To cretae a new service account, do the following:
4. Back to the Goog le Cloud Platform Service Account wizard, click Finish.
Veeam Backup & Replication will create a new service account and will use it to communicate with Google Cloud
Platform.
Deleting Credentials
To delete a credentials record:
2. Select the credentials record in the list and click Remove. You cannot delete a record that is already used
for any component in the backup infrastructure.
Password Manager
You can use the Password Manager to create and maintain a list of passwords that you plan to use for data
encryption. Password management can be helpful in the following situations:
• You want to create new passwords. You can use one password per job or share the same password
between several jobs on the backup server.
• You want to edit an existing password, for example, change its hint, or delete a password.
TIP
Periodical change of passwords is a security best practice. You can create new passwords as often as you
need based on your company security needs and regulatory requirements.
Creating Passwords
You can use the Password Manager to create one or more passwords.
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > E ncryption Passwords. Alternatively, you can use
job properties to create a new password:
c. In the working area, right-click the backup or backup copy job and select E d it.
d. At the Storage step of the wizard (for backup job) or Ta rget step of the wizard (for backup copy job),
click Ad vanced.
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f. In the E ncryption section of the Ad vanced Setting window, select the E na ble backup file encryption
check box and click the Ma nage passwords link.
3. In the Hint field, specify a hint for the created password. It is recommended that you provide a meaningful
hint that will help you recall the password. The password hint is displayed when you import an encrypted
file on the backup server and access this file.
4. In the P a ssword field, enter a password. To view the entered password, click and hold the eye icon on the
right of the field.
IMP ORTANT
Always save a copy of the password you create in a secure place. If you lose the password, you will not be
able to restore it.
Editing Passwords
You can edit passwords you have created using the Password Manager.
To edit a password:
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > E ncryption Passwords. Alternatively, you can use
job properties to edit the password:
c. In the working area, right-click the backup or backup copy job and select E d it.
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d. At the Storage step of the wizard (for backup job) or Ta rget step of the wizard (for backup copy job),
click Ad vanced.
f. In the E ncryption section of the Ad vanced Setting window, select the E na ble backup file encryption
check box and click the Ma nage passwords link.
After you edit the password, you do not need to perform any other actions. Veeam Backup & Replication will
start using the changed password after a job runs for the next time. Before the job run, the old password is still
used. For more information on which password to use when you restore data, see Restoring Data from
Encrypted Backups.
Deleting Passwords
You can delete passwords using the Password Manager.
You cannot remove a password that is currently used by any job on the backup server. To remove such
password, you first need to delete a reference to this password in the job settings.
To delete a password:
1. From the main menu, select Credentials and Passwords > E ncryption Passwords. Alternatively, you can use
job properties to delete passwords:
c. In the working area, right-click the backup or backup copy job and select E d it.
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d. At the Storage step of the wizard (for backup job) or Ta rget step of the wizard (for backup copy job),
click Ad vanced.
f. In the E ncryption section of the Ad vanced Setting window, select the E na ble backup file encryption
check box and click the Ma nage passwords link.
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Backup & Replication Console
The Veeam Backup & Replication console is a client-side component that provides access to the backup server.
The console allows you to log in to Veeam Backup & Replication and perform all kinds of data protection and
disaster recovery operations on the backup server.
The console does not have a direct access to the backup infrastructure components and configuration database.
Such data as user credentials, passwords, roles and permissions are stored on the backup server side. To access
this data, the console needs to connect to the backup server and query this information periodically during the
work session.
To make users work as uninterrupted as possible, the remote console maintains the session for 5 minutes if the
connection is lost. If the connection is re-established within this period, you can continue working without re-
logging to the console.
You can install as many remote consoles as you need so that multiple users can access
Veeam Backup & Replication simultaneously. Veeam Backup & Replication prevents concurrent modifications on
the backup server. If several users are working with Veeam Backup & Replication at the same time, the user who
saves the changes first has the priority. Other users will be prompted to reload the wizard or window to get the
most recent information about the changes in the configuration database.
If you have multiple backup servers in the infrastructure, you can connect to any of them from the same
console. For convenience, you can save several shortcuts for these connections.
IMP ORTANT
You cannot use the same console to connect to backup servers with different versions of
Veeam Backup & Replication. Note this if you have more than one backup server in your backup
environment, and these backup servers run different versions of Veeam Backup & Replication. For example,
if one of your backup servers run version 9.5 Update 3, and another backup server runs version 9.5 Update
4, you will need to use 2 separate consoles for connecting to these servers.
The console supports automatic update. Every time you connect to the backup server locally or remotely, the
console checks for updates. If the backup server has updates installed, the console will be updated
automatically.
• Upgrade to another Veeam Backup & Replication major product version is not supported. If you upgrade
Veeam Backup & Replication to another major version, you must upgrade the console to the same version
manually. Automatic upgrade is not supported for Preview, Beta or RTM versions of
Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Downgrade of the console is not supported. If the console is of a higher version than the backup server
(for example, you have upgraded the console manually), the connection to the server will fail.
If other Veeam Backup & Replication components, such as Veeam Cloud Connect Portal or Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager, are installed on the machine where the console runs, these components will also be
upgraded.
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Backup & Replication Console Components
When you install a remote console on a machine, Veeam Backup & Replication installs the following
components:
• Mount server
• The machine must meet the system requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• The remote console can be installed on a Microsoft Windows machine (physical or virtual).
• If you install the console remotely, you can deploy it behind NAT. However, the backup server must be
outside NAT. The opposite type of deployment is not supported: if the backup server is deployed behind
NAT and the remote console is deployed outside NAT, you will not be able to connect to the backup
server.
• You cannot perform restore from the configuration backup using the remote console.
• The machines on which the remote console is installed are not added to the list of managed servers
automatically. For this reason, you cannot perform some operations, for example, import backup files that
reside on the remote console machine or assign roles of backup infrastructure components to this
machine. To perform these operations, you must add the remote console machine as a managed server to
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Managing Servers.
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Logging in to Veeam Backup & Replication
To log in to Veeam Backup & Replication, you must open the Veeam Backup & Replication console and specify
connection settings to access the backup server.
1. To open the Veeam Backup & Replication console, do one of the following:
o From the Microsoft Windows Sta rt menu, select All P rograms > Veeam > Veeam Backup & Replication
Console.
o Use the Microsoft Windows search to find the Veea m Backup & Replication Console program on the
computer.
2. In the Server field, type the name or IP address of the backup server or select it from the list of recent
connections. By default, the console connects to the backup server installed locally — localhost.
3. In the P ort field, enter the port over which you want to connect to the backup server. The port number is
set at the P ort Configuration step of the setup wizard for Veeam Backup & Replication. By default, port
9392 is used.
4. In the Username and P a ssword fields, enter credentials of the user account that you want to use to
connect to the backup server. The user account must be added to the Local Users group on the backup
server or a group of domain users who have access to the backup server.
You can also select the Use Windows session authentication check box. In this case, you will log in to
Veeam Backup & Replication using the account under which you are currently logged in to Microsoft
Windows.
5. Click Connect.
If multi-factor authentication (MFA) is enabled, after user clicks Connect, they will get the instruction how
to set up MFA or have to enter a 6-digit confirmation code generated in the mobile authenticator
application. For more information, see Multi-Factor Authentication.
To create a shortcut for the connection, click Sa ve shortcut. You can create as many shortcuts as you need.
NOTE
If you create a shortcut for a connection, the credentials for this connection will be stored in the Windows
Credentials Manager. The credentials are saved after the first successful login.
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Virtualization Servers and Hosts
You can add the following types of servers and hosts to the backup infrastructure:
• Linux Server
NOTE
We recommend that only one instance of a server or host is present in the backup infrastructure at a time.
Do not add the same server or host multiple times, for example, by a DNS name and IP address, this can
cause unexpected behavior.
You can add physical machines and VMs to the backup infrastructure and assign different roles to them. The
table below describes which roles can be assigned to the different types of servers.
Linux server
NOTE
• Hyper-V servers. For more information on how to add servers, see the Adding Microsoft Hyper-V
Servers section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide for Microsoft Hyper-V.
• Veeam Backup for AWS servers. For more information on how to add servers, see the Deployment
and Configuration section in the Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS Guide.
• Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure servers. For more information on how to add servers, see the
Deployment and Configuration section in the Integration with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure
Guide.
• Veeam Backup for Google Cloud servers. For more information on how to add servers, see the
Deployment and Configuration section in the Integration with Veeam Backup for Google Cloud
Guide.
• Nutanix AHV clusters. For more information on how to add AHV clusters, see the Deployment
section in the Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV User Guide.
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Related Topics
• Veeam Data Movers
• Rescanning Servers
• Removing Servers
You can add vCenter Servers and ESXi hosts. If an ESXi host is managed by a vCenter Server, it is recommended
that you add the vCenter Server, not a standalone ESXi host. If you move VMs between ESXi hosts managed by
the vCenter Server, you will not have to re-configure jobs in Veeam Backup & Replication.
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically locate migrated VMs and continue processing them as usual.
To add a VMware vSphere server, use the New VMware Server wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New VMware Server Wizard
To launch the New VMware Server wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane, select the Ma naged Servers node and click
Ad d Server on the ribbon or right-click the Ma naged Servers node and select Ad d Server. In the Add Server
window, click VMwa re vSphere > vSphere.
• Open the Inventory view, in the inventory pane select the VMwa re vSphere node and click Ad d Server on
the ribbon. You can also right-click the VMwa re vSphere node and select Ad d Server.
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Step 2. Specify Server Name or Address
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify an address and description for the VMware vSphere server.
1. Enter a full DNS name, or IPv4 or IPv6 address of the vCenter Server or standalone ESXi host. Note that
you can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
If you add a VMware Cloud on AWS vCenter Server, use its Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN). Make
sure the name you specify ends with <vmc.vmware.com>.
2. Provide a description for future reference. The default description contains information about the user
who added the server, date and time when the server was added.
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Step 3. Specify Credentials
At the Credentials step of the wizard, specify credentials and port settings for the VMware vSphere server.
1. From the Credentials list, select credentials with the required permissions. For more information, see
Permissions.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to
add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
2. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses port 443 to communicate with vCenter Servers and ESXi
hosts. If a connection with the vCenter Server or ESXi host over this port cannot be established, you can
customize the port number in vCenter Server/ESXi host settings and specify the new port number in the
P ort field.
3. When you add a vCenter Server or ESXi host, Veeam Backup & Replication saves to the configuration
database a thumbprint of the TLS certificate installed on the vCenter Server or ESXi host. During every
subsequent connection to the server, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the saved thumbprint to verify the
server identity and avoid the man-in-the-middle attack. For details on managing TLS Certificates, see TLS
Certificates.
If the certificate installed on the server is not trusted, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning.
o If you do not trust the server, click Ca ncel. Veeam Backup & Replication will display an error message,
and you will not be able to connect to the server.
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NOTE
When you update a certificate on a server, this server becomes unavailable in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console. To make the server available again, acknowledge the new certificate
at the Credentials step of the Edit Server wizard.
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Step 4. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all the required
components. Click Nex t to complete the adding of the server.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the VMware vSphere server and click Finish to exit the
wizard.
When you add VMware Cloud Director to the backup infrastructure, the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy is
displayed under the Cloud Director node in the Inventory view. You can work with VMs managed by VMware
Cloud Director directly in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
To add the VMware Cloud Director server, use the New VMware Cloud Director wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New VMware Cloud Director Server Wizard
To launch the New VMware Cloud Director Server wizard, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ma naged Servers node and select Ad d Server. Alternatively, you can
click Ad d Server on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Specify Server Name or Address
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify connection settings for VMware Cloud Director. If the VMware Cloud
Director infrastructure comprises several cells, you can specify connection settings for any cell in the VMware
Cloud Director hierarchy.
1. In the DNS name or IP address field, enter a full DNS name, or IPv4 or IPv6 address of the VMware Cloud
Director server or any cell in the VMware Cloud Director infrastructure. Note that you can use IPv6
addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
2. In the URL field, enter a URL of the VMware Cloud Director server. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following URL: https://<clouddirectorservername>:443,
where <clouddirectorservername> is the name or IP address of the VMware Cloud Director server
that you have specified in the field above and 443 is the default port for communication with VMware
Cloud Director.
3. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who added the server, date and time when the server was added.
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Step 3. Specify VMware Cloud Director Credentials
At the Credentials step of the wizard, specify credentials to connect to VMware Cloud Director.
From the Credentials list, select credentials for the account that has system administrator privileges on VMware
Cloud Director (you cannot use the organization administrator account to add VMware Cloud Director). If you
have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link at the bottom of the list or click Ad d on
the right to add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
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Step 4. Specify Credentials for Underlying vCenter Servers
At the vCenter Servers step of the wizard, specify credentials for every vCenter Server added to VMware Cloud
Director. If the vCenter Server is already added to the backup infrastructure, you do not need to specify
credentials for it once again. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically detect the credentials you provided
when adding this vCenter Server and use them.
2. Click Account on the right and select credentials to connect to the vCenter Server. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the same credentials that you have specified for VMware Cloud Director
at the previous step of the wizard.
If you have not set up the credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link at the bottom of the list
or click Ad d on the right to add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication automatically detects a port used to communicate with the vCenter Server. If
necessary, you can change the connection port for the vCenter Server. Click vCenter on the right and
adjust the port number.
4. When you add a vCenter Server, Veeam Backup & Replication saves a thumbprint of the TLS certificate
installed on the vCenter Server to the configuration database. During every subsequent connection to the
server, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the saved thumbprint to verify the server identity and avoid the
man-in-the-middle attack. For details on managing TLS Certificates, see TLS Certificates.
If the certificate installed on the server is not trusted, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning.
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o If you do not trust the server, click Ca ncel. Veeam Backup & Replication will display an error message,
and you will not be able to connect to the server.
5. Repeat steps 1-3 for all vCenter Servers added to VMware Cloud Director.
NOTE
When you update a certificate on a server, this server becomes unavailable in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console. To make the server available again, acknowledge the new certificate
at the Credentials step of the Edit Server wizard.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, complete the procedure of VMware Cloud Director adding.
If vCenter Servers underlying VMware Cloud Director are already added to the backup infrastructure, they will
not be added for the second time. Veeam Backup & Replication will create associations with the vCenter Servers
and display them in the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy.
Before you add a Microsoft Windows server, check prerequisites. Then use the New W indows Server wizard to
add the server.
• Check permissions required to add the server. For more information, see Permissions.
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• File and printer sharing must be enabled in network connection settings of the added Microsoft Windows
server. On every connected Microsoft Windows server, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys two
components:
If file and printer sharing is not enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to deploy these
components.
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Step 1. Launch New Windows Server Wizard
To launch the New W indows Server wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure or Files view, in the inventory pane select the Microsoft Windows node
and click Ad d Server on the ribbon.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane, select the Ma naged Servers node and click
Ad d Server on the ribbon or right-click the Ma naged Servers node and select Ad d Server. In the Add Server
window, select Microsoft Windows.
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Step 2. Specify Server Name or Address
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify an address and description for the Microsoft Windows server.
1. Enter a full DNS name, or IPv4 or IPv6 address of the Microsoft Windows server. Note that you can use
IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
2. Provide a description for future reference. The default description contains information about the user
who added the server, date and time when the server was added.
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Step 3. Specify Credentials
At the Credentials step of the wizard, specify credentials for the Microsoft Windows server.
1. From the Credentials list, select credentials for the account that has privileges described in Permissions.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to
add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the provided credentials to deploy its components on the added
server.
2. To customize network ports used by Veeam Backup & Replication components, click P orts. For default
ports used by the Veeam Backup & Replication components, see Ports.
3. In the Da ta transfer options section of the Network Settings window, specify connection settings for file
copy operations. Provide a range of ports that will be used as transmission channels between the source
server and target server (one port per task). By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses port range
2500-3300.
If the virtual environment is not large and data traffic will not be significant, you can specify a smaller
range of ports, for example, 2500-2510 to run 10 concurrent tasks at the same time. Note that
Veeam Backup & Replication processes each VM disk as a separate task.
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4. [For Microsoft Windows server deployed outside NAT] In the P referred TCP connection role section select
the Run server on this side check box. In the NAT scenario, the outside client cannot initiate a connection
to the server on the NAT network. As a result, services that require initiation of the connection from
outside can be disrupted. With this option selected, you will be able to overcome this limitation and
initiate a "server-client" connection — that is, a connection in the direction of the Microsoft Windows
server.
The option applies if one of the following roles is assigned to the server: source VMware backup proxy in
backup or replication scenarios, source repository in the backup copy scenario.
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Step 4. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what Veeam Backup & Replication components are already installed on
the server and what components will be installed.
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Step 5. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all the required
components. Click Nex t to complete the adding of the server.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of Microsoft Windows server adding.
Before you add a Linux server, check prerequisites. Then use the New Linux Server wizard to add the server.
Linux Firewalls
When you add a Linux server to the backup infrastructure, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically opens
ports used by the Veeam Data Mover on the Linux server. Generally, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically
open ports for most of popular firewalls (iptables, ufw, firewall-cmd). However, if for some reason the ports are
not opened, you can open the ports manually. You can also specify these ports at the SSH Connection step of
the New Linux Server wizard. Note that ports are opened dynamically: if 10 concurrent jobs are running,
Veeam Backup & Replication opens ports 2500-2510.
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If you use the firewalld tool, you can configure firewall rules to open ports only in necessary zones. By
default, Veeam Backup & Replication opens ports in all active firewalld zones. If your firewall is configured
for different zones, and you want to minimize security holes, you can configure Veeam Backup & Replication to
open the ports only for certain zones. To do this, perform the following:
1. On the helper host or target Linux host, create the /etc/VeeamNetConfig file and define the following
parameter:
FirewalldZones=zone_name_1, zone_name_2
where zone_name_1, zone_name_2 is a list of zone names where the ports must be open.
Veeam Backup & Replication will skip the zones that are not in this list.
2. [Only for helper host] If you select a Linux host that is already added to the Veeam Backup & Replication
infrastructure, you should also add required zones to the
/opt/veeam/transport/VeeamTransportConfig file.
FirewalldZones=zone_name_1, zone_name_2
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication opens the port 2500 in all zones even if you have specified the required
zones in configuration files.
TLS Connection
Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12, Linux servers use the TLS connection. You can disable the TLS
connection with a registry value for the servers that do not support the TLS connection. For more information,
contact Veeam Customer Support.
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Step 1. Launch New Linux Server Wizard
To launch the New Linux Server wizard, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ma naged Servers node and select Ad d Server. Alternatively, you can
click Ad d Server on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Specify Server Name or Address
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify an address and description for the Linux server.
1. Enter a full DNS name,or IPv4 or IPv6 address of the Linux server. Note that you can use IPv6 addresses
only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
2. Provide a description for future reference. The default description contains information about the user
who added the server, date and time when the server was added.
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Step 3. Specify Credentials and SSH Settings
At the SSH Connection step of the wizard, specify credentials for the Linux server and additional SSH connection
settings.
1. From the Credentials list, select credentials for the account that has permissions described in Permissions.
You can select a credentials record that uses the password authentication method or credentials record
that uses the Identity/Pubkey authentication method.
NOTE
The account you selected must have the home directory created on the Linux server.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to
add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
To add a Linux server that you want to use as a hardened repository, click Ad d and select Single-use
credentials for hardened repository. For more information about preparing a Linux server and setting up
credentials, see Adding Hardened Repository.
NOTE
If you add a Linux server with single-use credentials, consider the following:
• The folder with the repository must be accessible for accounts with user permissions (and not
only root).
• SSH connection is necessary only for the deployment and upgrade of Veeam Data Mover, or
transport service. The transport service will be used to communicate with backup
infrastructure components without the SSH connection. For security purposes, after you
added the Linux server, you can disable SSH connection for the user account you use to
connect to the Linux server. If you can work with the server from the console, disable SSH
connection for the server itself.
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2. To configure SSH settings, click Ad vanced. This option becomes available after you have entered your
credentials. In the SSH Settings window:
a. In the Service console connection section, specify an SSH timeout. By default, the SSH timeout is set
to 20000 ms. If a task targeted at the Linux server is inactive after the specified timeout,
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically terminate the task.
b. In the Da ta transfer options section, specify connection settings for file copy operations. Provide a
range of ports that will be used as transmission channels between the source host and target host
(one port per task). By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses port range 2500-3300. If the virtual
environment is not large and data traffic will not be significant, you can specify a smaller range of
ports, for example, 2500-2510 to run 10 concurrent tasks at the same time.
NOTE
If you want to open these ports only for certain firewalld zones, you can specify the required
zones in the configuration files. For instructions, see the Before You Begin section.
c. [For Linux server deployed outside NAT] In the P referred TCP connection role section, select the Run
server on this side check box. In the NAT scenario, the outside client cannot initiate a connection to
the server on the NAT network. As a result, services that require initiation of the connection from
outside can be disrupted. With this option selected, you will be able to overcome this limitation and
initiate a ‘server-client’ connection — that is, a connection in the direction of the Linux server.
The option applies if one of the following roles is assigned to the server: source VMware backup proxy
in backup or replication scenarios, source repository in the backup copy scenario.
You can also change the SSH port over which you want to connect to the Linux server. For this, click the
Ma nage accounts link and edit the account used to connect to the Linux server.
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3. When you add a Linux server, Veeam Backup & Replication saves a fingerprint of the Linux host SSH key to
the configuration database. During every subsequent connection to the server,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the saved fingerprint to verify the server identity and avoid the man-in-
the-middle attack.
To let you identify the server, Veeam Backup & Replication displays the SSH key fingerprint:
o If you do not trust the server, click No. Veeam Backup & Replication will display an error message, and
you will not be able to connect to the server.
NOTE
When you update an SSH key on a server, this server becomes unavailable in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console. To make the server available again, acknowledge the new SSH
key at the SSH Connection step of the Edit Server wizard.
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Step 4. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what Veeam Backup & Replication components are already installed on
the server and what components will be installed.
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Step 5. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all the required
components. Click Nex t to complete the adding of the server.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of Linux server adding.
Rescanning Servers
In some cases, you may need to rescan hosts or servers in the backup infrastructure. The rescan operation may
be required if you have added or removed new disks and volumes to/from the host or server and want to display
actual information in Veeam Backup & Replication. During the rescan operation, Veeam Backup & Replication
retrieves information about disks and volumes that are currently connected to a host or server and stores this
information to the configuration database.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically performs a rescan operation every 4 hours. You can also start the
rescan operation manually:
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3. In the working area, select the server or host and click Rescan on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-
click the server or host and select Rescan.
3. In the working area, select the server and click E d it Server on the ribbon or right-click the server and
select P roperties.
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4. You will follow the same steps as you have followed when adding the server. Edit server settings as
required.
Removing Servers
If you do not plan to use some server anymore, you can remove it from the backup infrastructure.
You cannot remove a server that has any dependencies. For example, you cannot remove a server that is
referenced by a backup or replication job, performs the role of a VMware backup proxy or backup repository. To
remove such server, you will need to delete all referencing jobs and roles first.
When you remove a server that is used as a target host or backup repository, backup files and replica files are
not removed from disk. You can easily import these files later to Veeam Backup & Replication if needed.
NOTE
When you remove VMware Cloud Director from the backup infrastructure, vCenter Servers added to
VMware Cloud Director are not removed. To remove the vCenter Server, in the inventory pane expand the
vCenter Servers node, right-click the vCenter Server and select Remove.
You cannot remove vCenter Servers added to VMware Cloud Director until the VMware Cloud Director
server is removed from the backup infrastructure.
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3. In the working area, select the server and click Remove Server on the ribbon or right-click the server and
select Remove.
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VMware Backup Proxy
A VMware backup proxy is an architecture component that sits between the backup server and other
components of the backup infrastructure. While the backup server administers tasks, the proxy processes jobs
and delivers backup traffic.
• Compressing
• Deduplicating
• Encrypting
• Sending it to the backup repository (for example, if you run a backup job) or another VMware backup
proxy (for example, if you run a replication job)
• Virtual appliance
• Network
If the VM disks are located on the storage system and the storage system is added to the
Veeam Backup & Replication console, the VMware backup proxy can also use the Backup from Storage
Snapshots mode.
You can explicitly select the transport mode or let Veeam Backup & Replication automatically choose the mode.
For details, see the Transport Modes and Configuring Backup Proxy for Storage Snapshots sections in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
To optimize performance of several concurrent jobs, you can use several backup proxies. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will distribute the backup workload between available backup proxies. You can
deploy backup proxies both in the primary site and in remote sites.
To deploy a proxy, you need to add a Windows-based or Linux-based server to Veeam Backup & Replication and
assign the role of the VMware backup proxy to the added server. For requirements and limitations that backup
proxies have, see Requirements and Limitations for Backup Proxies.
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VMware Backup Proxy Services and Components
Backup proxies run light-weight services that take a few seconds to deploy. Deployment is fully automated.
Veeam Backup & Replication installs the following components and services:
• Veeam Installer Service is an auxiliary service that is installed and started on any Windows server once it is
added to the list of managed servers in the Veeam Backup & Replication console. This service analyzes the
system, installs and upgrades necessary components and services depending on the role selected for the
server.
• Veeam Data Mover is a component that performs data processing tasks on behalf of
Veeam Backup & Replication, such as retrieving source VM data, performing data deduplication and
compression, and storing backed-up data on the target storage.
In This Section
• Requirements and Limitations for Backup Proxies
• Transport Modes
Connection to Storage
The following list shows possible connections between the machine and storage that keeps backups of this
machine. The first connection is the most efficient, the last one is the least efficient.
• A machine used as a VMware backup proxy should have direct access to the storage on which VMs reside
or the storage where VM data is written. This way, the VMware backup proxy will retrieve data directly
from the datastore bypassing LAN.
• The VMware backup proxy can be a VM with HotAdd access to VM disks on the datastore. This type of
proxy also enables LAN-free data transfer between the host and the VMware backup proxy.
• If neither of the above scenarios is possible, you can assign the role of the VMware backup proxy to a
machine whose network is located closer to the source or the target storage to which the proxy will
connect. In this case, VM data will be transported over LAN using the NBD protocol.
• Before assigning the role of the VMware backup proxy to a machine, you must first add a vCenter server to
the backup infrastructure.
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• The machine must meet the system requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• The account that you specify when adding a server must have permissions described in Permissions.
• It is recommended that you balance the number of tasks on backup proxies and backup repository to avoid
the situation where some backup infrastructure resources remain idle while others are overloaded.
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server.
• If you back up proxies that use the Virtual appliance (Hot-Add) mode to process VM data, the change
block tracking mechanism (CBT) will be disabled. For more information on CBT, see Changed Block
Tracking.
• If you back up encrypted VMs that use the Virtual appliance (Hot-Add) mode, make sure backup proxies
are also encrypted. For more information, see Encrypted VMs.
• A VMware backup proxy should be as close to the source data as possible with a high bandwidth
connection. Consider a good connection between proxy and repository.
• Linux backup proxies use the transport service for connection with backup infrastructure components. If
the transport service cannot be installed, Linux backup proxy require SSH connection.
• You can assign the role of a VMware backup proxy to a Linux server added with single-use credentials. For
this configuration, only the Network mode (NBD) is supported, other transport modes will not be available
for selection.
• Linux backup proxies cannot be used with VMware Cloud on AWS. This is beca use VDDK settings required
by VMware cannot be enabled on Linux backup proxies.
• Linux backup proxies that use virtual appliance (Hot-Add) transport mode do not support the VM copy
scenario.
• For Direct SAN with iSCSI access, note that Linux backup proxies must have the Open-iSCSI initiator
enabled.
• See recommendations for VMware backup proxy parameters in the Veeam Backup & Replication Best
Practice Guide.
Transport Modes
A transport mode is a method that is used by the Veeam Data Mover to retrieve VM data from the source and
write VM data to the target. Job efficiency and time required for job completion greatly depend on the transport
mode.
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For data retrieval, Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following modes (starting from the most efficient) :
• Network
The Veeam Data Mover responsible for data retrieval runs on a VMware backup proxy. Correspondingly, t he
transport mode can be defined in the settings of the VMware backup proxy that performs the job.
When you configure VMware backup proxy settings, you can manually select a transport mode, or let
Veeam Backup & Replication select the most appropriate mode automatically. If you use automatic mode
selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will scan VMware backup proxy configuration and its connection to the
VMware vSphere infrastructure to choose the optimal transport mode. If several transport modes are availab le
for the same VMware backup proxy, Veeam Backup & Replication will choose the mode in the following order:
Direct storage access > Virtual appliance > Network.
The selected transport mode is used for data retrieval. For writing data to the target,
Veeam Backup & Replication picks the transport mode automatically, based on the configuration of the VMware
backup proxy and transport mode limitations. There can be no more than one transport mode for one VM.
Veeam Backup & Replication leverages VMware vStorage APIs for Data Protection (VADP) for all transport
modes except for backup from storage snapshots, the direct NFS transport mode and the virtual appliance
transport mode. VADP can be used for VMware vSphere starting from version 4.
Applicability and efficiency of each transport mode primarily depends on the type of datastore used by the
source host — local or shared, and on the VMware backup proxy type — physical or virtual. The table below
shows recommendations for installing the VMware backup proxy, depending on the storage type and desired
transport mode.
P roduction Storage Type Direct Storage Access Virtual Appliance Network Mode
Fib er Channel (FC) SAN Install a VMware backup Install a VMware backup This mode is not
proxy on a physical proxy on a VM running recommended on 1 Gb
server with a direct FC on an ESXi host Ethernet but works well
access to the SAN. connected to the storage with 10 Gb Ethernet.
device.
Install a VMware backup
iSCSI SAN Install a VMware backup proxy on any machine on
proxy on a physical or the storage network.
virtual machine.
NFS Storage
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P roduction Storage Type Direct Storage Access Virtual Appliance Network Mode
NOTE
If you use VMware Cloud on AWS, the only available transport mode is Virtual
appliance. We recommend you install a VMware backup proxy on a VM running
on an ESXi host connected to the VSAN storage device.
In the Direct SAN access transport mode, Veeam Backup & Replication leverages VMware VADP to transport VM
data directly from and to FC, FCoE and iSCSI storage over the SAN. VM data travels over the SAN, bypassing
ESXi hosts and the LAN. The Direct SAN access transport method provides the fastest data transfer spee d and
produces no load on the production network.
The Direct SAN access transport mode can be used for all operations where the VMware backup proxy is
engaged:
• Backup
• Replication
• VM copy
• Quick migration
• Entire VM restore
• VM disk restore
• Replica failback
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Requirements for the Direct SAN Access Mode
To use the Direct SAN access transport mode, make sure that the following requirements are met:
• It is strongly recommended that you assign the role of a VMware backup proxy working in the Direc t SAN
access mode to a physical machine. If you assign this role to a VM, the VMware backup proxy performance
may not be optimal.
• A VMware backup proxy using the Direct SAN access transport mode must have a direct access to the
production storage using a hardware or software HBA. If a direct SAN connection is not configured or not
available when a job or task starts, the job or task will fail.
• SAN storage volumes presented as VMware datastores must be exposed to the OS of the VMware backup
proxy that works in the Direct SAN access transport mode.
The volumes must be visible in Disk Management but must not be initialized by the OS. Otherwise, the
VMFS filesystem will be overwritten with NTFS, and volumes will become unrecognizable by ESXi hosts.
To prevent volumes initialization, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically sets the SAN Policy within
each proxy to Offline Shared and also sets the SAN LUNs to the Offline state.
• [For restore operations] A VMware backup proxy must have write access to LUNs whe re VM disks are
located.
• The transport mode is used for the entire VM, not for the virtual disk. It means that one VM can be
processed in one transport mode only. If there are VM disks that cannot be processed in the Direct SAN
access transport mode, then the rest of the disks also cannot be processed in this transport mode.
• You cannot use the Direct SAN access mode in the following cases:
o For VMs residing on vSAN. You can use Virtual appliance and Network transport modes to process
such VMs. For details on vSAN restrictions, see VDDK release notes. For example, release notes for
VDDK 7.0.3.
o For Veeam Cloud Connect Replication because in this scenario Veeam Backup & Replication always
creates VM replicas with thin disks.
o For incremental restore due to VMware limitations. Either disable CBT for VM virtual disks for the
duration of the restore process or select another transport mode for incremental restore.
• Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Direct SAN access transport mode to read and write VM data only
during the first session of the replication job. During subsequent replication job sessions,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the Virtual appliance or Network transport mode on the target side.
The source side proxy will keep reading VM data from the source datastore in the Direct SAN access
transport mode.
Veeam Backup & Replication writes VM data to the target datastore in the Direct SAN access transport
mode only if disks of a VM replica are thick-provisioned. If disks are thin-provisioned,
Veeam Backup & Replication will write VM data in the Network or Virtual appliance mode. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication replicates VM disks in the thin format.
To write VM data to the target datastore in the Direct SAN access transport mode, se lect to convert VM
disks to the thick format at the Destination step of the replication job wizard.
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• IDE and SATA disks can be processed in the Direct SAN access transport mode.
Data backup in the Direct SAN access transport mode includes the following steps:
1. The VMware backup proxy sends a request to the ESXi host to locate the necessary VM on the datastore.
4. The ESXi host retrieves metadata about the layout of VM disks on the storage (physical addresses of data
blocks).
6. The VMware backup proxy uses metadata to copy VM data blocks directly from the source storage over
the SAN.
7. The VMware backup proxy processes copied data blocks and sends them to the tar get.
TIP
If you plan to process VMs that have both thin and thick disks, you can enable the Direct SAN access mode.
However, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the Network transport mode to restore disks of these VMs.
If you want to use Direct SAN access mode, restore all VM disks as thick.
Data restore in the Direct SAN access transport mode includes the following steps:
1. The VMware backup proxy retrieves data blocks from the backup repositor y or a datastore in the target
site.
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2. The VMware backup proxy sends a request to the ESXi host in the source site to restore data to a
necessary datastore.
3. The ESXi host in the source site allocates space on the datastore.
The Direct NFS access mode provides an alternative to the Network mode. When Veeam Backup & Replication
processes VM data in the Network mode, it uses VMware VDDK to communicate with the ESXi host. This
produces additional load on the ESXi host.
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In the Direct NFS access mode, Veeam Backup & Replication bypasses the ESXi host and reads/writes data
directly from/to NFS datastores. To do this, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys its native NFS client on the
VMware backup proxy and uses it for VM data transport. VM data still travels over LAN but there is no load on
the ESXi host.
The Direct NFS access mode can be used for all operations where the VMware backup proxy is engaged:
• Backup
• Replication
• Quick migration
• VM copy
• Entire VM restore
• VM disk restore
• Replica failback
• The VMware backup proxy used for VM data processing must have access to the NFS datastores where VM
disks are located. For more information, see VMware Backup Proxy for Direct NFS Access Mode.
• If NFS volumes are mounted on the ESXi host under names, not IP addresses, the volume names must be
resolved by DNS from the VMware backup proxy.
o The Direct NFS access mode cannot be used for VMs that have at least one snapshot.
o Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Direct NFS transport mode to read and write VM data only
during the first session of the replication job. During subsequent replication job sessions, the VM
replica will already have one or more snapshots. For this reason, Veeam Backup & Replication will use
another transport mode to write VM data to the datastore on the target side. The source side proxy
will keep reading VM data from the source datastore in the Direct NFS transport mode.
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• If you enable the E na ble VMware tools quiescence option in the job settings, Veeam Backup & Replication
will not use the Direct NFS transport mode to process running Microsoft Windows VMs that have VMware
Tools installed. The Direct NFS transport mode is not used because during VM quiescence VMware creates
a snapshot with two delta disks per virtual disk.
• If a VM has some disks that cannot be processed in the Direct NFS access mode,
Veeam Backup & Replication processes these VM disks in the Network transport mode.
To read and write data in the Direct NFS transport mode, the VMware backup proxy must meet the following
requirements:
1. The VMware backup proxy must have access to the NFS datastore.
2. The VMware backup proxy must have ReadOnly/Write permissions and root access to the NFS datastore.
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VMware Backup Proxy Selection
Veeam Backup & Replication selects backup proxies working in the Direct NFS access transport mode by the
following rules:
• If you instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to select a VMware backup proxy automatically for a job or
task, Veeam Backup & Replication picks a VMware backup proxy with the minimum number of hops to the
NFS datastore. If there are several backup proxies with the equal number of hops in the backup
infrastructure, Veeam Backup & Replication picks the least busy VMware backup proxy in the backup
infrastructure.
If all backup proxies with the minimum number of hops are busy at the moment,
Veeam Backup & Replication waits until these backup proxies are free. Veeam Backup & Replication does
not pick a VMware backup proxy that has a greater number of hops to the NFS datastore and works in the
Direct NFS access or Virtual appliance transport mode.
• If you select one or more backup proxies explicitly for a job or task, Veeam Backup & Replication does not
regard the number of hops to the NFS datastore. Veeam Backup & Replication picks the least busy
VMware backup proxy working in the Direct NFS access transport mode.
If all backup proxies working in the Direct NFS access transport mode are busy,
Veeam Backup & Replication waits until these backup proxies are free. Veeam Backup & Replication does
not pick a VMware backup proxy working in the Virtual appliance transport mode.
To detect the number of hops from a VMware backup proxy to the NFS datastore, Veeam Backup & Replication
uses the host discovery process. During host discovery, Veeam Backup & Replication obtains information about
the number of hops, checks to which NFS datastores the VMware backup proxy has access and what permissions
the VMware backup proxy has on NFS datastores.
The host discovery process rescans all Microsoft Windows machines to which the VMware backup proxy role is
assigned. The process starts automatically every 4 hours. Host discovery is also triggered when you change the
transport mode settings and choose to use the Direct storage access for the VMware backup proxy.
If necessary, you can start the host discovery process manually. To do this, perform the Rescan operation for a
machine to which the VMware backup proxy role is assigned.
1. The VMware backup proxy sends a request to the ESXi host to locate a VM on the NFS datastore.
4. The ESXi host retrieves metadata about the layout of VM disks on the storage (physical addresses of data
blocks).
6. The VMware backup proxy uses metadata to copy VM data blocks directly from the NFS datastore over
LAN.
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7. The VMware backup proxy processes copied data blocks and sends them to the target over LAN.
Data restore in the Direct NFS access transport mode is performed in the following way:
1. The VMware backup proxy retrieves data blocks from the backup repository or a datastore in the target
site.
2. The VMware backup proxy sends a request to the ESXi host to restore data to an NFS datastore.
4. Data blocks obtained from the VMware backup proxy are written to the NFS datastore over LAN.
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With the selected option Sa me as source from the Restore disk type drop-down list,
Veeam Backup & Replication restores the disk with the same type as in the backup. However, during the restore
in the Direct NFS access mode, the disk type can be affected by settings specified for your NFS server, VAAI, etc.
Thin disks can be restored as thin disks, thick eager disks as thick eager disks. Thus, Veeam Backup & Replication
converts thick lazy zeroed disks to thick eager disks, if you use VAAI, otherwise to thin disks. For more
information about disk types, see VMware Docs.
In the Virtual appliance mode, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the VMware SCSI HotAdd capability that allows
attaching devices to a VM while the VM is running. During backup, replication or restore disks of the processed
VM are attached to the VMware backup proxy. VM data is retrieved or written directly from/to the datastore,
instead of going through the network.
The Virtual appliance transport mode can be used for all operations where the VMware backup proxy is
engaged:
• Backup
• Replication
• VM copy
• Quick migration
• Entire VM restore
• VM disk restore
• Replica failback
• The VMware backup proxy and processed VMs must reside in the same datacenter.
• The VMware backup proxy must have access to disks of the VM that this proxy processes. For example, in
a replication job, the source VMware backup proxy must have access to the disks of the source VM, the
target proxy — to the disks of the replica. If a VMware backup proxy acts as both source and target proxy,
it must have access to the disks of the source VM and replica. In restore operations, the VMware backup
proxy must have access to disks of the restored VMs.
• [For NFS 3.0] If you plan to process VMs that store disks on the NFS datastore, you must configure
Veeam Backup & Replication to use the proxy on the same host as VMs. This is required due to an issue
described in this VMware KB article. For more information on how to configure the proxy, see this Veeam
KB article.
As an alternative, you can use ESXi 6.0 or higher and NFS 4.1.
• The VMware backup proxy must have the latest version of VMware Tools installed. Note that the backup
server installed on a VM can also perform the role of the VMware backup proxy that uses Virtual appliance
transport mode. In this case, make sure the backup server has the latest version of VMware Tools
installed.
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• SCSI 0:X controller must be present on a VMware backup proxy. In the opposite case, VM data processing
in the Virtual appliance transport mode will fail.
This limitation does not apply to VMFS-5 volumes that always have 1 MB file block size.
• For vSphere 5.5 and later the maximum supported VMDK size is 62 TB.
• [For Microsoft Windows proxy] Before running a data protection task, Veeam Backup & Replication
disables the volume automount feature, and it remains disabled after the data protection task is
completed.
• Backup and restore of IDE disks in the Virtual appliance mode is not supported.
• Backup and restore of SATA disks in the Virtual appliance mode is supported if you use VMware vSphere
6.0 and later.
• [For quick migration during Instant Recovery] Virtual appliance (HotAdd) transport mode cannot be used
if the role of the backup proxy and mount server or backup repository where the backup file is stored are
assigned to the same VM.
1. The backup server sends a request to the ESXi host to locate the necessary VM on the datastore.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication reads data directly from disks attached to the VMware backup proxy.
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6. When the VM processing is complete, VM disks are detached from the VMware backup proxy and the VM
snapshot is deleted.
The process of data restore in the Virtual appliance mode works in a similar manner. VM disks from the backup
are attached to the VMware backup proxy and Veeam Backup & Replication transports VM data to the target
datastore. After the restore process is finished, VM disks are detached from the VMware backup proxy.
ESXi host interacts with VMware Cloud on AWS through VMware vCenter. Veeam Backup & Replication performs
backup through the networkless Virtual appliance (HotAdd) mode.
• The VMware backup proxy VM must reside on an ESXi host connected to a VSAN cluster.
Veeam Backup & Replication will retrieve data of processed VMs over the I/O stack of the ESXi host on
which the VMware backup proxy is deployed.
• Disks of the VMware backup proxy VM must reside on the VSAN datastore.
If you have several backup proxies on ESXi hosts in the VSAN cluster, Veeam Backup & Replication chooses the
most appropriate VMware backup proxy to reduce the backup traffic on the VSAN cluster network. To choose a
VMware backup proxy, Veeam Backup & Replication checks HDDs directly attached to every ESXi host and
calculates the amount of VM data on these HDDs. The preference is given to the ESXi host that has a direct
access to an HDD with the maximum amount of VM data. This approach helps reduce workload on the ESXi I/O
stack during data transport.
NOTE
Even if disks of a VM are located on a host where the VMware backup proxy is deployed, VSAN traffic may
still be observed between hosts in the cluster. This behavior depends on the VSAN cluster itself and cannot
be modified in Veeam Backup & Replication.
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Network Mode
The Network mode can be used with any infrastructure configuration. In this mode, data is retrieved through the
ESXi host over LAN using the Network Block Device protocol (NBD).
The Network mode has low data transfer speed over LAN. To take the load off the LAN,
Veeam Backup & Replication provides two alternative modes: Direct Storage Access and Virtual Appliance.
However, the Network mode is the only applicable mode when the VMware backup proxy role is assigned to a
physical machine and the host uses local storage. Also, the Network mode can be the best choice if you have a
large virtual environment with hundreds of small VMs, with 10 Gb Ethernet networks and with a small change
rate.
The process of data retrieval in Network mode includes the following steps:
1. The VMware backup proxy sends a request to the ESXi host on which the processed VM is registered to
locate the VM on the datastore.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication instructs VMware vSphere to create a VMware vSphere VM snapshot.
4. ESXi host copies VM data blocks from the source storage and sends them to the VMware backup proxy
over LAN.
Note that the real data transfer speed may be significantly less than the available speed. This is because
the VMware backup proxy and the ESXi host communicate over the ESXi management network.
Veeam Backup & Replication processes VM disks in parallel. If VM disks are located on different storage types
(for example, on the SAN and local storage), Veeam Backup & Replication uses different transport modes to
process VM disks. In such scenario, it is strongly recommended that you select the Fa ilover to network mode if
p rimary mode fails, or is unavailable option when configuring the mode settings for the VMware backup proxy.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to switch to the Network transport mode and transfer VM data
over LAN if the primary transport mode — Direct storage access or Virtual appliance — fails during the job
session. This option is enabled by default to ensure that jobs and tasks can be completed successfully in any
situation.
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Note that data transport over LAN puts additional load on your production network and may potentially affect
performance if you accomplish data protection and disaster recovery tasks in business hours.
Before adding a VMware backup proxy, check prerequisites. Then use the New VMware Proxy wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New VMware Proxy Wizard
To launch the New VMware Proxy wizard, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ba ckup Proxies node and select Ad d Proxy. Alternatively, you can
click Ad d Proxy on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Choose Server
At the Server step of the wizard, specify server settings for the backup proxy:
1. From the Choose server list, select a Microsoft Windows or Linux server to which you want to assign the
backup proxy role.
If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure, click Ad d New to open the Ad d Server wizard. For
more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers or Adding Linux Servers.
NOTE
If a user account specified for the Linux server does not have root or elevated to root permission,
Veeam Backup & Replication will direct you to the E d it Linux Server wizard. In this wizard, you can
change the user account.
2. In the P roxy description field, provide a description. The default description contains information about
the user who added the backup proxy, date and time when the backup proxy was added.
3. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes the backup proxy configuration, defines to which
datastores it has access and automatically selects the best transport mode depending on the type of
connection between the backup proxy and datastores.
For Microsoft Windows backup proxy, you can manually select the data transport mode. Click Choose on
the right of the Tra nsport mode field. In the opened window, select one of the following modes: Direct
storage access , Virtual appliance or Network . For more information, see Transport Modes.
4. In the Op tions section of the Tra nsport Mode window, specify additional options for the selected
transport mode:
o [For the Direct storage access and Virtual appliance transport modes] If the primary transport mode
fails during the job session, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically fail over to the Network
transport mode. To disable failover, clear the Fa ilover to network mode if primary mode fails, or is
una vailable check box.
o [For the Network mode] You can choose to transfer VM data over an encrypted TLS connection. To do
this, select the E na ble host to proxy traffic encryption in Network mode (NBDSSL) check box. Traffic
encryption puts more stress on the CPU of an ESXi host but ensures secure data transfer.
NOTE
In some cases, the backup proxy may not be able to use some transport modes due to known
limitations. For more information, see Transport Modes. If you assign the backup proxy role to a
hardened repository, only the Network mode will be available. Other transport modes will be grayed
out.
5. In the Connected datastores field, specify datastores to which the backup proxy has a direct SAN or NFS
connection. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically detects all datastores that the backup
proxy can access.
You can set up the list of datastores if you want the backup proxy to work with specific datastores. Click
Choose on the right of the Connected datastores field, choose Ma nual selection and add datastores with
which the backup proxy must work in the Direct storage access mode.
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IMP ORTANT
If the backup proxy is located on the Veeam Cloud Connect service provider side, the list of selected
datastores is overridden. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically detects datastores
that the backup proxy can access.
6. In the Ma x concurrent tasks field, specify the number of tasks that the backup proxy must handle in
parallel. If this value is exceeded, the backup proxy will not start a new task until one of current tasks
finishes.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates one task per every VM disk. The recommended number of concurrent
tasks is calculated automatically based on available resources. Backup proxies with multi-core CPUs can
handle more concurrent tasks. For example, for a 4-core CPU, it is recommended that you specify
maximum 8 concurrent tasks, for an 8-core CPU — 16 concurrent tasks. When defining the number of
concurrent tasks, consider network traffic throughput in the virtual infrastructure.
IMP ORTANT
7. Click Nex t.
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Step 3. Select Proxy VM
The additional P roxy VM step will appear in the following cases:
• If the disk.EnableUUID parameter is not set for the selected Linux server. In this case, select this Linux
server once again at the P roxy VM step. After that, Veeam Backup & Replication will need to reboot the
server to set the disk.EnableUUID parameter to TRUE.
• If Veeam Backup & Replication cannot identify the selected VM: for example, there are two VMs with the
same BIOS UUID or BIOS UUID is not specified. In this case, choose the VM from the backup infrastructure
at the P roxy VM step.
To select a VM:
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Step 4. Configure Traffic Rules
At the Tra ffic Rules step of the wizard, configure network traffic rules. These rules help you throttle and encryp t
traffic transferred between backup infrastructure components. For more information, see Configuring Network
Traffic Rules.
The list of network traffic rules contains only the rules that are applicable to the VMware backup pr oxy: its IP
address falls into the IP range of the rule.
1. Click Ma nage network traffic rules link at the bottom of the wizard.
2. In the opened window, you will see all global network traffic rules.
3. Select the rule that you want to modify and click E d it.
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Step 5. Apply VMware Backup Proxy Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for the VMware backup proxy to be added to the backup infrastructure.
Then click Nex t.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, check that the VMware backup proxy is added. Then click Finish to exit the
wizard.
3. In the working area, select the VMware backup proxy and click E d it P roxy on the ribbon or right-click the
VMware backup proxy and select P roperties.
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4. Edit VMware backup proxy settings as required.
You can disable all VMware backup proxies, including the default backup proxy installed on the backup server.
Do not disable all VMware backup proxies at once. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to
perform backup, replication and restore operations that use VMware backup proxie s.
3. In the working area, select the VMware backup proxy and click Disable Proxy on the ribbon or right-click
the backup proxy and select Disable proxy.
3. In the working area, select the VMware backup proxy and click Disable Proxy on the ribbon once again or
right-click the VMware backup proxy and select Disable proxy.
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Removing VMware Backup Proxies
You can permanently remove a VMware backup proxy from the backup infrastructure. When you remove a
VMware backup proxy, Veeam Backup & Replication unassigns the VMware backup proxy role from the server,
and this server is no longer used as a VMware backup proxy. The actual server remains in the backup
infrastructure.
You can remove all VMware backup proxies, including the default backup proxy installed on the backup server.
Do not remove all VMware backup proxies at once. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to
perform backup, replication and restore operations that use VMware backup proxies.
You cannot remove a VMware backup proxy that is explicitly selected in any backup, replication or VM copy job.
To remove such VMware backup proxy, you first need to delete a reference to this VMware backup proxy in the
job settings.
3. In the working area, select the VMware backup proxy and click Remove Proxy on the ribbon or right-click
the VMware backup proxy and select Remove.
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VMware CDP Proxy
A VMware CDP proxy is a component that operates as a data mover and transfers data between the source and
target hosts. Basically, VMware CDP proxy performs the following tasks:
• Sends data to the storage in the disaster recovery site or another VMware CDP proxy
We recommend that you configure at least two VMware CDP proxies: one (source proxy) in the production site
and one (target proxy) in the disaster recovery site. To optimize performance of several concurrent tasks, you
can use several VMware CDP proxies in each site. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will distribute the
restore workload between available proxies on per-task basis, taking into account proxy connectivity and their
current load. For more information on which proxies are considered the most appropriate for continuous data
protection, see How CDP Works.
Design your system in such a way that one VMware CDP proxy is used only as a source or only as target proxy.
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For example, if you have cross cluster or cross host replication (from ESXi 1 to ESXi 2, and f rom ESXi 2 to ESXi 1),
it is better to have four VMware CDP proxies: one source proxy and one target proxy for data flow from ESXi 1 to
ESXi 2, and one source proxy and one target proxy for data flow from ESXi 2 to ESXi 1.
NOTE
If you deploy VMware CDP proxies on virtual machines, we recommend you to locate source proxies on the
source host, target proxies on the target host.
• Veeam CDP Proxy Service manages all CDP activities such as data aggregation, data compression and
decompression, data transfer and other.
• Veeam Installer Service is an auxiliary service that is installed and started on any Windows server once it is
added to the list of managed servers in the Veeam Backup & Replication console. This service analyzes the
system, installs and upgrades necessary components and services depending on the role selected for the
server.
If a VMware CDP proxy runs out of the memory or cannot allocate space in the memory, the proxy sta rts storing
data into the cache. If the cache and RAM gets full and there is no "free" VMware CDP proxy,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the protective mechanism. However, disk processing performance will be
low.
Data is deleted from the cache or memory only after the proxy gets a notification that the target host has
successfully saved data sent by the proxy.
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Requirements for VMware CDP Proxy
Before you assign the role of a backup proxy, check the following requirements:
• For system requirements, see System Requirements for VMware CDP Proxy Server.
• Before assigning the role of the VMware CDP proxy to a server, you must first add a vCenter server or
VMware Cloud Director server to the backup infrastructure.
• [For VMware CDP proxies deployed on physical servers] Fast network between hosts and VMware CDP
proxies is required.
To add a VMware CDP proxy, use the New VMware CDP Proxy wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New VMware Proxy Wizard
To launch the New VMware CDP Proxy wizard, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ba ckup Proxies node and select Ad d Proxy. Alternatively, you can
click Ad d Proxy on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Select Server and Traffic Ports
At the Server step of the wizard, select a server which you want to use as the VMware CDP proxy, specify
description and ports that will be used for communication:
1. From the Choose server drop-down list, select a physical or virtual Microsoft Windows-based or Linux-
based server to which you want to assign the VMware CDP proxy role.
If you have not added a server to the backup infrastructure, click Ad d New to open the Ad d Server wizard,
and follow the instructions from the Adding Microsoft Windows Servers or Adding Linux Servers section.
3. In the CDP host traffic port field, specify a port that the source and target host will use to communicate
with the VMware CDP proxy.
4. In the CDP proxy traffic port field, specify a port that the proxy will use to communicate with other
VMware CDP proxies.
IMP ORTANT
You must specify different values in the CDP host traffic port and CDP proxy traffic p ort fields.
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Step 3. Configure Cache
At the Ca che step of the wizard, specify the path to a folder where cached data will be stored and how much
space can be used for storing the cache.
For more information on the cache, see VMware CDP Proxy Cache.
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Step 4. Configure Network Traffic Rules
At the Tra ffic Rules step of the wizard, configure network traffic rules. These rules help you reduce, throttle and
encrypt traffic sent between backup infrastructure components. For more information, see Network Traffic
Management.
The list of network traffic rules contains only the rules that are applicable to the VMware CDP proxy — this
means that the proxy IP address falls into the IP range of a rule.
2. To edit or remove a rule, select the required rule and click E d it or Remove.
3. To add a rule, click Ad d and follow the instructions from the Configuring Network Traffic Rules section.
4. To choose networks over which Veeam Backup & Replication will send data between backup infrastructure
components, click Networks. Then follow the instructions in steps 3 –6 in the Specifying Preferred
Networks section.
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Step 5. Review Settings and Install Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review components which are already installed on the server and which will be
installed. Click Ap p ly to start installation of missing components.
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Step 6. Apply Proxy Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all the required
components. Click Nex t to complete the procedure of the VMware CDP proxy role assignment.
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Step 7. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the server added as the VMware CDP proxy and click Finish
to exit the wizard.
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Cache Repository
A cache repository is a storage location where Veeam Backup & Replication keeps temporary cached metadata
for the data backed up by the file share backup jobs. For more information about cache repository, see NAS
Backup Support.
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Backup Repository
A backup repository is a storage location where Veeam keeps backup files, VM copies and me tadata for
replicated VMs. To configure a backup repository, you can use the following storage types:
• Direct attached storage. You can add virtual and physical servers as backup repositories:
o Linux server
o Hardened Repository
• Network attached storage. You can add the following network shares as backup repositories:
o NFS share
• Ded uplicating storage appliances. You can add the following deduplicating storage appliances as backup
repositories:
o ExaGrid
o HPE StoreOnce
o Infinidat InfiniGuard
o Quantum DXi
• Ob ject storage . You can use cloud storage services as backup repositories. For details, see Object Storage
Repository.
NOTE
Do not configure multiple backup repositories pointing to the same location or using the same path.
Related Topics
• Scale-Out Backup Repository
• External Repository
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Microsoft Windows Repository Deployment
To communicate with a Microsoft Windows-based repository, Veeam Backup & Replication uses two Data
Movers that are responsible for data processing and transfer:
When any job addresses the backup repository, Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy establishes a
connection with Veeam Data Mover on the backup repository, enabling efficient data transfer over LAN or WAN.
The Data Mover is installed automatically when you add a server to Veeam Backup & Replication as a managed
server.
• The role of the repository can be assigned to a Microsoft Windows machine (physical or virtual). The
machine must meet the system requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server.
• If you want to use Fast Clone in the Microsoft Windows backup repository, the machine must also meet
requirements listed in the Fast Clone section.
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Linux Server
You can add a Linux server with local, directly attached storage or mounted NFS as a backup repository. The
storage can be a local disk, directly attached disk-based storage (such as a USB hard drive), NFS share, or
iSCSI/FC SAN LUN in case the server is connected into the SAN fabric.
A Linux repository with single-use credentials and the immutability feature provides additional protection for
your backup files. For more information, see Hardened Repository.
For more information about Veeam Data Movers communication with a Linux -based server, see Veeam Data
Movers.
Veeam Data Mover establishes a connection with the source-side Data Mover on the backup proxy, enabling
efficient data transfer over LAN or WAN.
• The role of the repository can be assigned to a Linux machine (physical or virtual). The machine must meet
the system requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server.
• If Veeam Data Mover is non-persistent, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the SSH protocol to
communicate with Linux backup repositories and requires the SCP utility in Linux repos itories. Make sure
that the SSH daemon is properly configured and SCP utility is available on the Linux host.
• If you want to use Fast Clone in the Linux backup repository, the machine must also meet requirements
listed in the Fast Clone section.
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You can place both repositories (hardened and standard) on one Linux server only if you used single -use
credentials when adding the host. Standard repository is a repository added with persistent credent ials and
disabled immutability. For more hardened repository limitations, see Requirements and Limitations.
Hardened Repository
To protect your backup files from loss as a result of malware activity or unplanned actions, you can add to your
backup infrastructure a hardened repository based on a Linux server. The hardened repository supports the
following features:
• Immutability: when you add a hardened repository, you specify the time period while backup files must be
immutable. During this period, backup files stored in this repository cannot be modified or deleted.
• Sing le-use credentials: credentials that are used only once to deploy Veeam Data Mover, or transport
service, while adding the Linux server to the backup infrastructure. These credentials are not stored in the
backup infrastructure. Even if the Veeam Backup & Replication server is compromised, the attacker cannot
get the credentials and connect to the hardened repository.
NOTE
For security reasons, you cannot assign other roles to the hardened repository except for the VMware
backup proxy working in the Network mode. For more information, see Hardened Repository as VMware
Backup Proxy.
Supported Backups
In the hardened repository, you can store the following backups created with backup and backup copy jobs:
• Image-level virtual machine backups and backup copies (VMware, Hyper-V, Cloud Director, Nutanix AHV,
RHV)
• Physical machine backups and backup copies (Microsoft Windows, Linux, MacOS, AIX, Solaris)
• Cloud machine backup copies (Microsoft Azure, AWS, Google Cloud Platform)
• Application-aware processing log backups and backup copies (Microsoft SQL transaction log files, Oracle
archived log files, PostgreSQL WAL files)
• Enterprise application backups and backup copies (SAP HANA, Oracle RMAN, SAP on Oracle, Microsoft SQL
Server)
Also, backups created with VeeamZIP, Copy Backup jobs, Move Backup jobs, and Export Backup jobs are
supported.
The immutability service runs with root permissions as a child process of the transport service. It checks file
immutability attributes every 20 minutes, calculates the time until a file needs to be immutable, and sets or
removes the immutable attribute.
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The described mechanism prevents backup files from being deleted or modified by a potential attacker even if
they somehow exploit the transport service. For more information about the hardened repository architecture,
see Protect against Ransomware with Immutable Backups.
For image-level VM backups and physical machine backups, immutability works in the following way:
1. For each backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a.veeam.N.lock file that contain information
about the immutability time period. Also, the xattr attribute with immutable time period is set on each
backup file. These files are stored on the hardened repository.
2. Backup files become immutable for the configured time period (minimum 7 days, maximum — 9999). The
immutability period is set according to the following:
o The count of the immutability period starts from the moment the last restore point in the active
backup chain is created. For example:
▪ The full backup file of the active chain was created on January 12. The first increment was
created on January 13. The second and last increment was created on January 14.
▪ The immutability period is set for 10 days and will be automatically extended for all backup files
in the active chain. If there are several chains in the backup, Veeam Backup & Replication does
not extend the immutability for inactive chains.
▪ Full and incremental backup files will be immutable until January 24: the date of the last restore
point creation (January 14) + 10 days.
o The immutability flag is set on the file only when the current backup session is completed.
NOTE
• If you use per-machine backup with single metadata file or per-machine backup with
separate metadata files format for storing backups and the restore point was incomplete,
the immutability flag will be set only on successfully created backup files.
• If you use single-file backup format for storing backups and the restore point was
incomplete, the immutability flag will not be set on the backup file.
For more information about backup chain formats, see Backup Chain Formats.
o If you increase the immutability period in repository settings, a new value will be applied for the
active and next chains. If you decrease the immutability period, a new value will be applied only for
the next chains.
3. When the immutability time period expires, the immutability service makes backup files mutable again so
they can be deleted or modified.
For application-aware processing log backups, immutability works in the following way:
1. For each log backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a.veeam.N.lock file that contain
information about immutability time period. These files are stored on the hardened repository.
2. Log backup files become immutable for the configured time period (minimum 7 days, maximum — 9999).
The immutability period is set according to the following:
o Newly created log backup files are being updated several times according to the interval settings.
Thus, the count of the immutability period starts and the immutability flag is set on the file only when
the log backup job finished writing any data to the VLB file.
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o The immutability period is not extended for log backup files in the active chain. If there are several
chains in the backup, Veeam Backup & Replication also does not extend the immutability for old
chains.
IMP ORTANT
If the immutability period is expired for log backup files in the active chain, these files become
mutable and may be potentially removed. In this case, the application restore may fail as the
log backup chain became incomplete. To mitigate risks, make sure that the immutability period
covers all backups in the active backup chain.
o If you increase the immutability period in repository settings, a new value will be applied for all log
backup files created after the last successful image-level VM backup or physical machine backup. If
you decrease the immutability period, a new value will be applied only for the next log backup files.
3. When the immutability time period expires, the immutability service makes backup files mutable again so
they can be deleted or modified.
For information on how immutability works for NAS backups and enterprise application backups, see the
following sections:
• NAS Backup
NOTE
Avoid mixing mutable and immutable extents within one scale-out backup repository.
If you use the Capacity Tier with move option, note that having a hardened repository as a performance extent
will affect the Capacity Tier behavior. You will not be able to move immutable backup files, because they cannot
be deleted from the performance extent. Veeam Backup & Replication will copy such backup files to the
Capacity Tier. When the immutability time period is over, Veeam Backup & Replication will delete these files
from the performance extent. For more information on copy and move policies, s ee Copying Backups to Capacity
Tier and Moving Backups to Capacity Tier.
If you evacuate your backups from an immutable performance extent, Veeam Backup & Replication will copy
them instead of moving. When the immutability time period is over, you will need to delete these files manually.
If the target extent is also immutable, the immutability of the target extent will apply to copied backup files.
For more information on evacuating backups, see Evacuating Backups from Performance Extents.
When you evacuate backups to the hardened Linux extent, the immutability period of the full chain will be
chosen as maximum between the following values:
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• The time of creation of the last restore point in the chain plus the immutability period determine d for the
target extent.
NOTE
For security reasons, only the Network mode (NBD) is supported. If you assign the backup proxy role to a
hardened repository, other transport modes will not be available for selection.
Retention Scenarios
Consider the following retention scenarios:
• An immutability retention overrides a job retention: if the job retention period is shorter than the
immutability period, Veeam Backup & Replication does not delete backup files when the retention period
is over, but only when the immutability period expires.
• Veeam Backup & Replication compares the immutability period of the backup repository and the GFS
backup file lifetime, and sets an immutability period for full backup files with GFS retention policy as equal
to the longest of these periods. For example: the backup repository immutability period is 10 days; the
GFS backup file lifetime is 3 years; the backup file will be immutable for 3 years; the increments from this
full backup file will be immutable for 10 days from the moment of the last increment crea tion.
• If a hardened repository is a part of a scale-out backup repository with the capacity tier added and the
move policy enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication ignores the GFS retention policy. The immutability time
period for full backup files equals the period specified in the setting of a hardened repository.
• The immutability period for backup files produced with VeeamZIP or Export Backup jobs is set according
to the following:
o [With enabled retention period] Veeam Backup & Replication compares the immutability period of the
backup repository and the retention period, and sets an immutability period for backup files with
retention period as equal to the longest of these periods. For example: the backup repository
immutability period is 1 month; the VeeamZIP or Export Backup backup file lifetime is 7 years; the
backup file will be immutable for 7 years.
NOTE
If a hardened repository is a part of a scale-out backup repository with the capacity tier added
and the move policy enabled and is used as a target for VeeamZIP or Export Backup jobs,
Veeam Backup & Replication ignores the VeeamZIP or Export Backup retention period. The
immutability time period for VeeamZIP or Export Backup backup files equals the period
specified in the setting of a hardened repository.
o [With disabled retention period] Veeam Backup & Replication ignores the VeeamZIP or Export Backup
retention period. The immutability time period for VeeamZIP or Export Backup backup fil es equals the
period specified in the setting of a hardened repository.
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Linux Server
• The role of the hardened repository can be assigned to a Linux machine with local or remotely attached
block storage. The machine must meet system requirements for backup repository servers. The Linux
distribution must be 64-bit due to Veeam Data Mover requirements.
NOTE
To reduce the attack surface, it is strongly recommended to use a physical machine with local
storage.
• The Linux machine file system must support immutable files and extended attributes modified by the
chattr and setxattr commands. We recommend using XFS for performance and space efficiency
reasons (block cloning support).
• You must add the Linux machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server. The
hardened repository cannot be shared between different Veeam Backup & Replication servers.
Repository
• To store backup files in a repository, use only a forward incremental backup method with enabled active
full backup or synthetic full backup. Once a backup file becomes immutable, it can be merged or deleted
only when the immutability time period expires. For this reason, you cannot select a reverse or a forever
forward incremental backup method.
• For importing a backup, use VBK backup files. Metadata files of a backup chain (.VBM) cannot be
immutable because they are updated on every job pass.
Immutability Feature
• To use the immutability feature for backup copy jobs, enable the GFS retention policy. For more
information, see Long-Term Retention Policy (GFS).
• Do not use the immutability feature for a Nutanix Mine infrastructure. As Mine repositories contain thin-
provisioned disks, there may be the case when Veeam Backup & Replication uses full storage capacity of a
repository and cannot delete backup files from the file system.
1. Create a user account that you will use to connect to the Linux server and deploy required
Veeam Backup & Replication components including persistent Veeam Data Mover, or transport service. For
more information about Veeam Data Movers, see this section.
adduser <username>
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NOTE
To install persistent Veeam Data Mover, the user account you created must have root permissions.
To evaluate account privileges, you can add it to the sudoers file. In that case, when you add a
Linux server as a hardened repository to the backup infrastructure and specify single -use credentials,
you do not need to enter the password for the root account. But after the repository is added, you
must remove the user account from the file. For more details, see Step 3. Specify Linux Server.
2. Create a separate directory where immutable backups will be stored. Allow access to this directory only
for the user account you use to connect to the Linux server. Use the following commands:
mkdir <dir_path>
Both owner and group must be the account you use to connect to the Linux server.
o To allow access to the directory only for its owner and root account:
Before you begin, check requirements and limitations and prepare a Linux server. Then use the New Ba ckup
Rep ository wizard to add the hardened repository:
If you upgrade to Veeam Backup & Replication 12 and have Linux backup repositories with enabled Ma k e recent
b a ckups immutable for check box, see Upgrading Linux Repository to Hardened Repository.
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Step 1. Launch New Backup Repository Wizard
To launch the New Backup Repository wizard, perform the following steps:
1. Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and
select Ad d Backup Repository. Alternatively, you can click Ad d Repository on the ribbon.
2. In the Ad d Backup Repository window, select Direct attached storage > Linux ( Hardened Repository).
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Step 2. Specify Hardened Repository Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the repository. The default description
contains information about the user who added the repository, date and time when the repository was added.
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Step 3. Specify Linux Server
From the Rep ository server list, select a Linux server that you want to use as a hardened repository. Click
P op ulate to see a list of disks connected to the server, their capacity and free space.
The Rep ository server list contains only those servers that are added to the backup infrastructure. If the server is
not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right and follow the wizard:
1. At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a full DNS name or IP address and description of the Linux server.
The default description contains information about the user who added the server, date and time when
the server was added.
2. At the SSH Connection step of the wizard, specify single-use, or temporary, credentials to connect to the
Linux server and deploy Veeam Data Mover. Note that Veeam Backup & Replication does not store these
credentials in the configuration database.
NOTE
The user account you specified must have the home directory created on the Linux server.
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The E levate a ccount privileges automatically check box is used by default. If you did not add the user
account to the sudoers file, select the Use "su" if "sudo" fails check box and enter the password for the
root account. For more information on these check boxes, see Linux Accounts (User Name and Password).
IMP ORTANT
If you added the user account to the sudoers file, you do not need to select the Use " su" if "sudo"
fa ils check box and specify the root password. But after the server is added, you must remove the
user account from the file.
If you want to change default SSH settings, click Ad vanced. For more details, see Step 3. Specify
Credentials and SSH Settings in the New Linux Server wizard.
3. At the Review step of the wizard, review what Veeam Backup & Replication components are already
installed on the server and what components will be installed. Click Ap p ly to add the Linux server to the
backup infrastructure.
4. At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the Linux server and click Finish to exit the wizard.
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Step 4. Configure Hardened Repository Settings
At the Rep ository step of the wizard, specify path and repository settings:
1. In the Loca tion section, specify a path to the directory that you created to store immutable backups when
preparing Linux server. Click P op ulate to check capacity and available free space in the selected location.
2. Select the Use fast cloning on XFS volumes check box to enable copy-on-write functionality. For more
information, see Fast Clone.
4. Specify load control settings to limit the number of concurrent tasks and prevent possible timeouts of
storage I/O operations. For more details, see Configure Backup Repository Settings.
5. If you want to configure additional settings for the repository, click Ad vanced. For more details, see
Configure Backup Repository Settings.
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Step 5. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use for file-level
and application items restore. For more details, see Specify Mount Server Settings.
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Step 6. Review and Apply Settings
At the Review step of the wizard, review the hardened repository settings and list of components that will be
installed.
If the backup repository contains backups that were previously created with Veeam Backup & Replication, select
the Sea rch the repository for existing backups and import th em automatically check box.
Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing backup files and display them in
the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Imp orted > Backups node.
If the backup repository contains guest file system index files that were previously created by
Veeam Backup & Replication, select the Imp ort guest file system index check box. Index files will be imported
with backup files, and you will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported backups.
Click Ap p ly and wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to install and configure all required components. At the
Summary step of the wizard, review details of the added hardened repository and click Finish to exit the wizard.
To maximize the repository security and protect your data from different attacks, after the deployment of
Veeam Data Mover, change file permissions for authentication certificates, so that only the root account and the
Veeam Data Mover user can read the certificate files. Use the following command:
You can also use chmod 770 to add same permissions to the group.
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IMP ORTANT
SSH connection is necessary only for the deployment and upgrade of Veeam Data Mover. For security
purposes, after you added the hardened repository, disable SSH connection for the user account you use to
connect to the Linux server. If you can work with the server from the console, disable SSH connection for
the server itself.
NOTE
If a Linux backup repository with enabled Ma k e recent backups immutable for check box was added with
root credentials, the upgrade process will be interrupted. To continue it, you must specify a user account
with non-root permissions for this repository. For more information, see this KB article.
1. On the Linux server, change permissions for the directory where backups are stored. Both owner and
group must be the account with non-root permissions you use to connect to the Linux server.
2. Go to the Veeam Backup & Replication console and perform the following steps:
a. Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view and select Ma naged Servers in the navigation pane. Right-click
the Linux server, select P roperties, go to the SSH Connection step of the wizard, and specify
credentials from the previous step. Note that these credentials must be single-use.
b. Remove backup files stored on the Linux repository from the backup configuration. To do this, go to
the Ba ckups > Disk node and select the backup file. Hold [Ctrl] and right-click the file. Then click
Remove from configuration.
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c. Add the same Linux server to the backup infrastructure as a hardened repository using the New
Ba ckup Repository wizard. At the Review step of the wizard, select the Sea rch the repository for
ex isting backups and import them automatically check box to detect existing backup files and display
them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Imported > Backups node. For more
information, see Adding Hardened Repository.
d. Go to the Job s node and edit the job associated with the Linux repository. At the Storage step of the
wizard, select the hardened repository from the Ba ckup repository list.
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Click Ma p backup and specify imported backups from the previous step.
e. Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view and remove the Linux backup repository from the backup
infrastructure.
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An SMB share cannot host Veeam Data Movers. For this reason, to communicate with the SMB share, you need
to deploy a gateway server. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically deploy a Veeam Data Mover on this
gateway server. For more information, see Gateway Server.
When any job addresses the SMB backup repository, Veeam Data Mover on the gateway server establishes a
connection with Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy, enabling efficient data transfer over LAN or
WAN.
If you plan to move VM data to an off-site SMB repository over a WAN link, it is recommended that you deploy
an additional gateway server in the remote site, closer to the SMB repository.
NFS Share
You can use NFS shares as backup repositories.
NOTE
Windows-based gateway servers cannot be used for NFS shares with k rb5i and k rb5p support.
An NFS share cannot host Veeam Data Movers. For this reason, to communicate with the NFS share, you need to
deploy a gateway server. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically deploy a Veeam Data Mover on this
gateway server. For more information, see Gateway Server.
When any job addresses the NFS backup repository, Veeam Data Mover on the gateway server establishes a
connection with Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy, enabling efficient data transfer over LAN or
WAN.
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If you plan to move VM data to an off-site NFS repository over a WAN link, it is recommended that you deploy
an additional gateway server in the remote site, closer to the NFS repository.
• The machine must meet the system requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• The role of the NFS repository can be assigned to a Microsoft Windows or Linux machine (physical or
virtual) or to NAS storage supporting NFS protocol.
• The NFS repository must present read and write access rights to the gateway.
Note that Veeam Backup & Replication does not support multipathing for NFS repository.
• The role of the gateway server can be assigned to a Microsoft Windows or Linux machine (physical or
virtual). The machine must meet the system requirements. For more information, see System
Requirements.
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server.
• [For automatic gateway selection] The backup server must have read and write access in the NFS
repository.
• [For automatic gateway selection] If you configure automatic gateway selection for NFS repository,
Veeam Backup & Replication may use the same machines as gateways for the repository and as proxies for
backup jobs. Make sure that the backup proxies meet the following requirements:
o If you explicitly choose backup proxies for backup jobs, provide read and write access rights to all
proxies chosen for backup jobs that are targeted to the NFS repository.
o If you configure automatic proxy selection for backup jobs, provide read and write access rights to all
proxies in the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure.
o If backup jobs that are targeted to the NFS repository use Linux proxies, check that the NFS client
package is installed on the Linux proxy server.
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Requirements and Limitations for Linux Gateway Server
In addition to the general requirements, the Linux gateway server must meet the following requirements:
• The Linux gateway server must have NFS client package installed.
• The credentials to authenticate with the Linux gateway server must have root or elevated to root
permission.
• Veeam Backup & Replication uses the highest NFS protocol version supported by the gateway and the
repository.
Note that the suffix indicating the NFS version in the NFS share properties may not be displa yed correctly,
this is a known issue.
TIP
If the NFS protocol version has changed (for example, if you updated the NFS share), click through the E dit
Ba ckup Repository wizard to update the information in Veeam Backup & Replication.
In This Section
• Dell Data Domain
• ExaGrid
• HPE StoreOnce
• Quantum DXi
• Infinidat InfiniGuard
To support the DD Boost technology, Veeam Backup & Replication leverages the following Dell Data Domain
components:
• DD Boost library. The DD Boost library is a component of the Dell Data Domain system. The DD Boost
library is embedded into the Veeam Data Mover setup. When you add a Microsoft Windows server to the
backup infrastructure, the DD Boost Library is automatically installed on the added server together with
Veeam Data Mover.
• DD Boost server. The DD Boost server is a target-side component. The DD Boost server runs on the OS of
the Dell Data Domain storage system.
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Backup Infrastructure
To communicate with Dell Data Domain, Veeam Backup & Replication uses two Veeam Data Movers that are
responsible for data processing and transfer:
The Dell Data Domain storage cannot host Veeam Data Mover. For this reason, to communicate with the Dell
Data Domain storage, you need to deploy a gateway server. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
deploy Veeam Data Mover on this gateway server. For more information, see Gateway Server.
When any job addresses the backup repository, Veeam Data Mover on the gateway server establishes a
connection with Veeam Data Mover on the backup proxy, enabling efficient data transfer over LAN or WAN.
You define what gateway server to use when you assign a backup repository role to Dell Data Domain. You can
define the gateway server explicitly or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to select it automatically.
IMP ORTANT
For Dell Data Domain storage systems working over Fibre Channel, you must explicitly define the gateway
server that will communicate with Dell Data Domain. As a gateway server, you must use a Microsoft
Windows server that is added to the backup infrastructure and has access to Dell Data Domain over Fibre
Channel.
Supported Protocols
Veeam Backup & Replication supports Dell Data Domain storage systems working over the following protocols:
• TCP/IP protocol: Veeam Backup & Replication communicates with the Dell Data Domain server by sending
commands over the network.
• Fibre Channel protocol: Veeam Backup & Replication communicates with the Dell Data Domain Fibre
Channel server by sending SCSI commands over Fibre Channel.
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Limitations and Recommendations for Dell Data Domain
If you plan to use Dell Data Domain as a backup repository, consider the following limitations and
recommendations:
• We strongly recommend that you follow recommendations from this list and also recommendations from
this Veeam KB article.
• Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12, deduplicating storage appliances use the TLS connection.
You can disable the TLS connection with a registry value for the deduplicating storage appliances that do not
support the TLS connection. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
• Use of Dell Data Domain with DD Boost does not guarantee improvement of job performance. It reduces
the load on the network and improves the network throughput.
• NFS services must be enabled on Dell Data Domain. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be
able to access the storage system.
• Do not enable encryption for the jobs targeted at the deduplication storage appliance. Encryption has a
negative effect on the deduplication ratio. For more information, see Data Encryption.
Encryption can also affect the backup size: the size of a backup can be larger than the size of the original
VM. When you enable encryption, set data processing block size to 4 MB, and leave decompression on
target and block alignment enabled (enabled by default), the size of the backup increases by 1 MB for
each 4 MB data block. This is because Veeam Backup & Replication reads blocks of 4 MB, encrypts them,
adds 16 KB metadata to each data block and then aligns data blocks. This results in that each 4 MB data
block on the source becomes 5 MB block on the target.
• When you create a backup job targeted at an Dell Data Domain backup repository,
Veeam Backup & Replication will offer you to switch to optimized job settings and use the 4 MB size of
data block for workload data processing (the Storage optimization setting). It is recommended that you
use optimized job settings. Large data blocks produce a smaller metadata table that requires less memory
and CPU resources to process. For more information on storage optimization, see Data Compression and
Deduplication.
• Dell Data Domain does not support the reverse incremental backup method.
• You cannot use Dell Data Domain backup repositories as sources or targets for file copy jobs.
• The length of forward incremental and forever forward incremental backup chains (chains that contain one
full backup and a set of subsequent incremental backups) cannot be greater than 60 restore points. To
overcome this limitation, schedule full backups (active or synthetic) to split the backup chain into shorter
series. For example, to perform backups at 30-minute intervals 24 hours a day, you must schedule
synthetic fulls every day. In this scenario, intervals immediately after midnight may be skipped due to
duration of synthetic processing. For more information, see How Synthetic Full Backup Works.
• If you connect to an Dell Data Domain backup repository over Fibre Cha nnel, you must explicitly define a
gateway server to communicate with Dell Data Domain. As a gateway server, you must use a Microsoft
Windows server that is added to the backup infrastructure and has access to the Dell Data Domain backup
repository over Fibre Channel.
• During backup repository rescan, Veeam Backup & Replication detects if the hard stream limit is set for a
storage unit, and displays this information in backup repository rescan statistics. If the hard stream limit is
exceeded when Veeam Backup & Replication runs tasks against the backup repository,
Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to create new I/O streams.
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Dell Data Domain Supported Features
The DD Boost technology offers a set of features for advanced data processing. Veeam Backup & Replication
supports the following features:
• Virtual Synthetics
In addition to these technologies, Veeam Backup & Replication supports in-flight data encryption and per
storage unit streams.
NOTE
You cannot configure Managed File Replication using Veeam Backup & Replication. However, you can
import and map backups replicated between Data Domain storage systems to backup, backup copy or
replication jobs, or perform restore operations from such backups.
Without Distributed Segment Processing, Dell Data Domain performs deduplication on the Dell Data Dom ain
storage system. The gateway server sends unfiltered data blocks to Dell Data Domain over the network. Data
segmentation, filtering and compression operations are performed on the target side, before data is written to
disk.
With Distributed Segment Processing, operations on data segmentation, filtering and compression are
performed on the gateway server side. The gateway server sends only unique data blocks to Dell Data Domain.
As a result, the load on the network reduces and the network throughput impr oves.
Without Advanced Load Balancing, every gateway server connects to Data Domain on a dedicated Ethernet link.
Such configuration does not provide an ability to balance the data transfer load across the links. If a network
error occurs during the data transfer process, the backup job fails and needs to b e restarted.
Advanced Load Balancing allows you to aggregate several Ethernet links into one interface group. As a result,
Dell Data Domain automatically balances the traffic load coming from several gateway servers united in one
group. If some link in the group goes down, Dell Data Domain automatically performs link failover, and the
backup traffic is routed to a working link.
Virtual Synthetics
Veeam Backup & Replication supports Virtual Synthetic Fulls by Dell Data Domain. Virtual Synthetic Fulls let you
synthesize a full backup on the target backup storage without physically copying data from source datastores.
To construct a full backup file, Dell Data Domain uses pointers to existing data segments on the target backup
storage. Virtual Synthetic Fulls reduce the workload on the network and backup infrastructure components and
increase the backup job performance.
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In-Flight Data Encryption
Veeam Backup & Replication supports in-flight encryption introduced in Dell Data Domain Boost 3.0. If
necessary, you can enable data encryption at the backup repository level. Veeam Backup & Replication will
leverage the Dell Data Domain technology to encrypt data transported between the DD Boost library and Data
Domain system.
Dell Data Domain storage systems are optimized for sequential I/O operations. However, data blocks of VM
disks in backup files are stored not sequentially, but in the random order. If data blocks of VM disks are read at
random, the restore performance from backups on Dell Data Domain degrades.
To accelerate the restore process, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a map of data blocks in backup files. It
uses the created map to read data blocks of VM disks from backup files sequentially, as they reside on disk.
Veeam Backup & Replication writes data blocks to target in the order in which they come from the target Veeam
Data Mover, restoring several VM disks in parallel.
This accelerated restore mechanism is enabled by default, and is used for the entire VM restore scenario.
NOTE
To further accelerate the process of entire VM restore, Veeam Backup & Replication reads VM data from
Dell Data Domain in multiple threads.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication opens all backup files in the backup chain, reads metadata from these backup
files and caches this metadata on the backup proxy that is assigned for the restore task.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the cached metadata to build a map of data blocks. The map contains
references to VM data blocks, sorted by VM disks.
3. Every VM disks is processed in a separate task. For every task, Veeam Backup & Replication starts a
separate Veeam Data Mover on the backup proxy.
Veeam Data Movers read data blocks of VM disks from the backup repository sequentially, as these blocks
reside on disk, and put read data blocks to the buffer on the backup proxy.
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4. Data blocks are written to target in the order in which they come from the target Veeam Data Mover.
For every VM disk, Veeam Backup & Replication starts a separate Veeam Data Mover on the backup proxy. For
example, if you restore a VM with 10 disks, Veeam Backup & Replication starts 10 Veeam Data Movers on the
backup proxy.
The backup proxy assigned for the entire VM restore task must have enough RAM resources to be able to restore
VM disks in parallel. For every VM disk, 200 MB of RAM is required. The total amount of required RAM resources
is calculated by the following formula:
Before starting the restore process, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the amount of RAM resources on the
backup proxy. If the backup proxy does not have enough RAM resources, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a
warning in the job session details and automatically fails over to a regular VM disks processing mode (data of
VM disks is read at random and VM disks are restored sequentially).
• If you restore a VM with dynamically expanding disks, the restore process may be slow.
• If you restore a VM using the Network transport mode, the number of VM disks restored in parallel cannot
exceed the number of allowed connections to an ESXi host.
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• If Dell Data Domain is added as an extent to a scale-out backup repository, you must set the backup file
placement policy to Locality. If the backup file placement policy is set to Performance, parallel VM disk
restore will be disabled.
ExaGrid
You can use ExaGrid appliances as backup repositories.
Adaptive Deduplication
ExaGrid uses adaptive deduplication. Data deduplication is performed on the target storage system. After VM
data is written to disk, ExaGrid analyses bytes in the newly transferred data portions. ExaGrid comp ares versions
of data over time and stores only the differences to disk.
ExaGrid deduplicates data at the storage level. Identical data is detected throughout the whole storage system,
which increases the deduplication ratio.
Backup Infrastructure
To communicate with ExaGrid, Veeam Backup & Replication uses two Veeam Data Movers that are responsible
for data processing and transfer:
ExaGrid does not host Veeam Data Mover permanently. When any task addresses an ExaGrid storage,
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys and starts the Veeam Data Mover on the ExaGrid appliance.
Veeam Data Mover establishes a connection with Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy, enabli ng
efficient data transfer over LAN or WAN.
Ba ckup repositories
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Configure ExaGrid backup repositories in the following way:
1. Create at least one share on each ExaGrid appliance. Enable the E x aGrid-Veeam Accelerated Data Mover
tra nsport option for the created share. Leave default compression and deduplication settings for the
share. For more information, see the ExaGrid documentation.
NOTE
When adding credentials for ExaGrid, use only lower case symbols for the user name.
a. Configure ExaGrid backup repositories and point them at the created shares on each ExaGrid
appliance. Set the Limit maximum concurrent tasks to N option to 10 tasks. This limit can be tuned up
or down with assistance from ExaGrid Customer Support.
When you add ExaGrid servers to the Veeam backup infrastructure, and you use the UPN format for an
Active Directory account user name (for example, [email protected]), make sure you enter the
user name in lowercase letters only.
Ba ckup Jobs
b. Enable synthetic full backups and schedule them to run on a weekly basis.
c. Enable active full backups and schedule them to run on a monthly basis.
2. Backup target: Assign backup jobs to the scale-out backup repository with ExaGrid appliances as extents.
NOTE
• Do not create multiple backup repositories directed at the same folder/path on the same device.
• We recommend against enabling encryption for the jobs targeted at the deduplication storage
appliance. Encryption has a negative effect on the deduplication ratio. For more information, see
Data Encryption.
• Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12, deduplicating storage appliances use the TLS
connection. You can disable the TLS connection with a registry value for the deduplicating storage
appliances that do not support the TLS connection. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
For more information and recommendations on working with ExaGrid, see this Veeam KB article.
HPE StoreOnce
You can use HPE StoreOnce storage appliances as backup repositories.
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To work with HPE StoreOnce, Veeam Backup & Replication leverages the HPE StoreOnce Catalyst technology
and two HPE StoreOnce components:
• HP E StoreOnce Catalyst agent. The HPE StoreOnce Catalyst agent is a component of the HPE StoreOnce
Catalyst software. The HPE StoreOnce Catalyst agent is embedded into the Veeam Data Mover setup.
When you add a Microsoft Windows server to the backup infrastructure, the HPE StoreOnce Catalyst agent
is automatically installed on the added server together with Veeam Data Mover.
• HP E StoreOnce appliance. The HPE StoreOnce appliance is an HPE StoreOnce storage system on which
Catalyst stores are created.
Backup Infrastructure
To communicate with HPE StoreOnce, Veeam Backup & Replication uses two Data Movers that are responsible
for data processing and transfer:
The HPE StoreOnce storage cannot host Veeam Data Mover. For this reason, to communicate with the HPE
StoreOnce storage, you need to deploy a gateway server. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically deploy
Veeam Data Mover on this gateway server. For more information, see Gateway Server. For communicating with
the HPE StoreOnce storage appliances, the gateway server must run a 64-bit Microsoft Windows version.
When any job addresses the backup repository, Veeam Data Mover on the gateway server establishes a
connection with Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy, enabling efficient data transfer over LAN or
WAN.
The gateway server is selected when you assign a backup repository role to the HPE StoreOnce appliance. You
can define the gateway server explicitly or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to select it automatically.
TIP
For work with HPE StoreOnce, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Catalyst agent installed on the
gateway server. If you want to reduce the load on the network between the source and target side, assign
the gateway server role to a machine on the source side, closer to the VMware backup proxy.
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Supported Protocols
Veeam Backup & Replication supports HPE StoreOnce storage systems working over the following protocols:
• TCP/IP protocol: Veeam Backup & Replication communicates with the HPE StoreOnce appliance by
sending commands over the LAN.
• Fibre Channel protocol: Veeam Backup & Replication communicates with the HPE StoreOnce appliance by
sending SCSI commands over Fibre Channel.
Data processing over Fibre Channel (FC) connectivity enables local area network-free backup to HP
StoreOnce, eliminates the load from backup activities and increases availability of LAN resources to
production workloads.
• Check that HPE StoreOnce that you plan to use is supported. For more information, see Backup Target.
• One HPE StoreOnce deduplicating storage appliance must be added to one backup server only.
• Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12, deduplicating storage appliances use the TLS connection.
You can disable the TLS connection with a registry value for the deduplicating storage appliances that do not
support the TLS connection. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
• When you create a job targeted at HPE StoreOnce, Veeam Backup & Replication will offer you to switch to
optimized job settings and use the 4 MB size of data block for VM data processing. It is recommended that
you use optimized job settings. Large data blocks produce a smaller metadata table that requires less
memory and CPU resources to process.
• The HPE StoreOnce backup repository usually works in the Use per-machine backup files mode. For more
information, see Backup Chain Formats. However, there are cases when the HPE StoreOnce backup
repository can store not only per-machine backups, for example, when backups are evacuated to this
repository from other extents in a SOBR. For more information, see Evacuating Backups from Performance
Extents. Note that restore from such backups can last longer than from per-machine backups.
• We recommend against enabling encryption for the jobs targeted at the deduplication storage appliance.
Encryption has a negative effect on the deduplication ratio. For more information, see Data Encryption.
• HPE StoreOnce does not support the reverse incremental backup method.
• For backup jobs, HPE StoreOnce does not support the forever forward incremental backup method. When
creating a backup job, you must enable synthetic and/or active full backups. For more information on how
to enable such backups, see Backup Settings.
• The HPE StoreOnce backup repository does not support the Defragment and compact full backup file
option.
• You cannot use HPE StoreOnce backup repositories as sources or targets for file copy jobs.
• You cannot copy backup files (VBK, VIB and VRB) manually to the HPE StoreOnce backup repository. To
copy such files, use backup copy jobs or evacuate backups if you use a scale-out backup repository.
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• You cannot use the HPE StoreOnce backup repository as a cloud repository hosted behind a Cloud Connect
Gateway server.
• To optimize data transfer between two HPE StoreOnce repositories, use backup copy jobs with HPE
Catalyst Copy enabled. For more information on how to create jobs and recommendations for them, see
Creating Backup Copy Jobs for HPE StoreOnce Repositories.
• You can use HPE Cloud Bank Storage only as a target for backup copy jobs with enabled HPE Catalyst
Copy.
• HPE StoreOnce has a limit on the number of concurrently opened files. Due to this limit, the maximum
length of backup chains (chains that contain one full backup and a set of subsequent incremental backups)
on HPE StoreOnce is also limited and depends on the particular storage model. For more information, see
the following table.
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Storage model Ma x imum number of restore points per backup chain
VSA
VSA Gen3 7
P roliant Gen7
P roliant Gen8
2700 7
2900 14
4500 14
4700 14
4900 28
P roliant Gen9
3100 7
3500 14
5100 21
5500 35
P roliant Gen10
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3620 14
3640 14
5200 28
5250 28
5650 42
3660 21
5260 28
5660 42
• A StoreOnce system can have multiple Catalyst stores, and large backup loads (exceeding 1PB) should be
spread across more than one Catalyst store on the same StoreOnce system.
• Do not include Catalyst stores in a SOBR intended for NAS backups. This will reduce the global
deduplication of the StoreOnce system.
• Dual Authorization must be enabled on HPE StoreOnce. For more information on Dual Authorization, see
HPE Support Center.
• The Ma ximum ISV Controlled Data Retention (Days) setting must be set to 365000 on HPE StoreOnce.
For more information, see HPE Support Center.
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• HPE StoreOnce immutability cannot be used for backup copy jobs with enabled HPE Catalyst Copy. Even if
the target HPE StoreOnce supports immutability, the copied backups are not immutable.
• To use the immutability feature for backup copy jobs without HPE Catalyst Copy, enable the GFS retention
policy. For more information, see Long-Term Retention Policy (GFS) for Backup Copy Jobs.
• Immutability applies only if you use HPE StoreOnce in the integration mode, not the shared folder mode.
• Immutability is supported only for forward incremental backup chains. Once a backup file becomes
immutable, it can be merged or deleted only when the immutability time period expires. For this reason,
you cannot select a reverse or a forever forward incremental backup method.
• If you configure several backup repositories on HPE StoreOnce and add them as extents to a scale -out
backup repository, make sure that all backup files from one backup chain are stored on one extent. If
backup files from one backup chain are stored to different extents, the performance of transformation
processes will be lower. For more information about transformation performance, see this Veeam blog
post.
• HPE StoreOnce has a limit on the number of opened files that applies to the whole appliance. Tasks
targeted at different backup repositories on HPE StoreOnce and run in parallel will equally share this limit.
• For HPE StoreOnce working over Fibre Channel, there is a limitation on the number of connections from
one host. If you connect several backup repositories to one gateway, backup repositories will compete for
connections.
• Deduplication on HPE StoreOnce works within the limits of one object store.
• If your VMs contain similar data, it is recommended to create backup repositories on a single HPE
StoreOnce Catalyst Store. This minimizes backup job duration and reduces disk space used for backups.
For details, see this Veeam KB article.
For more information and recommendations on working with HPE StoreOnce, see this Veeam KB article.
Operational Modes
Depending on the storage configuration and type of the backup target, HPE StoreOnce can work in the
following modes:
• Source-side deduplication
• Target-side deduplication
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• The Catalyst store is configured to work in the Low Bandwidth mode (Primary Transfer Policy).
• The HPE StoreOnce Catalyst is added to the backup repository as a deduplicating storage appliance, not as
a shared folder.
To deduplicate data on the source side, HPE StoreOnce uses the HPE StoreOnce Catalyst agent. The HPE
StoreOnce Catalyst agent is a component of the HPE StoreOnce Catalyst software. It is installed on the gateway
server communicating with the HPE StoreOnce appliance.
HPE StoreOnce deduplicates data on the source side, b efore writing it to target:
1. During the backup job session, HPE StoreOnce analyzes data incoming to the HPE StoreOnce appliance in
chunks and computes a hash value for every data chunk. Hash values are stored in an index on disk.
2. The HPE StoreOnce Catalyst agent calculates hash values for data chunks in a new data flow and sends
these hash values to target.
3. HPE StoreOnce identifies which data blocks are already saved on disk and communicates this information
to the HPE StoreOnce Catalyst agent. The HPE StoreOnce Catalyst agent sends only unique data blocks to
target.
As a result, the load on the network reduces, the backup job performance improves, and you can save on disk
space.
o The Catalyst store works in the High Bandwidth mode (Primary Transfer Policy is set to High
Bandwidth).
o The Catalyst store is added to the backup repository as a deduplicating storage appliance, not as a
shared folder.
o The CIFS store is added as a shared folder backup repository to the backup infrastructure.
For more information about working with CIFS stores, see Shared Folder Mode.
HPE StoreOnce deduplicates data on the target side, after the data is transported to HPE StoreOnce:
1. HPE StoreOnce analyzes data incoming to the HPE StoreOnce appliance in chunks and creates a hash value
for every data chunk. Hash values are stored in an index on the target side.
2. HPE StoreOnce analyzes VM data transported to target and replaces identical data chunks with references
to data chunks that are already saved on disk.
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As a result, only new data chunks are written to disk, which helps save on disk space.
If you work with HPE StoreOnce in the shared folder mode, the performance of backup jobs and transformation
processes is lower (in comparison with the integration mode, when HPE StoreOnce is added as a deduplicating
storage appliance).
The HPE StoreOnce Catalyst technology offers a set of features for advanced data processing.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following features.
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HPE StoreOnce Replication
HPE StoreOnce replication improves copying data between two HPE StoreOnce backup repositories. For more
information on copying, see Creating Backup Copy Jobs for HPE StoreOnce Repositories.
You can enable the immutability feature and specify the immutable period when adding or editing the HPE
StoreOnce backup repository. For more information, see Configure Backup Repository Settings. Once imposed,
immutability prohibits deletion of data from the deduplicating storage appliance until the immutability
expiration date comes. Note that if you enable immutability and Veeam Backup & Replication does not start a
new backup chain and still continues the chain, the whole backup chain is marked as immutable. Once you
disable immutability, newly created backups are not marked as immutable.
In many respects, HPE StoreOnce with enabled immutability works similarly to the hardened repository. For
more information on how repositories with immutability operate as a part of a scale-out backup repository, see
Hardened Repository as Performance Extent. For more information on how retention periods set in jobs and in
the deduplicating storage appliance correlate, see Retention Scenarios.
Quantum DXi
You can use Quantum DXi appliances as backup repositories.
Backup Infrastructure
To communicate with Quantum DXi, Veeam Backup & Replication uses two Veeam Data Movers that are
responsible for data processing and transfer:
Quantum DXi does not host the Veeam Data Mover permanently. When any task addresses a Quantum DXi
storage, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys and starts Veeam Data Mover on the Quantum DXi system.
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Veeam Data Mover establishes a connection with Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy, enabling
efficient data transfer over LAN or WAN.
NOTE
Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12, deduplicating storage appliances use the TLS connection.
You can disable the TLS connection with a registry value for the deduplicating storage appliances that do
not support the TLS connection. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
For more information and recommendations on working with Quantum DXi, see this Veeam KB article.
1. Create at least one share on each Quantum DXi appliance. Enable VDMS (Veeam Data Mover Service) for
the created share. Leave default compression and deduplication settings for the share. For more
information, see Quantum DXi documentation.
NOTE
When adding credentials for Quantum DXi, use only lower case symbols for the user name.
2. Configure Quantum DXi backup repositories and point them at the created shares on each Quantum DXi
appliance. Set the Limit maximum concurrent tasks to N option to 10 tasks. This limit can be tuned up or
down with assistance from Quantum DXi Customer Support.
When you add Quantum DXi servers to the Veeam backup infrastructure, make sure that you use the UPN
format for an Active Directory account user name (for example, [email protected]), and enter the
user name in lowercase letters only.
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Fujitsu ETERNUS CS800
You can use Fujitsu ETERNUS CS800 deduplicating storage appliances as backup repositories.
Backup Infrastructure
To communicate with the Fujitsu appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication uses two Veeam Data Movers that are
responsible for data processing and transfer:
Fujitsu does not host the Veeam Data Mover permanently. When any task addresses a Fujitsu storage,
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys and starts Veeam Data Mover on the Fujitsu system.
Veeam Data Mover establishes a connection with Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy, enabling
efficient data transfer over LAN or WAN.
NOTE
Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12, deduplicating storage appliances use the TLS connection.
You can disable the TLS connection with a registry value for the deduplicating storage appliances that do
not support the TLS connection. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
1. Create at least one share on each Fujitsu appliance. Enable VDMS (Veeam Data Mover Service) for the
created share. Leave default compression and deduplication settings for the share.
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NOTE
When adding credentials for Fujitsu, use only lower case symbols for the user name.
2. Configure Fujitsu backup repositories and point them at the created shares on each Fujitsu appliance. Set
the Limit maximum concurrent tasks to N option to 10 tasks. This limit can be tuned up or down with
assistance from Fujitsu Customer Support.
When you add Fujitsu servers to the Veeam backup infrastructure, make sure that you use the UPN format
for an Active Directory account user name (for example, [email protected]), and enter the user name
in lowercase letters only.
Infinidat InfiniGuard
You can use Infinidat InfiniGuard appliances as backup repositories.
Backup Infrastructure
To communicate with Infinidat Infiniguard, Veeam Backup & Replication uses two Veeam Data Movers that are
responsible for data processing and transfer:
Infinidat InfiniGuard does not host the Veeam Data Mover permanently. When any task addresses a Infinidat
InfiniGuard storage, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys and starts Veeam Data Mover on the Infinidat
InfiniGuard system.
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Veeam Data Mover establishes a connection with Veeam Data Mover on the VMware backup proxy, enabling
efficient data transfer over LAN or WAN.
NOTE
Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12, deduplicating storage appliances use the TLS connection.
You can disable the TLS connection with a registry value for the deduplicating storage appliances that do
not support the TLS connection. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
1. Create at least one share on each Infinidat InfiniGuard appliance. Enable VDMS (Veeam Data Mover
Service) for the created share. Leave default compression and deduplication settings for the share.
NOTE
When adding credentials for Infinidat InfiniGuard, use only lower case symbols for the user name.
2. Configure Infinidat InfiniGuard backup repositories and point them at the created shares on each Infinidat
InfiniGuard appliance. Set the Limit maximum concurrent tasks to N option to 10 tasks. This limit can be
tuned up or down with assistance from Infinidat InfiniGuard Customer Support.
When you add Infinidat InfiniGuard servers to the Veeam backup infrastructure, make sure that you use
the UPN format for an Active Directory account user name (for example, [email protected]), and
enter the user name in lowercase letters only.
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Backup Repositories with Rotated Drives
A backup repository can use rotated drives. Rotated drives can be detachable USB or eSATA hard drives. This
scenario can be helpful if you want to store backups on several external hard drives that you plan to regularly
move between different locations.
To use rotated drives, you must enable the This repository is backed by rotated hard drives option in the
advanced settings of the backup repository. When this option is enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication
recognizes the backup target as a backup repository with rotated drives and uses a specific algorithm to make
sure that the backup chain created on these drives is not broken.
• On one managed server, you must create only one repository with rotated drives.
• You cannot store archive full backups (GFS backups) created with backup jobs or backup copy jobs in
backup repositories with rotated drives.
• NFS backup repositories do not support rotated drives. If you enable the This repository is backed by
rotated hard drives setting on the repository, Veeam Backup & Replication will ignore this setting.
• Scale-out backup repositories do not support rotated drives. If you enable the This repository is backed by
rotated hard drives setting on an extent, Veeam Backup & Replication will ignore this setting and will work
with such repository as with a standard extent.
• Repositories with rotated drives are not supported as archive repositories for NAS backup.
In This Section
• How Repository with Rotated Drives Works
IMP ORTANT
When you specify retention settings for a backup job or a backup copy job targeted at a backup repository
with rotated drives, you must define the total number of restore points that you want to retain on all
drives in the set. You can specify retention in days or restore points. For example, if you set retention to 14
restore points, the job will keep the total of 14 restore points across all drives.
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Backup Jobs
Backup jobs are performed in the following way:
1. During the first and subsequent runs of the job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a regular backup
chain on the currently attached drive.
2. When the drives are swapped, the behavior depends on how you have configured the repository:
o If you have chosen to continue an existing backup chain, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the
backup chain anew. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new full backup file on the drive, and this
full backup is used as a starting point for subsequent incremental backups until the drives are
swapped again.
o If you have chosen to delete the backups existing on the drive (all backups or backups created by a
specific job), Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the existing backup chains. Then
Veeam Backup & Replication starts the backup chain anew.
3. [For external drives attached to Microsoft Windows servers] Veeam Backup & Replication checks the
retention policy set for the job. If some backup files in the backup chain are outdated,
Veeam Backup & Replication removes them from the backup chain.
1. During the first and subsequent runs of the job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a regular backup
chain on the currently attached drive.
2. When the drives are swapped, the behavior depends on how you have configured the repository:
o If you have chosen to continue an existing backup chain, the following applies:
▪ If the attached drive is empty, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a full backup on it.
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▪ If there is a backup chain on the drive, Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether this backup
chain is consistent. The consistent backup chain must contain a full backup and all incremental
backups that have been produced by the job. This requirement applies to all types of backup
chains: forever forward incremental and forward incremental. If the chain is consistent,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new incremental backup and adds it to the backup chain.
The latest incremental backup existing in the backup chain is used as a starting point for the new
incremental backup. If the chain is not consistent, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the backup
chain anew. It creates a new full backup file on the drive, and this full backup is used as a
starting point for subsequent incremental backups.
o If you have chosen to delete the backups existing on the drive (all backups or backups created by a
specific job), Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the existing backup chains. Then
Veeam Backup & Replication starts the backup chain anew.
3. [For external drives attached to Microsoft Windows servers] Veeam Backup & Replication checks the
retention policy set for the job. If some backup files in the backup chain are outdated,
Veeam Backup & Replication removes them from the backup chain.
Drive Detection
Drive letters for external drives may change when you add new volumes or storage hardware such as CD -ROM
on the server. In Microsoft Windows backup repositories, Veeam Backup & Replication can keep track of drives
and detect them even if the drive letter changes.
To detect a drive correctly, Veeam Backup & Replication must have a record about it in the configuration
database. Consider the following requirements:
• When you insert a drive for the first time, the drive is not registered in the configuration database. Such
drive must have the same letter as the one specified in the P a th to folder field in backup repository
settings. For more information, see Configuring Path and Load Control Settings.
If the drive has some other letter, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to detect and use it.
• When you insert a drive that has already been used and has some restore points on it, the drive is already
registered in the configuration database. Veeam Backup & Replication will be able to detect and use it,
even if the drive letter changes.
• If the drive letter of the already used drive changes and a job has not run yet, you cannot change the
option that controls the behavior when rotated drives are swapped . To change the behavior, change the
drive letter back to the original one and change the option that controls the be havior, then change the
drive letter as required.
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Linux and Shared Folder Backup Repository
If you use a Linux server or CIFS share as a backup repository with rotated drives, Veeam Backup & Replication
employs a “cropped” mechanism of retention with rotated drives. Veeam Backup & Replication keeps
information only about the latest backup chain in the configuration database. Information about previous
backup chains is removed from the database. For this reason, the retention policy set for the job may not work
as expected.
1. During the first and subsequent runs of the job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a regular backup
chain on the currently attached drive.
2. When the drives are swapped, the behavior depends on how you have configured the repository:
o If you have chosen to continue an existing backup chain, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the
backup chain anew. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new full backup file on the drive, and this
full backup is used as a starting point for subsequent incremental backups until the drives are
swapped again.
o If you have chosen to delete the backups existing on the drive (all backups or backups created by a
specific job), Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the existing backup chains. Then
Veeam Backup & Replication starts the backup chain anew.
As soon as Veeam Backup & Replication starts a new backup chain on the drive, it removes information
about restore points from previous backup chains from the configuration database. Backup files
corresponding to these previous restore points are not deleted, they remain on disk. This happens because
Veeam Backup & Replication applies the retention policy only to the current backup chain, not to previous
backup chains.
1. Attach one of external drives from the set to a Microsoft Windows or Linux server. The server must be
added to the backup infrastructure. For more information on how to add a server, see Virtualization
Servers and Hosts.
You can also attach the external hard drive to the backup server itself. In this case, the VM traffic will path
through the backup server, which will produce additional workload on it.
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2. Use the New Backup Repository wizard to add a direct attached storage. For more information, see Adding
Backup Repositories. Pay attention to the following settings:
a. At the Server step of the wizard, select the server to which the drive is attached.
b. At the Rep ository step of the wizard, in the P a th to folder field, specify a path to the folder where
backup files must be stored.
IMP ORTANT
Later, when you attach another external hard drive to the server for the first time, this drive
must have the same drive letter as specified in the P a th to folder field. For more information,
see Drive Detection.
c. Click the Ad vanced button. In the Storage Compatibility Settings window, select the This repository is
b a cked by rotated hard drives check box and choose how Veeam Backup & Replication will behave
when a drive is swapped:
▪ Continue an existing backup chain if present . Select this option to continue the backup chain
found on the drive.
▪ Delete backups belonging to this job . Select this option to delete all backups created by the
currently running job.
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▪ Delete all backups on the drive . Select this option to delete all backups created by
Veeam Backup & Replication and stored on the drive in the repository folder. Note that
Veeam Backup & Replication will delete all backups, even backups created by other jobs.
d. Configure other settings of the backup repository as required and finish wor king with the wizard.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following types of object storage repositories:
• S3 compatible
• Google Cloud
• IBM Cloud
• Microsoft Azure Blob, Azure Archive Storage and Azure Data Box
You can use object storage repositories as target repositories in the following ways:
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IMP ORTANT
You can not keep backups created by file share backup jobs in object storage repositories if they are
added as performance extents of the scale-out backup repository.
• As target repositories for backups of VMware Cloud Director virtual machines created by
Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Backups of virtual and physical machines created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent
for Linux.
• Backups of Nutanix AHV virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV.
• Backups of K10 environment created with Veeam Plug-in for Kasten K10.
You can also use object storage repositories as the following parts of the scale-out backup repository:
• As a part of Performance Tier. Performance tier allows to quickly access the stored data. For more
information, see Performance Tier.
• As a part of Capacity Tier. Capacity tier of scale-out backup repository allows to offload existing backup
data directly to cloud-based object storage. For more information, see Capacity Tier.
• As a part of Archive Tier. Archive tier of scale-out backup repository allows to transport infrequently
accessed data from the capacity tier for archive storage. For more information, see Archive Tier.
Depending on the type of a job, a VMware backup proxy connects to the object storage repository using one of
the following options:
• Directly - in this case, a VMware backup proxy transfers data directly to the object storage repository.
• Using a gateway server - in this case, a VMware backup proxy transfers data to the object storage
repository through a gateway server.
TIP
If a backup job backs up multiple VMs, you can use several gateway servers and combine them into a
gateway pool to process data. For more information, see Gateway Server.
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During a health check, Veeam Backup & Replication performs a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) for metadata and
a hash check for VM data blocks in the backup file to verify their integrity. If during the health check
Veeam Backup & Replication detects corrupted data blocks in the latest restore point in the backup chain, it will
start the health check retry. During the health check retry, Veeam Backup & Replication will transport valid data
blocks from the source datastore to the object storage repository. After the health check retry completes, the
transported data blocks are moved immediately to the latest backup in the backup chain.
NOTE
The health check retry will start only if the backups job meets the necessary requirements. Otherwise,
Veeam Backup & Replication will add healthy blocks to a new backup file after the next job run.
To allow Veeam Backup & Replication perform the health check of data blocks located in the object storage
repository, you must:
• Configure a proxy appliance located in the object storage at the Mount server step of the New Object
Rep ository wizard.
• Enable the health check when you configure a backup job and define its schedule. For more information,
see Specifying Health Check Settings.
By default, the health check is performed on the last Friday of every month. You can change the schedule
and run the health check weekly or monthly on specific days.
NOTE
• If you perform health check for encrypted backup files, Veeam Backup & Replication will pass
encryption keys to the regular backup repository or cloud repository. For more information on
encryption, see Data Encryption.
• If you use Veeam Agent to back up machines and store their backups in object storage repositories,
you can also perform the health check for Veeam Agent backups. For more information, see the
Health Check for Object Storage section of the User Guide for Veeam Agent that you use to back up
data.
NOTE
• The health check runs only after all jobs and operations that process a backup are completed
(for example, a backup job, a restore job, synthetic operations with backups and so on). If
some of these activities are started, the health check stops.
• If a health check session does not complete until the next scheduled run, this session will stop
and a new session will start according to the schedule.
• The health check skips verification of already processed data, however
Veeam Backup & Replication verifies the metadata of backup files that did not change
between health check sessions.
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2. Veeam Backup & Replication performs CRC values check for backup metadata, verifies that blocks of data
are present in the object storage repository and checks their integrity.
During the health check, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies the latest restore point in the backup chain
(restore point created with the current backup job session — the session during which the health check is
performed). If the latest restore point in the backup chain is incomplete, Veeam Backup & Replication
checks the restore point preceding the latest restore point.
3. If the health check does not detect data corruption, the backup job session completes in a regular way. If
the health check detects corrupted data, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the health check retry
process.
Depending on the revealed data corruption, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
o If the health check has detected corrupted backup metadata, Veeam Backup & Replication marks the
whole backup chain as corrupted in the configuration database. In this case, you must detach the
corrupted backup from the source job and you run a backup job again to create a new backup chain.
o If the health check detects corrupted blocks of data, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the health
check retry and attempts to repair the corrupted data blocks.
If Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform the health check retry, you must retry the job manually. In this
case, Veeam Backup & Replication produces a new backup file with healthy data blocks. You can use this backup
file to restore from the latest restore point.
For scheduled jobs, the number of health check retries is equal to the number of job retries specified in the job
settings. For jobs started manually, Veeam Backup & Replication performs 1 health check retry.
Important
To allow Veeam Backup & Replication add the repaired data blocks to the latest restore point after
completing the health check, the backup job must meet the following requirements:
If the backup job does not meet these requirements, Veeam Backup & Replication will add the repaired
data blocks to a new restore point, created during a next run of the backup job.
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General Considerations and Limitations
• Make sure to open required ports to communicate with object storage repositories in advance, as
described in Ports.
• Object storage gateway appliances that are used to store backup data in filer (CIFS/NFS) or block device
mode (iSCSI/FC/SAS) are not supported if the backup data is offloaded to object storage and is no longer
stored directly on the appliance.
o All of the backup data is stored on the appliance altogether (that is, all of the backup chains are
stored on the appliance as a whole and not scattered across multiple devices) and only additional
copies of the backup data are transported to object storage.
o These appliances emulate a tape system (VTL) as an access protocol for Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Data in object storage bucket/container must be managed solely by Veeam Backup & Replication,
including retention and data management. Enabling lifecycle rules is not supported, and may result in
backup and restore failures.
IMP ORTANT
Only one backup server must interact with an object storage repository. If you want to perform disaster
recovery testing, you can add the object storage repository to another backup server. However, on the
initial backup server, you must switch the object storage repository to the Maintenance mode. Otherwise,
metadata on the object storage can get corrupted or out of sync, and you will not be able to restore data.
• Use one bucket per scale-out backup repository to reduce metadata. Creating folders for multiple scale-
out backup repositories within a bucket slows down processing, as metadata operations within the object
storage are handled per bucket.
• Object storage systems that offload data to tape devices or any other sequential storage devices are
supported only if they are added as an archive tier in a scale-out backup repository.
• If a backup chain contains backup files that are marked as corrupted by Health Check, then such corrupted
files, as well as all subsequent files that go after the corrupted one are never offloaded. In such a scenario,
offload is only possible starting from the full backup file that succeeds the backup chain with corrupted
backups.
• Different object storage repositories mapped to the same cloud folder can be used for storing both the
capacity tier backups and the NAS backups.
IMP ORTANT
• The same object storage repository (mapped to the same cloud folder) must not be used
across multiple Veeam Backup & Replication servers for the same purposes as it leads to
unpredictable system behavior and data loss.
• For the same reason, two object storage repositories mapped to the same cloud folder must
not be added to different scale-out backup repositories within one
Veeam Backup & Replication server.
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• Within a scale-out backup repository, the mount server of a performance extent will act as a gateway
server of the capacity extent if all of the following is true:
a. You use SMB share/NFS share/deduplicating storage appliances as performance extents of your scale -
out backup repository.
b. You have chosen Automatic selection for the gateway server at the Specify Shared Folder Settings
step of the New b ackup repository wizard.
c. For the object storage that you use as the capacity extent, you have not selected to connect to object
storage using a gateway server at the Account step of the New Object Repository wizard.
• The backup proxy that processes backup data must meet the following requirements:
o It must have access to the cloud storage that you use as an object storage repository.
• The backup proxy that processes VM data must be as close as possible to a backup server.
• A backup server and a gateway server must have internet access to verify that the certificates installed on
object storage repositories are valid.
• You cannot back up directly to object storage repositories backups created by Veeam Plug-ins for
Enterprise Applications.
• [For Amazon S3] Only the Standard , Standard -IA and One Zone-IA storage classes are supported. For more
information about Amazon S3 storage classes, see AWS Documentation.
• S3 compatible storage systems with the eventual data consistency model are not supported.
• You cannot add as performance extents one Wasabi bucket as an S3 Compatible Object Storage and
another Wasabi bucket as a Wasabi Cloud Object Storage to the same type of tier (either performance tier
or capacity tier) of a scale-out backup repository.
• [For Microsoft Azure Blob storage] Veeam Backup & Replication does not support Azure Germany since
Microsoft closed Microsoft Cloud Deutschland.
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• Veeam Backup & Replication supports the Versioning feature for Microsoft Azure object storage
repositories for which immutability is enabled.
• [For Microsoft Azure Archive storage] Microsoft Azure has certain limits (quotas) on maximum amount of
resources used. The quotas depend on the type of proxies you have selected. If you exhaust a quota, you
will be unable to use Microsoft Azure Archive storage. For more information about Microsoft Azure
quotas, see Microsoft Docs.
• [For Microsoft Azure Blob storage] Veeam Backup & Replication does not support soft delete for blobs.
• Veeam Backup & Replication performs operations only on a blob level. You cannot create Azure containers
or storage accounts from the backup infrastructure.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not support object-level immutability and default immutability policies
assigned to Azure storage accounts. You must set immutability for an Azure container where backed-up
objects will reside. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
IMP ORTANT
Enabling either any or both of these features on the bucket may result in unpredictable system behavior
and data loss, as well as in extra costs for storing objects that have been removed by the retention policy.
For more information, see Object Versioning and Bucket Lock.
• Currently, only the Standard storage class is supported for IBM Cloud object storage.
The default retention may result in an unpredictable system behavior and data loss. However, note that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use Compliance object lock mode for each uploaded object. For more
information on the retention modes, see AWS documentation. For more information on how to disable
retention settings for S3 bucket, see AWS documentation. For more information on how to disable
retention settings for Azure container, see Microsoft Docs.
• [Azure Blob Storage] Make sure that the Azure Blob storage settings meet the following requirements:
when you configure an Azure storage and an Azure container:
o When you create a storage, make sure you enable versioning for blobs.
o When you create a storage, do NOT enable version-level immutability. By default, this option is
enabled and you must disable it. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
o When you create a container, you must enable version-level immutability. For more information, see
Microsoft Docs.
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• [Azure Blob Storage] The default immutability policies are not supported.
• [Azure Blob Storage] Do NOT enable immutability for already existing containers in the Azure portal.
Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to process these containers properly and it may
result in data loss.
• If you plan to use the immutability feature with the existing S3 bucket containing backups created by 9.5
Update 4, keep in mind that both Versioning and Object Lock must be enabled on the bucket
simultaneously and immediately before enabling the immutability feature. Any other approach will lead to
backup offload failures and inability to correctly interact with backups in the bucket.
• Immutable data is preserved as described in Block Generation (applicable only to Capacity Tier).
• Amazon S3 Object Storage, Amazon S3 Glacier Storage and AWS Snowball Edge
• Microsoft Azure Object Storage, Microsoft Azure Archive Storage and Data Box
To add an S3 Compatible object storage to the backup infrastructure, use the New Ob ject Repository wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New Object Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the Ba ckup Repositories node and click
Ad d Repository on the ribbon. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > S3
Compatible.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and
select Ad d Backup Repository. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > S3
Compatible.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Account
1. In the Service point field, specify an endpoint address and a port number of your S3 Compatible object
storage.
3. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your S3 Compatible object storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select it from the drop -down list.
Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Access Keys for AWS Users.
You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a credentials record.
4. Next to the Connection mode field, click Choose and specify how Veeam Backup & Replication will access
the object storage repository:
o Direct — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use a proxy server to transfer
data from processed VM or file share to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that a backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as it is possible to the backup server.
• Veeam Agent that runs in the managed mode does not use a backup proxy and transfers
data to the object storage repositories directly. Make sure that you grant Veeam Agent
necessary permissions. For more information, see Access Permissions.
o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use a
gateway server to transfer data from processed VM or file share to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your Veeam Backup & Replication
infrastructure and has internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the
Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure beforehand. Before you add the server, check the
following Considerations and Limitations. For more information on how to add a server, see
Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
NOTE
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Step 4. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify the bucket and folder where you will store data, and define storage
limits and immutability settings that Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to data in the object storage.
1. In the Buck et field, enter a name of the bucket or click Browse to get the necessary bucket.
Note that you must create the bucket where you want to store your backup data beforehand.
2. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
3. Select the Limit object storage consumption to check box to define a soft limit that can be exceeded
temporarily for your object storage consumption. Provide the value in TB or PB.
4. Select the Ma k e recent backups immutable for check box to prohibit deletion of blocks of data from object
storage. Specify the immutability period. For more information, see Immutability.
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Step 5. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use for restore
operations and configure a helper appliance. The helper appliance is a temporary host that
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys on your S3 compatible storage to perform a health check of backup files
and apply retention to NAS backup files. For more information, see Health Check for Object Storage Repositories
and NAS Backup Retention Scenarios. After Veeam Backup & Replication completes these operations, it removes
the helper appliance from the S3 compatible storage.
IMP ORTANT
• If you do not configure a helper appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication will use local resources to
perform the health check and apply retention to NAS backup files. It will consume more cloud
resources and can result in additional costs.
• To perform the health check, you must enable this option when you configure a backup job. For
more information, see Health Check for Backup Files.
1. From the Mount Server drop-down list, select a server that you want to use as a mount server.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this server during restore operations to mount VM disks directly from
objects located in object storage repositories. For more information, see Mount Server.
The Mount Server list contains only Microsoft Windows servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right to
open the New W indows Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use the mount server to restore data from capacity tier or
archive tier. For more information, see Restore from Capacity Tier and Restore from Archive Tier.
2. In the Instant recovery write cache folder field, specify a folder to keep cache that is created during mount
operations.
3. Select the E na ble vPower NFS service on the mount server check box to allow the Veeam vPower NFS
Service access the object storage repository. Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the Veeam vPower
NFS Service on the necessary mount server. For more information, see Veeam vPower NFS Service.
4. Click P orts to customize network ports used by the Veeam vPower NFS Service. In the vP ower NFS Port
Settings window, specify the following settings:
o Next to the Mount Port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
mount the vPower NFS datastore to the ESXi host.
o Next to the vP ower NFS port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
connect to the target NFS share.
5. To specify the helper appliance settings, click Configure. From the Ma naged server: drop-down list, select
a server that you want to use as the helper appliance.
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IMP ORTANT
Do not enable Microsoft Windows NFS services on the machine where you install the Veeam vPower NFS
Service. If Microsoft NFS services and Veeam vPower NFS Service are enabled on the same machine, both
services may fail to work correctly.
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Step 6. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what components will be processed on the mount server server and
their status.
If the backup repository contains backups, select the Sea rch the repository for existing backups and import
them automatically check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing
backup files and display them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage
( Imported) node.
If the backup repository contains guest file system index files, select the Imp ort guest file system index data to
the catalog check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will import index files together with backup files, and you
will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported backup s.
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Step 7. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to complete saving your settings to the
configuration database and create backup infrastructure objects.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
Adding Amazon S3 Object Storage, Amazon S3 Glacier Storage and AWS Snowball
Edge
Before you add an Amazon S3 storage, Amazon Glacier or Amazon Snowball Edge to the backup infrastructure,
check prerequisites. After that, use the New Object Repository wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New Object Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the Ba ckup Repositories node and click
Ad d Repository on the ribbon. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Amazon S3.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and
select Ad d Backup Repository. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Amazon S3.
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Step 2. Select Amazon S3 Storage Type
At the Ama zon Cloud Storage Services step of the wizard, select one of the following storage types:
• Amazon S3 Storage
For more information about Amazon S3 object storage, see AWS Documentation.
5. Review components
6. Apply settings
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Step 1. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Account
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Amazon S3 object storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select it from the drop -down list.
Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Access Keys for AWS Users.
You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a credentials record.
2. From the AW S region drop-down list, select the AWS region where the Amazon S3 bucket is located.
3. Next to the Connection mode field, click Choose and specify how a VMware backup proxy will transfer
data to the object storage repository:
o Direct — select this option if you want a backup proxy to transfer data from the processed machines
or file shares directly to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that the backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the followingSystem
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as possible to the backup server.
• If Veeam Agent stores data in other than S3 Compatible objects storage repositories, it
does not use a backup proxy and transfers data directly to object storage repositories.
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o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify Amazon S3 bucket and folder that will be used to store data:
2. In the Buck et field, enter a name of the bucket or click Browse to get the necessary bucket.
Note that you must create the bucket where you want to store your backup data beforehand.
3. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication supports specific storage classes. For more information, see
Considerations and Limitations.
3. Select the Limit object storage consumption to check box to define a soft limit that can be exceeded
temporarily for your object storage consumption. Provide the value in TB or PB.
4. Select the Ma k e recent backups immutable for check box to prohibit deletion of blocks of data from object
storage. Specify the immutability period. For more information, see Immutability.
5. If you plan to access your backup data in an infrequent manner, select the Use infrequent access storage
cla ss check box to mark each block as Standard IA ( Standard Infrequent Access ).
6. To enable Amazon S3 One Zone-Infrequent Access , select the Store backups in a single availability zone
only check box. For more information, see AWS Documentation.
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Step 4. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use for restore
operations, and configure a helper appliance. The helper appliance is a temporary EC2 instance that
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys on your S3 storage to perform a health check of backup files and apply
retention to NAS backup files. For more information, see NAS Backup Retention Scenarios. After
Veeam Backup & Replication completes these operations, it removes the helper appliance from the S3 storage.
IMP ORTANT
• If you do not configure a helper appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication will use local resources to
perform the health check and apply retention to NAS backup files. It will consume more cloud
resources and can result in additional costs.
• To perform the health check, you must enable this option when you configure a backup job. For
more information, see Health Check for Backup Files.
1. From the Mount Server drop-down list, select a server that you want to use as a mount server.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this server during restore operations to mount VM disks directly from
objects located in object storage repositories. For more information, see Mount Server.
The Mount Server list contains only Microsoft Windows servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right to
open the New W indows Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use the mount server to restore data from capacity tier or
archive tier. For more information, see Restore from Capacity Tier and Restore from Archive Tier.
2. In the Instant recovery write cache folder field, specify a folder to keep cache that is created during mount
operations.
3. Select the E na ble vPower NFS service on the mount server check box to allow the Veeam vPower NFS
Service access the object storage repository. Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the Veeam vPower
NFS Service on the necessary mount server. For more information, see Veeam vPower NFS Service.
4. Click P orts to customize network ports used by the Veeam vPower NFS Service. In the vP ower NFS Port
Settings window, specify the following settings:
o Next to the Mount Port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
mount the vPower NFS datastore to the ESXi host.
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o Next to the vP ower NFS port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
connect to the target NFS share.
1. From the E C2 instance type drop-down list, select the EC2 instance type for the helper appliance. The EC2
instance type affects the speed and the cost of the operations that the helper appliance applies to backup
files. For information on instance types, see AWS Documentation.
2. From the Ama zon VPC drop-down list, select the Amazon VPC where Veeam Backup & Replication will
launch the EC2 instance. For information on the Amazon VPC, see AWS Documentation.
To be able to select the necessary VPC from the drop-down list, you must create it beforehand as
described in the AWS Documentation.
3. From the Sub net drop-down list, select the subnet where the helper appliance will reside. For information
on the subnets for Amazon VPC, see AWS Documentation.
To be able to select the necessary subnet from the drop-down list, you must create it beforehand as
described in the AWS Documentation.
4. From the Security g roup drop-down list, select a security group that will be associated with the helper
appliance. For information on security groups for Amazon VPC, see AWS Documentation.
To be able to select the necessary security group from the drop-down list, you must create it beforehand
as described in the AWS Documentation.
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5. In the Red irector port field, specify the TCP port that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to route
requests between the helper appliance and backup infrastructure components.
6. Click OK.
IMP ORTANT
Do not enable Microsoft Windows NFS services on the machine where you install the Veeam vPower NFS
Service. If Microsoft NFS services and Veeam vPower NFS Service are enabled on the same machine, both
services may fail to work correctly.
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Step 5. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what components will be processed on the mount server server and
their status.
If the backup repository contains backups, select the Sea rch the repository for existing backups and import
them automatically check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing
backup files and display them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage
( Imported) node.
If the backup repository contains guest file system index files, select the Imp ort guest file system index data to
the catalog check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will import index files together with backup files, and you
will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported backups.
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Step 6. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to complete saving your settings to the
configuration database and create backup infrastructure objects.
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Step 7. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not create or use any S3 Glacier vaults in your AWS environment. Glacier
vaults is an archive storage solution independent from AWS. It uses storage containers named vaults
(opposed to S3 buckets) and its own set of APIs to upload and retrieve data.
Amazon S3 Glacier storage uses S3 APIs to manage data. It also uses S3 storage as a repository for
metadata of the Glacier-stored objects. Veeam Backup & Replication assigns the added storage class to
backups stored in the repository. That is why the archived backups remain in Amazon S3 and cannot be
accessed directly through the Amazon S3 service.
You can only use this repository as an archive extent of the scale-out backup repository. For more information,
see Archive Tier.
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3. Specify object storage settings
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Step 1. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for the new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Account
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Amazon S3 object storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select it from the drop -down list.
Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Access Keys for AWS Users.
You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a credentials record.
2. From the AW S region drop-down list, select the geographical location of the Amazon datacenter.
3. To specify how Veeam Backup & Replication will access the object storage repository, click Choose and in
the Connection mode window specify the following settings:
o Direct — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use a proxy server to transfer
data from processed VM or file share to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that a backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as it is possible to the backup server.
• Veeam Agent that process backup policies that run in the Ma naged by agent mode
transfers data directly to the object storage repositories. Make sure that you grant
Veeam Agent the necessary permissions. For more information, see Access Permissions.
o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
NOTE
The gateway server should have direct connection to AWS service endpoints. HTTP(S) proxy
servers are not supported. For more information, see Ports.
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By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify Amazon S3 bucket and folder that will be used to store data:
1. From the Da ta center drop-down list, the AWS region where the Amazon S3 bucket is located.
2. In the Buck et field, enter a name of the bucket or click Browse to get the necessary bucket.
Note that you must create the bucket where you want to store your backup data beforehand.
3. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
To prohibit deletion of blocks of data from object storage, select the Ma ke backups immutable for the entire
d uration of their retention policy check box. The immutability period will be equal to the retention period (if
any) of the data blocks. All the types of files that are eligible for archive storage can be made immutable. For
more information on the immutability feature and the retention policy for each file type, see Immutability for
Archive Tier.
Keep in mind that in order to use immutability, you need to enable the Object Lock and Versioning features on
your S3 bucket at the time when you create the bucket. For more information, see Preparing to Use
Immutability.
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Step 4. Specify Object Storage Class Settings
At the Storage Class step of the wizards, specify a storage class that will be assigned to blocks in Amazon S3
Glacier object storage. For more information on Amazon S3 archive storage classes, see AWS Documentation.
• Select the Deep Archive option to mark each block as the Amazon S3 Glacier Deep Archive storage class.
Use this option if you want to keep data for more than 7 years and do not plan to access it.
Note that to get data from this type of a backup, you must first retrieve data from Archive Tier. For more
information, see Restore from Archive Tier.
• Select the Flexible retrieval option to mark each block as the Amazon S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval storage
class. Use this option if you want to access data in infrequent manner.
Note that to get data from this type of a backup, you must first retrieve data from Archive Tier. For more
information, see Restore from Archive Tier.
• Select the Instant retrieval option to mark each block as the Amazon S3 Glacier Instant Retrieval storage
class. Use this option if you plan to access your backup data immediately. In this case, you do not need to
retrieve data from Archive Tier and can immediately initiate any type of the data recovery operation.
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Step 5. Specify Archiver Appliance
At the Archiver Appliance step of the wizard, you can specify the archiver appliance settings. An archiver
appliance is an auxiliary instance that is necessary for transferring the data from Amazon S3 to Amazon S3
Glacier.
• Use the default settings. In that case, Veeam Backup & Replication will select the necessary settings from
those available in your account, or will create for you new settings for the EC2 instance type, Amazon VPC,
subnet, security group and redirector port.
a. Click Customize.
b. From the E C2 instance type drop-down list, select the instance type for the proxy appliance. The EC2
instance type affects the speed and the cost of transferring the backup files to the Archive Tier of a
scale-out backup repository. For information on instance types, see AWS Documentation.
c. From the Ama zon VPC drop-down list, select the Amazon VPC where Veeam Backup & Replication will
launch the target instance. For information on the Amazon VPC, see AWS Documentation. For details
on the EC2 instant types used by Veeam Backup & Replication, see this Veeam KB article.
d. From the Sub net drop-down list, select the subnet for the proxy appliance.
e. From the Security group drop-down list, select a security group that will be associated with the proxy
appliance. For information on security groups for Amazon VPC, see AWS Documentation.
f. In the Red irector port field, specify the TCP port that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to route
requests between the proxy appliance and backup infrastructure components.
g. Click OK.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
This device might become useful when you need to offload a significant number of backup files occupying
storage space on your extents, as offloading data to the AWS Snowball Edge device is much faster than
transferring the same amount of data directly to Amazon object storage. Once you have offloaded backups to
AWS Snowball Edge, you need to ship the device back to Amazon for further data synchronization with your
storage account, as described in Seeding Backups to AWS Snowball Edge Storage.
1. Check prerequisites
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Before You Begin
Before you add AWS Snowball Edge storage to the backup infrastructure, check the following prerequisites:
• To maintain the device performance, be sure to select 1 MB or 4 MB as the storage optimization option
when you configure a backup job. For more information on the optimization, see Storage Optimization.
• When you configure a scale-out backup repository with AWS Snowball Edge storage as the capacity
extent, it is recommended to only use the copy policy. This way you keep copy of the data on your local
storage which helps you reduce the risk of data loss if the device is damaged during shipping. It will also
ensure that the backup data is available for restore operations while AWS Snowball Edge storage is in
shipment.
• For information on FIPS status of AWS Snowball Edge storage, see Amazon official updates.
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Step 1. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
TIP
Set the maximum number of concurrent task to a reasonable number to avoid overloading if you plan to
upload significant amount of backup chains to the device.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Account
1. In the Service point field, specify a service point address of your AWS Snowball Edge device and define a
port.
To get information on the IP address that must be used as a service point, see the AWS Snowball Edge
Developer Guide.
To get information on the port you must specify, see the AWS Snowball Edge Developer Guide, By default,
the 443 port is used.
3. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your AWS Snowball Edge storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select it from the drop-down list.
Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Access Keys for AWS Users.
You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a credentials record.
3. To specify how Veeam Backup & Replication will access the object storage repository, click Choose and in
the Connection mode window specify the following settings:
o Direct — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use a proxy server to transfer
data from processed VM or file share to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that a backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as it is possible to the backup server.
• Veeam Agent that process backup policies that run in the Ma naged by agent mode
transfers data directly to the object storage repositories. Make sure that you grant
Veeam Agent the necessary permissions. For more information, see Access Permissions.
o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
NOTE
The gateway server should have direct connection to AWS service endpoints. HTTP(S) proxy
servers are not supported. For more information, see Ports.
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By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify Amazon S3 bucket and folder that will be used to store data:
Make sure that the bucket where you want to store your backup data was created in advance.
2. In the Folder field, select a cloud folder to which you want to map your object storage repository.
To select a folder, click Browse and either select an existing folder or create a new one by clicking New
Fold er.
3. Select the Limit object storage consumption to check box to define a soft limit that can be exceeded
temporarily for your object storage consumption. Provide the value in TB or PB.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
Before you add a Google Cloud object storage to the backup infrastructure, check prerequisites. After that, use
the New Ob ject Repository wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New Object Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckup Repositories node and click
Ad d Repository on the ribbon. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Google Cloud
Storage.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and
select Ad d Backup Repository. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Google Cloud
Storage.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Account
At the Account step of the wizard, specify Google Cloud credentials and connection settings that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to transfer data to the object storage repository.
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Google Cloud object storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select it from the drop -down list.
Otherwise, click Add and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Cloud Credentials Manager.
You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a credentials record.
2. Next to the Connection mode field, click Choose and specify how Veeam Backup & Replication will access
the object storage repository:
o Direct — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use a proxy server to transfer
data from processed VM or file share to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that a backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as it is possible to the backup server.
• Veeam Agent that process backup policies that run in the Ma naged by agent mode
transfers data directly to the object storage repositories. Make sure that you grant
Veeam Agent the necessary permissions. For more information, see Access Permissions.
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o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
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Step 4. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify the bucket and folder that will be used to store data:
2. In the Buck et field, enter a name of the bucket or click Browse to get the necessary bucket.
Note that you must create the bucket where you want to store your backup data beforehand.
3. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
5. Select the Limit object storage consumption to check box to define a soft limit that can be exceeded
temporarily for your object storage consumption. Provide the value in TB or PB.
6. If you plan to access your backup data rarely, on average once per month or less, select the Use nearline
storage class check box. For more information about Google Cloud storage classes, see this Google article.
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Step 5. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use f or restore
operations, and configure a helper appliance. The helper appliance is a temporary VM instance that
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys in Google Compute Engine to perform a health check of backup files and
apply retention to NAS backup files. For more information, see NAS Backup Retention Scenarios. After
Veeam Backup & Replication completes these operations, it removes the helper appliance from the Google
Cloud object storage.
IMP ORTANT
• If you do not configure a helper appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication will use local resources to
perform the health check and apply retention to NAS backup files. It will consume more cloud
resources and can result in additional costs.
• To perform the health check, you must enable this option when you configure a backup job. For
more information, see Health Check for Backup Files.
1. From the Mount Server drop-down list, select a server that you want to use as a mount server.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this server during restore operations to mount VM disks directly from
objects located in object storage repositories. For more information, see Mount Server.
The Mount Server list contains only Microsoft Windows servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right to
open the New W indows Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use the mount server to restore data from capacity tier or
archive tier. For more information, see Restore from Capacity Tier and Restore from Archive Tier.
2. In the Instant recovery write cache folder field, specify a folder to keep cache that is created during mount
operations.
3. Select the E na ble vPower NFS service on the mount server check box to allow the Veeam vPower NFS
Service access the object storage repository. Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the Veeam vPower
NFS Service on the necessary mount server. For more information, see Veeam vPower NFS Service.
4. Click P orts to customize network ports used by the Veeam vPower NFS Service. In the vP ower NFS Port
Settings window, specify the following settings:
o Next to the Mount Port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
mount the vPower NFS datastore to the ESXi host.
o Next to the vP ower NFS port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
connect to the target NFS share.
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Configuring Helper Appliance
To configure the helper appliance, at the Mount Server step, click Configure and in the Ad vanced Settings
window, specify the following settings::
1. From the Account drop-down list, select a credentials record to access your Google Cloud object storage.
Veeam Backup & Replication will use this credentials record to connect to Google Compute Engine within
Google Cloud Platform and create the helper appliance.
If you have not added the credentials record beforehand, click Ma nage cloud accounts or Ad d to add the
necessary service account. For more information, see Google Cloud Platform Service Account.
2. Next to the Helper appliance field, click Configure. In the Ap p liance Settings window, specify the
following settings:
a. From the Ma chine type drop-down list, select the machine type for the helper appliance. The machine
type affects the speed and the cost of the operations that the helper appliance applies to backup
files. For information on instance types, see Google Cloud documentation.
b. From the VP C drop-down list, select a VPC network where a helper appliance will be launched. For
more information on VPC networks, see Google Cloud documentation.
To be able to select the necessary VPC from the drop -down list, you must create it beforehand as
described in the Google Cloud documentation..
c. From the Sub net drop-down list, select a subnet where a helper appliance will reside. For more
information on subnets, see Google Cloud documentation.
To be able to select the subnet from the drop-down list, you must create it beforehand as described
in the Google Cloud documentation.
d. In the Red irector port field, specify the TCP port that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to route
requests between the helper appliance and backup infrastructure components.
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Step 6. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what components will be processed on the mount server server and
their status.
If the backup repository contains backups, select the Sea rch the repository for existing backups and import
them automatically check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing
backup files and display them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage
( Imported) node.
If the backup repository contains guest file system index files, select the Imp ort guest file system index data to
the catalog check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will import index files together with backup files, and you
will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported backups.
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Step 7. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to complete saving your settings to the
configuration database and create backup infrastructure objects.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
Before you add an IBM Cloud object storage to the backup infrastructure, check prerequisites. After that, use
the New Ob ject Repository wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New Object Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the Ba ckup Repositories node and click
Ad d Repository on the ribbon. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > IBM Cloud
Ob ject Storage.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and
select Ad d Backup Repository. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > IBM Cloud
Ob ject Storage.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Account
1. In the Service point field, specify a service point address of your IBM cloud object storage.
3. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your IBM cloud object storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select such a record from the
drop-down list. Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Cloud
Credentials Manager. You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a
credentials record.
4. To specify how Veeam Backup & Replication will access the object storage repository, click Choose and in
the Connection mode window specify the following settings:
o Direct — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use a proxy server to transfer
data from processed VM or file share to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that a backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as it is possible to the backup server.
• Veeam Agent that process backup policies that run in the Ma naged by agent mode
transfers data directly to the object storage repositories. Make sure that you grant
Veeam Agent the necessary permissions. For more information, see Access Permissions.
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o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
552 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Step 4. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify the bucket and folder that will be used to store data:
1. In the Buck et field, enter a name of the bucket or click Browse to get the necessary bucket.
Note that you must create the bucket where you want to store your backup data beforehand.
2. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
3. Select the Limit object storage consumption to check box to define a soft limit that can be exceeded
temporarily for your object storage consumption. Provide the value in TB or PB.
NOTE
The Ma ke recent backups immutable for check box is currently unavailable for IBM Cloud Object Storage,
since IBM does not currently support S3 Object Lock feature required for the immutability.
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Step 5. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use for restore
operations, and configure a helper appliance. The helper appliance is a temporary host that
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys on your IBM Cloud object storage to perform a health check of backup files
and apply retention to NAS backup files. For more information, see NAS Backup Retention Scenarios. After
Veeam Backup & Replication completes these operations, it removes the helper appliance from the IBM Cloud
object storage.
IMP ORTANT
• If you do not configure a helper appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication will use local resources to
perform the health check and apply retention to NAS backup files. It will consume more cloud
resources and can result in additional costs.
• To perform the health check, you must enable this option when you configure a backup job. For
more information, see Health Check for Backup Files.
1. From the Mount Server drop-down list, select a server that you want to use as a mount server.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this server during restore operations to mount VM disks directly from
objects located in object storage repositories. For more information, see Mount Server.
The Mount Server list contains only Microsoft Windows servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right to
open the New W indows Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use the mount server to restore data from capacity tier or
archive tier. For more information, see Restore from Capacity Tier and Restore from Archive Tier.
2. In the Instant recovery write cache folder field, specify a folder to keep cache that is created during mount
operations.
3. Select the E na ble vPower NFS service on the mount server check box to allow the Veeam vPower NFS
Service access the object storage repository. Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the Veeam vPower
NFS Service on the necessary mount server. For more information, see Veeam vPower NFS Service.
4. Click P orts to customize network ports used by the Veeam vPower NFS Service. In the vP ower NFS Port
Settings window, specify the following settings:
o Next to the Mount Port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
mount the vPower NFS datastore to the ESXi host.
o Next to the vP ower NFS port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
connect to the target NFS share.
5. To specify the helper appliance settings, click Configure. From the Ma naged server drop-down list, select
a server that you want to use as the helper appliance.
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IMP ORTANT
Do not enable Microsoft Windows NFS services on the machine where you install the Veeam vPower NFS
Service. If Microsoft NFS services and Veeam vPower NFS Service are enabled on the same machine, both
services may fail to work correctly.
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Step 6. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what components will be processed on the mount server server and
their status.
If the backup repository contains backups, select the Sea rch the repository for existing backups and import
them automatically check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing
backup files and display them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage
( Imported) node.
If the backup repository contains guest file system index files, select the Imp ort guest file system index data to
the catalog check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will import index files together with backup files, and you
will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported b ackups.
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Step 7. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to complete saving your settings to the
configuration database and create backup infrastructure objects.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
Adding Microsoft Azure Blob Storage, Microsoft Azure Archive Storage and Microsoft
Azure Data Box
Before you add a Microsoft Azure Blob storage, Azure Archive storage or Azure Data Box to the backup
infrastructure, check prerequisites. After that, use the New Object Repository wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New Object Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the Ba ckup Repositories node and click
Ad d Repository on the ribbon. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Microsoft
Azure Storage.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and
select Ad d Backup Repository. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Microsoft
Azure Storage.
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Step 2. Select Azure Storage Type
At the Microsoft Azure Storage step of the wizard, select one of the following storage types:
4. Review components
5. Apply settings
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Step 1. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Account
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Azure Blob storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select such a record from the
drop-down list. Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your account name and a shared key, as described in
Microsoft Azure Storage Accounts. You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or
remove a credentials record.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication does not support Azure Germany since Microsoft closed Microsoft Cloud
Deutschland.
3. Next to the Connection mode field, click Choose and specify how a VMware backup proxy will transfer
data to the object storage repository:
o Direct — select this option if you want a backup proxy to transfer data from the processed machines
or file shares directly to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that the backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as possible to the backup server.
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o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
563 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Step 3. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Container step of the wizard, specify the container and folder that will be used to store data:
Make sure that the container where you want to store your backup data was created in advance.
NOTE
The default Root container is not supported. For more information about this container, see
Microsoft Docs.
2. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
3. Select the Limit object storage consumption to check box to define a soft limit that can be exceeded
temporarily for your object storage consumption. Provide the value in TB or PB.
4. Select the Ma k e recent backups immutable for check box to prohibit deletion of blocks of data from object
storage. Specify the immutability period. For more information, see Immutability.
5. If you plan to access your backup data in an infrequent manner, select the Use Cool Tier (may result in
hig her cost) check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will keep blocks of data in the Cool access tier. For
more information on the Cool tier, see Microsoft Docs.
IMP ORTANT
If you do not use this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the access tier that you have set
up for the storage account.
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Step 5. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use for restore
operations, and configure a helper appliance. The helper appliance is a temporary host that
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys on your Microsoft Azure Blob storage to perform a health check of backup
files and apply retention to NAS backup files. For more information, see NAS Backup Retention Scenarios. After
Veeam Backup & Replication completes these operations, it removes the helper appliance from the Microsoft
Azure Blob storage.
IMP ORTANT
• If you do not configure a helper appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication will use local resources to
perform the health check and apply retention to NAS backup files. It will consume more cloud
resources and can result in additional costs.
• To perform the health check, you must enable this option when you configure a backup job. For
more information, see Health Check for Backup Files.
1. From the Mount Server drop-down list, select a server that you want to use as a mount server.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this server during restore operations to mount VM disks directly from
objects located in object storage repositories. For more information, see Mount Server.
The Mount Server list contains only Microsoft Windows servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right to
open the New W indows Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use the mount server to restore data from capacity tier or
archive tier. For more information, see Restore from Capacity Tier and Restore from Archive Tier.
2. In the Instant recovery write cache folder field, specify a folder to keep cache that is created during mount
operations.
3. Select the E na ble vPower NFS service on the mount server check box to allow the Veeam vPower NFS
Service access the object storage repository. Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the Veeam vPower
NFS Service on the necessary mount server. For more information, see Veeam vPower NFS Service.
4. Click P orts to customize network ports used by the Veeam vPower NFS Service. In the vP ower NFS Port
Settings window, specify the following settings:
o Next to the Mount Port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
mount the vPower NFS datastore to the ESXi host.
o Next to the vP ower NFS port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
connect to the target NFS share.
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Configuring Helper Appliance
To configure the helper appliance, at the Mount Server step, click Configure and in the Helper Appliance
Settings window, specify the following settings:
1. From the Sub scription drop-down list, select your Microsoft Azure subscription credentials.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click Ad d . You will be prompted to the Specify Microsoft
Azure Compute Account Name wizard. Follow the wizard to add your account. Before adding your
Microsoft Azure account, check the prerequisites.
2. From the Size drop-down list, select the size of the helper appliance.
3. From the Resource group drop-down list, select a resource group that will be associated with the helper
appliance.
To be able to select the necessary resource group from the drop -down list, you must create it beforehand
as described in the Microsoft Docs.
4. From the Virtual network drop-down list, select a network to which the helper appliance must be
connected.
To be able to select the necessary network from the drop -down list, you must create it beforehand as
described in the Microsoft Docs.
5. From the Sub net drop-down list, select a subnet for the helper appliance.
To be able to select the necessary subnet from the drop -down list, you must create it beforehand as
described in the Microsoft Docs.
6. In the Red irector port field, specify the port that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to route requests
between the helper appliance and backup infrastructure components.
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Step 6. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what components will be processed on the mount server server and
their status.
If the backup repository contains backups, select the Sea rch the repository for existing backups and import
them automatically check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing
backup files and display them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage
( Imported) node.
If the backup repository contains guest file system index files, select the Imp ort guest file system index data to
the catalog check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will import index files together with backup files, and you
will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported backups.
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Step 7. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to complete saving your settings to the
configuration database and create backup infrastructure objects.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
For more information about Azure Archive Storage, see Microsoft Docs.
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Step 1. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Account
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Azure Archive Storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select it from the drop -down list.
Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your account name and a shared key, as described in Microsoft Azure
Storage Accounts. You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a credentials
record.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication archive tier feature does not support Microsoft Azure Stack Hub
Compute accounts.
2. From the Reg ion drop-down list, select the Azure region.
3. Next to the Connection mode field, click Choose and specify how a VMware backup proxy will transfer
data to the object storage repository:
o Direct — select this option if you want a backup proxy to transfer data from the processed machines
or file shares directly to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that the backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as possible to the backup server.
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o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
572 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Step 3. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Container step of the wizard, specify the container and folder that will be used to store data:
Make sure that the container where you want to store your backup data was created in advance.
2. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
3. Select the Ma k e backups immutable for the entire duration of their retention policy check box to prohibit
deletion of blocks of data from object storage. The immutability period will be equal to the retention
period (if any) of the data blocks. All the types of files that are eligible for archive storage can be made
immutable. For more information on the immutability feature and the retention policy for each file type,
see Immutability for Archive Tier.
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Step 4. Specify Archiver Appliance
At the Archiver Appliance step of the wizard, you can specify archiver appliance settings. An archiver appliance
is an auxiliary instance that is necessary to transfer data from Azure Blob storage to Azure Archive Storage.
To configure and set up an archiver appliance, you must add a Microsoft Azure account to
Veeam Backup & Replication. For that, do the following:
1. From the Sub scription drop-down list, select your Microsoft Azure subscription credentials. If you have
not set up credentials beforehand, click Ad d . You will be prompted to the Adding Microsoft Azure
Compute Accounts wizard. Follow the wizard to add your account. Before adding your Microsoft Azure
account, check the prerequisites.
2. You can use the default settings or customize the helper appliance. To specify helper appliance settings,
click Customize and in the Help er Appliance Settings window, specify the following settings:
a. From the Size drop-down list, select the size of the appliance. For details on the proxy types used by
Veeam Backup & Replication, see this Veeam KB article.
b. From the Resource group drop-down list, select a resource group that will be associated with the
proxy appliance.
c. From the Virtual network drop-down list, select a network to which the helper appliance must be
connected.
d. From the Sub net drop-down list, select the subnet for the proxy appliance.
e. In the Red irector port field, specify the port that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to route
requests between the proxy appliance and backup infrastructure components.
f. Click OK.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
This device might become useful when you need to offload a significant number of backup files occupying
storage space on your extents, as offloading data to the Azure Data Box device is much faster than transferr ing
the same amount of data directly to Azure object storage. Once you have offloaded backups to Azure Data Box,
you need to ship the device back to Microsoft for further data synchronization with your Azure storage account,
as described in Seeding Backups to Azure Blob Storage.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports only those Azure Data Box devices that are capable of reading and
writing data using REST API. The Azure Data Box disk type is not supported.
• Direct data copy to the archive tier from Azure Data Box is not supported. When you place your order, do
not enable Cop y to archive option on the Da ta destination step.
• When you configure a scale-out backup repository with Azure Data Box as the capacity extent, it is
recommended to only use the copy policy. This way you keep copy of the data on your local storage which
helps you reduce the risk of data loss if the device is damaged during shipping. It wil l also ensure that the
backup data is available for restore operations while Azure Data Box is in shipment.
For information about other limitations for Microsoft Azure Data Box storage, see Microsoft Docs.
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To add Microsoft Azure Data Box storage, do the following:
1. Check prerequisites.
• <ip_address> <mydataboxno>.microsoftdatabox.com
• <ip_address> <storageaccountname>.blob.<mydataboxno>.microsoftdatabox.com
For more information on how to learn the values for <ip_address> , <mydataboxno> and <storageaccountname> ,
see Microsoft Docs.
As an <ip_address> , use any of the IP-addresses listed under the Da ta N section. You can also use the address
specified under the MGMT section, but due to its slow connection rate (limited to 1 GbE), using such an address
is not recommended.
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NOTE
• Make sure to configure name resolutions on each server that might be used as a gateway.
• Alternatively, you can create a microsoftdatabox.com DNS zone with corresponding records on your
DNS server if you prefer not to modify the HOST file.
For more information on how to download an SSL certificate, see Microsoft Docs.
2. In the Certificate Store step, select P lace all certificates in the following store and click Browse.
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Sizing Gateway Server
Consider that Veeam Backup & Replication supports Azure Data Box devices that are capable of reading/writing
data using REST API only; the Azure Data Box Disk type is not supported.
As with any other object storage, REST API performance depends on scale. As Azure Data Box is a single
endpoint, the individual throughput of this REST API may be limited. The block size used in
Veeam Backup & Replication capacity tier for object storage offload matches that of the source job. The default
object size would be a compressed 1MB block, resulting in objects of around 512KB in size.
The speed of data offload to Azure Data Box devices may reach about 300 MB/s. To achieve this speed, we
recommend using a separate gateway server with 8 CPU cores.
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Step 1. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
TIP
Set the maximum number of concurrent task to a reasonable number to avoid overloading if you plan to
upload significant amount of backup chains to the device.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Account
1. In the Service endpoint field, specify a service endpoint address of your Azure Data Box device.
2. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Azure Data Box storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select such a record from the
drop-down list. Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Cloud
Credentials Manager. You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a
credentials record.
For more information on where to find connection parameters of your Azure Data Box device, see Getting
Data Box Connection Parameters.
3. Next to the Connection mode field, click Choose and specify how a VMware backup proxy will transfer
data to the object storage repository:
o Direct — select this option if you want a backup proxy to transfer data from the processed machines
or file shares directly to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that the backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as possible to the backup server.
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o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
3. Under the Access Settings column of the storage account that you want to use, click RE ST and in the
Access storage a ccount and upload data dialog, copy the following:
a. Under Storage Account Name, copy the Azure storage account name.
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c. Under Blob Service Endpoint, copy the service endpoint address that starts exactly after the blob
word.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Container step of the wizard, specify the container and folder that will be used to store data:
To create a container, use Microsoft Azure Storage Explorer. For more information on how to connect to
the Azure Data Box device using Microsoft Azure Storage Explorer, see Microsoft Docs.
2. In the Select Folder field, select a cloud folder to which you want to map your object storage repository.
To select a folder, click Browse and either select an existing folder or create a new one by clicking New
Fold er.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
Before you add a Wasabi Cloud object storage to the backup infrastructure, check prerequisites. After that, use
the New Ob ject Repository wizard.
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Step 1. Launch New Object Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the Ba ckup Repositories node and click
Ad d Repository on the ribbon. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Wasabi Cloud
Storage.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and
select Ad d Backup Repository. In the Ad d Backup Repository dialog, select Ob ject Storage > Wasabi Cloud
Storage.
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Step 2. Specify Object Storage Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, use the Na me and Description fields to enter a name for a new object storage
repository and to provide a description for future reference.
If you want to limit the maximum number of tasks that can be processed at once, select the Limit concurrent
ta sks to N check box.
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Step 3. Specify Object Storage Account
2. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Wasabi cloud object storage.
If you already have a credentials record that was configured in advance, select such a record from the
drop-down list. Otherwise, click Ad d and provide your access and secret keys, as described in Cloud
Credentials Manager. You can also click the Ma nage cloud accounts link to add, edit or remove a
credentials record.
3. Next to the Connection mode field, click Choose and specify how a VMware backup proxy will transfer
data to the object storage repository:
o Direct — select this option if you want a backup proxy to transfer data from the processed machines
or file shares directly to object storage repositories.
NOTE
• Make sure that the backup proxy server that you plan to use, meets the following System
Requirements.
• You must locate your proxy server as close as possible to the backup server.
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o Through gateway server — select this option if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use gateway
servers to transfer data from processed machines or file shares to object storage repositories. From
the Na me list, select gateway servers that you want to use for data transfer operations.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. You
can choose any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. Note that you must add the server to the backup infrastructure beforehand.
Before you add the server, check the following Considerations and Limitations. For more information
on how to add a server, see Virtualization Servers and Hosts.
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Step 4. Specify Object Storage Settings
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify the bucket and folder that will be used to store data:
1. In the Buck et field, enter a name of the bucket or click Browse to get the necessary bucket.
Note that you must create the bucket where you want to store your backup data beforehand.
2. In the Folder field, enter a cloud folder name to which you want to map your object storage repository.
Alternatively, click Browse and either select an existing folder or click New Folder.
3. Select the Limit object storage consumption to check box to define a soft limit that can be exceeded
temporarily for your object storage consumption. Provide the value in TB or PB.
4. Select the Ma k e recent backups immutable f or check box to prohibit deletion of blocks of data from object
storage. Specify the immutability period. For more information, see Immutability.
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Step 5. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use for restore
operations, and configure a helper appliance. The helper appliance is a temporary host that
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys on your Wasabi Cloud object storage storage to perform a health check of
backup files and apply retention to NAS backup files. For more information, see NAS Backup Retention
Scenarios. After Veeam Backup & Replication completes these operations, it removes the helper appliance from
the Wasabi Cloud object storage storage.
IMP ORTANT
• If you do not configure a helper appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication will use local resources to
perform the health check and apply retention to NAS backup files. It will consume more cloud
resources and can result in additional costs.
• To perform the health check, you must enable this option when you configure a backup job. For
more information, see Health Check for Backup Files.
1. From the Mount Server drop-down list, select a server that you want to use as a mount server.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this server during restore operations to mount VM disks d irectly from
objects located in object storage repositories. For more information, see Mount Server.
The Mount Server list contains only Microsoft Windows servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right to
open the New W indows Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use the mount server to restore data from capacity tier or
archive tier. For more information, see Restore from Capacity Tier and Restore from Archive Tier.
2. In the Instant recovery write cache folder field, specify a folder to keep cache that is created during mount
operations.
3. Select the E na ble vPower NFS service on the mount server check box to allow the Veeam vPower NFS
Service access the object storage repository. Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the Veeam vPower
NFS Service on the necessary mount server. For more information, see Veeam vPower NFS Service.
4. Click P orts to customize network ports used by the Veeam vPower NFS Service. In the vP ower NFS Port
Settings window, specify the following settings:
o Next to the Mount Port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
mount the vPower NFS datastore to the ESXi host.
o Next to the vP ower NFS port section, specify the port that the Veeam vPower NFS Service will use to
connect to the target NFS share.
5. To specify the helper appliance settings, click C onfigure. From the Ma naged server: drop-down list, select
a server that you want to use as the helper appliance.
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IMP ORTANT
Do not enable Microsoft Windows NFS services on the machine where you install the Veeam vPower NFS
Service. If Microsoft NFS services and Veeam vPower NFS Service are enabled on the same machine, both
services may fail to work correctly.
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Step 6. Review Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review what components will be processed on the mount server server and
their status.
If the backup repository contains backups, select the Sea rch the repository for existing backups and import
them automatically check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing
backup files and display them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage
( Imported) node.
If the backup repository contains guest file system index files, select the Imp ort guest file system index data to
the catalog check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will import index files together with backup files, and you
will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported backups.
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Step 7. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to complete saving your settings to the
configuration database and create backup infrastructure objects.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the newly created object storage repository and click
Finish.
3. In the working area, select an object storage repository and click E d it Repository on the ribbon or right-
click an object storage repository and select P roperties.
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4. Follow the steps of the E d it Object Storage Repository wizard and edit settings as required.
Note that some settings cannot be modified and will remain disabled while being edited.
You can remove any object storage repository from the application scope if you no longer need it.
To remove such a repository, you must first exclude an object storage repository from the scale -out
backup repository configuration. For more information, see Removing Performance Extents from Scale-
Out Repositories and Excluding Capacity Tier from Scale-Out Repositories.
• An object storage repository cannot be removed if backups located in this repository was imported, as
described in Importing Backups.
To remove such a repository, you must first detach object storage, as described in Detaching Object
Storage.
• When an object storage repository is being removed from the environment, the data remains completely
unaffected.
To learn how to remove data, see Removing Backups from Object Storage Repository.
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3. In the working area, select an object storage repository and click Remove Repository on the ribbon or
right-click an object storage repository and select Remove.
NOTE
You do not need to import backups located in performance extents and standalone object storage
repositories.
• The Import Backups option is available only if the object storage is not a part of the scale -out backup
repository.
• Before you start importing backups, make sure to add the object storage repository that stores data you
want to import.
• If you have imported backups from the object storage repository, you will not be able to select this
repository as a capacity extent at the Add Capacity Tier and as an archive extent at the Add Archive Tier
steps.
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• The Import Backups option is applicable only to the Capacity Tier and Archive Tier backups. It does not
support the NAS backups.
2. Specify Password
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Step 1. Launch Import Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select the Ba ckup Repositories node and in the
preview pane, right-click object storage that contains backups that you want to import and select Imp ort
b a ckups.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select the Ba ckup Repositories node, in the
preview pane, select object storage that contains backups that you want to import and select Imp ort
Ba ckups.
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Step 2. Specify Password
At the P a ssword step of the wizard, in the P a ssword field, specify the password that was used to encrypt data
during offload or copy sessions.
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Step 3. Wait for Import
At the Imp ort step of the wizard, wait until Veeam Backup & Replication prepares a temporary database to
which information about backups will be added upon import.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
During this session, all existing backups will be imported into the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
2. In the navigation pane, select the Ba ckups > Capacity Tier (Imported) or Archive Tier (Imported) node.
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3. In the preview pane, review imported backups.
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3. In the preview pane, select object storage the backups of which have been imported and click Detach
Rep ository on the toolbar or right-click object storage and select Detach Repository.
To reduce the load on the network during the initial synchronization of backup files to Azure, you can use
capabilities of Azure Data Box.
Azure Data Box is a storage device that you order from Microsoft. It emulates a cloud storage endpoint on-
premises.
After the initial setup, backup data is offloaded to Azure Data Box. The storage device is then shipped back, and
its contents are uploaded to your Azure storage account.
To learn more about ordering Azure Data Box, see Azure Storage Documentation.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication supports only those Azure Data Box devices that are capable of reading and
writing data using REST API. The Azure Data Box disk type is not supported.
2. Add Azure Data Box to the backup infrastructure and then offload the data
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To learn more about installing Azure Data Box, see Azure Storage Documentation.
To learn more about connecting to Azure Data Box via REST APIs, see Azure Storage Documentation.
After you perform the steps in the Azure Storage Documentation, you will have a storage account name, access
key, and blob service endpoint that can be used to connect to Veeam Backup & Replication.
1. Add Azure Data Box as an Azure Data Box storage as described in Adding Azure Data Box.
2. Add the Azure Data Box storage as the capacity tier or performance tier in a scale-out backup repository.
Keep in mind that you have to select the Cop y backups to object storage as soon as they are created check
box.
3. Press and hold the [ CTRL ] key, right-click the scale-out backup repository from the previous step and
select Run tiering job now.
IMP ORTANT
When you configure a scale-out backup repository with Azure Data Box as the capacity extent, it is
recommended to only use the copy policy. This way you keep copy of the data on your local storage which
helps you reduce the risk of data loss if the device is damaged during shipping. It will als o ensure that the
backup data is available for restore operations while Azure Data Box is in shipment.
1. Put an object storage repository that is associated with Azure Data Box into the Maintenance mode, as
described in Switching to Maintenance Mode.
After shipping the device, wait for Microsoft to receive it and copy your data into your Azure storage account.
You will be notified of successful data upload to your Azure storage account.
2. Edit the scale-out backup repository used for offloading the data, and change your Azure Data Box object
storage to the Azure Blob storage that you have created in the previous step.
3. Enable importing backups from Azure Blob storage and wait for the synchronization to complete.
4. Remove Azure Data Box object storage from Veeam Backup & Replication, as described in Removing
Object Storage Repository.
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NOTE
Keep in mind that if you delete individual VMs from your backup in the period between mailing Azure Data
Box and adding Azure Blob Storage, you may need to run Active Full instead of Incremental job after the
final Azure synchronization. To avoid this, do not delete any VMs manually and disable the Retention Policy
for Deleted Items option in the job settings for that period. After successful synchronization, you can re -
enable this option and work as usual.
To prepare AWS Snowball Edge for shipping, put the object storage repository that is associated with the AWS
Snowball Edge device into the Maintenance mode, as described in Switching to Maintenance Mode. You can
learn in more detail about preparing AWS Snowball Edge for shipping in AWS Documentation.
After mailing the device, wait until it is accepted by Amazon and notification of successful data upload to your
storage account is received (if you subscribed for such notification). After that, do the following:
1. Add an Amazon S3 storage, as described in Adding Amazon S3 Storage. At the Specify Object Storage
Settings step, select the same bucket and folder that you have selected for your AWS Snowball Edge
device.
2. Open the E d it Scale-out Backup Repository wizard, as described in Editing Settings of Scale-Out Backup
Repositories. In the Capacity Tier step, change your AWS Snowball Edge object storage to Amazon S3
storage that you have created in the previous step. Save the new setting.
3. Remove the AWS Snowball Edge object storage from the Veeam Backup & Replication backup
infrastructure, as described in Removing Object Storage Repository.
IMP ORTANT
Make sure that Versioning and Object Lock are not enabled on the used S3 bucket.
For information on how to add object storage repositories, see Adding Object Storage Repositories.
Before you add a backup repository, check prerequisites. Then use the New Backup Repository wizard to add the
backup repository.
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• The DD Boost license must be installed on the Dell Data Domain system, DD Boost must be enabled and
configured.
• The gateway server that you plan to use for work with Dell Data Domain must be added to the backup
infrastructure.
If the Dell Data Domain storage system does not meet these requirements, you can add it as a SMB (CIFS)
folder. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will not use the DD Boost technology to work with Dell Data
Domain. For more information, see Dell Data Domain.
ExaGrid
• ExaGrid must meet software and/or hardware requirements. For more information, see System
Requirements.
• To use ExaGrid as a backup repository, you must configure an ExaGrid share in ExaGrid Manager. For more
information, see the ExaGrid.
• When you add ExaGrid servers to the Veeam backup infrastructure, and you use the UPN format for an
Active Directory account user name (for example, [email protected]), make sure you enter the user
name in lowercase letters only.
HPE StoreOnce
• HPE StoreOnce must meet software and/or hardware requirements. For more information, see System
Requirements.
• The HPE StoreOnce Catalyst license must be installed on the HPE StoreOnce system.
• The gateway server that you plan to use for work with HPE StoreOnce system must be added to the
backup infrastructure.
• The client account that you plan to use to connect to HPE StoreOnce must have access permissions on the
Catalyst store where backup data will be kept.
If the HPE StoreOnce storage system does not meet these requirements, you can add it as a shared folder. In
this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform target-side deduplication. For more information, see HPE
StoreOnce.
Quantum DXi
• Quantum DXi must meet software and hardware requirements. For more information, see System
Requirements.
• To use Quantum DXi as a backup repository, you must configure a Quantum DXi share. For more
information, see Quantum DXi.
• To use Fujitsu ETERNUS CS800 as a backup repository, you must configure a Fujitsu share. For more
information, see Fujitsu ETERNUS CS800.
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Infinidat InfiniGuard
• Infinidat InfiniGuard must meet software requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• To use Infinidat InfiniGuard as a backup repository, you must configure a Infinidat InfiniGuard share. For
more information, see Infinidat InfiniGuard.
Storage Appliances
• Storage appliances that are used to store backup data in filer (CIFS/NFS) or block device mode
(iSCSI/FC/SAS) are not supported if the backup data is offloaded to tapes and is no longer stored directly
on the filer/block device (Hierarchical Storage Management with Tape tier).
o All of the backup data is stored on the appliance altogether (that is, all of the backup chains are
stored on the appliance as a whole and not scattered across multiple devices) and only copies are
stored on tapes.
NOTE
Consider reading the Considerations and Limitations section that describes prerequisites for object storage.
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Step 1. Launch New Backup Repository Wizard
To launch the New Backup Repository wizard, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ba ckup Repositories node and select Ad d Backup Repository.
Alternatively, you can click Ad d Repository on the ribbon.
3. In the Ad d Backup Repository window, select the type of the backup repository you want to add.
The New Backup Repository wizard will guide you through steps for adding direct attached storage, network
attached storage, and deduplicating storage appliances as backup repositories. For information on how to add a
hardened repository, see Adding Hardened Repository.
For information on how to add object storage repositories, see Adding Object Storage Repositories.
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Step 2. Specify Backup Repository Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the backup repository.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who added the backup repository, date and time when the backup repository
was added.
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Step 3. Specify Server or Shared Folder Settings
Options that you can specify at the Server step of the wizard depend on the type of backup repository you are
adding.
1. From the Rep ository server list, select a Microsoft Windows or Linux server that you want to use as a
backup repository. The Rep ository server list contains only those servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, you can click Ad d New on the
right to open the New W indows Server or New Linux Server wizard.
Note that you cannot add ExaGrid, Quantum DXi, Fujitsu ETERNUS CS800 and Infinidat InfiniGuard servers
as Linux backup repositories. These servers are integrated with Veeam Backup & Replication, and thus
must be added as deduplicating storage appliances.
2. Click P op ulate to see a list of disks connected to the server, their capacity and free space.
SMB Share
To configure settings for an SMB share:
1. In the Sha red folder field, specify a UNC path to the SMB shared folder that you want to use as a backup
repository. If you use the IPv6 address, specify the path in a literal format, for example, \\[1080--8-800-
200c-417a.ipv6-literal.net]\folder. For more information, see RFC 2732. Note that you can use IPv6
addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
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2. If you must specify user credentials to access the shared folder, select the This share requires access
credentials check box. From the Credentials list, select a credentials record for a user account that has Full
Control permissions on the shared folder. Note that the username must be in the down-level logon name
format. For example, DOMAIN\username or HOSTNAME\username.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link at the bottom of the list or
click Ad d on the right to add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
3. In the Ga teway server field, specify settings for the gateway server:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select a gateway server automatically, leave Automatic
selection.
o If you want to select servers that can be used as gateway servers explicitly, click Choose next to the
Ga teway server field. In the Ga teway Server window, click Use the following gateway servers only and
select servers. The servers must have a direct access to the SMB share and must be located as close to
the SMB share as possible. Veeam Backup & Replication will choose the most suitable server.
For more information on the gateway servers, their requirements and limitations, and how they are
selected, see Gateway Server.
NFS Share
To configure settings for an NFS share:
1. In the Sha red folder field, specify a path to the NFS shared folder that you want to use as a backup
repository. You can specify the path using an IPv4 or IPv6 address. Note that you can use IPv6 addresses
only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
2. In the Ga teway server field, specify which gateway server you want to use:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select a gateway server automatically, leave Automatic
selection.
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o If you want to select servers that can be used as gateway servers explicitly, click Choose next to the
Ga teway server field. In the Ga teway Server window, click Use the following gateway servers only and
select servers. The servers must have a direct access to the NFS share and must be located as close to
the NFS share as possible. Veeam Backup & Replication will choose the most suitable server.
For more information on the gateway servers, their requirements and limitations, and how they are
selected, see Gateway Server.
o If Dell Data Domain works over TCP, in the Ty p e in Data Domain server name field enter a full DNS
name, or IPv4 or IPv6 address of the Dell Data Domain server. Note that you can use IPv6 addresses
only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
o If Dell Data Domain works over Fibre Channel, select the Use Fibre Channel (FC) connectivity check
box. In the Ty p e in Data Domain server name field, enter a name of the Data Domain Fibre Channel
server. To get the Data Domain Fibre Channel server name, in Data Domain System Manager open the
Da ta Management > DD Boost > Fib re Channel tab.
2. In the Credentials field, specify credentials of the user account to connect to the Dell Data Domain server
or Dell Data Domain Fibre Channel server. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage
a ccounts link at the bottom of the list or click Ad d on the right to add the credentials. For more
information, see Managing Credentials.
To connect to the Dell Data Domain server, you must use credentials for the DD Boost User. To specify the
DD Boost User account settings, in Data Domain System Manager, open the Da ta Management > DD Boost
Settings tab.
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3. To use in-flight encryption between the backup proxy and Dell Data Domain, select the E nable DDBoost
encryption check box and choose the encryption level — Medium or High.
4. In the Ga teway server field, specify which gateway server you want to use:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select a gateway server automatically, leave Automatic
selection.
o If you want to select servers that can be used as gateway servers explicitly, click Choose next to the
Ga teway server field. In the Ga teway Server window, click Use the following gateway servers only and
select servers. The servers must have a direct access to the Dell Data Domain appliance and must be
located as close to the appliance as possible. Veeam Backup & Replication will choose the most
suitable server.
For more information on the gateway servers, their requirements and limitations, and how they are
selected, see Gateway Server.
IMP ORTANT
If you connect to Dell Data Domain over Fibre Channel, you must explicitly define the gateway servers to
communicate with Dell Data Domain. The servers you select must be added to the backup infrastructure
and must have access to the Dell Data Domain appliance over Fibre Channel.
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ExaGrid, Quantum DXi, Fujitsu ETERNUS CS800 or Infinidat
InfiniGuard Deduplicating Appliance
To configure settings for ExaGrid, Quantum DXi, Fujitsu ETERNUS CS800 or Infinidat InfiniGuard deduplicating
appliance:
1. From the Rep ository server list, select an appliance that you want to use as a backup repository. The
Rep ository server list contains only those servers that are added to the backup infrastructure. If the server
is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, you can click Ad d New to open the New Linux Server wizard.
For more information, see Managing Servers.
2. Click P op ulate to see the appliance capacity and available free space.
1. In the Ty p e in HPE StoreOnce server name field, enter a full DNS name, or IPv4 or IPv6 address of the HPE
StoreOnce appliance. Note that you can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as
described in IPv6 Support.
2. If HPE StoreOnce works over Fibre Channel, select the Use Fibre Channel (FC) connectivity check box.
3. In the Credentials field, specify credentials of the client account to connect to the HPE StoreOnce
appliance. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link at the bottom of
the list or click Ad d on the right to add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
The client account that you plan to use to connect to HPE StoreOnce must have access permissions on a
Catalyst store where backup data will be kept. To check the client account permissions, in the HPE
StoreOnce management console, select the Catalyst store and open the P ermissions tab for it.
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4. In the Ga teway server field, specify which gateway server you want to use:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select a gateway server automatically, leave Automatic
selection.
o If you want to select servers that can be used as gateway servers explicitly, click Choose next to the
Ga teway server field. In the Ga teway Server window, click Use the following gateway servers only and
select servers. The servers must have a direct access to the Dell Data Domain appliance and must be
located as close to the appliance as possible. Veeam Backup & Replication will choose the most
suitable server.
For more information on the gateway servers, their requirements and limitations, and how they are
selected, see Gateway Server.
IMP ORTANT
If you connect to HPE StoreOnce over Fibre Channel, you must explicitly define the gateway server
to communicate with HPE StoreOnce appliance. The server you select must be added to the backup
infrastructure and must have access to the HPE StoreOnce appliance over Fibre Channel.
5. If a WAN connection between the gateway server and the HPE StoreOnce appliance is weak, select the
Ga teway server and StoreOnce are connected over WAN check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will
compress VM data transported from the gateway server to the HPE StoreOnce appliance, and calculate
checksums for data blocks going from the gateway server to the HPE StoreOnce appliance.
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Step 4. Configure Backup Repository Settings
At the Rep ository step of the wizard, specify path and load control repository settings.
1. In the Loca tion section, specify a path to the folder where backup files must be stored. Click P op ulate to
check capacity and available free space in the selected location.
o For Dell Data Domain, click Browse and select a location from the list of available paths.
2. [For Linux repository and deduplicating storage appliances except HPE StoreOnce and Dell Data Domain]
Select the Use fast cloning on XFS volumes check box to enable copy-on-write functionality. In terms of
Veeam Backup & Replication, this functionality is known as Fast Clone. For more information, see Fast
Clone.
3. [For HPE StoreOnce with immutability] To prohibit deletion of blocks of data from the backup repository,
select the Ma k e recent backups immutable for check box and specify the immutability period. for more
information on limitations and recommendation for HPE StoreOnce with immutability, see HPE StoreOnce
and Immutability.
• Use the Loa d control section to limit the number of concurrent tasks and data ingestion rate for the
backup repository. These settings will help you control the load on the backup repository and prevent
possible timeouts of storage I/O operations.
o Select the Limit maximum concurrent tasks check box and specify the maximum allowed number of
concurrent tasks for the backup repository. If this value is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication will
not start a new task until one of current tasks finishes. For more information, see Limiting the Number
of Concurrent Tasks.
NOTE
• Limitation of concurrent tasks is ignored for vCD backup jobs. And also if the backup
repository acts as a target storage for a Veeam Cloud Connect job.
• It is not recommended that you disable the Limit maximum concurrent tasks to N option
for backup repositories with per-machine backup chains. In case of per-machine backup
chains, synthetic operations (synthetic full backup, backup files merge and
transformation) work in parallel for every workload in the backup. The number of parallel
operations is limited by the number of concurrent tasks that can be performed on the
backup repository. If you disable the Limit maximum concurrent tasks to N option (which
results in using an unlimited number of slots), the load on the backup repository may be
high.
o Select the Limit read a nd write data rates to check box and specify the maximum rate to restrict the
total speed of reading and writing data to the backup repository disk. For more information, see
Limiting Combined Data Rate for Backup Repositories.
NOTE
The Limit read and write data rates to settings does not apply to health checks performed as
part of backup and backup copy jobs. Even if you limit read/write rate for a backup repository,
the health check will consume resources of the backup repository regardless of this setting.
Consider this limitation when configuring basic and health check schedules for backup and
backup copy jobs.
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4. Click Ad vanced to configure additional settings for the backup repository:
o For storage systems using a fixed block size, select the Align backup file data blocks check box.
Veeam Backup & Replication will align VM data saved to a backup file at a 4 KB block boundary.
o When you enable compression for a backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication compresses VM data at
the source side and then transports it to the target side. Writing compressed data to a deduplicating
storage appliance results in poor deduplication ratios as the number of matching blocks decreases. To
overcome this situation, select the Decompress backup data blocks before storing check box. If data
compression is enabled for a job, Veeam Backup & Replication will compress VM data on the source
side, transport it to the target side, decompress VM data on the target side and write raw VM data to
the storage device to achieve a higher deduplication ratio.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication does not compress VM data if encryption is enabled for a job and
the Decompress backup data blocks before storing check box is selected in the settings of the
target backup repository. Therefore, in the job statistics, you may observe a higher amount of
transferred data (the Tra nsferred counter) as compared to a job for which encryption is
disabled. For more information on job statistics, see Viewing Real-Time Statistics.
In the properties of the backup created with encryption, you may also see that the backup size
(the Ba ckup Size column) is larger than the original VM size (the Orig inal Size column). For more
information on backup properties, see Viewing Backup Properties.
o If you plan to use rotated drives for the backup repository, select the This repository is backed by
rotated hard drives check box and choose how Veeam Backup & Replication will behave when a drive
is swapped:
▪ Continue an existing backup chain if present. Select this option to continue the backup chain
found on the drive.
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▪ Delete backups belonging to this job . Select this option to delete all backups created by the
currently running job.
▪ Delete all backups on the drive . Select this option to delete all backups created by
Veeam Backup & Replication and stored on the drive in the repository folder. Note that
Veeam Backup & Replication will delete all backups, even backups created by other jobs.
For more information, see Configuring Backup Repositories with Rotated Drives.
o To create a separate backup file for every machine in the job, make sure that the Use per-machine
b a ckup files check box is selected. If you clear the check box, Veeam Backup & Replication will create
single-file backups. For more information on the backup chain formats and their limitations, see
Backup Chain Formats.
NOTE
Changing of the Use p er-machine backup files setting after the repository was already created
does not take any effect. To change backup chain format, follow the instructions provided in
Changing Backup Chain Formats.
• The This repository is backed by rotated hard drives option is disabled and cannot be changed.
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• The Use per-machine backup files option is enabled.
ExaGrid
• The Align backup file data blocks option is disabled and must not be changed.
• The This repository is backed by rotated hard drives option is disabled and cannot be changed.
Quantum DXi
• The Align backup file data blocks option is disabled and must not be changed.
• The This repository is backed by rotated hard drives option is disabled and cannot be changed.
• The This repository is backed by rotated hard drives option is disabled and cannot be changed.
Infinidat InfiniGuard
• The This repository is backed by rotated hard drives option is disabled and cannot be changed.
HPE StoreOnce
• The Align backup file data blocks option is enabled and cannot be changed if Fixed Block is enable on the
HPE StoreOnce. In other cases, the option is disabled and must not be changed.
• The This repository is backed by rotated hard drives option is disabled and cannot be changed.
• The Use per-machine backup files option is enabled and cannot be changed.
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Step 5. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Server step of the wizard, specify settings for the mount server that you plan to use for file-level
and application items restore.
1. From the Mount Server list, select a server that you want to use as a mount server. The mount server is
required for file-level and application items restore. During the restore p rocess,
Veeam Backup & Replication will mount the VM disks from the backup file residing in the backup
repository to the mount server. As a result, VM data will not have travel over the network, which will
reduce the load on the network and speed up the restore process. For more information, see Mount
Server.
The Mount Server list contains only Microsoft Windows servers that are added to the backup
infrastructure. If the server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, click Ad d New on the right to
open the New W indows Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
2. In the Instant recovery write cache folder field, specify a folder that will be used for writing cache during
mount operations.
3. To make the backup repository accessible by the Veeam vPower NFS Service, select the E nable vPower
NFS service on the mount server check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the vPower NFS
Service on the mount server you have selected.
4. To customize network ports used by the vPower NFS Service, click P orts. For information on ports used by
default, see Ports.
IMP ORTANT
Do not enable Microsoft Windows NFS services on the machine where you install the Veeam vPower NFS
Service. If Microsoft NFS services and Veeam vPower NFS Service are enabled on the same machine, both
services may fail to work correctly.
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Step 6. Review Properties and Components
At the Review step of the wizard, review details of the backup repository and specify importing settings.
1. Review the backup repository settings and list of components that will be installed on the backup
repository server.
2. If the backup repository contains backups that were previously created with Veeam Backup & Replication,
select the Sea rch the repository for existing backups a nd import them automatically check box.
Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the backup repository to detect existing backup files and display
them in the Veeam Backup & Replication console under the Imported > Backups node.
3. If the backup repository contains guest file system index files that were previously created by
Veeam Backup & Replication, select the Imp ort guest file system index check box. Index files will be
imported with backup files, and you will be able to search for guest OS files inside imported ba ckups.
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Step 7. Apply Backup Repository Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to install and configure all required
components. Then click Nex t to complete the procedure of adding the backup repository to the backup
infrastructure.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the added backup repository. Then click Finish to exit the
wizard.
In This Section
• Editing Settings of Backup Repositories
• Access Permissions
• Fast Clone
• Proxy Affinity
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NOTE
When editing backup repository settings, you cannot change the selected backup repository server.
Therefore, the Rep ository server field at the Server step is grayed out.
TIP
The following column headers show information on the repository storage settings:
• The Ca pacity column header — specifies a full size of a storage location where you keep your
backups.
• The Free column header — specifies the amount of free space on a storage location. It considers a
size of all data that is already added to this storage location without using
Veeam Backup & Replication. For example, if the storage location capacity is 100 GB, and you added
to this location data that occupies 50 GB, the Free column header will display 50 GB.
• The Used Space column header — specifies the amount of space occupied by backups created by
Veeam Backup & Replication. Note that it does not consider data compression and deduplication
that is not performed by means of Veeam Backup & Replication. For example, if
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a backup that occupies 10 GB, and a size of this backup
decreases to 9 GB after compression or deduplication performed by a storage appliance, the Used
Space column header will display 10 GB.
• [For object storage repositories] The Memb ership column header - specifies a scale-out backup
repository to which object storage repositories are added as performance extents,
3. In the working area, select the backup repository and click E d it Repository on the ribbon or right-click the
backup repository and select P roperties.
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4. Edit the backup repository settings as required. Note that you cannot change the selected repository
server and path to the folder used for storing backups.
Access Permissions
If you want to store in the backup repository backups of virtual and physical machines created with
Veeam Backup & Replication additional solutions, for example, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, Veeam
Agent for Linux and so on, you must set up access permissions to backup repositories.
Access permissions are granted to security principals such as users and AD groups by the backup administrator
who works with Veeam Backup & Replication. Users with granted access permissions can target Veeam Agent
backup jobs at this backup repository and perform restore from backups located in this backup repository.
NOTE
If you plan to create backups in a Veeam backup repository with Veeam Agent backup jobs configured in
Veeam Backup & Replication, you do not need to grant access permissions on the backup repository to
users. In the Veeam Agent management scenario, to establish a connection between the backup server and
protected computers, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a TLS certificate. To learn more, see the
Configuring Security Settings section in the Veeam Agent Management Guide.
Right after installation, access permissions on the default backup repos itory are set to Allow to everyone for
testing and evaluation purposes. If necessary, you can change these settings.
After you create a new backup repository, access permissions on this repository are set to Deny to everyone . To
allow users to store backups in the backup repository, you must grant users with access permissions to this
repository.
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Managing Permissions of Backup Server
To grant access permissions to a security principal:
o The Ba ckup Repositories node — if you want to grant access permissions on a regular backup
repository.
o The Sca le-out Repositories node — if you want to grant access permissions on a scale-out backup
repository.
1. In the working area, select the necessary backup repository and click Set Access Permissions on the ribbon
or right-click the backup repository and select Access permissions. If you do not see the Set Access
P ermissions button on the ribbon or the Access permissions command is not available in the shortcut
menu, press and hold the [CTRL] key, right-click the backup repository and select Access p ermissions.
2. In the Sta ndalone applications window, specify to whom you want to grant access permissions on this
backup repository:
o Allow to everyone — select this option if you want all users to be able to store backups in this backup
repository. Setting access permissions to Everyone is equal to granting access rights to the Everyone
Microsoft Windows group ( Anonymous users are excluded). Note, however, this scenario is
recommended for demo environments only.
o Allow to the following accounts or groups only — select this option if you want only specific users to
be able to store backups in this backup repository. Click Ad d to add the necessary users and groups to
the list.
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3. To encrypt backup files created in the backup repository by Veeam Agents operating in the standalone
mode, select the E ncrypt backups stored in this repository check box and choose the necessary password
from the field below. If you have not specified a password beforehand, click Ad d on the right or the
Ma nage passwords link to add a new password. Veeam Backup & Replication will encrypt files at the
backup repository side using its built-in encryption mechanism.
If you want to encrypt backup files created by Veeam Agents operating in the managed mode, you must
configure encryption in the backup job settings. For example, to learn how to encrypt backup files created
by managed Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, see the Storage Settings section in the Veeam Agent
Management Guide.
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3. In the working area, select the necessary S3 Compatible backup repository and click Set Access
P ermissions on the ribbon or right-click the backup repository and select Access permissions. If you do not
see the Set Access P ermissions button on the ribbon or the Access p ermissions command is not available
in the shortcut menu, press and hold the [CTRL] key, right-click the backup repository and select Access
p ermissions.
4. On the Security tab, specify how Veeam Agent or a SP will access an S3 Compatible object storage
repository:
o Ag ents share credentials to object storage repository — use this option if you want directly access the
S3 Compatible object storage repository. In this case, Veeam Agent will use credentials that you
specified when added the S3 Compatible object storage repository to the backup infrastructure.
IMP ORTANT
This option is not secure since Veeam Backup & Replication will have access permissions on the
bucket where you keep your folders with backups.
o P rovided by the backup server — use this option if you want to access the S3 Compatible object
storage repository through a gateway server.
o P rovided by IAM/STS object storage capabilities — use this option if you want directly access the S3
Compatible object storage repository. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will create service
tokens that Veeam Agent or a SP will use to access the S3 Compatible object storage repository.
i. In the Id entity and access management (IAM) endpoint field, specify the endpoint of your S3
Compatible object storage repository.
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ii. In the Security token service (STS) endpoint field, specify the security token.
During the rescan operation, Veeam Backup & Replication gathers information about backups that are currently
available in the backup repository and updates the list of backups in the configuration database. After the
rescan operation, backups that were not in this configuration database will be shown on the Home view in the
Ba ckups > Disk (Imported) node. If backups are encrypted, they will be shown in the Ba ckups > Disk (Encrypted)
node.
IMP ORTANT
• It is recommended that you stop or disable all jobs before performing the
rescan.Veeam Backup & Replication skips from scanning backups created by active jobs.
• Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to import backups automatically while performing a
rescan if VBM files are not available. In this case you will have to import backups manually using the
VBK files. For more information, see Importing Backups Manually.
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2. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckup Repositories node.
3. In the working area, select the backup repository and click Rescan Repository on the ribbon or right-click
the backup repository and select Rescan repository.
TIP
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication skips from rescan files whose paths contain $RECYCLE.BIN or
.Trash-<digits> . You can exclude other file paths with a registry value. For more information, contact
Veeam Customer Support.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not remove backup files and other data stored in the backup repository. You
can re-connect the backup repository at any time and import backups from this backup repository to
Veeam Backup & Replication.
You cannot remove a backup repository that is used by any job. To remove such backup repository, you first
need to delete a reference to this backup repository in the job settings.
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3. In the working area, select the backup repository and click Remove Repository on the ribbon or right-click
the backup repository and select Remove.
Fast Clone
Fast Clone is the Veeam Backup & Replication technology that helps create quick file copies. Fast Clone
increases the speed of synthetic backup creation and transformation, reduces disk space requirements and
decreases the load on storage devices.
With this technology, Veeam Backup & Replication references existing data blocks on volumes instead of
copying data blocks between files. Data blocks are copied only when files are modified.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports Fast Clone for the following types of backup repositories:
• Linux server
• SMB share
• ExaGrid
• Quantum DXi
• Infinidat InfiniGuard
Depending on the repository type, Fast Clone uses different technologies and has different requirements and
limitations. For more information, see Fast Clone for Deduplicating Storage Appliances, Fast Clone for Linux
Repositories and Fast Clone for Microsoft Windows and SMB Repositories.
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Veeam Backup & Replication uses Fast Clone for the following operations:
• In b a ckup jobs: to merge backup files, create synthetic full backups (including GFS backups), transform
reverse incremental backups and compact full backup files.
• In b a ckup copy jobs: to merge backup files, create GFS backups (synthetic method) and compact full
backup files.
When Veeam Backup & Replication performs an operation with Fast Clone, it reports this information to the
session details of this operation.
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Fast Clone for Linux Repositories
For Linux backup repositories, Fast Clone is based on the reflink technology.
• The Linux distribution is supported. For more information, see Backup Repository Server (XFS integration).
• The minimum supported data block size is 1 KB. The maximum supported block size is 4KB.
1. Format the disk where backups will be stored using the following XFS volume format string:
Consider that:
mkdir /backups
mount /dev/sda1 /backups
3. Run the following command to ensure that the disk is properly configured:
df -hT
4. To permanently mount the disk, add the entry to the /etc/fstab configuration file. It is recommended
to use the UUID to specify the disk.
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blkid /dev/sda1
Limitations
After you have moved backup chains to a Linux backup repository with Fast Clone support, you must create
active full backups for these chains to activate Fast Clone. You can also schedule the backup file compact
operation instead of active full backup.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses Fast Clone for all Microsoft Windows and SMB backup repositories
that meet the requirements. You can disable this option with a registry value. For more information, contact
Veeam Customer Support.
To use Fast Clone, Veeam Backup & Replication requires that Microsoft Windows backup repositories meet the
following conditions:
• OS is Microsoft Windows Server 2016 (or later) or Microsoft Windows 10 Pro for Workstations (or later).
NOTE
All ReFS supported configurations must use Windows Server Catalog certified hardware. For other
requirements, limitations and known issues, see this Veeam KB article.
To use Fast Clone, Veeam Backup & Replication requires that SMB backup repositories support
FSCTL_DUPLICATE_EXTENTS_TO_FILE and FSCTL_SET_INTEGRITY_INFORMATION. SMB shares configured on
Microsoft Windows machines must also support the SMB 3.1.1 protocol and the ReFS 3.1 (or later) file system.
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Depending on the type of the performed job, Veeam Backup & Replication also imposes the following
requirements on backup infrastructure components.
OS: Microsoft Windows Server 2016 (or later) or Microsoft Windows 10 Pro for
Workstations (or later) on the following backup infrastructure components:
• If a gateway is selected manually: Gateway server.
• If a gateway is selected automatically: Mount server associated with the
backup repository, or backup server. For reverse incremental backup
chains, Microsoft Windows Server 2016 (or later) or Windows 10 Pro for
Workstations (or later) must additionally be installed on backup proxies
assigned for the job.
OS: Microsoft Windows Server 2016 (or later) or Microsoft Windows 10 Pro for
Workstations (or later) on the following backup infrastructure components:
• If a gateway is selected manually: Gateway server.
• If a gateway is selected automatically:
[For direct data transport path] Mount server associated with the backup
repository, or backup server.
[For data transport path over WAN accelerators] Microsoft Windows
Server 2016 (or later) or Microsoft Windows 10 Pro for Workstations (or
later) on the target WAN accelerator.
Limitations
The following limitations apply when Veeam Backup & Replication uses Fast Clone for Microsoft Windows or
SMB backup repositories:
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not use Fast Clone for backup repositories configured with
Veeam Backup & Replication 9.5 or an earlier version. After upgrade, such backup repositories will work as
backup repositories without Fast Clone support. To leverage Fast Clone, edit settings of such backup
repositories and complete the E d it Backup Repository wizard without changing settings.
• After you have enabled Fast Clone for existing repositories as described in the previous paragraph or have
moved backup chains to backup repositories with Fast Clone support, you must create active full backups
for backup chains stored in / moved to the repositories to activate Fast Clone. You can also schedule the
backup file compact operation instead of performing active full backup.
• Due to Microsoft limitations, all backup files in the backup chain must be stored on the same volume. For
more information, see Restrictions and Remarks at Microsoft Docs.
• Fast Clone requires that source and destination files are stored on the same ReFS volume. If you add a
backup repository with Fast Clone support as an extent to a scale-out backup repository, make sure that
you enable the Data Locality placement policy for this scale-out backup repository. If backup files are
stored on different extents, Fast Clone will not be used.
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• Veeam Backup & Replication automatically aligns data blocks at a 4KB or 64 KB block boundary depending
on the volume configuration or SMB share used storage.
We recommend that you use ReFS volume formatted with 64 KB cluster size to provide better
performance with large data volumes.
• When you copy data from a ReFS volume to another location, the file system downloads cloned data
blocks. For this reason, copied data occupy more space in the target location than it used to occupy in the
source location. This can happen, for example, if you evacuate an extent that supports block cloning from
a scale-out backup repository and migrate VM backup data to another extent: copied data will require
more space than it originally took.
• If you plan to assign the role of a backup repository to Microsoft Windows Server 2016 version 1709 (or
later) or Microsoft Windows 10 Pro for Workstations (or later), consider the following limitations:
o Fast Clone and Windows data deduplication cannot be used simultaneously. Thus, if you target a
backup job to a repository supporting Fast Clone and enable Windows data deduplication, the Fast
Clone technology will not be used for this job.
o If you target a backup job to a CIFS ReFS repository and enable Windows data deduplica tion, the job
will fail. Veeam Backup & Replication does not support such scenario.
Proxy Affinity
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication assigns backup proxies and repositories for jobs or tasks independently
of each other. If you need to bind backup proxies to specific backup repositories and use them together, you can
define proxy affinity settings. Proxy affinity determines what backup proxies are eligible to access a specific
backup repository and read/write data from/to this backup repository.
Proxy affinity lets you control assignment of resources in the backup infrastructure and reduce administration
overhead. For example, in case of a geographically distributed infrastructure, you can restrict a backup
repository in the local site from communicating with backup proxies in a remote site. Or you can configure proxy
affinity rules based on a connection speed between backup proxies and backup repositories.
Proxy affinity settings are specified at the level of a backup repository. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication
lets all backup proxies in the backup infrastructure access the backup repository. Using proxy affinity settings,
you can define a list of backup proxies that can access this backup repository.
Proxy affinity can be set up for the following types of backup repositories:
• Backup repositories
• Cloud repositories (proxy affinity settings are configured on the tenant side)
Proxy affinity rules are applied to the following types of jobs and tasks that engage backup proxies and
repositories:
• Backup jobs, including VMware Cloud Director backup and backup jobs from storage snapshots on primary
and target storage arrays
• VeeamZIP
• VM copy
• Entire VM restore
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Proxy affinity rules are not restrictive. You can think of affinity rules as a priority list. If backup proxies from the
proxy affinity list cannot be used for some reason, for example, these backup proxies are inaccessible,
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically fails over to the regular processing mode. It displays a warning in the
job or task session and picks the most appropriate backup proxy from the list of proxies selected for the job or
task.
When you target a job at a backup repository for which proxy affinity settings are configured, you must make
sure that you assign a backup proxy from the proxy affinity list for job or task processing. If you assign a backup
proxy that is not bound to this backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning. For job
processing, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the backup proxy that you define in the job settings, which
may result in degraded job performance.
Extent selection rules have a higher priority than proxy affinity rules. Veeam Backup & Replication first selects
an extent and then picks a backup proxy according to the proxy affinity rules specified for this extent.
For example, you have 2 backup proxies: Backup Proxy 1 and Backup Proxy 2. You create a backup job and target
it at a scale-out backup repository configured in the following way:
• Scale-out backup repository has 2 extents: Extent 1 has 100 GB of free space and is bound to Backup
Proxy 1; Extent 2 has 1 TB of free space and is bound to Backup Proxy 2.
In the backup job settings, you define that Backup Proxy 1 must be used for job processing.
When you run the backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will store backup files to Extent 2 since it has more
free space. For job processing, it will pick Backup Proxy 1 and will display a message in the job statistics that
requirements of proxy affinity rules cannot be met.
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In case of restore from a scale-out backup repository, backup files may be located on different extents. In this
case, Veeam Backup & Replication picks a backup proxy according to the following priority rules (starting from
the most preferable one):
2. Backup proxy is added to the affinity list for the extent where the full backup file is stored.
3. Backup proxy is added to the affinity list for at least one extent.
3. In the working area, select the backup repository and click P roxy Affinity on the ribbon or right-click the
backup repository and select P roxy affinity.
4. In the P roxy Affinity window, select P refer the following backup proxies for this repository and select
check boxes next to the backup proxies that you want to bind to the backup repository.
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External Repository
An external repository is a read-only repository. You can use Veeam Backup & Replication to copy, import and/or
restore backups created by Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure and Veeam Backup for
Google Cloud from external to on-premises repositories. This way, you can perform data migration between
cloud, on-premises and virtual infrastructures.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following types of external repositories:
To start working with backups created by Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure and
Veeam Backup for Google Cloud, you must add a repository that contains backups of Amazon EC2 instances,
Azure VMs or Google Cloud Platform VMs to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure as an external
repository. After that, you can perform the following operations:
• Restore EC2 instances, Azure VMs and Google Cloud Platform VMs to AW S
• Restore Azure VMs, EC2 instances and Google Cloud Platform VMs to Microsoft Azure
• Restore Google Cloud Platform instances, EC2 instances and Azure VMs to Google Cloud
• Export disks of EC2 instances, Azure VMs and Google Cloud Platform VMs
NOTE
• During the process of copying backups, or restore to Amazon EC2 or Microsoft Azure, data of EC2
instances and Azure VMs may migrate from one geographic location to another. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning and stores a record about data migration to job or
task session details. For more information, see Locations.
• You cannot use an external repository as a target for backup or backup copy jobs.
Ownership
Ownership defines what entity can own an Amazon S3, Azure Blob or Google Cloud storage repository at a time.
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How Does Taking Ownership Occur
After Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure or Veeam Backup for Google Cloud has
finished its initial backup job session, it becomes the rightful owner of both a storage repository and backup files
in that repository.
Taking ownership of such a repository along with its backup files by the Veeam Backup & Replication client
consists of the following consecutive steps:
Reclaiming ownership of a repository occurs every time a client adds object storage as an external
repository to the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
During its session, Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure or Veeam Backup for
Google Cloud verifies the owner of a repository and if it finds out that the owner has been changed, it
changes the owner of each backup file in that repository by creating a new checkpoint that ref ers to a new
rightful owner. Such a checkpoint will be used during subsequent sessions of a backup job to repeat owner
verification.
It is possible, however, that after you add an external repository, you never launch the associated backup job
again. In such a scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to manage retention policies, but you will
still be able to restore external repository data, remove backups from external repositories and perform backup
copy.
Therefore, if a client A adds an external repository that has previously been added by the client B, the client B
completely loses its ownership privileges.
Losing privileges means that the client B will no longer be able to manage retention policies. All the previously
created backup copy jobs and restore sessions will be failing.
Ownership, however, can easily be reclaimed by re-adding the same object storage anew.
Cache
Veeam Backup & Replication caches data that is being retrieved from external repositories every time a backup
copy job or restore session is performed.
Such an approach helps not only to reduce the number of cost-expensive operations incurred by AWS, Microsoft
Azure or Google Cloud Platform, but also decrease the amount of traffic being sent over the network.
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Consider the following:
• Cache is created on a gateway server while the following activities are being processed:
o Restore sessions.
• Cache is not created upon the addition of an external repository to the Veeam Backup & Replication
console.
• Cache is reused and updated during each subsequent execution of a backup copy job or restore session.
• Cache size limit is 10GB. Once reached, Veeam will purge obsolete cache by 20% preserving most
frequently used parts. Purging is done by the maintenance job.
o An external repository has been removed from the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
o The gateway server has been changed in the settings of the external repository configuration.
o The backup file has been removed from the external repository.
• Cache can be removed manually without affecting the backup infrastructure in any negative way.
Encryption
Backups that reside in Amazon S3 buckets, Azure Blob storage and Google Cloud storage can be encrypted by
Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure and Veeam Backup for Google Cloud. Moreover,
password for such encrypted backups may change on a daily basis. For example, there is a backup chain in
Amazon S3 bucket that consists of 10 restore points, each of which was encrypted with different password.
Therefore, there are 10 different passwords in total that have been used.
To be able to decrypt each restore point in such a backup chain without having to provide each previously used
password separately, Veeam Backup & Replication implements the ability of backward hierarchical decryption.
Backward hierarchical decryption requires you to provide only the latest password so that all the previously
created restore points can be decrypted as well. For example, there are three restore points: A, B, and C. Th e
point A was encrypted with password 1, B with password 2, and C with password 3. Therefore, you will only
need to know the password of the C point to decrypt points C, B, and A.
If you plan to perform data recovery operations with encrypted backups, you must provide a password for these
backups in the E x ternal Repository wizard:
• [For Veeam Backup for AWS] At the Encryption step of the wizard.
• [For Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure] At the Encryption step of the wizard.
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Managing Retention Policy
A retention policy is set in the backup policy settings of Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft
Azure and Veeam Backup for Google Cloud and defines the number of restore points to keep in repositories.
Retention policies are initially managed by Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure or Veeam
Backup for Google Cloud until a Veeam Backup & Replication client reclaims ownership of a repository and all
the backup files in such a repository.
Once ownership is reclaimed, Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure or Veeam Backup for
Google Cloud ceases to govern retention policies and the Veeam Backup & Replication client becomes
responsible for removing obsolete restore points from repositories.
The restore points that fall under the retention policy will be removed upon the next successful session of the
maintenance job.
When a Veeam Backup & Replication client removes an external repository from its scope, it relinquishes its
ownership which then goes directly to Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure or Veeam
Backup for Google Cloud until another Veeam Backup & Replication client reclaims it anew and so forth.
IMP ORTANT
A retention policy can only be applied by the Veeam Backup & Replication client that is the rightful owner
of an Amazon S3 object storage repository and its backup files.
Maintenance Job
The maintenance job is a system job that is executed automatically every 24 hours.
• Purges obsolete restore points that fall under the retention policy.
To be able to purge obsolete restore points from external repositories due to the retention policy
threshold, a Veeam Backup & Replication client must be the owner of a repository and its backup files.
• Purges cache by 20% of the size limit. By default, the size limit is 10GB.
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2. Specify the repository name and description
NOTE
If you added the Veeam Backup for AWS appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and
want to deploy a new S3 repository, see instructions in the Adding S3 Repositories section in the
Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS Guide.
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Step 1. Launch New External Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the E x ternal Repositories node and click
Connect to Repository on the ribbon. At the Connect to External Repository window, select Veeam Backup
for AWS.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the E x ternal Repositories node and
select Connect to... At the Connect to External Repository window, select Veea m Backup for AWS.
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Step 2. Specify External Repository Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the external repository.
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Step 3. Specify Cloud Repository Account
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access an Amazon S3 bucket with Amazon
EC2 instance backups.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand in the Cloud Credentials Manager, click the Ma nage cloud
a ccounts link or click Ad d on the right to add the necessary credentials.
2. From the Da ta center region drop-down list, select the AWS region where the Amazon S3 bucket is
located: Global, GovCloud (US) , or China .
3. From the Ga teway server drop-down list, select a gateway server that will be used to access the Amazon
S3 bucket. We recommend that you use a gateway server, for example, if your organization has NAT or
different types of firewalls and your access to the internet is limited.
The gateway server caches data when you copy backups or perform restore operations. The gateway
server helps you decrease the amount of traffic being sent over the network and reduce data transfer
costs. For more information on caching data, see Cache.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. If the
Veeam Backup & Replication server resides in a region that differs from the Amazon region where your
Amazon S3 bucket resides, choose a server that is located close to the bucket. You can choose any
Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and
has internet connection. Note that the server must be added to the infrastructure beforehand. For more
information on how to add a server, see the Adding Microsoft Windows Servers and Adding Linux Servers
sections.
NOTE
• On the gateway server, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys Veeam Data Mover that handles
traffic sent when you work with external repository data. If Veeam Data Mover becomes
outdated, you must upgrade it as described in the Upgrading External Repositories section.
• If you choose not to use a gateway server, make sure that all scale-out repository extents
have direct internet access.
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Step 4. Specify Cloud Storage Details
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify an Amazon S3 bucket and folder where Amazon EC2 instance backups
reside:
1. From the Da ta center region drop-down list, select an AWS region where the Amazon S3 bucket is located.
2. From the Bucket drop-down list, select the necessary Amazon S3 bucket where EC2 insta nce backups
reside.
3. Click Browse to select a folder in the Amazon S3 bucket where EC2 instance backups reside.
If you do not see the required folder, make sure that the repository you are trying to add is created on the
Veeam Backup for AWS server.
NOTE
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Step 5. Configure Encryption
• If data in the external repository is encrypted with a key management service (KMS) customer master key
(CMK), Veeam Backup & Replication shows the used key. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will
automatically decrypt the backups.
• If data in the external repository is encrypted with a password, select E nable backup file encryption and
then click P erform Veeam encryption with the following password. From the drop-down list, select the
password that must be used to decrypt the data. If the password is correct, Veeam Backup & Replication
will automatically decrypt the backups.
If you have not added the password beforehand, click the Ma nage passwords link or the Ad d button to
add the necessary password. For more information on adding passwords, see Creating Passwords.
If you do not specify the decryption password, you can do it later. For more information, see Viewing
External Repository Data.
For more information on how backups are encrypted, see the S3 Repository Encryption section in the Veeam
Backup for AWS User Guide.
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Step 6. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to install and configure all required
components. Then click Nex t to complete the procedure of adding the external repository to the backup
infrastructure.
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Step 7. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the external repository settings and click Finish.
NOTE
If you added the Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication
infrastructure and want to deploy a new Microsoft Azure Blob storage, see instructions in the Adding
Microsoft Azure Blob Storage section in the Integration with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure Guide.
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Step 1. Launch New External Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the E x ternal Repositories node and click
Connect to Repository on the ribbon. At the Connect to External Repository window, select Veeam Backup
for Microsoft Azure.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the E x ternal Repositories node and
select Connect to... At the Connect to External Repository window, select Veea m Backup for Microsoft
Azure.
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Step 2. Specify External Repository Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the external repository.
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Step 3. Specify Cloud Repository Account
At the Account step of the wizard, specify settings for an account which will be used to connect to Azure Blob
storage:
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access your Azure Blob storage.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand in the Cloud Credentials Manager, click the Ma nage cloud
a ccounts link or click Ad d on the right to add the necessary credentials.
2. From the Reg ion drop-down list, select the region type.
3. From the Ga teway server drop-down list, select a gateway server that will be used to access Azure Blob
storage. We recommend that you use a gateway server, for example, if your organization has NAT or
different types of firewalls and your access to the internet is limited.
The gateway server caches data when you copy backups or perform restore operations. The gateway
server helps you decrease the amount of traffic being sent over the network and reduce data transfer
costs. For more information on caching data, see Cache.
By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the Veeam Backup & Replication server. If the
Veeam Backup & Replication server resides in a region that differs from the Azure region where your Blob
storage resides, choose a server that is located close to the storage. You can choose any Microsoft
Windows or Linux server that is added to your Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and has internet
connection. Note that the server must be added to the infrastructure beforehand. For more information on
how to add a server, see the Adding Microsoft Windows Servers and Adding Linux Servers sections.
NOTE
• On the gateway server, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys Veeam Data Mover that handles
traffic sent when you work with external repository data. If Veeam Data Mover becomes
outdated, you must upgrade it as described in the Upgrading External Repositories section.
• If you choose not to use a gateway server, make sure that all scale-out repository extents
have direct internet access.
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Step 4. Select Azure Blob Container
At the Container step of the wizard, specify Azure Blob storage container settings:
1. From the Container drop-down list, select a container that contains backups created by Veeam Backup for
Microsoft Azure.
2. Click Browse to select a folder that contains backups created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
If you do not see the required folder, make sure that the repository you are trying to add is created on the
Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure server.
NOTE
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Step 5. Configure Encryption
• If data in the external repository is encrypted with a Key Vault key, Veeam Backup & Replication shows the
used Key Vault and encryption key. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically decrypt
the backups.
• If data in the external repository is encrypted with a password, select E nable backup file encryption and
then click P erform Veeam encryption with the following password. From the drop-down list, select the
password that must be used to decrypt the data. If the password is correct, Veeam Backup & Replication
will automatically decrypt the backups.
If you have not added the password beforehand, click the Ma nage passwords link or the Ad d button to
add the necessary password. For more information on adding passwords, see Creating Passwords.
If you do not specify the decryption password, you can do it later. For more information, see Viewing
External Repository Data.
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Step 6. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait for Veeam Backup & Replication to install and configure all required
components. Then click Nex t to complete the procedure of adding the external repository to the backup
infrastructure.
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Step 7. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the repository configuration settings and click Finish.
5. Apply settings
NOTE
If you added the Google Cloud Platform appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and
want to deploy a new Cloud Storage Repository, see instructions in the Adding Standard Backup Repository
section in the Integration with Google Cloud Platform Guide.
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Step 1. Launch New External Repository Wizard
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select the E x ternal Repositories node and click
Connect to Repository on the ribbon. At the Connect to External Repository window, select Veeam Backup
for Google Cloud.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click the E x ternal Repositories node and
select Connect to... At the Connect to External Repository window, select Veea m Backup for Google
Cloud.
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Step 2. Specify External Repository Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the external repository.
The default description contains information about the user who added the external repository, date and
time when the external repository was added.
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Step 3. Specify Cloud Repository Account
At the Account step of the wizard, specify Google Cloud connection settings:
1. From the Credentials drop-down list, select user credentials to access a storage bucket with the backups.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage cloud accounts link or click Ad d on the
right and add the necessary credentials, as described in Google Cloud Accounts .
2. From the Ga teway server drop-down list, select a server that will be used to access the Google Cloud
storage.
You can select any Microsoft Windows or Linux server that is added to your backup infrastructure and has
internet connection. You may want to use a gateway server, for example, if your organization has NAT or
different types of firewalls and your access to the internet is limited. For more information on how to add
such a server to your environment, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers and Adding Linux Servers
respectively. By default, the role of a gateway server is assigned to the machine where
Veeam Backup & Replication is installed.
On the gateway server, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys Veeam Data Mover. Veeam Data Mover is
responsible for handling ingress/egress requests that are sent to/from the gateway server when you work
with the external repository data in Veeam Backup & Replication. If Veeam Data Mover becomes outdated,
you must upgrade it as described in the Upgrading External Repositories section.
Gateway servers store cached data. For more information, see Cache.
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Step 4. Specify Cloud Storage Details
At the Buck et step of the wizard, specify a Google Cloud bucket and folder where Google Cloud instance
backups reside:
3. In the Select Folder field, select a cloud folder where the data will be stored. To do it, click Browse and
select an existing folder.
4. If the folder contains encrypted backups, select the Use this password for encrypted backups check box
and provide a password. If you skip this step for encrypted backups, Veeam Backup & Replication will add
such backups to the E x ternal Repository (Encrypted) node. For more information, see Viewing External
Repository Data.
NOTE
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Step 5. Apply Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait until Veeam Backup & Replication applies settings and completes adding
the external repository. Then click Nex t.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the external repository settings and click Finish.
o Amazon EC2 instance backups that were decrypted at the Bucket step of the New E xternal Repository
wizard.
o Microsoft Azure VMs that were decrypted at the Container step of the New E xternal Repository
wizard.
o Google Cloud Platform VM instances that were decrypted at the Bucket step of the New External
Rep ository wizard.
• In the E x ternal Repository (Encrypted) node, Veeam Backup & Replication displays:
o EC2 instance backups that were encrypted by Veeam Backup for AWS.
o Microsoft Azure VMs that were encrypted by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
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o Google Cloud Platform VM instances that were encrypted by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud.
To decrypt backups, select a backup policy that created the backups you want to decrypt, click Sp ecify
P a ssword on the ribbon, provide a password and click OK.
o Every 24 hours.
o After a backup chain is modified in the object storage. For example, if a restore point is added or
deleted.
• Rescan session results are saved to the configuration database and can be found in the History view under
the Sy stem node.
3. Select a repository you want to rescan and click Rescan on the ribbon menu or right-click a repository and
select Rescan.
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If you have more than one external repository added to the scope, you may want to rescan all the repositories
altogether. For that, right-click the root E x ternal Repositories node in the navigation pane and select Rescan.
Upload of Veeam Data Mover is done directly to a gateway server which you specify at the Account step of the
New E xternal Repository wizard.
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3. Select a repository you want to upgrade and click Up grade on the ribbon menu or right-click a repository
and select Up g rade.
3. In the working area, select an external repository and click E d it Repository on the ribbon or right-click the
external repository and select P roperties.
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4. Follow the steps of the E d it External Repository wizard and edit settings as required.
Note that some settings cannot be modified and will remain disabled during editing.
When you remove an external repository, Veeam Backup & Replication does the following:
• Relinquishes ownership.
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3. In the working area, select an external repository and click Remove Repository on the ribbon or right-click
the external repository and select Remove.
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Scale-Out Backup Repository
A scale-out backup repository is a repository system with horizontal scaling support for multi-tier storage of
data. A scale-out backup repository consists of one or more backup repositories or object storage repositories
called performance tier, and can be expanded with object storage repositories for long -term and archive
storage: capacity tier and archive tier. All the storage devices and systems inside the scale -out backup
repository are joined into a system, with their capacities summarized.
NOTE
Scale-out backup repository is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket -based
license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
If you configure a scale-out backup repository and then downgrade to the Sta ndard license, you will not be
able to run jobs targeted at the scale-out backup repository. However, you will be able to perform restore
from the scale-out backup repository.
• A scale-out backup repository can be expanded at any moment: if the extents of your scale -out backup
repository run out of space, you can add a new extent to the existing scale-out backup repository. For
example, if backup data grows and the backup repository reaches the storage limit, you can add a new
storage system to the scale-out backup repository. The free space on this storage system will be added to
the capacity of the scale-out backup repository. As a result, you will not have to move backups to a
backup repository of a larger size.
• It supports any backup target supported by Veeam: Windows or Linux servers with local or DAS storage,
network shares, deduplicating storage appliances. All the features of any stor age device or system are
preserved.
• It allows you to set up granular performance policy. For more information, see Backup File Placement.
A scale-out backup repository can comprise different tiers, or logical levels of storage.
• Performance tier is the level used for the fast access to the data. It consists of one or more backup
repositories or object storage repositories called performance extents.
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• Capacity tier is an additional level for storing data that needs to be accessed less frequently. However, you
still can restore your data directly from it. The capacity tier consists of cloud -based or on-premises object
storage repositories called capacity extent.
• Archive tier is an additional level for archive storage of infrequently accessed data. Applicable data can be
transported ether from the capacity or archive tier. For restore from the ar chive tier, data must undergo
preparation process.
A scale-out backup repository can be used for the following types of jobs and tasks:
• Backup jobs
You can copy backups that reside in scale-out backup repositories and store backup copies in scale-out
backup repositories
• Veeam backups for Amazon and Microsoft Azure (via backup copy jobs)
• VeeamZIP tasks
• Backup jobs created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows 2.0 or later
Backup files stored in the scale-out repository can be used for all types of restores, replication from backup and
backup copy jobs. You can verify such backups with SureBackup jobs. The scale -out backup repository can be
used as a staging backup repository for restore from tape media. Files restored from the tape media are placed
to the extents according to data placement policy configured for the scale-out backup repository. For more
information, see Backup File Placement.
To deploy a scale-out backup repository, you must configure one or more backup repositories or object storage
repositories and add them to a scale-out backup repository as extents. You can use the following types of
repositories:
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Limitations for Scale-Out Backup Repositories
Scale-out backup repositories have the following limitations:
• You cannot use a scale-out backup repository as a target for the following types of jobs:
o VM copy jobs
o Veeam Agent backup jobs created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows 1.5 or earlier
o Veeam Agent backup jobs created by Veeam Agent for Linux 1.0 Update 1 or earlier
• You cannot add a backup repository as an extent to the scale-out backup repository if any job of
unsupported type is targeted at this backup repository or if the backup repository contains data produced
by jobs of unsupported types (for example, replica metadata). To add such backup repository as an extent,
you must first target unsupported jobs to another backup repository and remove the job data from the
backup repository in question.
• Scale-out backup repositories do not support rotated drives. If you enable the This repository is backed by
rotated hard drives setting on an extent, Veeam Backup & Replication will ignore this setting and will work
with such repository as with a standard extent.
• If a backup repository is added as an extent to the scale-out backup repository, you cannot use it as a
regular backup repository. You cannot target jobs to this backup repository. Instead, you have to target
jobs to the configured scale-out backup repository.
• You cannot add a scale-out backup repository as an extent to another scale-out backup repository.
• You cannot add a backup repository as an extent if this backup repository is already added as an extent to
another scale-out backup repository.
• You cannot add a backup repository as an extent if this backup repository is already used as a backup
destination by VMware Cloud Director organizations.
• You cannot add a backup repository in which some activity is being performed (for example, a backup job
or restore task) as an extent to the scale-out backup repository.
• If you apply the Forget or Remove from disk options to a missing restore point in a scale-out backup
repository, the backup file associated with the missing restore point will be deleted from capacity tier and
archive tier on the next offload and archiving job run.
• If you use Enterprise edition of Veeam Backup & Replication, you can create two scale-out backup
repositories.
For each scale-out backup repository, you can have either backup repositories or object stor age
repositories added as a performance extent or a capacity extent. You can have 2 active, and 1 inactive (that
is, put to the Maintenance mode) performance or capacity extents. You can add inactive extents, for
example, if any of active extents has no free space, and you want to evacuate backup data from it.
If you add four performance extents and do not put any of them to the Maintenance mode, the jobs
targeted at the scale-out backup repository will fail.
Veeam Universal License and Enterprise Plus editions have no limitations on the number of scale-out
backup repositories or performance extents and capacity extents.
• If you want to use the Extract utility to work with backup files located on any of the extents of your scale -
out backup repository, make sure that incremental and full backup files are located on the same extent.
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• You can use the Veeam Backup Validator utility only for backups stored in the performance tier which
consists of backup repositories (except object storage repositories). Make sure that incremental and full
backup files are located on the same extent.
• To let Veeam Backup & Replication automatically import backups during rescan of a scale-out backup
repository, names of VBM files and paths to VBM files (starting from the backup r epository root to VBM
files, not including the root itself) must contain only allowed characters:
Names of VBM file and paths to VBM files must not contain spaces.
If a name of a VBM file or a path to a VBM file contains prohibited characters, Veeam Backup & Replication
will fail to import such backup during rescan of the scale-out backup repository. To import such backup,
you can replace prohibited characters with the underscore character, for example: C:\My
Repository\Backup_Job\Backup_Job.vbm. You do not need to rename the actual backup files.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not split one backup file across multiple extents.
• An object storage repository added as a capacity tier in a scale-out backup repository can not be used for
storing NAS backups. To archive NAS backup files to an object storage repository, assign the object
storage repository as an archive repository when you create a file share backup job.
• You cannot assign the role of a cache repository for file share backup to a scale -out backup repository and
its extents. To learn more about cache repository, see NAS Backup Support.
• If a repository is being used as a cloud repository, you cannot add it as an extent of a scale -out backup
repository.
• [For Nutanix AHV VM backups] Due to specifics of backup jobs for AHV VMs, Veeam Backup for Nutanix
AHV always creates a separate backup chain for each VM added to a backup job. Thus, even if you clear the
Use per-machine backup files check box in the advanced settings of a scale-out backup repository,
backups of multiple AHV VMs are not stored in a single backup file.
Immutability
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to prohibit deletion of data from the extents of the scale-out backup
repository by making that data temporarily immutable. It is done for increased security: immutability protects
your data from loss as a result of attacks, malware activity or any other injurious actions.
You can enable the immutability feature for any tier of scale-out backup repository.
To learn how immutability works with performance tier of the scale-out backup repository, see Immutability for
Performance Tier.
To learn how immutability works with capacity tier of the scale-out backup repository, see Immutability for
Capacity Tier.
To learn how immutability works with archive tier of the scale-out backup repository, see Immutability for
Archive Tier.
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IMP ORTANT
Note that most vendors allow enabling Object Lock only at the moment of creating the bucket.
For more information on enabling the Object Lock and Versioning features, see these Amazon articles:
Creating a bucket and Enabling versioning on buckets.
• Azure Storage
You must configure immutability policies for blob versions and enable blob versioning for your storage
account when you create a storage account.
For more information on enabling immutability for a container, see Microsoft Docs.
For more information on blob versioning for a storage account, see Microsoft Docs.
IMP ORTANT
When you create the storage account, by default the version-level immutability support option is
enabled. You must disable it, otherwise immutability will not be applied for your Azure object
storage. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
Performance Tier
Performance tier of a scale-out backup repository is the level used for fast access to the data.
The performance tier of a scale-out backup repository can comprise one or more performance extents. A
performance extent is a backup repository or an object storage repository added to the scale-out backup
repository. The list of the performance extents is displayed at the Add Performance Extents step of the New
Sca le-out Backup Repository wizard.
After you add a backup repository or an object storage repository to the scale-out backup repository, they no
longer exist as individual backup repositories.
When a backup repository or an object storage repository is added as a performance extent, some of its original
settings are kept, and some are not. The following settings are kept, or inherited:
• Rotated drive settings. Rotated drive settings are ignored and cannot be configured at the level of the
scale-out backup repository.
• Per-machine backup file settings. Per-machine settings can be configured at the level of the scale-out
backup repository.
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Limitations for Backup Repositories
Consider the following limitations for backup repositories added as performance extents:
• The same limitations that are specific for certain types of backup repositories apply to the performance
extents. For example, if you add Dell Data Domain as a performance extent to the scale -out backup
repository, you will not be able to create a backup chain longer than 60 points in this scale-out backup
repository.
• The performance extents of the scale-out backup repository should be located in the same site.
Technically, you can add to the scale-out backup repository the performance extents that reside in
different sites. However, in this case Veeam Backup & Replication will have to access VM backup files on
storage devices in different locations, and the backup performance will degrade.
• You can add only one type of object storage repositories as performance extents of one scale -out backup
repository. For example, if a first extent is an Amazon S3 object storage repository, the second extent
must also be an Amazon S3 object storage repository. You cannot use the backup repository and the
object storage repository for the same performance tier.
• Data located in object storage repositories is organized into a separate backup cha in for every machine in a
job.
When you configure a scale-out backup repository, you must set the backup file placement policy for backup
repositories. The backup file placement policy describes how backup files are distributed between extents. You
can choose one of the following policies:
• Data locality
• Performance
You can also select an extent for backup file placement, which has its nuances if you set the Performance policy
for the scale-out backup repository:
• Extent Selection
Keep in mind that at the beginning of a job, Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves the actual free space on a
scale-out backup repository and estimates the size of a restore point to be created. Then the estimated restore
point size is subtracted from the actual free space to determine the estimated free space. This estimated free
space is then used by all further concurrently running jobs targeted at the same scale -out backup repository. For
details, see Backup Size Estimation.
The backup file placement policy is not strict. If the necessary extent is not accessible,
Veeam Backup & Replication will disregard the policy limitations and attempt to place the backup file to the
extent that has enough free space for the backup file.
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For example, you have set the Performance policy for the scale-out backup repository and specified that full
backup files must be stored on Extent 1 and incremental backup files must be stored on Extent 2. If before an
incremental backup job session Extent 2 goes offline, the new incremental backup file will be placed to Extent 1.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication places backups of Microsoft SQL transaction logs, Oracle archived logs and
PostgreSQL WAL files to the extent configured for storing incremental backup files. If such extent is not
accessible, Veeam Backup & Replication will attempt to place log backups to any other extent that has
enough free space.
Data Locality
If you set the Data locality policy for a scale-out backup repository, all backup files that belong to the same
backup chain are stored on the same extent of the scale-out backup repository.
The Data locality policy does not put any limitations to backup chains. A new backup chain can be stored on the
same extent or another extent. For example, if you create an active full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication
may store the full backup file to another extent, and all dependent incremental backup files will be stored
together with this full backup file.
However, if you use a deduplicating storage appliance as an extent to the scale -out backup repository,
Veeam Backup & Replication will attempt to place a new full backup (active or synthetic) to the extent where
the full backup from the previous backup chain resides. Such behavior will help increase the data deduplication
ratio.
TIP
If you plan to use Fast Clone on performance extents with volumes formatted with ReFS or XFS, select
Data locality.
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Performance
If you set the Performance policy for a scale-out backup repository, full backup files and incremental backup
files that belong to the same backup chain are stored on different extents of the scale -out backup repository. If
necessary, you can explicitly specify on which extents full backup files and incremental backup files must be
stored.
The Performance policy can improve performance of transformation processes if you use raw data devices as
extents. When Veeam Backup & Replication performs transformation, it needs to access a number of backup
files in the backup repository. If these files are located on different storage devices, the I/O load on the devices
hosting backup files will be lower.
If you set the Performance policy, you must make sure that the network connection between extents is fast and
reliable. You must also make sure all extents are online when the backup job, backup copy job or a restore task
starts. If any extent hosting backup files in the current backup chain is not available, the backup chain will be
broken, and Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to complete the task. To avoid data loss in this
situation, you can enable the P erform full backup when required extent is offline option for the scale-out
backup repository. With this option enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a full backup instead of
incremental backup if some files are missing from the backup chain.
Extent Selection
To select an extent for backup file placement, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the following conditions:
1. Availability of extents on which backup files reside. If some extent with backup files from the current
backup chain is not accessible, Veeam Backup & Replication will trigger a full backup instead of
incremental (if this option is enabled). For more information, see Adding Backup Repository Extents.
3. Load control settings — maximum number of tasks that the extent can process simultaneously.
4. Amount of free space available on the extent — the backup file is placed to the extent with the most
amount of free space.
5. Availability of files from the current backup chain — extents that host incremental backup files from the
current backup chain (or current VM) have a higher priority than extents that do not host such files.
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For example, a scale-out backup repository has 2 extents that have 100 GB and 200 GB of free space. You set
the Performance policy for the scale-out backup repository and define that all types of backup files (full and
incremental) can be placed on both extents.
When a backup job runs, Veeam Backup & Replication picks the target extent in the following manner:
1. During the first job session, Veeam Backup & Replication checks to which extent a full backup file can be
stored. As both extents can host the full backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication checks which extent has
more free space, and picks the extent that has 200 GB of free space.
2. During incremental job session, Veeam Backup & Replication checks to which extent an incremental
backup file can be stored. As both extents can host the incremental backup file,
Veeam Backup & Replication picks the extent that does not store the full backup file — the extent that has
100 GB of free space.
To select an extent for backup file placement, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the following conditions:
1. During the first job session, Veeam Backup & Replication checks availability of extents. In case, an extent
is set to to Sealed or Maintenance mode, these extents will be skipped from backup file placement.
2. After that, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the amount of backup chains in available extents and
selects the extent with a minimal amount of backup chains.
3. If some extents have storage space limitations, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the average
storage of the backup chains located in all extents and select the extent that contains a minimum amount
of backup chains. If all extents have the same number of backup chains, Veeam Backup & Replication
selects the extent that has more free space.
4. During subsequent job sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication moves backup chains to the extent that was
specified before.
NOTE
If an extent is set to Sealed mode or Maintenance mode, Veeam Backup & Replication will not move
a backup chain to this extent. In this case, a new extent is selected and Veeam Backup & Replication
follows the same algorithm as during the first job session. The backup chain located in an unavailable
extent will be moved again to another extent. Veeam Backup & Replication will remove backup
chains from the unavailable extents according to retention policy.
Veeam Backup & Replication assumes that the following amount of space is required for backup files:
• The size of the first full backup file is equal to 50% of source VM data.
• The size of further full backup files is equal to 100% of the previous full backup file size.
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• The size of the first incremental backup file is equal to 10% of the previous full backup file size.
• The size of further incremental backup files in the backup chain is equal to 100% of the previous
incremental backup file size.
In case of reverse incremental backup chains, during incremental job sessions Veeam Backup & Replication
allocates 10% of the previous full backup file size on the extent where a rollback file is placed and
additional 10% on the extent where the full backup file resides.
This mechanism is also applied to backup files created with ba ckup copy jobs.
NOTE
• On every extent of a scale-out backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication reserves 1% of
storage space to guarantee correct update of backup metadata files (VBM) and success of merge
operations.
• Make sure that you have enough free space on the extent where the full backup file resides.
Veeam Backup & Replication requires 10% of the size of the full backup file to perform merge
operations in the backup chain. If the disk space is low, merge operations may fail .
• The actual free space value is only captured at the start of a job targeted at the scale -out backup
repository while no other jobs actively use the same scale-out backup repository. For more
information, see the Veeam KB2282 article.
You can enable immutability for data stored in Amazon, S3-compatible and Azure object storage repositories
used as performance extents of the scale-out backup repository. After you enable immutability,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prohibit data deletion from performance tier until the immutability expiration
date comes.
Backups are immutable only during the immutability period set in the object storage repository settings even if
their retention policy allows for longer storage. Immutability retention policy ignores retention policies set for
the following types of backups:
The immutable data within the performance extent cannot be subject to the following operations:
• Removal of data by the Remove deleted items data after option, as described in Maintenance Settings.
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Enabling Immutability
To enable immutability, you must do the following:
1. Configure the necessary settings when you create an S3 bucket or an Azure container.
2. Enable the immutability option when you add an object storage repository to the backup infrastructure at
the Container step (for Azure object storage repository) or Buck et step (for Amazon S3 or S3 compatible
object storage repositories) of the new Ob ject Storage Repository wizard.
If the performance extent contains backup files, it is strongly recommended that you perform the following
actions before you remove the extent:
2. Evacuate backups from the extent. For more information, see Evacuating Backups from Performance
Extents.
In this case, backup files will be moved to other performance extents of the scale -out backup repository, and
the backup chain will remain consistent. If you do not evacuate backups from the performance extent, the
backup chain may get broken as some restore points will be missing from it.
3. In the working area, select the scale-out backup repository and click E d it Scale-out Repository on the
ribbon or right-click the scale-out backup repository and select P roperties.
5. In the E x tents list, select the performance extent and click Remove.
If the performance extent contains backup files, Veeam Backup & Replication will suggest evacuating them. To
evacuate files, click No, close the wizard and evacuate backup files. For more information, see Evacuating
Backups from Performance Extents.
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If you do not want to evacuate the backup files, click Y es and proceed with the wizard.
Capacity Tier
Capacity tier is an additional tier of storage that can be attached to a scale-out backup repository. Data from the
scale-out backup repository performance extents can be transported to the capacity tier for long -term storage.
• Your organization policies allow you to store only a certain amount of data on your extents, while the
outdated data should be stored elsewhere.
• You seek to store data on several sites to ensure its safety in case of a disaster.
• Move inactive backup chains to capacity extents, as described in Moving Backups to Capacity Tier and
Manually Moving Backups to Capacity Tier.
• Copy new backup files as soon as these files are created, as described in Copying Backups to Capacity Tier.
• Download data that was moved from capacity extents back to the performance extents, as described in
Downloading Data from Capacity Tier.
• Restore your data. For more information, see Restore from Capacity Tier. In particular, you can promptly
restore data from the capacity tier in case of disaster without creating a scale-out backup repository anew.
For more information about this feature, see Importing Object Storage Backups.
The capacity tier consists of multiple capacity extents. The capacity extent can be either a cloud -based object
storage repository or on-premises object storage repository, such as:
• Amazon S3
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• IBM Cloud Object Storage
Before an object storage repository can be configured as the capacity extent, it must be added to
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Adding Object Storage Repositories.
The capacity extents are displayed in the scale-out backup repository wizard, on the Capacity Tier step.
For information on configuring capacity tier and synchronizing capacity tier data, see Add Capacity Tier.
• You can add only one type of object storage repository as a capacity extent. For example, if your first
added Microsoft Azure Blob object storage as a capacity extent, you cannot add Amazon S3 object storage
as a second capacity extent.
• You cannot add more than one instance of Azure Databox or Snowball Edge AWS object storage repository
as a capacity extent.
• Before you start using the capacity tier, make sure to check the pricing plans of your cloud storage
provider to avoid additional costs for offloading and downloading backup data.
• Capacity tier extents must have the same immutability state. If you use immutability, you must enable it
for all capacity extents. If you do not plan to use immutability, do not enable it for any capacity extent.
• Downloading or restoring data from capacity tier does not reuse the existing blocks present on
performance tier if performance tier consists of object storage repositories.
• Full restore points downloaded from capacity tier to ReFS or FXS performance extents do not use Fast
Clone.
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Capacity Extent Structure
When data is being transferred to the capacity extent, Veeam Backup & Replication creates and maintains the
following structure of directories:
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Directory Description Misc
You can enable immutability for data stored in Amazon, S3-compatible and Azure object storage repositories
used as capacity extents of the scale-out backup repository. After you enable immutability,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prohibit data deletion from capacity tier until the immutability expiration date
comes.
Backups are immutable only during the immutability period set in the object storage repository settings even if
their retention policy allows for longer storage. Immutability retention policy ignores retention policies set for
the following types of backups:
The immutable data within the capacity extents cannot be subject to the following operations:
• Removal of data by the Remove deleted items data after option, as described in Maintenance Settings.
TIP
There are two ways to migrate your data from a non-immutable bucket to an immutable one. For more
information, see section Migrating Data Between Different Buckets.
Enabling Immutability
To enable immutability, you must do the following:
1. Configure the necessary settings when you create an S3 bucket or an Azure container.
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2. Enable the immutability option when you add an object storage repository to the backup infrastructure at
the Container step (for Azure object storage repository) or Buck et step (for Amazon S3 or S3 compatible
object storage repositories) of the new Ob ject Storage Repository wizard.
Block Generation
To reduce I/O operations and associated costs, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically add from 1 to 10
days to the immutability expiration date. This period is called Block Generation. You do not have to configure it,
the Block Generation setting is applied automatically.
For example, if you set your immutability period to 30 days, Veeam Backup & Replication will add from 1 to 10
days to specific objects to reduce I/O operations with the storage over time. This will not change the retention
and their effective immutability. It is a background optimization. Thus, if you need 30 days immutability period,
set the period to 30 days.
Block Generation works in the following way. When the first data block (a full backup) arrives, its immutability
period is set to 30 + 10 = 40 days. The first full backup starts its generation, that will be appended with the
incremental backups. All the incremental backups within the generation (i.e. within the 10-days period) will
have the same immutability expiration date as the full backup. For instance, a data block that was offloaded on
day 9 will have the same immutability expiration date as a data block offloaded on day 1. Thus we ensure that
the immutability period for all the data blocks within a generation is no less than 30 days.
Consider this example: within one forward incremental backup chain, a full backup file can not be removed
before an incremental backup file. On the other hand, an incremental backup file makes no sense without
relevant full backup file. So the immutability period is extended for all data blocks in the backup chain.
The Block Generation period was introduced in order to reduce the number of requests to the capacity tier,
thereby saving traffic and reducing costs that might be incurred by your storage provider. With 10 days of
immutability automatically added, it means there is no need to extend the immutability p eriod for the
incremental backups in forward chain and for the unchanged blocks of current full backups in reverse chain
offloaded within those 10 days. On the 11th day, though, the immutability period will have to be extended (in
order to ensure that the immutability period for all the data blocks within a generation is no less than 30 days).
The immutable blocks of data may be reused during the offload. Veeam Backup & Replication continues to keep
reused or dependent blocks of data locked by continuously assigning them to new generations, thereby
extending their immutability expiration period. This is valid both for forward and reverse incremental backup
chains.
o Immutability is extended for the data blocks that are being reused from the old backup chain,
o Immutability is set anew for the new blocks of the new full backup file.
o Immutability is extended for all the data blocks from the current backup chain,
o Immutability is set anew for the new blocks of the latest incremental backup file.
o Immutability is extended for the data blocks that are being reused from the previous full backup file,
o Immutability is set anew for the new blocks of the new full backup file.
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• Current full backup file in the new generation:
o Immutability is extended for all the data blocks of this full backup file that are already stored in the
capacity tier,
o Immutability is set anew for the new blocks of this full backup file.
• When you add a capacity tier extent to your scale-out backup repository
To get benefits of both encryption levels, you can use job -level and capacity tier encryption within the same
object storage. Both encryption levels allow you to keep your data from an unauthorized access, but capacity
tier encryption allows you to encrypt backup chain metadata and restore points.
Job-level Encryption
Before data is offloaded to capacity tier, Veeam Backup & Replication checks if encryption is enabled in the job
settings. If encryption is enabled, data encrypted by the job is not decrypted or decompressed. It is offloaded to
capacity tier as is.
If capacity tier encryption has been disabled, backup data encrypted by the job settings will be uploaded
unmodified to capacity tier.
NOTE
• Make sure you enable encryption when you add a capacity tier extent. Otherwise, unencrypted
backups, offloaded to capacity tier, may be reused for synthetic backup creation.
• If you enable encryption after you have already offloaded data to capacity tier,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not encrypt previously offloaded backup chains.
• Download previously offloaded data from the capacity extent back to the performance extents.
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• Reduce the number of cost-based operations incurred by your cloud storage provider and decrease the
amount of traffic being sent over the network when moving or copying data to the capacity tier. For more
information, see Indexes.
• Exclude the capacity extents from the scale-out backup repository scope.
Data Transfer
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to transfer data to and from capacity extents, as well as move data from
capacity extents to archive extents.
• Move policy: the inactive backup chains can be transferred to the capacity extents.
• Previously offloaded data can also be downloaded from the capacity tier back to the performance extents.
To manage data transfer to and from capacity extents, Veeam Backup & Replication uses system sessions.
The following types of backup files can be moved or copied to capacity extents:
• Veeam backups for Amazon, Google and Microsoft Azure (via backup copy jobs)
• Backups created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, Veeam Agent for Linux, Veeam Agent for Unix
or Veeam Agent for Mac
• Backups created with Veeam Plug-ins for Enterprise Applications (Oracle RMAN, SAP HANA, SAP on
Oracle)
• Orphaned backups
In This Section
• Copying Backups to Capacity Tier
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Copying Backups to Capacity Tier
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to copy backups from the performance extents of your scale -out backup
repository to capacity extents as soon as these backups are created.
To enable data copy, make sure to select the Cop y backups to object storage as soon as they are created option,
as described in Add Capacity Tier.
To copy data to capacity extents, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following steps:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication verifies that performance extents are available and are not in the
Maintenance mode.
2. After a backup (or backup copy) job that is targeted to capacity extents of a scale -out backup repository
finishes, Veeam Backup & Replication initiates a copy session.
A complete name of each copy session consists of the backup (or backup copy) job name plus the Offload
postfix. That is, if your backup (or backup copy) job name is Amazon, the copy session name will be
Amazon Offload .
3. During a copy session, Veeam Backup & Replication extracts data blocks and metadata from each new
backup file (.VBK, .VIB, .VRB) or data blocks created on performance extents and copies these blocks and
metadata to capacity extents.
Backup files with metadata are created as described in Moving Backups to Capacity Tier.
Having such replica gives you the ability to quickly restore data as of the latest state in case of trouble with any
backup files, any unexpected failure of any of your performance extents, or even of the entire scale -out backup
repository, as described in Restore Scenarios.
Once the backup chain becomes inactive (for example, sealed) and exceeds the operational restore window,
data blocks will be removed from each associated backup file in such an inactive backup chain and only
metadata will be preserved. Such a behavior mimics data movement, but instead of moving data that was
already copied, Veeam Backup & Replication simply purges associated data blocks from the performance
extents, thereby saving traffic and reducing costs that might be incurred by your storage provider for
performing read/write operations.
The following figure shows an example in which both options are enabled, suggesting that each backup file has
been copied to object storage upon its creation.
The backup chain on the left becomes inactive after a new full backup file is created and consists of one .VBK
file and five .VIB files. Since only the first four backup files (represented as grey blocks) in this inactive backup
chain exceed the operational restore window, Veeam Backup & Replication removes blocks of data from these
four files only and leaves the other two .VIB files (created on Thursday and Friday ) as they are until the
operational restore window moves forward, and so on.
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After copy is complete, the new Ca pacity Tier node appears in the Home view, under the Ba ckups node and
shows backups that have been copied to the capacity extent.
NOTE
The copy is not performed during prohibited hours specified in the scale-out backup repository backup
window configuration. You can configure the backup window at the Add Capacity Tier step of the New
Sca le-out Backup Repository wizard.
To enable data movement, make sure to select the Move backups to object storage as they age out of the
op erational restores window option, as described in Add Capacity Tier.
A complete name of each offload session is built up of the scale-out backup repository name plus the Offload
postfix. That is, if your scale-out backup repository name is Amazon, the offload session name will be Amazon
Offload .
• Validation Process
• Data Transfer
Validation Process
Before your data can safely be moved to the capacity tier, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following
mandatory verifications and required actions:
• Verifies whether data that is about to be moved belongs to an inactive backup chain.
• Verifies whether performance extents are available and have not been put into the Maintenance mode.
Consider that data will not be offloaded from Linux-based performance extents that have internet access
through HTTP(S) proxy. All Linux-based performance extents configured in your scale-out backup
repository must have direct access to the internet.
• Verifies whether the capacity extents have not been put into the maintenance or the Sealed mode.
For more information, see Switching to Maintenance Mode and Switching to Sealed Mode.
• Verifies whether configuration parameters that define how and when inactive backup chains must be
moved to capacity extents are met.
• Synchronizes the backup chain state between the performance and capacity extents to maintain retention
policies.
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Data Transfer
After the validation process is complete, the SOBR Offload session collects backup files that have passed
verification. Such verified backup files are collected from all the performance extents added to a scale -out
backup repository.
The performance extent A has an inactive backup chain consisting of one VBK file and three VIB files, that is,
four restore points in total. Each of these files comprises metadata and the actual blocks of data. During the
offload session, Veeam Backup & Replication will collect the actual blocks of data from all the backup files (VBK
and VIB) and offload these blocks to the object storag e repository.
Each offloaded block might be of different size, which is defined during configuring storage optimization. The
offloaded blocks are placed to the blocks directory in your capacity extents.
Such approach will be applied to all inactive backup chains that satisfy validation criteria.
After offload is complete, the new Ca pacity Tier node appears in the Home view, under the Ba ckups node and
shows backups that have been moved to capacity extents.
NOTE
The offload is not performed during prohibited hours specified in the scale-out backup repository backup
window configuration. You can configure the backup window at the Add Capacity Tier step of the New
Scale-out Backup Repository wizard.
Veeam Backup & Replication will transfer to capacity extents only those restore points that belong to inactive
backup chains. To ensure a backup chain is inactive, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies its state. This does not
apply to the copy policy: all newly created restore points are copied immediately.
When a backup job runs for the first time, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an initial full backup file. It
contains complete information about the VMs that are being backed up. With each subsequent backup job
session, new incremental backup files are created. They contain only the changes that have occurred since the
last backup session.
For forward incremental backup method, the active backup cha in is the one that has not yet been sealed with a
new full backup file.
To transform an active backup chain into inactive, a new active full (or synthetic full) backup file must be
created for this chain. This can be done either manually, as described in Performing Active Full Backup. Else, you
can configure a schedule according to which new active or synthetic full backups will be created automatically,
as described in Active Full Backup and Synthetic Full Backup.
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Once a new full backup file is created and the offload session is being executed, Veeam Backup & Replication
collects all the restore points (full and incremental) that were created prior to the latest active full, verifies that
they belong to an inactive chain, and prepares them to be moved to capacity extents. This process is called
detect. For more information, see Moving Backups to Capacity Tier.
The same applies to backup chains created by backup copy jobs. Veeam Backup & Replication will transfer to
capacity extents only those restore points that belong to an inactive backup copy chain. Note that if you enable
backup copy GFS, Veeam Backup & Replication implements the forward incremental retention policy. If you
disable backup copy GFS, Veeam Backup & Replication implements the forever forward incremental retention
policy.
Note that Veeam Backup & Replication will not transfer to the capacity tier the corrupted restore points and the
files dependent on those. For more information on the corrupted restore points, see Health Check for Backup
Files.
The same applies to the backup chains created with the reverse-incremental method. In this case, all the .VRB
files starting from the third restore point will be considered inactive automatically. Thus, you do not need to
create an active full (nor synthetic full) backup manually unless you want to offload all the restore points
including the most recent .VBK file and the first two .VRB files.
• Six VRB files and a VBK file belong to an inactive chain and can be offloaded:
NOTE
A full backup file and the first two incremental backup files (that is, two .VRB files that immediately follow
the most recent .VBK file) will not be offloaded until another full backup file is created successfully.
The structure of the backup chains can be different. That depends on whether your backups were created using
the per-machine method (for more information, see Backup Chain Formats) or as a single-file backup, with all
VMs placed into a single file. The type of the backup chain structure does not affect the offload process.
For more information on how Veeam Backup & Replication creates and manages backup chains, see Backup
Chain.
Consider that backup files you want to offload must belong to an inactive backup chain. For more information,
see Backup Chain Detection.
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2. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckups > Disk node (for backup repositories) or Ba ckup > Ob ject Storage
(for object storage repositories) node.
4. In the P roperties window, right-click a backup file that you want to offload and select Move to capacity
tier.
Alternatively, you can use the Move to capacity tier control at the bottom.
▪ This backup a nd all dependent increments — to offload the selected backup along with its
increments.
▪ This backup a nd all dependent increments — to offload the selected full backup along with its
increments.
You can download one backup at a time using the Cop y to Performance Tier option, or get all offloaded backups
in bulk using the Download feature. For more information, see below Downloading Single Backup Chain and
Downloading All Backups, respectively.
For more information, see How Downloading from Capacity Tier Works.
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Downloading Single Backup Chain
To download previously offloaded backup data back to the performance extents, one backup at a time, do the
following:
2. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckups or Ba ckups > Capacity Tier node.
4. In the P roperties window, right-click an offloaded backup file and select Cop y to performance tier.
Alternatively, you can use the Cop y to performance tier control at the bottom.
▪ This backup a nd all dependent increments — to copy the selected backup along with its
increments.
▪ This backup a nd all dependent increments — to copy the selected backup along with its
increments.
NOTE
To remove copied blocks from the performance extents, use the Move to capacity tier option, as described
in Moving Inactive Backup Chains to Capacity Tier.
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2. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckups > Capacity Tier node.
3. On the ribbon, click Download or in the working area, right-click a backup job and select Download.
o If the latest backup chain is already present on your performance extent, you will be asked if you wish
to download all other backup files. Click Y es if you wish to do so or No to cancel the download.
o If the latest backup chain is not on your performance extent yet, you will be asked which backup files
you would like to download. Click All Backups to download all backup files or La test Only to
download just the latest backup chain.
NOTE
To remove downloaded data from the performance extents, use the Move to capacity tier option, as
described in Moving Inactive Backup Chains to Capacity Tier.
The SOBR Download job is triggered right after you select the Cop y to performance tier option; it collects
offloaded blocks of data from capacity extents and copies them back to the performance extents. For more
information, see Downloading from Capacity Tier.
• Before copying data blocks, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies whether any of such blocks exist on any
of the performance extents of your scale-out backup repository. If found, Veeam Backup & Replication will
reuse the existing blocks instead of downloading the exact same data fr om capacity extents.
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NOTE
If the password in the backup job has been changed, in some cases Veeam Backup & Replication may
not be able to reuse the performance tier data in the course of the download.
• If a performance extent is unable to accommodate copied data due to lack of free storage space,
Veeam Backup & Replication will find another extent in the associated scale-out backup repository that
has sufficient storage capacity to receive the data. If your scale-out backup repository has no performance
extents other than the one running out of space, the copy will not be possible.
• If you have removed any of the performance extents from a scale-out backup repository without
evacuating backup files with metadata, the copy will not be possible until the f iles with metadata are
downloaded back to the performance extents in the course of the rescan process. For more information on
the rescan process, see Rescanning Scale-Out Repositories.
Backup files with metadata are created as described in Moving Inactive Backup Chains to Capacity Tier.
• The SOBR download session results are saved to the configuration database and available for viewing, as
described in Viewing Download Job Session Results.
3. In the working area, right-click an offload session and select Sta tistics.
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For more information, see Moving Inactive Backup Chains to Capacity Tier.
Veeam Backup & Replication displays offload job session statistics for the following counters:
• The Job progress bar shows percentage of the offload session completion.
• The Summary box shows general information about the offload session:
o P rocessing rate — average speed of VM data processing. This counter is a ratio between the amount of
data that has actually been read and the offload session duration.
o Bottleneck — bottleneck in the data transmission process. To learn more about bottlenecks, see
Performance Bottlenecks.
o Rea d — the amount of data read from from the performance tier to the capacity tier.
o Tra nsferred — the amount of data transferred from performance tier to capacity tier.
• The Sta tus box shows information about the job results. This box informs how many tasks have completed
with the Success, Warning and Error statuses (1 task per 1 VM).
• The pane in the lower-left corner shows a list of objects processed by the offload session.
• The pane in the lower-right corner shows a list of operations performed during the session. To see a list of
operations for a specific object, click the object in the pane on the left. To see a list of operations for the
whole offload session, click anywhere on the blank area in the left pane.
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3. In the working area, right-click a copy session and select Sta tistics.
Veeam Backup & Replication displays offload job session statistics for the following counters:
• The Job progress bar shows percentage of the copy session completion.
• The Summary box shows general information about the copy session:
o P rocessing rate — average speed of VM data processing. This counter is a ratio between the amount of
data that has actually been read and the offload session duration.
o Bottleneck — bottleneck in the data transmission process. To learn more about bottlenecks, see
Performance Bottlenecks.
o Tra nsferred — the amount of data transferred from the performance tier to the capacity tier.
• The Sta tus box shows information about the copy results. This box informs how many tasks have been
completed with the Success, Warning and Error statuses (1 task per 1 VM).
• The pane in the lower-left corner shows a list of objects processed by the copy session.
• The pane in the lower-right corner shows a list of operations performed during the session. To see a list of
operations for a specific object, click the object in the pane on the left. To see a list of operations for the
whole copy session, click anywhere on the blank area in the left pane.
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Viewing Download Session Results
3. In the working area, right-click a SOBR Download session and select Sta tistics.
For more information, see How Downloading Data from Capacity Tier Works.
Veeam Backup & Replication displays SOBR Download job session statistics for the following counters:
• The Summary box shows general information about the job session:
o P rocessing rate — average speed of data processing. This counter is a ratio between the amount of
data that has actually been read and the job session duration.
o Bottleneck — bottleneck in the data transmission process. To learn more ab out bottlenecks, see
Performance Bottlenecks.
o P rocessed — total size of data blocks being downloaded from object storage repository plus blocks (if
any) being taken from the extents of your scale-out backup repository.
o Rea d — the amount of data read from both the object storage repository and extents of your scale-out
backup repository.
• The Sta tus box shows information about the job results. This box informs how many tasks have completed
with the Success, Warning and Error statuses.
• The pane in the lower-left corner shows a list of objects processed by the job.
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• The pane in the lower-right corner shows a list of operations performed during the session. To see a list of
operations for a specific object, click the object in the pane on the left. To see a list of operations for the
whole job session, click anywhere on the blank area in the left pane.
The migration option may be useful if you want, for example, switch your provider.
• Migrating data between different cloud providers — use this scenario to migrate data from one type of
object storage provider to another. For example, to migrate data the Amazon S3 object storage repository
to the Azure Blob storage or any other storage provider.
• Migrating data between different buckets — use this scenario to migrate data between different buckets
of the same cloud provider.
IMP ORTANT
• Migrating data between object storage repositories is available only at the capacity tier. Archive tier
does not support such scenarios.
• You can copy cloud data only to a bucket without the Versioning feature enabled. If you need to
migrate your data from a non-immutable bucket to an immutable bucket, perform the steps
described in the migrating data between different cloud providers scenario.
1. Download data from an object storage repository back to the performance extents, as described in
Downloading Data from Capacity Tier.
2. Add a new object storage repository to the Veeam Backup & Replication environment, as described in
Adding Object Storage Repositories.
3. Change an object storage repository to a new one that you have created at the previous step, as described
in Add Capacity Tier.
4. Copy or move your data to a new object storage repository, as described in Moving to Capacity Tier.
1. Use any available 3rd-party tool to copy cloud data to a different bucket of your cloud storage.
2. Add a new object storage repository to the Veeam Backup & Replication environment, as described in
Adding Object Storage Repositories.
3. Change the capacity extent to a new one that you have created at the previous step, as described in Add
Capacity Tier.
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4. Synchronize your data, as described in Synchronizing Capacity Tier Data.
Indexes
IMP ORTANT
Starting from Veeam Backup & Replication version 12 indexes are no longer used. Indexes will be removed
after the first offload session.
To reduce the number of cost-based operations incurred by your cloud storage provider and to decrease the
amount of traffic being sent over the network when moving or copying data to object storage,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses indexes.
• Indexes are created (or updated) during each offload or copy session and consist of hash v alues of blocks
that are being transferred to the capacity tier. These hashes are retrieved from meta information of your
backup files (VBK, VIB, or VRB).
• Indexes are stored in the ArchiveIndex directory that is located on the Performance Tier.
On each subsequent offload/copy session, Veeam Backup & Replication reuses these indexes to verify
whether new blocks that are about to be transferred to the capacity tier have not been offloaded earlier.
Verification is done by comparing existing indexes hashes with that of a block being transferred.
• If backups are created using the per-machine method, indexes are built per backup chain and cannot have
any cross references to any other backup chains. If all VM data is backed up to a single storage, indexes
are built for the whole backup.
For example, some data might have been removed due to the retention policy threshold, or you may have
removed it manually. Both scenarios will modify your indexes upon the next successful offload or copy
session to maintain consistency.
• Corrupted indexes can be rebuilt by using the Rescan feature, as described in Rescanning Scale-Out
Repositories.
Once an index is rebuilt, Veeam Backup & Replication will have to wait for 24 hours before it can offload
any data again. This is necessary to comply with the eventual consistency model of S3 compatible object
storage repositories.
Directory Description
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Directory Description
• If a backup was created using the per-machine method, then each VM will be
placed to its own directory.
• If a backup was created as a single-file backup, then all the VMs will be
placed to a unique directory.
stg _index Contains indexes of offloaded backup files (VBK, VIB, or VRB).
ind ex_data.vbk Contains meta information on hash values stored in index files.
Retention Policy
Retention policy defines the number of restore points to keep on your performance extents and capacity extents
is configured at the Specify Backup Storage Settings step of the New Backup Job wizard.
You can manage retention policies to remove obsolete restore points both from the performance extents and
the capacity tier.
The restore points that fall under the retention policy will be removed both from the performance and capacity
extents in the following manner:
• An earliest restore point will be removed from the backup chain on the associated extent.
• Data blocks that correspond to the restore point that is being removed will be purged from the capacity
extent upon the next offload or copy session.
Make sure that the capacity extent has not been put into the Maintenance mode, as this mode prevents
synchronization of the state of the backup chain in the performance tier with that of the capacity tier.
For more information about the move and copy offload sessions, see Moving Inactive Backup Chains to
Capacity Tier and Copying Backups to Capacity Tier respectively.
• Immutable blocks of data are removed after the immutability period is over.
When a retention policy encounters immutable copied/moved blocks of data, it removes such blocks from
the associated backup files on the extents only, informing Veeam Backup & Replication that these blocks
no longer exist and must be removed from the capacity tier once mutable.
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Consider that after you exclude an object storage repository that is being used as a capacity extent and is storing
offloaded backup data, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically puts the excluded object storage repository
into the Maintenance mode. Once a repository is in the Maintenance mode, you will not be able to restore your
data from it. To switch back to normal, you will have to re-add that repository as a capacity extent and
synchronize existing backup chains with your performance extents. After the synchronization is complete, the
existing backups will become available as Imported. For more information, see Synchronizing Capacity Tier Data.
NOTE
If you have an archive extent in the same scale-out backup repository, it will also switch to the
Maintenance mode when you exclude a capacity extent. Note that this is not applied if you use the same
object storage repository by the same provider for performance, capacity and archive tiers, for example, by
Amazon S3. In this case, after removing a capacity extent from capacity tier the performance and archive
tiers will remain in a scale-out backup repository.
To exclude a capacity extent from the scale-out backup repository scope, do the following:
3. In the working area, select a scale-out backup repository and click E d it Scale-out Repository on the ribbon,
or right-click a scale-out backup repository and select P roperties.
5. Clear the E x tend scale-out backup repository capacity with object storage check box.
If you have data on the object storage, you will be asked to confirm the action in the pop -up dialog. After
that, the object storage repository will be immediately put into the Maintenance mode.
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Restore from Capacity Tier
You can restore your data directly from the capacity tier back to production servers or to Microsoft Azure,
Amazon EC2 or Google cloud platforms. Capacity tier data recovery does not differ from that of a standard
backup data recovery and can be performed by using any of the following methods:
• Entire VM Restore
• VM Files Restore
• Disk Export
• Exporting Backups
Data recovery can also be done directly to Amazon EC2, Microsoft Azure or Google as described in the Restore
to Amazon EC2, Restore to Microsoft Azure and Restore to Google Compute Engine sections, respectively.
Restore Scenarios
This section explains possible restore scenarios from the capacity tier.
For more information on how to rescan a scale-out backup repository, see Rescanning Scale-Out
Repositories.
For more information on how to copy data, see Copying to Performance Tier.
NOTE
Unavailability of Extents
A performance extent in a scale-out backup repository may become unavailable or be in the Maintenance mode.
To restore data in such case, you can use any method described in Data Recovery.
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For example, you are restoring a virtual machine consisting of three data blocks, of which two blocks reside on
the Extent 1 and another required block is stored on the Extent 2 which is unavailable. In such scenario,
Veeam Backup & Replication gets two blocks from the Extent 1 and another required block from the capacity
tier.
If the entire scale-out backup repository becomes unavailable, Veeam Backup & Replication restores data from
the capacity tier only.
For example, both performance extents that store required backup files to restore a virtual machine are not
available. In such a scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication restores data from the capacity tier only.
• Restore the configuration of the backup server from the configuration backup, as described in
Configuration Backup and Restore.
Archive Tier
Archive tier is an additional tier of storage that can be attached to a scale-out backup repository. You can
transport data to the archive tier for archive storage from the following extents:
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• From capacity extents.
Storing archived data in the archive tier is cheaper than in the capacity tier. However, restoring data f rom the
archive tier is longer and more expensive compared to the capacity tier. Data must be prepared for restore from
the archive tier.
• You have a lot of rarely (no more than once a quarter) accessed data that has to be stored in an archive.
The following types of backup files are suitable for archive storage:
• Backups with GFS flags created with Veeam Backup for Red Hat Virtualization
The archive tier consists of a single archive extent. One of the following cloud -based object storage repositories
providing "cold" data storage can be added as the archive extent:
• Amazon S3 Glacier
Before an object storage repository can be configured as the archive extent, it must be added to
Veeam Backup & Replication backup infrastructure. For more information, see Adding Amazon S3 Glacier
Storage or Adding Azure Archive Storage.
You can add the archive extent to your scale-out backup repository and configure its settings on the Add
Archive Tier step of the New Scale-out Backup Repository wizard.
• For archive extents you must use the same object storage provider, that you use for the tier (either the
performance tier, or the capacity tier) from which data moves to the archive tier:
o If data moves from the performance tier to the archive tier, the object storage on these tiers must be
of the same provider. However, in this scale-out backup repository configuration you can use any
object storage provider for the capacity tier. For example, you can use Amazon S3 object storage as a
performance extent, Amazon S3 Glacier as an archive extent and Google object storage as a capacity
extent.
o If data moves from the capacity tier to the archive tier, the object storage on these tiers must be of
the same provider. However, in this scale-out backup repository configuration you can use any object
storage provider for the performance tier. For example, you can use Microsoft Azure Blob object
storage as a performance extent, Microsoft Azure Archive as an archive extent and S3 compatible as a
capacity extent.
For more information on performance capacity extents, see Add Performance Extents.
For more information on configuring capacity extents, see Add Capacity Tier.
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• Migrating data to another archive tier is not supported.
• Archive Tier does not support Azure accounts with the following redundancy options: zone -redundant
storage (ZRS), geo-redundant storage (GZRS) and read-access geo-zone-redundant storage (RA-GZRS).
For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
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Directory Description Misc
You can enable immutability for data stored in Amazon, S3-compatible and Azure object storage repositories
used as archive extents of the scale-out backup repository. After you enable immutability,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prohibit data deletion from the archive tier until the immutability expiration
date comes.
When you enable immutability for the archive tier, keep in mind that only the settings of the Amazon S3 Glacier
repository will be taken into account. The settings of the capacity tier repository and of the original data blocks
will be ignored.
For Amazon S3 Glacier, all the types of files that are suitable for archive storage can be made immutable:
• Backup files with GFS flags assigned: in case GFS retention is extended in the backup job or backup copy
job settings, the immutability period for existing backup files will b e prolonged at the end of the archiving
session. For more information about GFS retention policy, see Long-Term Retention Policy (GFS).
• VeeamZIP backup files with specified retention (deletion date). For more information, se e Creating
VeeamZIP Backups.
• Exported backup files with specified retention (deletion date). For more information, see Exporting
Backups.
The immutability period of a backup file will be equal to its retention period at the moment of archiving. If the
retention period is not specified for VeeamZIP backup files or exported backup files, such files will not be made
immutable.
Enabling Immutability
To enable immutability, you must do the following:
1. Configure the necessary settings when you create an S3 bucket or an Azure container.
2. Enable the immutability option when you add an object storage repository to the backup infrastructure at
the Container step (for Azure object storage repository) or Buck et step (for Amazon S3 or S3 compatible
object storage repositories) of the new Ob ject Storage Repository wizard.
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Managing Archive Tier
You can manage your archive tier and the archived data in the following ways:
• Move outdated backups from the capacity extent or the performance extent to the archive extent.
• Exclude the archive extent from the scale-out backup repository scope.
• In case the copy policy is selected (the outdated backup files are copied from the performance tier to the
capacity tier), the original file stays in the performance tier.
• In case the move policy is selected (the outdated backup files are transferred from the performance tier to
the capacity tier), the original file disappears from the performance tier.
• In case you transfer data from the performance tier to the archive tier, the original file disappears from the
performance tier.
Proxy Appliances
Data transfer from the capacity extent or the performance extent to the archive extent is done through proxy
appliances — temporary virtual machines. The template for all the proxy appliances is set up at the P roxy
Ap p liance step of the Adding Amazon S3 Glacier or Adding Azure Archive Storage wizard.
You can set up the size of the virtual machine and cloud resources where the proxy appliance will be created.
You can specify the proxy appliance settings manually, or use the default settings.
After the archiving job is finished, all the proxy appliances are automatically deleted. If the job ends
prematurely, the proxy appliances will be deleted as well. Also, any proxy appliance can be deleted if there are
no more tasks for it.
Archiving Job
The process of moving backup files to the archive tier is called an archiving job. The archiving job takes place in a
separate job session. The archiving job launches periodically, under the same default schedule as the offload job
from the performance tier to the capacity tier.
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New backup files are offloaded to the archive tier and outdated ones are cleaned up during the same archiving
session. You can archive backup files if they meet all the following conditions:
• The type of backup file is appropriate. For details, see Archive Tier.
• Backup files have been created N days ago according to Archive backup files older than N days setting of
the Add Archive Tier step of the wizard.
NOTE
If you set the value in the Archive backup files older than N days field to 0, the backup files will be
moved to the archive tier during the nearest archiving session, and will no longer participate in the
capacity tier data deduplication.
• If you have selected the Archive backups only if the remaining retention time is above minimal storage
p eriod check box of the Add Archive Tier step of the wizard:
a. for Amazon S3 Glacier storage: only backup files with retention period no less than 90 days.
b. for Microsoft Azure Archive storage: only backup files with retention period no less than 180 days.
Backup files that meet all the following conditions will be cleaned up:
• Backup files that do not have corresponding original file on the performance tier
• Backup files with expired or unspecified immutability period. For more information, see Immutability for
Archive Tier.
After the archiving job is completed, the transported files are deleted from the capacity tier. It happens during
the next offload to capacity tier session.
Cleanup Tasks
Cleanup tasks exist within archiving jobs. They are launched if there are only outda ted backup files to delete
during a certain job session, and no new backup files are to be offloaded to the archive tier.
Consider that after you exclude an object storage repository that is being used as an archive extent and is
storing archived backup data, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically puts the excluded object storage
repository into the Maintenance mode. Once a repository is in the Maintenance mode, you will not be able to
restore your data from it. To switch back to normal, you will have to re-add that repository as an archive extent
and synchronize existing backup chains with data in this scale-out backup repository. After the synchronization
is complete, the existing backups will become available as Imported.
To exclude an archive extent from the scale-out backup repository scope, do the following:
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2. In the inventory pane, click Sca le-out Repositories.
3. In the working area, select a scale-out backup repository and click E d it Scale-out Repository on the ribbon,
or right-click a scale-out backup repository and select P roperties.
5. Clear the Archive GFS full backups to object storage check box.
You will be asked to confirm the action in the pop-up dialog. After that, the object storage repository will
be immediately put into the Maintenance mode.
1. Data retrieval
Data Retrieval
Data retrieval is the process of receiving temporary access to archived data, so that it can be restored.
The process of retrieving data from the archive tier takes course in a separate retrieval job session. It is
completed when a restore point is available for reading and restore. For information on how to launch the
retrieval job, see Retrieving Backup Files.
When the retrieval job is complete, the retrieved data will be available for a limited period of time, during which
you can restore it. However, you can extend the availability period.
NOTE
If you launch restore job when retrieval job is not over yet, the restore job will be pending until the
retrieval job is complete.
Retrieval cost varies depending on the desired speed of the process and on the targeted period of the data
accessibility. See below the options for different vendors.
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Retrieval Options for Amazon S3 Glacier
Amazon provides the following options for data retrieval. The indicated time is approximate. For more
information, see AWS Documentation.
Keep in mind that this option will be unavailable for data stored in Glacier Deep Archive class.
A backup file can be stored in Glacier Deep Archive if the following conditions are met:
a. The Use Glacier Deep Archive for backups with the retention policy over 180 days check box was
selected on the Specify Object Storage Settings step of the Adding Amazon S3 Glacier wizard.
c. If the Store archived backups as standalone fulls check box was not selected on the Add Archive Tier
step of the New Scale-Out Backup Repository wizard, that is, the reuse of the data blocks was
allowed, all the backup files in the chain after the one stored in Deep Archive will be automatically
considered as belonging to Deep Archive as well.
• Standard: retrieval time 3-5 hours for Amazon S3 Glacier and within 12 hours for Amazon S3 Glacier Deep
Archive.
• Bulk: the least expensive method. Retrieval time within 5-12 hours for Amazon S3 Glacier and within 48
hours for Amazon S3 Glacier Deep Archive.
However, during the retrieval job Veeam Backup & Replication constantly requests the S3 API to move the
expiration time forward, until the job is completed and all the data blocks are ready.
For more information on calculating the estimated expiration time, see AWS Documentation.
For information on how to extend the expiration time, see Extending Expiration Time.
• High Priority: most expensive method. Retrieval may take less than one hour.
For information on how to extend the expiration time, see Extending Expiration Time.
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Retrieving Backup Files
To start the retrieval of archived backup files, use the Retrieve Backup wizard.
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Step 1. Launch Retrieve Backup Wizard
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Archive Tier. In the working area, select the backup job
whose files you want to retrieve and click P roperties on the ribbon. In the Ba ckup Properties window, click
on Retrieve.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Archive Tier. In the working area, select the VM whose
guest OS files you want to restore and on the ribbon select the necessary type of restore. Proceed to the
Select Restore Point step of the wizard. If this restore point has not been retrieved yet, you will be
prompted to launch the Retrieve Backup wizard.
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Step 2. Select Retrieval Mode
At the Retrieval Mode step of the wizard, select the desired retrieval option. For information on the retrieval
modes for different archive storage options, see Data Retrieval.
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Step 3. Select Availability Period
At the Ava ilability Period step of the wizard, select the desired availability period of the retrieved backup files.
During that period you will be able to restore the data.
If you want to receive a notification that the availability period is about to end, select the Send a notification
ema il N hours before the published data expires check box and choose the desired time for the notification.
TIP
You will be able to extend that period if necessary. For information on how to extend backup files
availability, see Extending Data Availability.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the retrieval settings. Click Finish to exit the wizard.
• Manually. If the retrieval job still continues at the moment of manual extension, the new extension time is
automatically added to the job.
• Automatically. This happens in cases when the expiration time is close, but the restore process still
continues.
At the Select Availability Period step of the Retrieve Backup wizard, you can request a notification that the data
availability is about to expire. If you extend the expiration time, the notification will be postponed accordingly.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Da ta Retrieval. In the working area, select the retrieved
backup file whose availability period you want to extend, and click E x tend Availability on the ribbon. You
will be prompted to select the number of days you want to add to the availability expiration time.
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• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Archive Tier. In the working area, select the backup job
for whose retrieved files you want to extend availability and click P roperties on the ribbon. In the Ba ckup
P roperties window, click on E x tend Availability P eriod. You will be prompted to select the number of days
you want to add to current expiration time.
You can restore your data directly from the archive tier back to production servers or to Microsoft Azure,
Amazon EC2 or Google Compute Engine platforms. The retrieved data recovery does not differ from standard
backup data recovery and can be performed by using any of the methods documented in the Data Recovery
section.
• Backup repositories that you plan to add as performance extents to the scale-out backup repository must
be added to the backup infrastructure. For more information, see Adding Backup Repositories.
• You must check limitations for scale-out backup repositories. For more information, see Limitations for
Scale-Out Backup Repositories.
• An object storage repository cannot be added as part of two or more different scale -out backup
repositories at the same time.
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• If the selected object storage contains offloaded backup data, you will be offered to synchronize this data
with your performance extents.
• Object storage that contains imported backups cannot be added as a capacity extent.
• You cannot add the same object storage repository as the performance extent and capacity extent.
• You cannot use object storage of different providers in the same type of tier.
• You cannot use the object storage repository and the backup repositories in performance tier
simultaneously.
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Step 1. Launch New Scale-Out Backup Repository Wizard
To launch the New Scale-out Backup Repository wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane select Sca le-out Repositories and click Ad d
Sca le-out Repository on the ribbon.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane right-click Sca le-out Repositories and select
Ad d Scale-out Backup Repository.
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Step 2. Specify Scale-Out Backup Repository Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the scale-out backup repository.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who added the backup repository, date and time when the backup repository
was added.
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Step 3. Add Performance Extents
At the P erformance Tier step of the wizard, specify which backup repositories or object storage repositories you
want to add as performance extents, and configure options for the scale-out backup repository.
2. In the E x tents window, select check boxes next to backup repositories or object storage repositories that
you want to add as performance extents.
3. Click OK.
a. If you want to create a separate backup chain for every machine in the job, check that the Use p er-
ma chine backup files check box is selected . With this option enabled, during one backup job session
Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a number of backup files — one per every machine, and will
write these files to the backup repository in multiple streams simultaneously. It is recommended that
you enable this option to achieve better storage and compute resource utilization, especially if you
use as a backup repository a deduplicating storage appliance that supports multiple write streams.
NOTE
For object storage repositories that you add as performance extents, this option is selected by
default and you cannot disable it.
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b. To preserve the consistency of backup chains in the scale-out backup repository, select the P erform
full backup when required extent is offline check box. If an extent that contains previous restore
points from the current backup chain gets offline, the ba ckup chain will be broken.
Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to add a new incremental backup file. With this option
enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a full backup file instead of an incremental backup
file. If you enable this option, you must make sure that you have enough free space in the scale-out
backup repository to host a full backup file.
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If a backup repository that you add as a performance extent is already used by jobs of supported type or there
are backups pointing at the backup repository (for example, independent backups created with VeeamZIP),
Veeam Backup & Replication will offer you to update a link to the backup repository in the job properties. Click
Y es to update the link and target the jobs and backups at the sca le-out backup repository. If you click No, you
will not be able to pass to the next steps of the wizard.
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Step 4. Specify Backup Placement Policy
[This step is not available if you use object storage repositories as performance extents. For more informati on
on how backup file placement policy works for performance extents configured of objects storage repositories,
see Backup File Placement]
At the P olicy step of the wizard, specify how you want to store backup files on performance extents of the
scale-out backup repository.
1. Set the backup file placement policy for the scale-out backup repository:
o Select Da ta locality if you want to store backup files that belong to the same backup chain together.
In this case, a full backup file and subsequent incremental backup files will be stored to the same
performance extent of the scale-out backup repository. The new backup chain may be stored to the
same performance extent or to another performance extent (unless you use a deduplicating storage
appliance as a performance extent).
o Select P erformance if you want to store full and incremental backup files to different performance
extents of the scale-out backup repository. If you set the Performance policy, you must make sure
that the network connection is fast and reliable so that Veeam Backup & Replication can access all
backup files from the backup chain.
2. If you select the P erformance policy, you can restrict which types of backup files can be stored on a
specific performance extent. For example, if you have added three performance extents to the s cale-out
backup repository, you may want to store full backup files on one extent and incremental backup files —
on the other two extents.
a. Click Customize.
b. In the Ba ckup Placement Settings window, select a performance extent and click E d it.
c. Select a check box next to the type of backup files that you want to store on the extent: Full backup
files or Incremental backup files. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication can store both full and
incremental backup files on the same extent.
3. If you select the Strict placement policy enforcement check box, Veeam Backup & Replication will not
create a backup if it violates the backup placement policy and may result in that a backup job will fail.
NOTE
This option is not available if you either rebalance extents of your scale-out backup repositories or
evacuate data from scale-out backup repositories.
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Step 5. Add Capacity Tier
Before you add a capacity tier, check the prerequisites.
At the Ca pacity Tier step of the wizard, select object storage repositories that you want to add as capacity
extents. Then specify when to move and/or copy data.
TIP
If you already have a scale-out backup repository in your backup infrastructure and you want to add
capacity tier, select the scale-out backup repository, click E d it Scale-out Repository on the ribbon or right-
click the scale-out backup repository and select P roperties. In the E d it Scale-out Backup Repository wizard
go to the Ca pacity Tier step and proceed with the steps below.
1. Select the E x tend scale-out backup repository capacity with object storage check box.
2. To select the object storage repositories to which you want to offload your data, click Choose.
3. In the Ca pacity Tier Extents window select the checkbox in front of the necessary object storage
repositories.
Make sure that these repositories are added to the backup infrastructure in advance. In case object storage
repositories are not added, click Ad d and follow the steps of the Adding Object Storage Repository wizard.
3. Click W indow and specify when it is allowed or prohibited to move or copy data to object storage.
4. Select the Cop y backups to object storage as soon as they are created check box to copy new backups as
soon as they are created, as described in Copying Backups to Capacity Tier.
When selecting this option, you will be asked whether to copy all backup files that you might already have
on any of the performance extents, or only those that have been created recently.
If you select La test, only backup files that belong to the last active backup chain will be copied from each
of the performance extents. If you select All, Veeam Backup & Replication will copy all backup files that
belong to all backup chains located on any of the specified extents.
5. Select the Move backups to object storage as they age out of the operational restores window check box
to move inactive backup chains to the capacity extent, as described in Moving Backups to Capacity Tier.
In the Move backup files older than X days field, specify the operational restore window to define a period
after which inactive backup chains on your performance extents would be considered outdated and,
therefore, should be moved to the capacity extent. Consider that "0" is an acceptable value, which you
can specify to offload inactive backup chains on the same day they are created.
To override behavior of moving old backups, click Override, select the Move oldest backup files sooner if
sca le-out backup repository is reaching capacity check box and define a threshold in percent to force data
transfer if a scale-out backup repository has reached the specified threshold.
6. To offload data encrypted, select E ncrypt data uploaded to object storage and provide a strong password.
With this option selected, the entire collection of blocks along with the metadata will be encrypted while
being offloaded.
If you have not created the password beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a
new password.
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TIP
You can combine both the Cop y backups to object storage as soon as they are created option and the Move
b a ckups to object storage as they age out of the operational restores window option, as described in
Copying Backups to Capacity Tier.
• An object storage repository can only be added as a capacity extent after existing data (if any) is
synchronized.
• During synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication downloads backup files with metadata located in
object storage to the performance extents that are part of the scale-out backup repository that is being
added.
• Extents to which backup data is going to be downloaded (synchronized), will be selected automatically,
depending on the available resources.
• The actual data blocks will not be downloaded and will continue to remain in object storage.
• When synchronizing encrypted storage, make sure to provide the same exact password with which the
data was encrypted.
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After the synchronization is complete, the associated backup files located in object storage will become
available as Imported and will be displayed in the Home view, under the Ob ject Storage (Imported) node in the
inventory pane.
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Step 6. Add Archive Tier
At the Archive Tier step of the wizard, select an object storage repository that you want to add as an archive
extent and specify data move settings.
TIP
If you have a compatible type of a repository configured as a capacity extent, you can add an archive extent
to the existing scale-out backup repository. To do so, select the scale-out backup repository, click E d it
Sca le-out Repository on the ribbon or right-click the scale-out backup repository and select P roperties. In
the E d it Scale-out Backup Repository wizard go to the Archive Tier step and proceed with the steps below.
• The Archive Tier step of the wizard will appear only if you have a compatible type of repository configured
as a capacity extent or a performance tier. For more information, see Limitations for Archive Tier.
• You can add only one archive extent per scale-out backup repository.
1. Select the Archive GFS full backups to object storage check box. In the drop-down list, select one of
available object storage repositories or click Ad d to add a new one.
2. In the Archive GFS backups older than N days field, specify the operational restore window to define a
period after which inactive backup chains on your capacity extent would be considered outdated and,
therefore, should be moved to the archive extent. Consider that "0" is an acceptable value, which you can
specify to archive inactive backup chains on the same day they are created.
You can use the default storage settings or specify them manually. For that, click Storage.
• Select the Store archived backups as standalone fulls check box to forbid reuse of the data blocks.
• Select the Archive backups only if the remaining retention time is above minimal storage period check box
to specify which data blocks can be transported to the archive tier.
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When you add as an archive extent an object storage repository that contains archived backup data, you will be
prompted to synchronize existing backup chains with data in this scale-out backup repository. After the
synchronization is complete, the existing backups will become available as Impor ted and will be displayed in the
Home view, under the Archive Tier (Imported) node in the inventory pane.
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Step 7. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of scale-out backup repository configuration.
Wait for the scale-out backup repository to be added to the backup infrastructure. The process may take some
time.
• If you enable or disable the Use p er-machine backup file option, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply
new settings after a new full backup file is created.
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• If you enable or disable the P erform full backup when required extent is offline option,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the new settings starting from the next session of the job targeted
at this scale-out backup repository.
• If you change the backup file placement policy settings, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the new
settings starting from the next session of the job targeted at this scale-out backup repository.
3. In the working area, select the scale-out repository and click E d it Scale-out Repository on the ribbon or
right-click the scale-out backup repository and select P roperties.
4. Follow the steps of the E d it Scale-out Backup Repository wizard and edit settings as required.
• State of every performance extent added to the scale-out backup repository: online or offline.
The rescan operation is performed automatically by a rescan process that works permanently in the background.
The process is started every 24 hours. It can be also started when a new task session starts, and the Veeam
Backup Service requires information about the infrastructure to be refreshed.
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In addition to the automated rescan process, you can manually start rescan of the scale -out backup repository.
Backup repository rescan may be helpful, for example, if you want to discover backup files that were manually
relocated from one performance extent to another one.
• Information about backup files location is updated only if you perform manual rescan of scale -out backup
repositories.
• Veeam Backup & Replication rescans scale-out backup repositories when you perform backup files import.
• To successfully rediscover relocated backups files created by backup copy jobs, make sure to disable these
jobs manually prior to rescanning.
3. In the working area, select the scale-out repository and click Rescan Repository on the ribbon or right-
click the scale-out backup repository and select Rescan.
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3. In the working area, right-click the job and select Sta tistics.
4. In the bottom left pane of the window, click the VM name. In the Action pane, locate the message: Using
N scale-out repository extent.
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4. Veeam Backup & Replication will display the extent where the backup file resides in the headline of the
Ba ckup Properties window. To see the path to the backup file, right-click the job and select Cop y path.
For more information on icons and what they indicate, see Restore Points Icons.
4. In the working area, select the scale-out repository and click E d it Scale-out Repository on the ribbon or
right-click the backup repository and select P roperties.
6. Click Ad d .
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7. In the E x tents window, select a check box next to the backup repository that you want to add as a
performance extent to the scale-out backup repository.
If a backup repository that you add as a performance extent is already used by jobs of supported type or
there are backups pointing at the backup repository (for example, independent backups created with
VeeamZIP), Veeam Backup & Replication will offer you to update a link to the backup repository in the job
properties. Click Y es to update the link and target the jobs and backups at the scale-out backup
repository. If you click No, you will not be able to pass to the next steps of the wizard.
8. Pass through the next wizard steps and finish working with the wizard. The new performance extent will
be added to the scale-out backup repository.
NOTE
After you add a backup repository to the scale-out backup repository as a performance extent, you will not
be able to use it as an individual backup repository.
4. In the working area, select the scale-out repository and click E d it Scale-out Repository on the ribbon or
right-click the backup repository and select P roperties.
6. Click Choose.
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7. In the Ca pacity Tier Extents window, select a check box next to the backup repository that you want to
add as a performance extent to the scale-out backup repository.
8. If a backup repository that you add as a capacity extent is already used by jobs of supported type or there
are backups pointing at the backup repository (for example, independent backups created with
VeeamZIP), Veeam Backup & Replication will offer you to update a link to the backup repository in the job
properties. Click Y es to update the link and target the jobs and backups at the scale-out backup
repository. If you click No, you will not be able to pass to the next steps of the wizard.
9. Pass through the next wizard steps and finish working with the wizard. The new capacity extent will be
added to the scale-out backup repository.
An object storage in the Maintenance mode operates with the limited functionality, as described in Maintenance
Mode Limitations.
An object storage can be put into both the Maintenance and the Sealed modes at the same time. When both
modes are applied, limitations of Maintenance mode override limitations of Sealed mode.
3. In the working area, select an object storage and click Ma intenance mode on the ribbon or right-click an
object storage and select Ma intenance mode.
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To remove the object storage repository from the Maintenance mode, select the extent and click Ma intenance
Mod e on the ribbon or right-click the extent and select Ma intenance mode once again.
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Activity Restriction Level
Retention policies Synchronization is skipped for backup chains located in object storage
repositories. Obsolete restore points will only be removed from backup
chains on the extents.
Sealing up object storage gives you the ability to gradually remove data located in such storage by applying a
retention policy. You can use this feature to gracefully stop using some of your object storage as backup
repositories and exclude them from the scale-out backup repository configuration altogether.
When sealing up an object storage, Veeam Backup & Replication restricts any further data transfer to the
storage and allows only operations listed in Sealed mode Limitations.
All restore points that exceed the specified retention period will be continuously removed from the sealed
object storage, as described in Retention Policy.
• An object storage repository can be put into Sealed mode only if it is a member of the scale -out backup
repository.
If an object storage repository was not added as part of any of your scale-out backup repositories, the Seal
E x tent option will not be available.
• An object storage repository can be put into both maintenance and Sealed modes at the same time.
When both modes are applied, limitations of Maintenance mode override limitations of Sealed mode.
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2. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckup Repositories node.
3. In the working area, select an object storage repository and click Sea l Extent on the ribbon or right-click
an object storage repository and select Sea l extent.
To remove the object storage repository from Sealed mode, select the extent and click Sea led on the ribbon or
right-click the extent and select Sea led.
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Activity Restriction Level
Exporting as .VBK file from backup files residing on object storage Allowed
You can perform the following service actions with extents of a scale-out backup repositories:
Maintenance Mode
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to put any of the scale-out backup repository extents into the
Maintenance mode. You can use this mode if you need to perform service actions, such as upgrading an extent
or installing a patch on it. Putting an extent into the Maintenance mode is mandatory to evacuate backups, as
described in Evacuating Backups from Extents.
The extent in the Maintenance mode operates with the limited functionality:
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not start new tasks targeted at this extent.
• You cannot restore VM data from backup files residing on the extent. You also cannot restore VM data
from backup files residing on other extents if a part of the backup chain resides on the extent in the
Maintenance mode.
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When you switch to the Maintenance mode, Veeam Backup & Replication launches the Repository Maintenance
job. The Repository Maintenance job checks the status of jobs and tasks targeted at the extent and puts the
extent to one of the following modes:
• If no tasks using the extent are currently running, the job puts the extent to the Maintenance mode
immediately.
• If the extent is busy with any task, for example, a backup job, the job puts the extent to the Maintenance
pending state and waits for the task to complete. When the task is complete, the extent is put to the
Maintenance mode.
NOTE
If you put to the Maintenance mode an extent that has a part of an active backup chain on it, the backup
job targeted to the scale-out backup repository will fail. To avoid this, create a full backup manually.
2. In the inventory pane, select the scale-out backup repository under Sca le-out Repositories.
3. In the working area, select the extent and click Ma intenance Mode on the ribbon or right-click the extent
and select Ma intenance mode.
To remove the extent from the Maintenance mode, select the extent and click Ma intenance Mode on the ribbon
or right-click the extent and select Ma intenance mode once again.
If you want to remove an extent from a scale-out backup repository, you first need to evacuate backups from
this extent. When you evacuate backups, Veeam Backup & Replication moves backup files from the extent in
question to other extents within the same scale-out backup repository.
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How Evacuating Backups from Performance Extents Works
When selecting the target performance extent for evacuated files, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to
keep to the backup placement settings specified for remaining extents. For example, you have 3 performance
extents in the scale-out backup repository with the following backup file placement settings:
If you evacuate backup files from Performance Extent 2, Veeam Backup & Replication will relocate them to
Performance Extent 3.
NOTE
• If performance extents consist of repositories with Fast Clone enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication
selects the target extent depending on the whether it contains data blocks that can be reused. In
the process of evacuation, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new backup file in the target
extent using these data blocks. Therefore, evacuated backups do not occupy all space in the target
performance extent.
• For performance extents that consist of object storage repositories, Veeam Backup & Replication
selects the target performance extent as described in the Extent Selection for Object Storage
Repositories Added as Performance Extents section.
TIP
If you want to gracefully stop using some of your performance extents and ex clude them from a scale-out
backup repository configuration, consider using the Sealed mode instead of evacuating backups.
1. [Recommended] Stop and disable jobs targeted at the extent from which you plan to evacuate backups.
3. In the inventory pane, select the scale-out backup repository under Sca le-out Repositories.
4. In the working area, select the extent and click Ma intenance Mode on the ribbon or right-click the extent
and select Ma intenance mode.
5. Select the extent and click E vacuate Backups on the ribbon or right-click the extent and select E va cuate
b a ckups.
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7. After you evacuate backups, you can proceed to removing the performance extent from the scale -out
backup repository. For more information, see Removing Performance Extents from Scale-Out Repositories.
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3. In the working area, select the evacuation session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or right-click the
evacuation session and select Sta tistics.
Evacuation cannot be stopped immediately. If you stop evacuation in the middle of moving a large backup file,
Veeam Backup & Replication requires additional time to complete the process. Backup files that were not moved
to a new extent remain on the current extent.
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3. In the working area, select the evacuation session and click Stop session on the ribbon or right-click the
evacuation session and select Stop session.
Sealing up scale-out backup repository extents allows you to gradually remove data located on these extents by
applying a retention policy. You can use this feature to gracefully stop using some of your extents and exclude
them from the scale-out backup repository configuration.
After the extent is sealed, no further data is saved to the extent, and only read operations such as restore,
merge and remove are allowed.
Backup jobs that are targeted to a scale-out backup repository with the sealed extents that store active backup
chains will be forced to create a new active full backup on the next run. However, if backup jobs targeted at
such scale-out backup repository were created outside of Veeam Backup & Replication, you must trigger active
full backup job manually. The new active full will be saved to another available extent in the scale -out backup
repository scope, thereby forming a new active backup chain. The extent to which the new active full is going to
be saved is chosen automatically by Veeam Backup & Replication, depending on the available resources.
All restore points that exceed the specified retention period will be continuously removed from the sealed
extents on each subsequent backup session.
• An extent can be put into both the Maintenance and the Sealed modes at the same time.
When both modes are applied, the Maintenance mode overrides Sealed mode.
• When you put an extent into the Sealed mode, you will still be able to restore, merge and remove data
without exiting this mode.
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To put an extent into the Sealed mode:
2. In the inventory pane, select the scale-out backup repository under the Sca le-out Repositories node.
3. In the working area, select the extent and click Sea l extent on the ribbon or right-click the extent and
select Sea l extent.
To remove the extent from the Sealed mode, select the extent and click Sea led on the ribbon or right-click the
extent and select Sea led.
• Reports are sent only after you have enabled and configured email notifications, as des cribed in
Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
• Reports are sent for all notification types selected in global notification settings, such as Success, Warning
and Failure.
• The title of a report is built up of " Scale-out Backup Repository " + a repository name. That said, if your
scale-out backup repository name is Amazon, then the report title would be Scale-out Backup Repository
Amazon.
Each report is divided into sections and contains the following information:
o Used Space. Shows the used disk space of your scale-out backup repository.
o Ca pacity. Shows the total storage capacity of your scale-out backup repository.
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• Ca pacity Tier (upper-right) section:
o Used Space. Shows the occupied storage space in your object storage repository.
o Sp a ce Limit. Shows the space limit (if any). A space limit is specified when adding a new object
storage repository, as described in Adding Object Storage Repositories.
o Used Space. Shows the amount of disk space used on your extents.
o Sta tus. Shows the status of each extent, as described in Description of Report Statuses.
o Used Space. Shows the occupied storage space in your capacity extent.
o Sta tus. Shows the status of the capacity extent, as described in Description of Report Statuses.
If an automatic offload job session exits with any status other than Success, you will see the
associated status message in this field. For more information about the offload job, see Moving
Inactive Backup Chains to Object Storage.
If none of the conditions listed in the E x tent state column is true, then the report status will be shown as
Success.
E x tent type E x tent state Sta tus message Rep ort type
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E x tent type E x tent state Sta tus message Rep ort type
Space limit exceeded. Space limit is specified when Out of capacity Error
adding a new object storage repository, as described
in Adding Object Storage Repositories.
Report Examples
Success Reports
The following figure shows an example of a report consisting of two performance extents ( Backup Volume 01
and Backup Volume 02); both share 253.3 GB of storage capacity, of which 52.4 GB is occupied.
Both extents have OK status, which means that neither extent was put into the Maintenance mode, nor has any
of these performance extents exceeded the allowed threshold limit.
This report also includes the Ca pacity Tier section consisting of a capacity extent with no Sp a ce Limit applied.
This capacity extent stores 29.6 GB of data and has the OK status.
Warning Reports
The figure below demonstrates a report with the Warning status.
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As per example, the Backup Volume 01 performance extent has been put into the Maintenance mode, and the
Backup Volume 02 performance extent has exceeded the allowed threshold both of which ha ve caused a report
to be generated with the Warning status.
Error Reports
In the figure below a report has been generated with the Error status caused by the Amazon S3 Object Storage
performance extent which has exceeded its allowed space limit.
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Consider the following:
• When removing offloaded backup files from the backup chain that was created with the per -machine
method, the associated blocks of data will be removed from the capacity or archive extent altogether.
For more information about per-machine backups, see Backup Chain Formats.
• When removing offloaded backup files from the backup chain that was created as a single -file backup file,
then nothing will be removed until either of the following occurs:
• If the capacity or archive extent has been put into the Maintenance mode, the removal of data from such a
repository is not possible until the extent is removed from the Maintenance mode.
• During data removal, the entire folder structure starting from the repos itory folder (<backup_id>) will
be completely purged.
For more information on how Veeam Backup & Replication stores data in the capacity extent, see Capacity
Extent Structure.
• If backup files with metadata that are located on your extents have been removed locally in any way other
than by using the Deleting from Disk feature, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to synchronize
the backup chain state with that of the capacity or archive extent. Therefore, the offloaded blocks of data
will continue to remain in cloud storage. To remove such blocks, use your cloud platform abilities.
You can use the rebalance to distribute data within extents according to this policy in the following cases:
• To maintain the current placements policy. If data within performance extents is not distributed according
to the placement policy and some extent contains more backup s than the others, you can rebalance these
extents.
• To change the placement policies. If you have switched from one type of policy to another, for example
from data locality to placement policy, the rebalance will help to ditribute data according to a ne w policy.
After you start the rebalance, Veeam Backup & Replication will scan performance extents and backup files
located on these extents. In case some backup chain does not meet the backup placement policy,
Veeam Backup & Replication will check all available performance extents, analyze their total space and amount
of free space and will evaluate the best way to distribute data between extents. After that,
Veeam Backup & Replication will move backups chains from the source extent to a new extent.
Depending on the mechanisms that are used to store data on extents, Veeam Backup & Replication chooses one
of the following algorithm to perform the rebalance:
• Common rebalance — Veeam Backup & Replication uses this type of the rebalance, if a scale-out backup
repository contains at least one extent that uses the data deduplication or block cloning technologies.
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• Deduplication rebalance — Veeam Backup & Replication uses this type of the rebalance, if all extents of a
scale-out backup repository use the data deduplication, block cloning technologies and applies the data
locality placement policy.
• If you use the ReFS Microsoft Windows file system or XFS Linux file system as performance extents,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply Data Deduplication to backup files.
• Veeam Backup & Replication skips from rebalance the performance extents that are set to the
Maintenance mode.
• Veeam Backup & Replication skips from rebalance the archive extents.
• Before you perform the rebalance, you must stop all activities (for example, backup jobs, restore
operations and so on) that are related to the scale-out backup repository.
• You must stop the backup jobs created by Veeam Plug -in for Microsoft SQL Server or Veeam Plug-in for
Oracle RMAN.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication checks extents configuration and selects the best algorithm to perform the
rebalance.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication checks if data is distributed across extents according to the placement policy.
If at least one backup files does not beet the placement policy, the whole chain on the extents is marked
as a violator.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication checks the capacity of every extent, prioritize them according to the
placement policy and optimal free space.
7. Veeam Backup & Replication chooses the preferred extent to keep data.
8. Veeam Backup & Replication starts to evacuate data from the current extents and distribute it to the
preferred extent.
9. After the data is distributed, extents are removed from the Maintenance mode.
TIP
If you want to exclude a specific performance extent from rebalance, set to the Maintenance mode.
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Removing Scale-Out Backup Repositories
You can remove a scale-out backup repository at any time. When you remove a scale-out backup repository,
Veeam Backup & Replication unassigns the extent role from all the backup repositories configured into it, and
they become individual backup repositories. Backup files are not removed from the backup repositories — they
remain on the disk or an object storage repository.
You cannot remove a scale-out backup repository if at least one job is targeted at it. First, you must move all
backup files to the new backup repository and then retarget the jobs. For details, see this Veeam KB article.
3. In the working area, select the scale-out repository and click Remove Repository on the ribbon or right-
click the backup repository and select Remove.
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Guest Interaction Proxy
The guest interaction proxy is a backup infrastructure component that sits between the backup server and
processed VM. This component is needed if the backup or replication jobs perform the following processing of
VMs:
• Application-aware processing
To interact with the VM guest OS, Veeam Backup & Replication needs either to install non-persistent runtime
components or use (if necessary, install) persistent agent components in each VM. The task of deploying these
components in a VM is performed by the guest interaction proxy. For more information on the components, see
Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent Agent Components.
NOTE
The guest interaction proxy functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy
socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
The guest interaction proxy allows you to communicate with the VM guest OS even if the backup server and
processed VM run in different networks.
IMP ORTANT
The guest interaction proxy deploys the non-persistent runtime components or persistent agent
components only in Microsoft Windows VMs. In VMs with another guest OS, the non-persistent runtime
components or persistent agent components are deployed by the backup server.
In a backup infrastructure with multiple remote sites, you can deploy a guest interaction proxy in each site. This
can reduce load on the backup server and produce less traffic between the backup server and remote site.
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Requirements for Guest Interaction Proxy
A machine performing the role of a guest interaction proxy must meet the following requirements:
• The role of a guest interaction proxy can be assigned to a Microsoft Wind ows server (physical or virtual).
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server.
• Guest interaction proxy must have either a LAN or VIX connection to the VM that will be processed. You
do not have to set up both connections — only one connection is required. For more information about
setting up a connection to the VM, see this Veeam KB article.
The guest interaction proxy role can be performed by any machine that meets the requirements, including
VMware backup proxy, backup repository, WAN accelerator or backup server.
To assign a guest interaction proxy for the job, you must select a Microsoft Windows machine that will perform
the role of the guest interaction proxy at the Guest Processing step of the backup or replication job wizard. You
can assign the guest interaction proxy manually, or let Veeam Backup & Replication do it automatically.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following priority rules to select the guest interaction proxy:
1. A machine in the same network as the protected VM that does not perform the backup server role.
2. A machine in the same network as the protected VM that performs the backup server role.
3. A machine in another network that does not perform the backup server role.
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If Veeam Backup & Replication finds several available machines of equal priority, it selects the less loaded
machine. The load is defined by the number of tasks that the machine already performs.
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Gateway Server
A gateway server is an auxiliary backup infrastructure component that “bridges” the backup server and backup
repository. It can also "bridge" a source backup repository and a target backup repository in case of backup copy
jobs. The gateway server is required if you deploy the following types of backup repositories in the backup
infrastructure:
Such backup repositories cannot host Veeam Data Movers— Veeam components that establish a connection
between a backup proxy and backup repository (in case of backup jobs) or between backup repos itories (in case
of backup copy jobs). To overcome this limitation, Veeam Backup & Replication uses gateway servers.
In the backup infrastructure, a gateway server hosts the target Veeam Data Mover. Veeam Backup & Replication
establishes a connection between the source Veeam Data Mover and target Veeam Data Mover, and transports
data from/to backup repositories through gateway servers.
For more information on using gateway servers in backup copy jobs, see Backup Copy Architecture.
• The role of a Dell Data Domain, HPE StoreOnce or SMB gateway server must be assigned to a Microsoft
Windows machine.
• The role of an NFS or object storage repository gateway server can be assigned to a Microsoft Windows or
Linux machine.
To configure a gateway server, you must first add a machine that you plan to use as a gateway server to the
backup infrastructure using the New W indows Server or New Linux Server wizard. For more information, see
Adding Microsoft Windows Servers or Adding Linux Servers.
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After that, you must go through the New Backup Repository wizard and define gateway server settings. For
more information, see Adding Backup Repositories. You can select a gateway server explicitly or instruct
Veeam Backup & Replication to select it automatically.
If you plan to select gateway servers explicitly, these servers must be located as close to the backup repository
as possible. However, if you use a deduplicating storage appliance with source-side data deduplication, it is
reasonable to assign the roles of gateway servers to machines that are located closer to the backup proxy. This
will help you reduce the amount of traffic traveling over the network. For more information, see Dell Data
Domain and HPE StoreOnce.
Gateway Selection
Veeam Backup & Replication uses multiple gateway servers to process workloads in a job if the Use p er-machine
b a ckup files option is enabled for the repository to which the job is targeted at. Veeam Backup & Replication
selects one gateway server for each workload. If the number of workloads is greater than the number of
gateway servers, Veeam Backup & Replication uses one gateway server for multiple workloads.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses one gateway server for the whole job if the Use per-machine backup files
option is disabled. However, if multiple jobs are targeted at one backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication
selects different gateway servers for the jobs, if possible.
You can select gateway servers explicitly or automatically. For more information on which backup infrastructure
components Veeam Backup & Replication uses as gateway servers during automatic selection, see the Automatic
Selection section. If you select only one gateway server explicitly, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the
selected gateway server and perform all operations on it.
Ty p e of job Comp onent used as gateway server Comp onent used as gateway server for
sy nthetic operations
Ba ckup job / File Backup proxy that was assigned first to Synthetic operations are performed on the
sha re backup job process workload data / file share for a mount server associated with the backup
backup job.* repository. If the mount server is not
accessible, Veeam Backup & Replication fails
over to the backup server.
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Ty p e of job Comp onent used as gateway server Comp onent used as gateway server for
sy nthetic operations
over to the backup server. These rules are applied to the direct data
• [For backup copy jobs] Over path and processing over WAN accelerators.
File share backup copy job does not support
WAN accelerators: source and/or
WAN accelerators.
target WAN accelerator
(depending on the shared folder
backup repository location). File
share backup copy job does not
support WAN accelerators.
Ta p e job If there is a direct connection between Synthetic operations are performed on the
a backup repository and tape device, mount server associated with the backup
the role of a gateway server is assigned repository. If the mount server is not
to the tape server. accessible, Veeam Backup & Replication fails
over to the backup server.
Otherwise, the role of a gateway server
is assigned to the backup server.
Veeam Agent Mount server associated with the Synthetic operations are performed on the
b a ckup job backup repository. If the mount server mount server associated with the backup
is not accessible, repository. If the mount server is not
Veeam Backup & Replication fails over accessible, Veeam Backup & Replication fails
to the backup server. over to the backup server.
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Ty p e of job Comp onent used as gateway server Comp onent used as gateway server for
sy nthetic operations
* For repositories for which Linux gateway servers cannot be used — Dell Data Domain, HPE StoreOnce and SMB. If the
backup proxy is a Linux machine, the role of the gateway server is assigned to the mount server associated with the backup
repository. If the mount server is not accessible, Veeam Backup & Replication fails over to the backup server.
• The gateway server can run on a Microsoft Windows or Linux machine. The machine must meet the system
requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• The role of a Dell Data Domain, HPE StoreOnce or SMB gateway server must be assigned to a Microsoft
Windows machine.
• The role of an NFS or object storage repository gateway server can be assigned to a Microsoft Windows or
Linux machine.
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server.
• The machine must have access to the backup repository — shared folder, Dell Data Domain or HPE
StoreOnce.
• For deduplicating storage appliances working over Fibre Channel, you must explicitly select a gateway
server that will communicate with the appliance. As a gateway server, you must use a Microsoft Windows
machine that is added to the backup infrastructure and has access to the appliance over Fibre Channel.
• For HPE StoreOnce deduplicating storage appliances, you must assign the role of a gateway server to a
64-bit machine.
Related Topics
• Scale-Out Backup Repository
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Mount Server
The mount server is a server required for restores that work with guest OS files and application items. To access
files or items stored in a backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication mounts the content of the backup to the
mount server. Only after the content is mounted, Veeam Backup & Replication can get files and copy them to
the restore destination.
• Secure restore
To reduce the load on the network and speed up the restore process, the mount server must be located in the
same site as the backup repository where backup files are stored. In this case, you will be able to keep the traffic
in one site. If the mount server is located in some other site, the data will travel across the network between the
sites.
NOTE
In some scenarios, Veeam Backup & Replication can mount content of backups to machines other than
mount servers. For more information, see File-Level Restore Scenarios and Mount Points.
You can assign the mount server role to any 64-bit Microsoft Windows machine added to the backup
infrastructure. This machine and the backup repository must be located as close to each other as possible. If you
have several sites, we recommend you configure at least one mount server in each site.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication suggests assigning the mount server role to the following
infrastructure components depending on the OS of the backup repository:
• For Microsoft Windows backup repositories, Veeam Backup & Replication suggests the backup repository
server itself.
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• For Linux, shared folder backup repositories and deduplicating storage appliances,
Veeam Backup & Replication suggests the backup server.
NOTE
• For scale-out backup repositories, you must specify the mount server for every extent.
• For cloud repositories and hosts that store replicas or backups from storage snapshots, the mount
server role is assigned to the backup server. For such repositories, you cannot assign the mount
server role to a different machine.
• Veeam Mount Service mounts backups and replicas for file-level access, browsing the guest file system
and restoring guest OS files and application items.
• Veeam vPower NFS Service (if you enable it when configuring the mount server).
• The machine must meet the system requirements. For more information, see System Requirements.
• The mount server must have access to the backup repository with which it is associated and to the original
VM (the VM to which you restore files or application items). For restore from storage snapshots, the
mount server must also have access to the ESXi host on which the temporary VM is registered.
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Veeam Data Movers
Veeam Data Mover performs data processing tasks on behalf of Veeam Backup & Replication, such as retrieving
source machine data, performing data deduplication and compression, and storing backed -up data on the target
storage.
• For Microsoft Windows servers, Veeam Data Movers are persistent, that is, Veeam Da ta Mover is uploaded
and installed on a server only once.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically installs Veeam Data Mover when you add a Microsoft Windows
server to the backup infrastructure.
o Non-persistent Veeam Data Mover is uploaded and removed each time Veeam Backup & Replication
addresses a server.
o For Veeam Data Mover to be persistent, you must specify an account with root or equivalent to root
permissions when adding a Linux server. Persistent Veeam Data Movers are required for hardened
repositories and backup proxies. For other backup infrastructure components based on Linux servers,
Veeam Data Movers can be persistent or non-persistent.
If you do not want to provide root or equivalent to root permissions, specify an account with non-root
permissions. In this case, Veeam Data Movers will be non-persistent. Veeam Backup & Replication will
upload and start Veeam Data Movers through the SSH connection when Veeam Backup & Replication
addresses the server.
NOTE
In Veeam Backup & Replication version 11a (build 11.0.1.1261), persistent Veeam Data Movers
are required for Linux servers with the backup proxy role assigned. When you upgrade to
version 11a, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically updates all Linux backup proxies and
installs Veeam Data Movers on them. Veeam Backup & Replication does not automatically
update Linux servers that have other roles. If you want to install Veeam Data Movers on such
servers, open the Edit Linux Server wizard for the necessary server and click Finish.
o File and printer sharing must be enabled in network connection settings of the added server.
o Make sure the user account that you use to add a Microsoft Windows server is in the local
administrators group on the server being added.
o Linux server version must be 64-bit. For more information, see System Requirements. Note that Perl
is required only for non-persistent Veeam Data Movers. Check the full list of required Perl modules in
this Veeam KB article.
o Veeam Backup & Replication does not install Veeam Data Movers on deduplicating storage appliances
based on Linux.
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o Make sure the user account that you use to add a Linux server has required permissions:
▪ If you want to use persistent Veeam Data Movers, the user account specified for the server must
have root or elevated to root permission. Otherwise, Veeam Data Movers will be non-persistent,
that is, the Linux server will not host Veeam Data Movers permanently.
▪ For hardened repository, when you add a Linux server with single-use credentials, the user
account must still have elevated to root permission in order for Veeam Data Movers to be
persistent. For more information, see Step 3. Specify Linux Server.
TIP
If Veeam Data Mover on a Linux server fails for some reason, you can re-install it manually. For more
information, see this Veeam KB article.
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Veeam vPower NFS Service
The vPower technology enables the following features:
• SureBackup
• SureReplica
• Instant Recovery
• Staged restore
The key construct of the vPower technology is the vPower NFS Service. The vPower NFS Service is a Microsoft
Windows service that runs on a Microsoft Windows machine and enables this machine to act as an NFS server.
On the vPower NFS server, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a special directory — the vPower NFS datastore.
When you start a VM or a VM disk from a backup, Veeam Backup & Replication "publishes" VMDK files of the VM
from the backup on the vPower NFS datastore. Technically, Veeam Backup & Replication emulates the presence
of VMDK files on the vPower NFS datastore — the VMDK files themselves are still located in the backup file in
the backup repository.
The vPower NFS datastore is then mounted to the ESXi host. As a result, the ESXi host can "see" backed -up VM
images with the help of the vPower NFS datastore and work with them as with regular VMDK files. The
emulated VMDK files function as pointers to the real VMDK files in the backup repository.
The vPower NFS datastore stays mounted to the ESXi host. Each time you start an operation from the list ,
Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether vPower NFS datastore is mounted to the host. If you manually
unmounted the datastore or the datastore was unmounted by other causes, Veeam Backup & Replication
remounts the datastore.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam vPower NFS datastores are service datastores that can be used for vPower operations only. You
cannot use them as regular VMware vSphere datastores — for example, you cannot place files of replicated
VMs on such datastores.
The Veeam vPower NFS Service can also run on any Microsoft Windows server in the backup infrastructure,
including the backup server itself. However, in this case the recovery verification performance may decrease.
The connection between the ESXi host and backup repository will be split into two parts:
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vPower-Specific Settings
To establish a connection between the ESXi host and vPower NFS server, you must make sure that the ESXi host
has a proper network interface configuration and can access the vPower NFS server.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication uses IP address authorization to restrict access to the vPower NFS server. By
default, the vPower NFS server can be accessed only by the ESXi host that provisioned the vPower NFS
datastore. However, you can disable this option with a registry value. For more information, contact Veeam
Customer Support.
When connecting to the vPower NFS server, the ESXi host uses a VMkernel interface. For this reason, the ESXi
host must have a VMkernel interface. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to mount the vPower NFS
datastore on the ESXi host.
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WAN Accelerators
WAN accelerators are dedicated components that Veeam Backup & Replication uses for WAN acceleration. WAN
accelerators are responsible for global data caching and data deduplication.
Technically, WAN accelerators add a new layer in the backup infrastructure — between Veeam Data Movers on
the source side and the Veeam Data Mover on the target side.
• One WAN accelerator is deployed on the source site, closer to the source backup repository or source host.
• The other WAN accelerator is deployed on the target site, closer to the target backup repository or target
host.
On each WAN accelerator Veeam Backup & Replication creates the VeeamWAN folder containing the following
data:
• The VeeamWAN folder on the source WAN accelerator stores files with digests required for deduplication.
For more information, see How WAN Acceleration Works.
• The VeeamWAN folder on the target WAN accelerator stores global cache data.
NOTE
Global cache is not used if both WAN accelerators in the pair (the source one and the target one)
operate in the Hig h bandwidth mode.
To learn how to add a WAN accelerator to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure, see Adding WAN
Accelerators.
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Recommendations for WAN Accelerators
You should not assign one source WAN accelerator to several jobs to remote locations that you plan to run
simultaneously. The source WAN accelerator requires a lot of CPU and RAM resources, and does not process
multiple tasks in parallel. As an alternative, you can create one job to the remote location for all VMs you p lan
to process over one source WAN accelerator.
The target WAN accelerator, however, can be assigned to several jobs to remote locations.
NOTE
Global cache is not used if both WAN accelerators in the pair (the source one and the target one) operate in
the Hig h bandwidth mode .
By default, the size of the global cache is 100 GB. You can increase the size or decrease it if necessary. The more
space you allocate, the more repeating data blocks will be written to the global cache and the more efficient
WAN acceleration will be. It is recommended that you allocate at least 40 GB to the global cache storage.
The global cache size is specified per source WAN accelerator. That is, if you plan to us e one target WAN
accelerator with several source WAN accelerators, the specified amount of space will be allocated for every
source WAN accelerator that will be working with the target WAN accelerator and the size of the global cache
will increase proportionally. For more information, see WAN Accelerator Sizing.
The WAN global cache is a “library” that holds data blocks repeatedly going from the source side to the target
side. The global cache is populated at the first cycle of a job to the remote location. The priority is given to data
blocks of Windows-based OSes, other OSes like Linux/Unix, and Microsoft Exchange Server.
Veeam Backup & Replication constantly maintains the global cache in the actual state. To do that, it
continuously monitors data blocks going over WAN and data blocks in the global cache.
• If some new data block is constantly sent over WAN, it is added to the global cache.
• If some data block in the global cache is not sent over WAN and are not re-used for some period of time, it
is removed from the global cache to make room for new data blocks.
Veeam Backup & Replication also performs periodic consistency checks. If some data block in the global cache
gets corrupted, Veeam Backup & Replication removes it from the global cache.
The efficiency of the WAN acceleration increases with every new backup copy interval in the backup copy job.
During the first backup copy interval in the backup copy job, the WAN acceleration level is minimal.
Veeam Backup & Replication populates the global cache. With every new job cycle, Veeam Backup & Replication
updates the global cache to include the most “popular” data blocks and the WAN acceleration efficiency
increases.
NOTE
You can populate the global cache before you run the job to the remote location for the first time. In this
case, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the global cache starting from the first session of the job to the
remote location, and the WAN traffic will be minimal. For more information, see Population of Global
Cache.
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Many to One WAN Acceleration
The WAN global cache can be used by several source WAN accelerators simultaneously. For example, if you have
several remote/branch offices, you can configure several source WAN accelerators in remote sites and one
target WAN accelerator in the head office.
In this case, the global cache will hold cache data for separate source WAN accelerators. The cache data for
every source WAN accelerator will be stored in a dedicated subfolder in the global cache folder.
When one target WAN accelerator is used by several source WAN accelerators, Veeam Backup & Replication can
copy data blocks between global cache of these WAN accelerators. This mechanism works if there are no
matching backups of VMs in the target backup repository, but matching data is available in cache of other WAN
accelerators.
For example, you have two backup copy jobs: Job 1 and Job 2. The Job 1 uses the source WAN accelerator Source
1 and the target WAN accelerator Target 3. The Job 2 uses the source WAN accelerator Source 2 and the same
target WAN accelerator Target 3. In the global cache folder, Veeam Backup & Replication will store data for 2
WAN accelerators: Source 1 and Source 2.
• Job 1 processes a VM running Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2, and it has been running for some time.
In the global cache, there is already data for this type of OS.
• Job 2 also processes a VM running Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2. When you start Job 2 for the first
time, there is no data for this type of OS in the global cache for Source 2 WAN accelerator. In such
situation, Veeam Backup & Replication will copy the necessary data block from the Source 1 cache to the
Source 2 cache and will not transport this data block over WAN.
NOTE
Beside using global cache of other WAN accelerator, Veeam Backup & Replication also utilizes backup files
residing in the backup repository. For example, if the backup repository contains a backup file created with
a backup job and the backup copy job starts copying a backup of a VM of the same type,
Veeam Backup & Replication will populate global cache on the WAN accelerator from the backup file not to
transfer redundant data over WAN.
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Manual population of the global cache can be helpful in the following scenarios:
• First run of a job to the remote location. When you run a first session of a job to the remote location, the
global cache is empty, and the whole amount of VM data needs to be transferred over WAN. It is
recommended that you manually populate the global cache before you start a job to the remote location
for the first time.
• Global cache corruption. If the global cache gets corrupted for some reason, Veeam Backup & Replication
needs to perform at least one session of the job to the remote location to replace corrupted data blocks
with valid data blocks. In this situation, you can clean the global cache and manually populate it with valid
data before the job to the remote location begins.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use encrypted backups for manual global cache population.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not use encrypted backups for global cache population.
• Veeam Backup & Replication writes only data blocks for Windows-based OSes to the default cache. Data
blocks for other OSes like Linux/Unix and application data blocks are not written to the cache.
• You can start the global cache population task for the target WAN accelerator that is not currently used by
any job to the remote location.
• If the global cache population task is currently running, the corresponding target WAN accelerator is
locked. You cannot start any job to the remote location by using this target WAN accelerator.
• [For global cache corruption scenario] You must clean the global cache before you populate it with valid
data.
• [Veeam Cloud Connect] Veeam Backup & Replication does not use tenant backups to populate global
cache on the service provider side.
To populate the default cache, Veeam Backup & Replication uses backup files stored in backup repositories as a
source of data.
1. The user manually starts the global cache population tasks and selects backup repositories from which
data blocks should be retrieved.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication scans backup repositories and makes up a list of OSes whose data blocks are
available in backup files.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication copies data blocks from backup repositories and populates the default cache
with these data blocks.
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When a job to the remote location starts, Veeam Backup & Replication renames the default cache to a folder for
the source WAN accelerator engaged in the job. As a result, Veeam Backup & Replication can use data blocks in
this folder for deduplication starting from the very first session of the job to the remote location.
In many-to-one WAN accelerator deployment scenarios, the global cache may have folders for other source
WAN accelerators, and these folders may contain data blocks for some OSes. If the global cache already contains
some data, the procedure of global cache population includes the following steps:
1. The user manually starts the global cache population tasks and selects backup repositories from which
data blocks should be retrieved.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication scans backup repositories and makes up a list of OSes whose data blocks are
available in backup files.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication scans folders for other source WAN accelerators in the global cache and
makes up a list of OSes whose data blocks are available there.
4. The list of OSes in the global cache is compared to the list of OSes in backup repositories. This way,
Veeam Backup & Replication detects data blocks for which OSes are missing in the global cache.
5. In the global cache, Veeam Backup & Replication detects a folder with the maximum amount of data. This
folder is used as a basis for the default cache.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication copies data blocks only for missing OSes from backup repositories and
populates the default cache with these blocks. Data blocks for OSes available in folders for other source
WAN accelerators are not copied to the default cache during the population task.
Veeam Backup & Replication copies these data blocks on the fly, when a job to the remote location runs.
For more information, see Many to One WAN Acceleration.
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Manually Populating Global Cache
3. In the working area, right-click the target WAN accelerator and select P op ulate cache.
If the selected WAN accelerator is not assigned as a target WAN accelerator to any job to the remote
location, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning.
4. In the Source Backup Repositories window, select backup repositories from which OS data blocks must be
retrieved.
It is strongly recommended that you select backup repositories on the same site where the target WAN
accelerator is located. In the opposite case, the traffic will travel between sites, which will increase load
on the network.
5. Click OK.
• Global cache contains data that is no longer needed. This situation may occur, for example, if you have
decided to fully switch to the Hig h bandwidth mode that does not use the global cache data.
In such cases, it is recommended that you clear the global cache and populate it anew before you start jobs to
remote locations processing new types of VMs.
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3. In the working area, right-click the target WAN accelerator and select Clear cache.
IMP ORTANT
• Before you clear the global cache, make sure that you do not have any running jobs that use this
target WAN accelerator. When the global cache is cleared, Veeam Backup & Replication will restart
the Veeam WAN Accelerator Service, and running jobs will complete with the Failed status.
• When you clear the global cache, you also clear all digest da ta stored at this WAN accelerator.
When configuring WAN accelerators, note that there can be situations when WAN acceleration switches from
the Hig h bandwidth mode to the Low b andwidth mode : for example, the link to the remote location changes
and you decide to disable the Hig h bandwidth mode for one of the accelerators in the pair. If you disable the
Hig h bandwidth mode and start a job which utilizes this WAN accelerator, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes
digest data that was used in the Hig h bandwidth mode and recreates it for the Low b andwidth mode. Besides,
Veeam Backup & Replication will also use the global cache at the target WAN accelerator.
To avoid problems caused by the lack of free space when switching from the Hig h bandwidth mode to the Low
b a ndwidth mode, we recommend that you configure WAN accelerators as if you planned to use them in the Low
b a ndwidth mode.
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Source WAN Accelerator
When you run a remote job over WAN accelerators, Veeam Backup & Replication analyses data blocks going to
target and calculates digests for these data blocks. Digests data is stored on the sour ce WAN accelerator, in the
VeeamWAN folder on the disk that you select when you configure the WAN accelerator.
You must make sure that there is enough disk space on the source WAN accelerator to store digest data.
The amount of disk space required for a source WAN accelerator operating in the Low b andwidth mode is
calculated by the following formula:
For example, if you plan to process 10 VMs whose provisioned size is 2 TB, y ou must allocate 40 GB of disk
space for digest data on the source WAN accelerator operating in the Low b andwidth mode.
The amount of disk space required for a source WAN accelerator operating in the Hig h bandwidth mode is
calculated by the following formula:
For example, if you plan to process 10 VMs whose provisioned size is 2 TB, you must allocate 20 GB of disk
space for digest data on the source WAN accelerator operating in the Hig h bandwidth mode.
You can increase the throughput by adjusting the number of upload streams. To learn how to configure them on
the source WAN accelerator, see the Choose Server step of the New W AN Accelerator wizard.
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Target WAN Accelerator
You must make sure that you provide enough free space for the following data on the target WAN accelerator:
• Digest data
NOTE
For the target WAN accelerator operating in the Hig h bandwidth mode only, you must provide enough free
space to generate digest data. Global cache data is not used in the Hig h bandwidth mode.
When you enable the Hig h bandwidth mode for an existing WAN accelerator, Veeam Backup & Replication
does not automatically remove the global cache that was previously used for acceleration. If you are
planning to use the Hig h bandwidth mode for WAN acceleration and you do not need the global cache
anymore, you can free the disk space by manually removing the cache. If you are planning to use WAN
acceleration in the Low b andwidth mode in the future, we recommend that you keep the global cache. You
can disable the Hig h bandwidth mode and switch back to the Low b andwidth mode at any time.
You must provide enough free space for global cache data. It is recommended that you provide 10 GB per every
type of OS on VMs that you plan to process. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication allocates 100 GB for the
global cache size.
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For example, you want to process the following VMs:
There are 3 types of OSes so you must allocate 30 GB for the global cache on the target WAN accelerator.
NOTE
Global cache is stored only on the target WAN accelerator. You do not have to provide space for global
cache on the source WAN accelerator.
Digest Data
In some cases, Veeam Backup & Replication may require more space on the target WAN accelerator than
specified in the WAN accelerator properties. This can happen if digest data on the source WAN accelerator is
missing or cannot be used. For example:
• You have performed the Clear Cache operation on the source WAN accelerator and it no longer contains
digest data. For more information, see Clearing Global Cache.
• Veeam Backup & Replication has attempted to resume operation of backup data transfer, but the backup
file was not prepared for the operation in a proper way. The digest data must be recalculated.
In such situations, the target WAN accelerator calculates digest data on its own, which requires additional space.
After the digest data is calculated, the target WAN accelerator transfers it to the source WAN accelerator. After
the transfer, the copy of the digest data is removed from the target WAN accelerator.
For safety reasons, it is recommended that you provide the following amount of space for digest data on the
target WAN accelerator:
The amount of disk space required for digest data at a target WAN accelerator operating in the Low b andwidth
mod e is calculated by the following formula:
The amount of disk space required for digest data at a target WAN accelerator operating in the Hig h bandwidth
mod e is calculated by the following formula:
This amount of space is required for digest data recalculation. If you do not provide this amount of space and a
situation where Veeam Backup & Replication needs to recalculate digest data occurs, the job to the remote
location will work in the limited mode. Veeam Backup & Replication will not deduplicate data against the
previous restore points copied to target. For more information, see Global Data Deduplication.
IMP ORTANT
When you specify the global cache size for a target WAN accelerator, you do not allocate any space for
storing digest data. To let Veeam Backup & Replication recalculate digest data, you must make sure that
necessary amount of free space is available on the target WAN accelerator (in addition to the space
allocated for the global cache).
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For example:
• You have allocated 100 GB for global cache on the target WAN accelerator operating in the Low
b a ndwidth mode.
In this case, the needed amount of free disk space for the global cache on the target WAN accelera tor is:
100 GB + 40 GB = 140 GB
Total Global Cache Size = (# of Source WAN Accelerators) * (Size of Global Cach
e Configured in Target WAN Accelerator Properties)
Total Free Disk Space to Provide = Total Global Cache Size + Digest Size
For example:
• You have 4 source WAN accelerators in the source side working with 1 target WAN accelerator in the
disaster recovery (DR) site.
• The global cache size configured in properties of the target WAN accelerator is 100 GB.
In this case, the needed amount of free disk space for the global cache and digests on the target WAN
accelerator is:
4*100 GB + 40 GB = 440 GB
NOTE
For more information and recommendations on WAN accelerator cache sizing, see this Veeam KB article.
You must deploy a pair of WAN accelerators: one WAN accelerator on each side of the WAN link.
Before you add a WAN accelerator, check prerequisites. Then use the New W AN Accelerator wizard to add a
WAN accelerator.
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Before You Begin
Before you add a WAN accelerator, check the following prerequisites:
• The machine that will operate as a WAN accelerator must meet the system requirements. For more
information, see System Requirements.
• You must assign the WAN accelerator role to a Microsoft Windows server (physical or virtual). The WAN
accelerator role can be assigned to backup proxies and Microsoft Windows backup repositories already
configured in the backup infrastructure.
• You must use 64-bit Microsoft Windows machines as WAN accelerators. Veeam Backup & Replication does
not support 32-bit versions of Microsoft Windows used as WAN accelerators.
• WAN acceleration operations are resource-consuming. When assigning the WAN accelerator role, consider
available CPU and memory resources of the Microsoft Windows server. It is recommended that you assign
the WAN accelerator role to servers with 8 GB RAM and more.
• The machine must have enough free disk space to store digests or global cache data. For more
information, see WAN Accelerator Sizing.
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server before adding
it as a WAN accelerator.
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Step 1. Launch New WAN Accelerator Wizard
To launch the New W AN Accelerator wizard, do either of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select W AN Accelerators and click Ad d WAN
Accelerator on the ribbon.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane right-click W AN Accelerators and select Ad d
W AN Accelerator.
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Step 2. Choose Server
At the Server step of the wizard, select a Microsoft Windows server that you plan to use as a WAN accelerator
and define port and connection settings for this server.
1. From the Choose server list, select a Microsoft Windows server added to the backup infrastructure. If the
server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, you can click Ad d New to open the New W indows
Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
It is recommended that you describe the added WAN accelerator as the source or target one. When you
create a job to the remote location, this hint will be displayed in brackets next to the WAN accelerator
name, which will help you choose the necessary WAN accelerator to be used on the source or target side.
3. In the Tra ffic port field, specify the number of the port over which WAN accelerators must communicate
with each other. By default, port 6165 is used.
4. In the Streams field, specify the number of connections that must be used to transmit data between WAN
accelerators. By default, 5 connections are used.
This setting applies only to the source WAN accelerator. The greater is the number of streams, the more
bandwidth resources Veeam Backup & Replication will use. A great number of streams engage more CPU
and memory resources of the source WAN accelerator.
If the link has low latency and high bandwidth, the default setting (5 streams) may be enough to fully
saturate it. If the link is still not saturated, the number of streams may be increased accordingly. Tests
show that with high latency links, link speed x1.5 is a good best practice for estimating the num ber of
streams required. Below is an example benchmark on a 10 Mbit/s WAN link with 100 milliseconds of
latency.
Throughput
Link (Mbit/s) La tency (ms) P a cket Loss Streams
( Mbps)
10 100 0 3 3.5
10 100 0 10 7.5
10 100 0 15 10
10 100 0 20 10
Increasing the number of streams to more than required for fully saturating the link will slow down data
transfers, as the data transfer will wait for all streams to initialize and stabilize before starting to transfer
any data.
TIP
To test different scenarios in the lab before deploying WAN acceleration, you can use a WAN
emulator (such as WANem).
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5. If your network bandwidth is more than 100 Mbps, we recommend that you use the Hig h bandwidth mode
option. This mode provides significant bandwidth savings comparable to the direct mode on WAN links
under 1 Gbps.
To use the Hig h bandwidth mode, enable the option for WAN accelerators at both sites of the data
transfer: the source one and the target one. If the Hig h bandwidth mode is enabled for the target WAN
accelerator, different source accelerators can parallelly interact with it in different modes, depending on
the mode selected for each source WAN accelerator.
When you enable the Hig h bandwidth mode for an existing pair of WAN accelerators,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not automatically remove the global cache that was previously used for
acceleration. If you are planning to use only the Hig h bandwidth mode for WAN acceleration and you do
not need the global cache anymore, you can free the disk space by manually removing the cache. If you
are planning to use WAN acceleration in the Low b andwidth mode in the future, we recommend that you
keep the global cache. You can disable the Hig h bandwidth mode at any time.
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Step 3. Define Cache Location and Size
At the Ca che step of the wizard, define settings for the folder where service files and global cache data will be
stored.
NOTE
If both WAN accelerators (the source one and the target one) work in the Hig h bandwidth mode, WAN
acceleration does not use the global cache. But note that you can disable the Hig h bandwidth mode and
switch back to the Low b andwidth mode at any time, which will require to use the global cache. To provide
correct operation of WAN accelerators, we recommend that you allocate enough disk space for the global
cache folder when adding a new WAN accelerator, no matter if the Hig h bandwidth mode is enabled for it
or not.
1. In the Folder field, specify a path to the folder in which service files (for source and target WAN
accelerators) and global cache data (for target WAN accelerator) must be stored. When selecting a folder
on the target WAN accelerator, make sure that there is enough sp ace for storing global cache data.
2. [For target WAN accelerator] In the Ca che size field, specify the size for the global cache. The global cache
size is specified per source WAN accelerator. If you plan to use one target WAN accelerator with several
source WAN accelerators, the specified amount of space will be allocated to every source WAN accelerator
and the size of the global cache will increase proportionally. For more information, see WAN Accelerator
Sizing.
IMP ORTANT
Do not nest the global cache folder deep in the file tree. During WAN acceleration operations,
Veeam Backup & Replication generates service files with long file names. Placing such files to a folder of
significant depth may cause problems on the NTFS file system.
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Step 4. Review Components
Veeam Backup & Replication installs the following components on the server used as a WAN accelerator:
At the Review step of the wizard, review what components are already installed on the server and what
components will be installed.
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Step 5. Apply WAN Accelerator Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all required
components. Click Nex t to complete the procedure of creating the WAN accelerator and adding it to the backup
infrastructure.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the added WAN accelerator and click Finish to exit the
wizard.
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3. In the working area, select the WAN accelerator and click Remove WAN Accelerator on the ribbon or right-
click the WAN accelerator and select Remove.
WAN Acceleration
WAN acceleration is a Veeam technology that optimizes data transfer to remote locations. It is specific for off-
site backup copy jobs and replication jobs.
To enable WAN acceleration and data deduplication technologies, you must deploy a pair of WAN accelerators in
your backup infrastructure. For more information, see WAN Accelerators.
NOTE
WAN acceleration is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket-based license,
the Enterprise or Enterprise Plus editions of Veeam Backup & Replication are required.
Off-site backup copy and replication always involve moving large volumes of data between remote sites. The
most common problems that backup administrators encounter during off-site backup and replication are
insufficient network bandwidth to support VM data traffic and transmission of redundant data. To solve these
problems, Veeam Backup & Replication offers the WAN acceleration technology that combines:
• Multistreaming upload
These technologies help optimize the data transfer and reduce the amount of data going over WAN.
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High Bandwidth Mode
Starting with Veeam Backup & Replication 10, Veeam WAN acceleration introduces the Hig h bandwidth mode.
We recommend using it for WAN connections faster than 100 Mbps. If compared with the Low bandwidth mode,
it does not leverage the global cache, but utilizes a faster compression method, optimized digests processing
and an alternative deduplication mechanism. As a result, the new mode provides better performance and higher
speed of data transfer.
Note that to use the Hig h bandwidth mode, you must enable this option for WAN accelerators at both sites of
the data transfer: the source and the target. If the target WAN accelerator has the Hig h bandwidth mode
enabled, different source accelerators can parallelly interact with it in different modes, depending on the mode
selected for each source WAN accelerator.
The procedure of data copying with WAN acceleration enabled is performed in the following way:
1. [For backup copy job] Veeam Backup & Replication decompresses the backup file to analyze its content.
2. The Veeam WAN Accelerator Service on the source WAN accelerator analyzes data blocks of the file to be
transferred and creates a file with digests for these data blocks. The created file with digests is stored to
the VeeamWAN folder on the source WAN accelerator.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication compresses the backup file data (for backup copy) or VM data (for
replication) and copies it to the target side.
At this point, Veeam Backup & Replication can perform deduplication within the VM itself — that is,
deduplicate identical data blocks in every VM disk.
4. During the data transfer process, the Veeam WAN Accelerator Service on the target WAN accelerator
populates the global cache storage with data blocks from the copied file.
5. During the next job cycle, the Veeam WAN Accelerator Service on the source WAN accelerator analyzes
data blocks in the file that must be transferred this time and creates digests for these data blocks.
6. The Veeam WAN Accelerator Service compares the created digests with the digests that have been
previously stored to the VeeamWAN folder on the source WAN accelerator. If duplicate data blocks are
found, the actual data block in the backup file is not copied over WAN. Instead, it is taken fr om the global
cache and written to the restore point in the backup copy folder or on the target data volume.
7. Additionally, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes restore points that have been previously copied to the
target side. If duplicates are found, Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy such blocks over WAN but
takes them from the previously copied restore points.
As a result, Veeam Backup & Replication copies only new data blocks to the target side and uses data blocks
that are already stored in the global cache or in restore points in the target backup repository.
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If the target WAN accelerator is used by several jobs, the target backup repository may already contain data
blocks of the necessary VM type. In this situation, Veeam Backup & Replication will copy the required data
blocks to the global cache before the copying process starts and use these data blocks further on. For more
information, see Many to One WAN Acceleration.
If WAN acceleration is performed in the Hig h bandwidth mode, the procedure of data transfer with WAN
acceleration has the following peculiarities:
• Global cache is not used. Thus, the target WAN accelerator does not need extra disk space to store the
global cache folder.
• Deduplication is performed only by using previous restore points for the processed VM on the target
repository. Therefore, Veeam Backup & Replication performs less deduplication operations and saves
resources and time for data processing.
• The data chunk size used by the Changed Block Tracking mechanism during deduplication is smaller if
compared with the Low b andwidth mode. This reduces the size of redundant data to transfer.
1. When you first run a job to the remote location, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes data blocks going
over WAN.
2. With every new cycle of a job to the remote location, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the data
redundancy algorithm to find duplicate data blocks in copied files. Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes
data blocks in files on the source side and compares them with those that have been previously
transferred over WAN. If an identical data block is found, Veeam Backup & Replication deduplicates it.
As a result, only unique data blocks go over WAN. Data blocks that have already been sent are not sent. This
way, Veeam Backup & Replication eliminates transfer of redundant data over WAN.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses three sources for data deduplication:
• VM disks. Veeam Backup & Replication analyses data blocks within the same VM disk. If identical blocks
are found, duplicates are eliminated.
For example, in case of a virtualized Microsoft Exchange server, the same email is typically stored in
sender’s Outbox folder and recipient’s Inbox folder, which results in duplicate data blocks. When a job to
the remote location runs, Veeam Backup & Replication detects such VM data blocks and performs
deduplication.
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• Previous restore points for the processed VM on the target repository. Veeam Backup & Replication
analyses data in the restore point that is about to be copied and the restore points that are already stored
on the target side. If an identical block is found on the target side, Veeam Backup & Replication eliminates
the redundant data block in the copied restore point.
• Global cache. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a global cache holding data blocks that repeatedly go
over WAN. In a new job session, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes data blocks to be sent and
compares them with data blocks stored in the global cache. If an identical data block is already available in
the global cache, its duplicate on the source side is eliminated and not sent over WAN.
NOTE
• Veeam Backup & Replication deduplicates data blocks within one VM disk and in restore points for
one VM only. Deduplication between VM disks and restore points of different VMs is performed
indirectly, using the global cache. For more information, see WAN Global Cache.
• Global data deduplication and deduplication within the same VM disk are not used if both WAN
accelerators in the pair (the source one and the target one) operate in the Hig h bandwidth mode.
1. Before sending a data block to the target side, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates a checksum for the
copied data block.
2. Once the data block is copied over WAN and before it is written to the global cache or to the target
backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication recalculates the checksum for this data block on the
target side.
3. The source and target checksums are compared. If the checksums do not coincide, the target WAN
accelerator sends a request to the source WAN accelerator for the correct data block. The source WAN
accelerator re-sends the necessary data blocks to the target WAN accelerator as is and the re -sent data
block is written to the global cache or to the backup file in the target backup repository on the fly.
If a WAN connection is lost for more than 30 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication still does not finish the job
with a failed status. After a WAN connection is resumed, Veeam Backup & Replication starts a new data transfer
cycle. Data transported with every new transport cycle is written to a new working snapshot of a VM replica. As
the WAN connection may drop several times, Veeam Backup & Replication can create a number of working
snapshots.
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Not to keep long snapshot chains, Veeam Backup & Replication merges earlier snapshots and maintains only two
working snapshots for the VM replica. When all VM data is transferred to the target host, the two working
snapshots are also merged to create one fully functional VM restore point.
If the WAN link is weak and drops constantly, Veeam Backup & Replication may fail to transport VM data by the
time a new replication job session starts. In this case, during a new replication job session
Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to transfer VM data that have changed since the last replication job
session and VM data that were not transferred during the previous replication job session.
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Log Shipping Servers
Log shipping servers are dedicated components that Veeam Backup & Replication uses for backup of Microsoft
SQL Server transaction logs and Oracle archive logs. For more information, see Microsoft SQL Server Logs
Backup and Oracle Logs Backup.
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Tape Servers
Tape servers are dedicated components responsible for transferring data between data source and tape device.
For more information, see the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
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NDMP Servers
If your NAS device supports the NDMP protocol, you can back up data from it to tape. To do this, you need to
add the NAS device as an NDMP server. For more information, see the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
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Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager is an optional component intended for distributed enterprise environments
with multiple backup servers. Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager feder ates backup servers and offers a
consolidated view of these servers through a web browser interface. You can centrally control and manage all
jobs through a single "pane of glass", edit and clone jobs, monitor job state and get reporting data across all
backup servers. Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager also enables you to search for VM guest OS files in all
current and archived backups across your backup infrastructure, and restore these files in one click.
• Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Service coordinates all operations of Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager, aggregates data from multiple backup servers and provides control over these servers.
• Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Configuration Database is used by Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
for storing data. The database instance can be located on a SQL Server installed either locally (on the
same machine as Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Server) or remotely.
• Veeam Guest Catalog Service replicates and consolidates VM guest OS file system indexing data from
backup servers added to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. Index data is stored in Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager Catalog (a folder on the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager Server) and is used to
search for VM guest OS files in backups created by Veeam Backup & Replication.
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Deployment Scenarios
Veeam Backup & Replication can be used in virtual environments of any size and complexity. The architecture of
the solution supports on-site and off-site data protection, operations across remote sites and geographically
dispersed locations. Veeam Backup & Replication provides flexible scalability and easily adapts to the needs of
your virtual environment.
Before you install Veeam Backup & Replication, familiarize yourself with common deployment scenarios and
carefully plan your backup infrastructure layout.
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Simple Deployment
The simple deployment scenario is good for small virtual environments or the purpose of the
Veeam Backup & Replication evaluation. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication and all services needed
for data protection tasks are installed on a single Windows-based machine.
NOTE
If you decide to use the simple deployment scenario, it is recommended that you install
Veeam Backup & Replication on a VM. This will enable you to use the Virtual appliance transport mode and,
as a result, LAN-free data transfer. For details, see Transport Modes.
The machine where Veeam Backup & Replication is installed performs the following roles:
• Backup server that coordinates all jobs, controls their scheduling and performs other administrative
activities.
• Default VMware backup proxy that handles job processing and transfers backup traffic.
• Default backup repository where backup files are stored. During installation, Veeam Backup & Replication
checks volumes of the machine on which you install the product and identifies a volume with the greatest
amount of free disk space. On this volume, Veeam Backup & Replication creates the Backup folder that is
used as the default backup repository.
• Guest interaction proxy that is needed for application-aware processing, guest file system indexing and
transaction log processing.
Veeam Backup & Replication is ready for use right after the installation. The only thing you must do is add
VMware vSphere servers that you plan to use as source and target for backup, replication and other activities.
For details, see Adding VMware vSphere Servers.
The drawback of a simple deployment scenario is that all data is handled and stored on the backup server. For
medium-sized or large-scale environments, the capacity of a single backup server may not be enough. To ta ke
the load off the backup server and balance it throughout your backup infrastructure, we recommend that you
use the advanced deployment scenario. For details, see Advanced Deployment.
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Advanced Deployment
In large-scale virtual environments with a large number of jobs, the load on the backup server is heavy. In this
case, it is recommended that you use the advanced deployment scenario that moves the backup workload to
dedicated backup infrastructure components. The backup server here functions as a "manager" for deploying
and maintaining backup infrastructure components.
• Virtual infrastructure servers — VMware vSphere hosts used as source and target for backup, replication
and VM copy.
• VMware backup proxy — a “data mover” component used to retrieve VM data from the source datastore,
process it and deliver to the target.
• Backup repository — a location used to store backup files, VM copies and auxiliary replica files.
• Dedicated mount servers — component required for VM guest OS files and application items restore to the
original location.
• Dedicated guest interaction proxies — components used to deploy the non-persistent runtime components
or persistent agent components in Microsoft Windows VMs.
With the advanced deployment scenario, you can easily meet your current and future data protection
requirements. You can expand your backup infrastructure horizontally in a matter of minutes to match the
amount of data you want to process and available network throughput. Instead of growing the number of
backup servers or constantly tuning job scheduling, you can install multiple backup inf rastructure components
and distribute the backup workload among them. The installation process is fully automated, which simplifies
deployment and maintenance of the backup infrastructure in your virtual environment.
In virtual environments with several proxies, Veeam Backup & Replication dynamically distributes backup traffic
among these proxies. A job can be explicitly mapped to a specific proxy. Alternatively, you can let
Veeam Backup & Replication choose the most suitable proxy. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will
check settings of available proxies and select the most appropriate one for the job. The proxy server to be used
should have access to the source and target hosts as well as to the backup repository to which files will be
written.
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The advanced deployment scenario can be a good choice for backing up and replicating off -site. You can deploy
a VMware backup proxy in the production site and another one in the disaster recovery (DR) site, closer to the
backup repository. When a job is performed, backup proxies on both sides establish a stable connection, so this
architecture also allows for efficient transport of data over a slow network connection or WAN.
To regulate backup load, you can specify the maximum number of concurrent tasks per pr oxy and set up
throttling rules to limit proxy bandwidth. The maximum number of concurrent tasks can also be specified for a
backup repository in addition to the value of the combined data rate for it.
Another advantage of the advanced deployment scenario is that it contributes to high availability — jobs can
migrate between proxies if one of them becomes overloaded or unavailable.
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Distributed Deployment
The distributed deployment scenario is recommended for large geographically dispersed virtual environmen ts
with multiple Veeam Backup & Replication servers installed across different sites. These backup servers are
federated under Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager — an optional component that provides centralized
management and reporting for these servers through a web interface.
Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager collects data from backup servers and enables you to run backup and
replication jobs across the entire backup infrastructure through a single web console, edit them and clone jobs
using a single job as a template. It also provides reporting data for various areas (for example, all jobs
performed within the last 24 hours or 7 days, all VMs engaged in these jobs and so on). Using indexing data
consolidated on one server, Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager provides advanced capabilities to search for VM
guest OS files in VM backups created on all backup servers (even if they are stored in backup repositories on
different sites), and recover them in a single click. Search for VM guest OS files is enabled throug h Veeam
Backup Enterprise Manager itself.
With flexible delegation options and security roles, IT administrators can delegate the necessary file restore or
VM restore rights to authorized personnel in the organization – for example, allow database administrators to
restore Oracle or Microsoft SQL Server VMs.
If you use Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager in your backup infrastructure, you do not need to install licenses
on every backup server you deploy. Instead, you can install one license on the Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager server and it will be applied to all servers across your backup infrastructure. This approach simplifies
tracking license usage and license updates across multiple backup servers.
In addition, VMware administrators will benefit from Veeam plug-in for vSphere Web Client that can be installed
using Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. They can analyze cumulative information on used and available
storage space view and statistics on processed VMs, review success, warning, failure counts for all jobs, easily
identify unprotected VMs and perform capacity planning for repositories, all directly from vSphere.
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Resource Scheduling
Veeam Backup & Replication has the built-in mechanism of resource scheduling. Resource scheduling lets
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically define what backup infrastructure resources are required for data
protection and disaster recovery jobs and tasks, select optimal resources and assign them for the jobs and tasks.
Resource scheduling is performed by the Veeam Backup Service running on the backup server. When a job or
task starts, it communicates with the service and informs it about the resources it needs. The service analyzes
job settings, parameters specified for backup infrastructure components, current load on the components, and
automatically allocates optimal resources to the job.
For resource scheduling, Veeam Backup Service uses the following settings and features:
• Performance Bottlenecks
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Limitation of Concurrent Tasks
When you start a data protection or disaster recovery job, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes the list of VMs
added to the job and creates a list of tasks to be processed. Veeam Backup & Replication then defines what
backup infrastructure components must be used for the job, checks what backup infrastructure components are
currently available, and assigns necessary components to process the created job tasks. The task concept differs
depending on the type of the operation and the type of the backup chain being processed.
Backup infrastructure components typically process several tasks at the same time. You can limit the number of
tasks that backup infrastructure components must process concurrently. Task limitation helps you balance the
workload across the backup infrastructure and avoid performance bottlenecks.
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you limit the number of concurrent tasks for the following backup
infrastructure components:
• Backup proxies
• Backup repositories
NOTE
Task limits set for backup infrastructure components influence the job performance. For example, you add
a VM with 6 disks to a job and assign a VMware backup proxy that can process maximum 4 tasks
concurrently for the job. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will create 6 tasks (1 task per each VM
disk) and start processing 4 tasks in parallel. The other 2 tasks will be pending.
When a job starts, it informs the Veeam Backup Service about the list of tasks created for the job, and backup
infrastructure resources that must be used for the job. The Veeam Backup Service detects the number of tasks
that required backup infrastructure components are currently processing, and analyzes the number of allowed
tasks for these components. If the number of currently processed tasks has reached the allowed limit, the
backup infrastructure component will not start processing a new task until one of the currently running tasks
finishes.
We recommend that you define the maximum number of concurrent tasks depending on the number of CPU
cores available on the VMware backup proxy. To calculate the optimum limit, we recommend that you follow
the rule: not more than 2 tasks per 1 CPU core.
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To limit the number of concurrent tasks on a VMware backup proxy, you must define the Ma x concurrent tasks
setting for the backup proxy.
• For regular backup chains, Veeam Backup & Replication creates 1 task per job.
• For per-machine backup chains, Veeam Backup & Replication creates 1 task per every VM disk (that is, a
disk of a VM added to the job).
Synthetic operations performed in the backup repository (such as synthetic full backup, backup files merge and
transformation) are also regarded as tasks. The number of tasks performed during these operations also
depends on the type of backup chains stored on the backup repository:
• For regular backup chains, Veeam Backup & Replication creates 1 task per job.
• For per-machine backup chains, Veeam Backup & Replication creates 1 task per every VM chain (that is,
every VM added to the job).
We recommend that you define the maximum number of concurrent tasks based on the number of CPU cores
and RAM available on the backup repository. To calculate the optimum limit, follow the rule: not more than 2
tasks per 1 CPU core, and not less than 2 GB RAM for each concurrently processed machine or file share. In case
of shared folder backup repositories, the same amount of resources is required for gateway servers.
To limit the number of concurrent tasks in a backup repository, you must enable the Limit maximum concurrent
ta sks to <N> option on the backup repository and define the necessary task limit.
If you use backup repositories for backup copy jobs, you must also consider tasks for read operations.
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NOTE
When you limit the number of tasks for the backup repository, consider the storage throughput. If the
storage system is not able to keep up with the number of tasks that you have assigned, it will be the
limiting factor. It is recommended that you test components and resources of the backup infrastructure to
define the workload that they can handle.
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Limitation of Read and Write Data Rates for
Backup Repositories
Veeam Backup & Replication can limit the speed with which Veeam Backup & Replication must read and write
data to/from the backup repository. The data read and write speed is controlled with the Limit read and write
d a ta rates to <N> MB/s option that you can enable in backup repository settings.
The Veeam Backup Service is aware of read and write data rate settings configured for all backup repositories in
the backup infrastructure. When a job targeted at a backup repository starts, the Veeam Backup Service informs
the Veeam Data Mover running on this backup repository about the allowed read/write speed set for this
repository so that the Veeam Data Mover can limit the read/write speed to the specified value.
If the backup repository is used by a number of tasks simultaneously, Veeam Backup & Replication splits the
allowed read/write speed rate between these tasks equally. Note that the specified limit defines the allowed
read speed and the allowed write speed at the same time.
For example, you set the Limit read and write data rates to option to 8 MB/s and start two backup jobs. Each job
processes 1 VM with 1 VM disk. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will create 2 tasks and target them at
the backup repository. The data write rate will be split between these 2 tasks equally: 4 MB/s for one task and 4
MB/s for the other task.
If at this moment you start some job reading data from the same backup repository, for example, a backup copy
job processing 1 VM with 1 disk, Veeam Backup & Replication will assign the read speed rate equal to 8 MB/s to
this job. If you start 2 backup copy jobs at the same time (each processing 1 VM with 1 disk),
Veeam Backup & Replication will split the read speed rate between these 2 jobs equally: 4 MB/s for one backup
copy job and 4 MB/s for the other backup copy job.
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Network Traffic Management
Data protection requires large amount of data to be transferred through networks. This may cause heavy
network loads.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following capabilities to reduce the load:
The rules apply only to traffic sent between the backup infrastructure components, so you do not have to
change your network infrastructure.
For example, 192.168.0.1–192.168.0.255 is the source range, and 172.16.0.1–172.16.0.255 is the target range.
192.168.0.12 is the IP address of one component, and 172.16.0.31 is the IP address of another component. Both
IP addresses fall into the ranges, so the rule will apply.
Note that the rules are reversible. The rule from the example will also apply to the specified components if you
swap the ranges: make 192.168.0.1–192.168.0.255 the target range and 172.16.0.1–172.16.0.255 the source
range.
NOTE
If the configured network rule covers at least one of the connection interfaces to a Veeam agent,
Veeam Backup & Replication applies network traffic throttling even if the traffic is transferred to/from this
Veeam agent via another interface.
TIP
You can define a rule for specific components. For this, specify a single IP address in the source range and
in the target range.
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After you create or edit network rules, they are applied almost immediately.
TIP
If you created a rule for a VMware backup proxy, you can check whether it applies. For this, open the
Traffic Rules step of the backup proxy wizard. The rule must be in the list of rules.
IMP ORTANT
When several jobs that fall into the same network rule run simultaneously, Veeam Backup & Replication equally
splits the throttled traffic between them. For example, if two jobs run at a time, each job gets half of the
throttled traffic. Once one job finishes, the other gets the entire bandwidth allowed by the rule.
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NOTE
• It is recommended that you throttle network traffic if you perform off-site backup or replicate VMs
to a DR site over slow WAN links.
• Traffic throttling rules apply to the transfer of virtual disks. Do not be surprised if you see
bandwidth usage peaks at the beginning of the job: that may be caus ed by transferring other VM
files.
Infrastructure Components
Traffic can be throttled between the backup infrastructure components on which Veeam Data Movers are
deployed and also capacity tier of the scale-out backup repository. The components differ depending on a data
protection scenario. The following table shows this dependency.
Backup to a Microsoft Windows or Linux VMware backup proxy and backup repository
backup repository*
Backup to an SMB share, Dell Data Domain VMware backup proxy and gateway server.
and HPE StoreOnce*
Backup copy* Source and target backup repositories, gateway servers or WAN
accelerators (if they are involved in the backup copy process).
Backup to tape* Backup repository and tape server. For more information about
backup to tape jobs, see the Machines Backup to Tape section
in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
* Veeam Backup & Replication throttles traffic between the listed components also if backups are created with Veeam
Agents (Windows, Linux and so on) operating in the standalone or managed mode.
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2. In the Global Network Traffic Rules window, click Ad d and select an IPv4 or IPv6 rule. Note that you can
add the IPv6 rule only if IPv6 communication is enabled as descried in IPv6 Support.
4. In the Source IP address range section, specify a range of IP addresses for the backup infrastructure
components on the source site.
o To specify IP addresses of the backup infrastructure components, use the Ta rget IP address range
section.
o To throttle traffic to public networks, select the All public IP addresses check box. Public networks
are all IPv4 networks whose IP ranges differ from 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16 and all
IPv6 networks whose IP ranges differ from fc00::/7.
7. In the Throttle network traffic to field, specify the maximum speed that must be used to transfer data
from source to target.
8. If you want to throttle traffic during the restore activities, clea r the Never throttle any restore activity
check box.
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9. In the section below the Throttle network traffic to field, specify time periods when traffic is throttled,
when throttling is disabled and when throttling limit can be increased or decreased and how.
• Rule 1. Speed limit: 1 Mbps; time interval: Monday through Friday from 7 AM to 7 PM.
• Rule 2. Speed limit: 10 Mbps; time interval: Saturday through Sunday from 7 AM to 7 PM.
With such rules, Veeam Backup & Replication will limit the speed up to 1 Mbps during business hours and up to
10 Mbps during non-business hours.
If several rules have the same target/source IP address range but different speed limits, the lowest limit is used.
For example, if you configure the following rules:
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In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the lowest speed limit — 1 Mbps.
The principle of several rules and the lowest speed limit also applies if some rules are created on the
Veeam Backup & Replication side and others on the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows side. For more
information on how to throttle traffic by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, see the Veeam Agent
Management Guide and Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
3. In the Global Network Traffic Rules window, click Ad d and select an IPv4 or IPv6 rule. Note that you can
add the IPv6 rule only if the E na ble IPv6 communication check box is selected. For more information, see
IPv6 Support.
4. In the Source IP address range section, specify a range of IP addresses for backup infrastructure
components on the source site.
5. In the Ta rget IP address range section, specify a range of IP addresses for backup infrastructure
components on the target site.
Related Topics
Data Encryption
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Adjusting Internet Rule
The internet rule is a predefined network rule. This rule manages traffic transferred through public networks —
all IPv4 networks whose IP ranges differ from 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16 and all IPv6 networks
whose IP ranges differ from fc00::/7. The internet rule also encrypts traffic for such networks. You cannot
delete the internet rule — you can only adjust or turn it off.
Adjusting Rule
To adjust the rule:
2. In the Global Network Traffic Rules window, select Internet from the list and click E d it.
o To enable network traffic throttling, select the Throttle network traffic to check box. For details, see
Enabling Traffic Throttling.
TIP
You can create custom network traffic rules targeted to public networks a s described in Enabling Traffic
Throttling.
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Managing Upload Streams
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses multithreaded data transfer for every job session. VM data going
from source to target is transferred over 5 TCP/IP connections. However, if you schedule several jobs to run at
the same time, load on the network may be heavy. If the network capacity is not sufficient to support multiple
data transfer connections, you can disable multithreaded data transfer or cha nge the number of TCP/IP
connections.
2. In the Global Network Traffic Rules window, specify new data transfer settings:
o To disable multithreaded data transfer, clear the Use multiple upload streams per job check box.
Veeam Backup & Replication will use only one TCP/IP transfer connection for every job session.
o To change the number of TCP/IP connections, leave the Use multiple upload streams per job check
selected and specify the necessary number of connections in the field on the right.
NOTE
• Veeam Backup & Replication performs a CRC check for the TCP traffic going between the source and
the target. When you perform backup, replication or VM copy operations,
Veeam Backup & Replication calculates checksums for data blocks going from the source. On the
target, it recalculates checksums for received data blocks and compares them to the checksums
created on the source. If the CRC check fails, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically re-sends
data blocks without any impact on the job.
• [For Veeam Plug-ins for Enterprise Applications] The multithreaded data transfer setting does not
affect backup jobs created by Veeam Plug-in for Oracle RMAN/SAP HANA/SAP on Oracle. To
configure multiple channels for backup and restore operations for these plug -ins, see the Veeam
Plug-ins for Enterprise Applications Guide.
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Specifying Preferred Networks
You can choose networks over which Veeam Backup & Replication must transport data when you perform data
protection and disaster recovery tasks. This option can be helpful if you have a non-production network and
want to route data traffic over this network instead of the production one.
Preferred network rule applies only to traffic between the following backup infrastructure components:
• Backup server
• WAN accelerator 1
• Gateway server 2
• Backup repository
• Tape server
• Veeam Agent
To define networks for data transfer, you must create a list of preferred networks. When
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer data, it uses networks from this list. If a connection over
preferred networks cannot be established for some reason, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically fail
over to the production network.
3. In the P referred Networks window, select the P refer the following networks for backup a nd replication
tra ffic check box.
4. Click Ad d and select IPv4 or IPv6 network. Note that you can add the IPv6 network only if the E nable IPv6
communication check box is selected. For more information, see IPv6 Support.
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5. [For the IPv4 network] Specify a network address and a subnet mask using a CIDR notation and click OK.
6. [For the IPv6 network] Specify a network address and prefix length using a CIDR notation and click OK.
7. Repeat steps 4-6 for all networks that you want to add.
IPv6 Support
Veeam Backup & Replication supports IPv6 communication for all backup infrastructure components. The
following options are available:
• IP v4/IPv6 dual stack. This mode is enabled by default for new Veeam Backup & Replication installations.
• IP v4 only. For compatibility, this mode is used by default if you upgrade to Veeam Backup & Replication
12.
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NOTE
Temporary IPv6 addresses are not supported for backup infrastructure components and backed -up
machines. For more information about using temporary addresses, see this RFC section.
2. Click Networks.
3. To enable the IPv4/IPv6 dual stack mode, select the E na ble IPv6 communication check box. To enable the
IPv4 only mode, clear the check box.
After you enable IPv6 communication, you can add backup infrastructure components with IPv6 addresses to
the Veeam Backup & Replication console and configure IPv6 networks and traffic rules. You can use any text
representation format of the IPv6 address, although RFC 5952 describes the canonical format as recommended.
For more information, see this RFC section.
Note that if you want to switch back to the IPv4 only mode, you must remove backup infrastructure
components added only with IPv6 addresses from the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
NOTE
If you use the IPv4/IPv6 dual stack mode and there are backup infrastructure components added to the
Veeam Backup & Replication console using FQDN, Microsoft Windows itself determines which source
address and the network protocol (IPv4 or IPv6) will be used for connection between
Veeam Backup & Replication and these components. For more information, see this Microsoft article.
This case is also applied to your backup infrastructure if you use Kerberos authentication. For more
information, see Kerberos Authenticaiton.
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Performance Bottlenecks
As any backup application handles a great amount of data, it is important to make sure the data flow is efficient
and all resources engaged in the backup process are optimally used. Veeam Backup & Replication provides
advanced statistics about the data flow efficiency and lets you identify bottlenecks in the data transmission
process.
Veeam Backup & Replication processes VM data in cycles. Every cycle includes a number of stages:
When one data processing cycle is over, the next cycle begins. VM data therefore goes over the “data pipe”.
To evaluate the data pipe efficiency, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes performance of all components in
the data flow working as the cohesive system, and evaluates key factors on the source and target sites.
Veeam Backup & Replication checks the following points in the data pipe:
1. Source — source disk reader component responsible for retrieving data from the source storage.
3. Source W AN accelerator — WAN accelerator deployed on the source site. Used for backup copy and
replication jobs working through WAN accelerators.
4. Network — network queue writer component responsible for getting processed VM data from the VMware
backup proxy and sending it over the network to the backup repository or another VMware backup proxy.
5. Ta rget W AN Accelerator — WAN accelerator deployed on the target site. Used for backup copy a nd
replication jobs working through WAN accelerators.
The resource usage level for these points is evaluated in percent. This percent rate defines the amount of time
for which components are busy during the job. An efficient data flow assumes that there is no latency at any
point of the data pipe, and all its components work for approximately equal amount of time.
If any of the components operates inefficiently, there may appear a bottleneck in the data path. The insufficient
component will work 100% of time while the others will be idling, waiting for data to be transferred. As a
result, the whole data flow will slow down to the level of the slowest point in the data path, and t he overall
time of data processing will increase.
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To identify a bottleneck in the data path, Veeam Backup & Replication detects the component with the
maximum workload: that is, the component that works for the most time of the job. For example, you use a low-
speed storage device as the backup repository. Even if VM data is retrieved from the SAN storage on the source
site and transported over a high-speed link, VM data flow will still be impaired at the backup repository. The
backup repository will be trying to consume transferred data at the rate that exceeds its capacity, and the other
components will stay idle. As a result, the backup repository will be working 100% of job time, while other
components may be employed, for example, for 60% only. In terms of Veeam Backup & Replication, such data
path will be considered insufficient.
The bottleneck statistics for a job is displayed in the job session data. The bottleneck statistics does not
necessarily mean that you have a problem in your backup infrastructure. It informs you about the weakest
component in the data path. However, if you feel that the job performance is low, you may try taking some
measures to get rid of the bottleneck. For example, in the case described above, you can limit the number of
concurrent tasks for the backup repository.
Throttling as Bottleneck
In addition to main points in the data pipe, Veeam Backup & Replication may report throttling as a bottleneck.
This can happen in the following cases:
• If you limit the read and write data rates for a backup repository, a backup repository may become a
bottleneck. Veeam Backup & Replication will report Throttling in the bottleneck statistics.
• If you set up network throttling rules, network may become a bottleneck. Veeam Backup & Replication
will report Throttling in the bottleneck statistics.
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Locations
To control data migration in the virtual infrastructure, Veeam Backup & Replication introduces a notion of
location. A location defines a geographic region, or country, in which an infrastructure object resides. You can
create a list of locations, and assign to backup infrastructure objects information about locations to which they
belong.
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to assign information about locations to the following infrastructure
objects:
• Backup infrastructure objects: backup repositories, external repositories, scale -out backup repositories,
tape libraries and tape vaults.
• Veeam Cloud Connect for service providers: cloud repositories and hardware plans.
Information about infrastructure objects location is stored in the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration
database. When VM data in the virtual infrastructure is migrated from one location to another,
Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning and stores a record about data migration to job or task session
details. In addition to it, Veeam Backup & Replication logs this information to Microsoft Windows event logs. For
example, if you back up VMs from a host that resides in Germany to a backup repository that resides in Australia,
Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning that VM data changes its location in the backup job wizard,
display information about data migration in the backup job session details and log it to Microsoft Windows event
logs.
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Veeam Backup & Replication displays information about VM and file share data migration in statistics for the
following types of jobs:
• Backup jobs — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host on which VMs are
registered with the location of the target backup repository or cloud repository.
• Backup copy jobs — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host with the
location of the target host.
• File share backup jobs — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source file share with
the location of the target backup repository or cloud repository. If the secondary repository is specified,
Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source file share with the location of the
secondary target host.
• VeeamZIP tasks (except the cases when you select to store the VeeamZIP file in a local or shared folder) —
Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host on which VMs are registered with
the location of the target backup repository.
• Replication jobs — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host on which VMs are
registered with the location of the target host.
• Replica failback tasks — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host with the
location of the host to which the VM is restored.
• VM copy jobs — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host on which VMs are
registered with the location of the target backup repository or target host.
• Quick migration tasks — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host on which
VMs are registered with the location of the target host.
• File share backup copy tasks — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source file share
with the location of the target backup repository or target host.
• Entire VM restore tasks — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source host with the
location of the host to which VMs are restored.
• File share data recovery tasks — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source file
share with the location of the file share to which files are restored.
o Backup copy jobs: Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the source external
repository with the location of the target backup repository.
o Restore to Amazon EC2: Veeam Backup & Replication compares the geographic region of the backed-
up Amazon EC2 instance with the geographic region of the target EC2 instance.
o Restore to Microsoft Azure: Veeam Backup & Replication always displays a warning about VM data
migration when restore to Microsoft Azure is performed from external repositories.
• SureBackup jobs — Veeam Backup & Replication compares the source location with the target location.
The target location is always a host on which the virtual lab is registered. The source location may be one
of the following:
o If a VM is added to the application group, Veeam Backup & Replication compares the host on which
the VM is registered (or was registered at the moment of backup) with the target location.
o If a VM is added to the SureBackup job from the linked job , Veeam Backup & Replication compares the
backup repository on which the backup file resides with the target location.
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• Tape tasks:
o Backup to tape jobs: In backup to tape jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication compares the location of the
source job or repository with the location of the tape library in the target media pool. If the media
pool spans multiple tape libraries, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes locations of all libraries in
the media pool.
o Vaults: If a tape job exports offline backups to a vault, Veeam Backup & Replication compares the
location of the source job or repository with the location of the vault. I a GFS tape job exports tapes to
multiple vaults, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes all vaults configured for target media pools of
the GFS tape job.
o Media pools: Veeam Backup & Replication compares locations of all tape libraries added to the media
pool. If the media pool exports tapes to a vault, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes all vaults
configured for the media pool.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not display a warning about VM data migration for file copy jobs.
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Creating and Assigning Locations to
Infrastructure Objects
You can create a list of locations in Veeam Backup & Replication and assign locations to infrastructure objects. If
you assign a location to a vCenter Server, it will be applied to all child hosts (clusters and ESXi hosts). You can
also assign the location to a child host.
To create a location:
1. In the Inventory or Ba ckup Infrastructure view, right-click the infrastructure object and select Loca tion >
Ma nage locations.
To assign a location to an infrastructure object, in the Inventory or Ba ckup Infrastructure view, right-click the
infrastructure object and select Location > <Location name> . If the location is not in the list, select Loca tion >
Ma nage Locations and add the location to the list.
NOTE
When assigning a location to a scale-out backup repository, the location will be global for all extents. If
you add an extent whose location differs from the global location, it will be changed in favor of the
location of the scale-out repository.
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Editing Locations
You can edit a location in the locations list, for example, if you want to change the location name.
To edit a location:
1. In the Inventory or Ba ckup Infrastructure view, right-click the infrastructure object and select Loca tion >
Ma nage locations.
2. In the Ma nage Locations window, select the location and click E d it.
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Deleting Locations
You can delete a location from the locations list, for example, if you no longer host infrastructure objects in this
location.
To delete a location:
1. In the Inventory or Ba ckup Infrastructure view, right-click the infrastructure object and select Loca tion >
Ma nage locations.
2. In the Ma nage Locations window, select the location and click Delete. If the location is currently assigned
to some infrastructure objects, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning with the list of objects
that belong to this location. Click Y es to confirm the location deletion.
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Exporting and Importing Locations List
You can export and import the list of locations to/from a file of XML format.
The import and export functionality facilitates the process of locations creation and maintenance. For example,
if you need to set up the same list of locations throughout the whole backup infrastructure, you can create a list
of locations on one backup server manually, export this list to an XML file, and then import the list on other
backup servers and machines running the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
TIP
If you delete and recreate a location, Veeam Backup & Replication will create an object with a new ID in the
database and consider it as a new location. Thus, to preserve the uniqueness of the location, use the
location export/import operations.
1. In the Inventory or Ba ckup Infrastructure view, right-click an infrastructure object and select Location >
Ma nage locations.
2. In the Ma nage Locations window, click E x port and specify a name of the XML file to which the locations
list must be exported.
1. In the Inventory or Ba ckup Infrastructure view, right-click an infrastructure object and select Location >
Ma nage locations.
2. In the Ma nage Locations window, click Imp ort and browse to the XML file from which the locations list
must be imported.
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Veeam Backup & Replication Settings
You can set up general settings for Veeam Backup & Replication. General settings are applied to all jobs, backup
infrastructure components and other objects managed by the backup server.
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Specifying I/O Settings
You can specify data processing settings.
• The E nable storage latency control option is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy
socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
• The Set custom thresholds on individual datastores option is included in the Veeam Universal License.
When using a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise Plus edition is required.
• The E nable storage latency control option is not supported for vVOLs/vSAN storage.
3. To control the I/O load on the production storage where VMs reside, select the E na ble storage latency
control check box. When you enable storage latency control, Veeam Backup & Replication monitors
storage read latency on production datastores during data protection and disaster recovery activities. To
monitor the storage latency, Veeam Backup & Replication uses real-time metrics from the hypervisor
where VMs reside. By default, metrics from the hypervisor are collected every 20 seconds. These settings
are inherited from VMware vSphere.
a. In the Stop assigning new tasks to datastore a t field, specify the I/O latency limit at which
Veeam Backup & Replication must not assign new tasks targeted at the datastore.
b. In the Throttle I/O of existing tasks at field, specify the I/O latency limit at which
Veeam Backup & Replication must decrease the speed of data retrieval or writing to/from the
datastore. When the I/O latency for this datastore reaches this value, the Veeam Data Mover working
with this datastore will slow down data retrieval or writing.
The value in the Stop assigning new tasks to datastore at field cannot be greater than the value in the
Throttle I/O of existing tasks at field.
NOTE
If you enable the storage latency control option, Veeam Backup & Replication starts processing VM disks
residing on the same datastore with a 40-60 second time offset. This offset helps
Veeam Backup & Replication evaluate the current I/O load on the datastore. For example, if you launch a
job processing a VM with two disks, Veeam Backup & Replication will start processing the first VM disk,
wait for 40-60 seconds to evaluate the I/O workload on the datastore, and then start processing the
second VM disk.
Consider this behavior. If you schedule jobs that process multiple VM disks residing on the same datastore
to start at the same time, the jobs performance will degrade.
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You can set the I/O latency limit for every storage in the virtual infrastructure separately.
3. Click Configure.
4. Click Ad d > Da tastore, select the necessary datastore and click OK to add it to the storage list.
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6. Specify the I/O thresholds for the datastores as described above.
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Configuring Security Settings
In the Security tab, you can configure the following:
Enable the fingerprint check for Linux machines to protect connection from man-in-the-middle attacks.
• Cloud Connect
Enable access to the cloud gateway for the Remote Access Console connected to an external network.
• FIPS Compliance
• Keep the default self-signed TLS certificate generated by Veeam Backup & Replication at the process of
upgrading to a new version of Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Use Veeam Backup & Replication to generate a new self-signed TLS certificate. To learn more, see
Generating Self-Signed Certificate.
• Select an existing TLS certificate from the certificates store. To learn more, see Importing Certificate from
Certificate Store.
• Import a TLS certificate from a file in the PFX format. To learn more, see Importing Certificate from PFX
Files.
If you plan to use a certificate issued by your own Certificate Authority (CA), make sure that the certificate
meets the requirements. For more information, see Using Certificate Signed by Internal CA.
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IMP ORTANT
If you update the TLS certificate used on the backup server, you must also update info about the certificate
on the following backup infrastructure components:
• For AHV Backup proxies, pass through the E d it Nutanix Proxy wizard. To do this, in the Ba ckup
Infrastructure view, right-click a proxy and select P roperties. In the wizard, click Finish. Also, restart
the Veeam AHV Service.
• For RHV Backup proxies, pass through the E d it Red Hat Virtualization Proxy wizard. To do this, in
the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, right-click a proxy and select P roperties. In the wizard, click Finish.
• For VMware clusters, pass through the I/O filter Management wizard as described in Installing I/O
Filter.
• For VMware CDP proxies, pass through the E d it VMware CDP Proxy wizard. To do this, in the Ba ckup
Infrastructure view, right-click a proxy and select P roperties. In the wizard, click Finish.
If you remove the old certificate from the Microsoft Windows certificate store, you must also reconfigure
Veeam Agents added to the Computers with pre-installed agents protection group. To do this, repeat the
configuration step of the Veeam Agent deployment scenario as described in the subsections of
the Deploying Veeam Agents Using Generated Setup Files section. Other protection groups will be
automatically reconfigured during the next rescan operation.
If you do not remove the old certificate from the Microsoft Windows certificate store, all protection groups
will be automatically reconfigured the next time Veeam Agents connect to the backup serv er.
To generate TLS certificates, Veeam Backup & Replication employs the RSA Full cryptographic service provider
by Microsoft Windows installed on the backup server. The created TLS certificate is saved to the Shared
certificate store. The following types of users can access the generated TLS certificate:
If you use a self-signed TLS certificate generated by Veeam Backup & Replication, you do not need to take
additional actions to deploy the TLS certificate on a protected computer. When Veeam Backup & Replication
discovers a protected computer, a matching TLS certificate with a public key is installed on the protected
computer automatically. During discovery, Veeam Installer Service deployed on the protected computer
retrieves the TLS certificate with a public key from the backup server and installs a TLS certificate with a public
key on the protected computer.
NOTE
When you generate a self-signed TLS certificate with Veeam Backup & Replication, you cannot include
several aliases to the certificate and specify a custom value in the Subject field. The Subject field value is
taken from the Veeam Backup & Replication license installed on the Veeam backup server.
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IMP ORTANT
If you update the TLS certificate used on the backup server, you must also update info about the certificate
on the specific backup infrastructure components as described in Backup Server Certificate.
4. At the Certificate Type step of the wizard, select Generate new certificate.
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5. At the Generate Certificate step of the wizard, specify a friendly name for the created self-signed TLS
certificate.
6. At the Summary step of the wizard, review the certificate properties. Use the Cop y to clipboard link to
copy and save information about the generated TLS certificate. You will be able to use the copied
information to verify the TLS certificate with the certificate thumbprint.
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7. Click Finish. Veeam Backup & Replication will save the generated certificate in the Shared certificate store
on the Veeam backup server.
IMP ORTANT
If you update the TLS certificate used on the backup server, you must also update info about the certificate
on the specific backup infrastructure components as described in Backup Server Certificate.
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4. At the Certificate Type step of the wizard, choose Select certificate from the Certificate Store.
5. At the P ick Certificate step of the wizard, select a TLS certificate that you want to use. You can select only
certificates that contain both a public key and a private key. Certificates without private keys are not
displayed in the list.
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7. Click Finish to apply the certificate.
• Your organization uses a TLS certificate signed by a CA and you have a copy of this certificate in a file of
PFX format.
• You have generated a self-signed TLS certificate in the PFX format with a third-party tool and you want to
import it to Veeam Backup & Replication.
NOTE
The TLS certificate must pass validation on the Veeam backup server. Otherwise, you will not be able to
import the TLS certificate.
If a PFX file contains a certificate chain, only the end entity certificate will be imported.
IMP ORTANT
If you update the TLS certificate used on the backup server, you must also update info about the certificate
on the specific backup infrastructure components as described in Backup Server Certificate.
4. At the Certificate Type step of the wizard, choose Imp ort certificate from a file.
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5. At the Imp ort Certificate step of the wizard, specify a path to the PXF file.
6. If the PFX file is protected with a password, specify the password in the field below.
7. At the Summary step of the wizard, review the certificate properties. Use the Cop y to clipboard link to
copy and save information about the TLS certificate. You can use the copied information on a protected
computer to verify the TLS certificate with the certificate thumbprint.
Also, note that Certificate Revocation List (CRL) must be accessible from the Veeam Backup & Replication
server.
NOTE
If you use Windows Server Certification Authority, issue a Veeam Backup & Replication certificate based on
the built-in Subordinate Certification Authority template or templates similar to it. You can manage
templates with the Certificate Templates MMC snap-in.
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A certificate signed by a CA must meet the following requirements:
• The certificate subject is equal to the fully qualified domain name of the Veeam Backup & Replication
server. For example: vbrserver.domain.local.
• The Sub ject Alternative Name field contains both the FQDN and the NetBIOS name. You can add multiple
DNS entries in the following format: DNS:vbrserver.domain.local,DNS:vbrserver.
o Digital Signature
o Certificate Signing
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o CRL Signing (86)
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• The P a th Length Constraint parameter in the Ba sic Constraints extension is set to 0.
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If you use Windows Server Certification Authority, open the Certificate Templates MMC snap-in and
select the certificate template based on the built-in Subordinate Certification Authority template or
templates similar to it. On the E x tensions tab, enable the Do not a llow subject to issue certificates to
other CAs option.
To start using the signed certificate, you must select it from the certificates store on the
Veeam Backup & Replication server. To learn more, see Importing Certificate from Certificate Store.
• Ad d all discovered hosts to the list automatically — with this option enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication
allows all Linux servers added to the protection group and all Linux VMs to be connected to the backup
server.
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• Ad d unknown hosts to the list manually (more secure) — with this option enabled, only the following
Linux machines can connect to the backup server:
o Protected machines that have already established a connection to the backup server and have their
fingerprints stored in the Veeam Backup & Replication database.
Veeam Backup & Replication displays the number of trusted machines in the Trusted hosts field. To
export the list of trusted machines to the known_hosts file, click E x p ort and specify a path to the
folder to save the file.
o Protected machines specified in the known_hosts file imported to Veeam Backup & Replication. To
import the known_hosts file, click Import and specify a path to the folder where the file resides.
Machines that do not meet the above-mentioned conditions cannot connect to the Veeam backup
server and download Veeam Agent for Linux installation packages during discovery. Also, guest OS
processing of untrusted VMs will fail.
Veeam Backup & Replication displays these computers under the Untrusted node in the inventory. To
start managing an untrusted computer, you need to validate its fingerprint manually in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console. To learn more, see Validating SSH Fingerprints.
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Validating SSH Fingerprints of Linux VMs
When you enable the Ad d unknown hosts to the list manually (more secure) option in
Veeam Backup & Replication settings, Linux-based machines whose fingerprints are not stored in the
Veeam Backup & Replication database or the known_hosts file become unable to communicate to the Veeam
backup server. During discovery, Veeam Backup & Replication puts such machines to the Untrusted node. To
start managing an untrusted computer, you need to validate its fingerprint manually in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Virtual Infrastructure node and click Untrusted.
3. In the working area, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a list of machines whose fingerprints need to
be validated. Check fingerprints of the machines in the list and validate them in one of the following ways:
o To validate fingerprints of all untrusted machines at once, select the Untrusted node in the inventory
pane and click Trust All on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the Untrusted node and select
Trust all.
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o To validate a fingerprint of a specific computer in the list, select the necessary computer in the
working area and click Trust on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the computer and select
Trust.
1. In the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, expand the Ma naged Servers node and select Una vailable.
3. In the SSH Connection step of the E d it Linux Server wizard, click Ap p ly.
4. In the pop-up dialogue window, click Y es to confirm that you trust this server.
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5. Click Finish to close the wizard.
Cloud Connect
If you use the Veeam Cloud Connect functionality, you can remotely access the tenant backup server to manage
Veeam Backup & Replication deployed on the tenant side. One of the ways to do this is to use the Remote
Access Console. In case it is installed on a remote machine connected to an external network, you will need to
enable access to the cloud gateway for the Remote Access Console over the internet. For more information, see
Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
To enable access to the cloud gateway for the Remote Access Console:
3. In the Cloud Connect section, select the Accept remote console connection requests originating from the
Internet check box.
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4. Click OK.
FIPS Compliance
By default, Veeam backup infrastructure components use platform-provided cryptographic APIs and FIPS-
compliant Veeam Cryptographic Module to meet NIST CMVP cryptographic and security requirements.
Additionally, you can enable FIPS-compliant operation mode. It restricts connections to non-FIPS compliant
platforms and runs self-tests to ensure that encryption modules are valid and work properly.
NOTE
To make your backup infrastructure FIPS-compliant follow vendor recommendations. For more information
on Microsoft Windows Server, see this article.
1. From the main menu on the backup server, select General Options.
3. In the FIP S compliance section, select the E nable FIPS-compliant operation mode check box.
4. Click OK.
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IMP ORTANT
Consider the following for backup infrastructure components based on Linux servers with persistent Veeam
Data Movers:
• After you select or clear the selection of the E nable FIPS-compliant operation mode check box, you
must open the Edit Linux Server wizard for each Linux server with the persistent Veeam Data Mover
and proceed to the end of the wizard. This will update server settings. If you do not update the
settings, the servers will be unavailable.
• In Veeam Backup & Replication version 11, the component of persistent Linux Veeam Data Mover
that is responsible for data processing launch cannot operate in the FIPS-compliant mode. However,
components responsible for data processing itself can operate in this mode. Starting from
Veeam Backup & Replication version 11a, whole Data Mover can become FIPS-compliant.
In Aud it Logs Location field, you can specify folder where the audit logs will be stored. By default, log files are
stored in the following folder: %ProgramData%\Veeam\Backup\Audit. You can also specify an SMB (CIFS)
folder.
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If you use an SMB (CIFS) folder, the service account that is used for Veeam Back up Service on the machine with
Veeam Backup & Replication must have access to that SMB (CIFS) folder. By default, this is the Loca l System
account, so you will need to grant write access to the VBR Server Active Directory computer account.
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Specifying Email Notification Settings
You can receive email notifications with results on jobs performed on the backup server.
TIP
To receive email notification about all jobs performed on the backup server in one email, configure email
notification settings in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager.
2. Open the E -ma il Settings tab and select the E na ble e-mail notifications check box.
1. In the Ma il Server field, specify the authentication method you want to use. Veeam Backup & Replication
supports the following methods:
NOTE
For more secure environments, it is recommended to use OAuth 2.0 authentication. Also, note that
Microsoft and Google consider SMTP basic authentication as an outdated industry standard and plan
to disable it. For more information, see this Microsoft article and this Google article.
2. If you want to use SMTP basic authentication, perform the following steps:
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b. In the SMTP server field, enter a full DNS name, or IPv4 or IPv6 address of the SMTP server that will
be used for sending email notifications. Note that you can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6
communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
c. To specify user credentials and connection options, click the Ad vanced button:
▪ Specify the port number and connection timeout for the SMTP server.
NOTE
Sending email notifications using Implicit TLS (over port 465) is not supported. For more
information about Implicit TLS, see this RFC section.
▪ To use a secure connection for email operations, select the Connect using SSL check box.
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▪ If you need to connect to the SMTP server using a specific account, select the This SMTP server
requires authentication check box and select the necessary credentials from the Log on as list. If
you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the
right to add credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
When you add an SMTP server, Veeam Backup & Replication saves to the configuration database a
thumbprint of the TLS certificate. If the certificate is not trusted, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a
warning. If you trust the certificate, click Continue.
3. If you want to use Google Gmail OAuth 2.0 authentication, perform the following steps:
a. In the Ma il server field, select Google Gmail from the list and click the Sig n in with Google button.
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b. In the opened web browser window, specify the Google account to connect to the
Veeam Backup & Replication application. Note that you must select Send email on your behalf check
box during configuring access options.
NOTE
• For security reasons, it is recommended to use a dedicated service account with granular
SendMail permissions.
• To sign in with the Google account, your default web browser must meet Google
requirements. For more information, see this article.
If the authentication is successful, the Token is valid notice will appear. The token is refreshed
automatically. If it was revoked or the Google account password was changed, click the Re-authorize
link to update configuration.
For more information on how to register your custom application, see Registering Application in Google
Cloud Console.
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4. If you want to use Microsoft 365 OAuth 2.0 authentication, perform the following steps:
a. In the Ma il server field, select Microsoft 365 from the list and click the Authorize now link.
b. In the opened window, specify your Exchange Online credentials to connect to the
Veeam Backup & Replication application.
NOTE
• For security reasons, it is recommended to use a dedicated service account with granular
SendMail permissions.
• To sign in with Exchange Online credentials, turn off the Internet Explorer Enhanced
Security Configuration option in Server Manager. For more information, see this article.
If the authentication is successful, the Token is valid notice will appear. The token is refreshed
automatically. If it was revoked or Exchange Online credentials were changed, click the Re-authorize
link to update configuration.
NOTE
For custom applications, note that you must select Consent on behalf of your organization check box
during configuring access options.
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For more information on how to register your custom application, see Registering Application in Microsoft
Azure Portal.
1. In the From field, specify an email from which email notifications must be sent. Note that for OAuth 2.0
autnentication, it must be the account you use to connect to the Veeam Backup & Replication application.
2. In the To field, specify the recipient addresses. Use a semicolon to separate multiple addresses. Recipients
specified in this field will receive notification about every job managed by the backup server. You can
leave the field empty if required.
For every particular job, you can specify additional recipients. For more information, see Configuring Job
Notification Settings.
IMP ORTANT
If you specify the same email recipient in both job notification and global notification settings,
Veeam Backup & Replication will send the job notification only.
3. In the Sub ject field, specify a subject for the sent message. You can use the following variables in the
subject:
b. %JobName%
c. %JobResult%
e. %Issues% — number of VMs in the job that have been processed with the Warning or Failed status
4. In the Send daily reports at field, specify at what time Veeam Backup & Replication will send daily email
reports. Daily reports are generated for different purposes throughout Veeam Backup & Replication:
o Reports about processing results of scale-out repository data. For more information, see Receiving
Scale-Out Backup Repository Reports.
o Reports about processing results of backup copy jobs. For more information, see Notification Settings
in the Creating Backup Copy Jobs for VMs and Physical Machines section.
o Reports about processing results of backup copy jobs for transaction log backups. For more
information about transaction log backups, see Microsoft SQL Server Logs Backup.
o Reports about backups of virtual and physical machines created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows or Veeam Agent for Linux in the Ma naged by Agent mode.
o Reports with statistics for rescan job sessions performed for protection groups of virtual and physical
machines created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent for Linux .
o Reports about processing results of backup copy jobs for backups created with Veeam Plug-ins for
Enterprise Applications.
o Reports about active Instant Recovery sessions, that is, sessions that were not finalized. For more
information about Instant Recovery, see Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere and Instant Recovery to
Microsoft Hyper-V.
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NOTE
5. In the Notify on group, select the Success, W arning and/or Fa ilure check boxes to receive email
notification if a job is run successfully, not successfully or with a warning.
6. Select the Sup press notifications until the last retry check box to receive a notification about the final job
status. If you do not enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will send one notification per every
job retry.
7. Veeam Backup & Replication allows sending a test email to check if all settings have been configured
correctly. To send a test email, click Test Message .
1. Log in to the Google Cloud console under a Google account that has permissions to create applications.
2. Create a new project and enable Gmail API for the project. To do this, open AP Is and services > Library >
Gma il API > Manage and click E na ble API.
a. Open AP Is and services > Credentials. Click Create credentials and select OAuth client ID.
d. Click Create to generate the application client ID and the client secret. In the opened window, you can
copy credentials or download them in the JSON format. You can also find them later in the AP Is and
services > Credentials section when editing your OAuth 2.0 client ID.
4. Open AP Is and services > OAuth consent screen and click E d it App. Specify your application name and the
user support email and click Sa ve and continue.
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5. If your application is in the Testing status, you must specify test users. To do this, at the Test users step of
the E d it App wizard, click Ad d users. To apply changes, click Sa ve and continue. Note that only test users
will have access to the app.
After you finish the registration, specify custom application registration settings when configuring the mail
server for Google Gmail OAuth 2.0 authentication. For more information, see Configuring Mail Server.
NOTE
You can leave your application in the Testing status and do not publish it. In that case, you will receive a
warning message Google hasn't verified this app when connecting to your application. If you want to verify
it, see this Google article.
1. Log in to the Microsoft Azure portal under Exchange Online credentials that has permissions to register
Azure AD applications.
2. Register the application. To do this, open Azure Active Directory > App registrations and click New
reg istration:
b. In the Sup ported account types section, select the Accounts in this organizational directory only
option.
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c. Click Reg ister.
After registration, you can copy application (client) ID and directory (tenant) ID. You can also find these
credentials later in the Overview section of you application properties.
3. Add a platform configuration for your application. To do this, open Authentication > Platform
configurations and click Ad d a platform:
b. Select the MSAL redirect URI generated in the following format: msal<applicationid>://auth.
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c. Click Configure.
4. Grant the application the Mail.Send permission of Microsoft Graph. This will allow
Veeam Backup & Replication to call the Microsoft Graph API for sending email notifications. To do this,
open AP I p ermissions and click Ad d a permission:
b. Select the Mail.Send permission from the list and click Ad d permissions.
5. Click Grant admin consent for <Your Directory Name>. In the displayed window, click Y es to confirm the
operation.
After you finish the registration, specify custom application registration settings when configuring the mail
server for Microsoft 365 OAuth 2.0 authentication. For more information, see Configuring Mail Server.
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Configuring Job Notification Settings
To configure job notification settings:
2. On the Notifications tab, select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box.
3. In the field below, enter an email address to which a notification must be sent. You can enter several email
addresses separated with a semicolon.
IMP ORTANT
If you specify the same email recipient in both job notification and global notification settings,
Veeam Backup & Replication will send the job notification only.
4. You can choose to use global notification settings for the job or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the
backup server. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
o To configure a custom notification for the job, select Use custom notification settings and specify
notification settings as required.
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Specifying SNMP Settings
You can receive SNMP traps with results on jobs performed on the backup server. You can us e SNMP traps to
feed data to other monitoring systems such as CA Unicenter, BMC Patrol, IBM Tivoli or HPE OpenView. SNMP
traps can be sent to 5 different destinations.
TIP
You can find the list of available SNMP traps in the VeeamBackup.mib file. The backup server stores this
file in the <vbr_installation_folder>\Backup\ folder. The installation folder is specified at the
Program features step of the installation wizard. To interpret the traps incoming from the backup server,
import the VeeamBackup.mib file to your recipient systems.
3. In the Receiver field, specify an IPv4 or IPv6 address of the SNMP recipient. Note that you can use IPv6
addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
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5. In the Community String field, enter the community identifier.
1. Install a standard Microsoft SNMP agent from the Microsoft Windows distribution on the computer.
2. From the Sta rt menu, select Control Panel > Ad ministrative Tools > Services.
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5. Add the public string to the Community name list and name of the necessary host to the Tra p destinations
list.
9. Select the Accept SNMP packets from any host check box.
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Configuring SNMP Settings for Jobs
To receive SNMP traps with results of a specific job:
2. On the Notifications tab, select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box.
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Specifying Other Notification Settings
You can configure Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically notify you about the following events:
3. In the Ba ckup storage and P roduction datastores sections, select the W a rn me when free disk space is
b elow <N> % options and specify a desired disk space threshold.
4. In the P roduction datastores section, select the Sk ip VMs when free disk is below <N> % option and
specify a desired disk space threshold. When the threshold is reached, Veeam Backup & Replication will
terminate backup and replication jobs working with production datastores before VM snapshots are taken.
Such behaviour helps ensure that production datastores do not run out of space.
Veeam Backup & Replication also terminates jobs if the amount of free space on the datastore is below 2
GB. You can change this threshold limit with registry values. For more infor mation, see this Veeam KB
article.
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Support Contract Expiration Notification
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication informs email recipients specified in global notification settings about
the support expiration date in every email notification. Veeam Backup & Replication starts sending such
notifications 14 days before the expiration date. Expiration information is also shown on the splash screen and
on the License Information window (to display the License Information window, select Help > License from the
main menu).
3. Clear the E na ble notifications about support contract expiration check box.
3. Clear the Check for product and hypervisor updates periodically check box.
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IMP ORTANT
We recommend you to leave the update notifications enabled. This will help you not to miss critical
updates.
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Specifying Session History Settings
You can specify session history settings for jobs performed on the backup server.
3. In the Sessions section, configure how many sessions you want to display in the Sessions list of the History
view:
o Select Show only last sessions if you want to show a limited number of sessions. In the field, also
specify the total number of sessions that you want to display.
4. In the Session history retention section, configure for how long you want to keep session information in
the database:
o Select Keep only last weeks if you want to keep sessions for a limited period of time. In the field, also
specify this period in weeks.
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Users and Roles
You can assign one of the following roles to users or groups of users who plan to work with
Veeam Backup & Replication:
A role assigned to the user defines the user activity scope: what operations in Veeam Backup & Replication the
user can perform. Role security settings affect the following operations:
Role Op erations
Veeam Restore Operator Can perform restore operations using existing backups and replicas.
However, Veeam Restore Operator cannot migrate a recovered VM to the
production environment during Instant Recovery.
Note that during restore, Veeam Restore Operator can overwrite existing
instances: VMs during VM restore, disks during disk restore and files during
file-level restore.
Veeam Backup Viewer Has the “read-only” access to Veeam Backup & Replication. Can view
existing jobs and review the job session details.
Veeam Backup Operator Can start and stop existing jobs, export backups and create VeeamZip
backups.
Veeam Backup Administrator Can perform all administrative activities in Veeam Backup & Replication.
Note that with the Veeam Backup & Replication console, Veeam Backup
Administrator has full access to all files on servers and hosts added to the
backup infrastructure.
Veeam Tape Operator Can manage tapes and perform the following operations: tape inventory,
tape export, tape eject, tape catalog, inventory library, catalog library,
rescan library, import tapes, eject tape from drive.
You can assign several roles to the same user. For example, if the user must be able to start jobs and perform
restore operations, you can assign the Veeam Backup Operator and Veeam Restore Operator roles to this user.
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Consider the following:
NOTE
• The user account under which the Veeam Backup Service runs must have the Veeam Backup Administrator
role. By default, during installation the Veeam Backup Administrator role is assigned to users in the
Administrators group. If you change the default settings, make sure that you assign the Veeam Backup
Ad ministrator role to the necessary user account. It is recommended to assign the Veeam Backup
Ad ministrator role to the user account explicitly rather than the group to which the user belongs.
NOTE
If you enable multi-factor authentication (MFA), note that Veeam Backup & Replication services must
run under the service account with disabled MFA. For more information, see Disabling MFA for
Service Accounts.
2. Click Ad d .
3. In the User or group field, enter a name of a user or user group in the DOMAIN\USERNAME format.
To reduce the number of user sessions opened for a long time, set the idle timeout to automatically log off
users. To do this, select the E na ble auto log off after <number> min of inactivity check box, and set the number
of minutes.
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Global VM Exclusion
Global VM exclusion allows you to stop processing VMs even if they are included in jobs. When excluding VMs
globally, you do not need to change job settings. Global exclusion applies to all types of jobs that process VMs
except backup copy jobs. Note that if Veeam Backup & Replication has started to process a VM at the moment
when you exclude the VM from processing, Veeam Backup & Replication finishes processing and only then
excludes the VM.
At any moment, you can enable processing of VMs so that jobs will continue processing the VMs.
3. In the Ad d Objects window, select VMs that you want to exclude from processing. Click OK.
4. If you want to add a note why a VM is excluded from processing, select a VM from the list and click Note.
In the E d it Note window, enter the note text. Click OK.
Alternatively, you can open the Inventory view and switch to the required view. In the working area, select the
VMs that you want to exclude, right-click one of them and select Disable processing. In the Inventory view, VMs
excluded from processing will be displayed with the icon.
Resuming VM Processing
To resume processing for VMs, do the following:
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2. In the VM E x clusions window, select VMs for which you want to resume processing.
3. Click Remove.
Alternatively, you can open the Inventory view and switch to the required view. In the working area, select the
VMs that were excluded from processing, right-click one of them and select Disable processing.
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Update Notification
Automatic Update Notification
Veeam Backup & Replication may automatically notify you about updates that must or can be installed to
enhance your work experience with the product. Update notifications eliminate the risk of using out -of-date
components in the backup infrastructure or missing critical updates that can have a negative impact on data
protection and disaster recovery tasks.
After a new build of Veeam Backup & Replication is published on the Veeam update server, the backup console
will display a notification in the Windows Action Center (or an icon in the system tray for earlier Windows
versions). If the update is not installed, this notification will keep appearing once a week as a reminder.
You can also see available updates in the Ma naged Servers > Missing Updates node in the Ba ckup Infrastructure
view.
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The update notifications are enabled by default. You can disable notifications by clearing the Check for product
a nd hypervisor updates periodically check box on the General Options > Notifications tab, as described in
Specifying Other Notification Settings. However, it is recommended that you leave update notifications enabled
not to miss critical updates.
Veeam Backup & Replication notifies about new product versions and new product updates.
Veeam Backup & Replication downloads an XML file from the Veeam Update Notification Server once a week. It
also collects information about the installed product. The collected information is compared with the
information in the downloaded file. If new product versions and updates are available,
Veeam Backup & Replication informs you about them.
NOTE
Make sure that the backup server is connected to the internet and update notification is enabled in
Veeam Backup & Replication options. In the opposite case, update notification will not function.
Installing Updates
To install a product update, double-click the Veeam Backup & Replication notification in the Windows Action
Center (or an icon in the system tray for earlier Windows versions). Veeam Backup & Replication will open a KB
webpage with the update description and links to the installation archive of the new product version or new
update.
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Server Components Upgrade
Every time you launch the Veeam Backup & Replication console, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically
checks if Veeam Backup & Replication components installed on managed servers are up to date. If a later version
of components is available, Veeam Backup & Replication displays the Comp onents Update window and prompts
you to upgrade components on managed servers. Components upgrade may be necessary, for exa mple, after
you have upgraded Veeam Backup & Replication.
You can manually check if components upgrade is required. To do this, select Up grade from the main menu. If
components on all managed servers are up to date, the menu item will be disabled.
1. In the Components Update window, select a server and click Details. Veeam Backup & Replication will
display the current and latest available versions for installed components.
2. In the Components Update window, select check boxes next to servers for which you want to upgrade
components and click Ap p ly.
You can update components on every managed server separately. If components installed on the server require
upgrade, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning icon next to the server.
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3. In the working area, select the server and click Up g rade on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the
selected server and select Up g rade.
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Logging
Veeam Backup & Replication provides detailed logging of performed activities, data protection and disaster
recovery tasks.
Logs are stored on the backup server and all servers added to the backup infrastructure:
• Folders where logs are stored on the backup server are listed further in this section.
• On Linux servers and ESXi hosts, logs are stored in the following directory: /var/log/VeeamBackup/ or
/tmp/VeeamBackup.
TIP
You can change default log files settings. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
To collect log files from the backup server and servers managed by Veeam Backup & Replication, use the E x port
Log s wizard as described in Exporting Logs.
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Exporting Logs
You can use log files to submit a support ticket. It is recommended that you send all log files when submitting a
support ticket to ensure that overall and comprehensive information is provided to Veeam Support Team.
To aggregate all log files in the same location, use the E x port Logs wizard. To launch the wizard, from the main
menu select Help > Support Information.
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Step 1. Select Virtual Infrastructure Scope
At the Scop e step of the wizard, define the scope for logs export. You can export logs for the following objects:
NOTE
If you export logs from the Veeam Backup & Replication console, the exported logs will be copied to the
machine where the console is installed. The log archive will also contain logs from the console machine.
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Step 2. Specify Time Interval
At the Da te Range step of the wizard, define the time interval for which logs must be collected. You can select
one of the following options:
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Step 3. Specify Destination Folder
At the Loca tion step of the wizard, specify the destination folder to which the logs will be exported.
In the P a th to folder field, specify a path to an archive with log files that will be created. By default, the archive
is placed to the C:\temp\logs folder on the backup server.
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Step 4. Review Results
At the E x p ort step of the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication will collect specified logs and create a log
archive. Wait for the export process to complete, review the results and click the Op en folder link to browse to
exported log files and log package.
TIP
During the log export process, Veeam Backup & Replication locks the console, so you cannot close the
E x port Logs wizard. If you do not want to wait until the log export process completes, you can run another
session of the Veeam Backup & Replication concurrently and continue work with it.
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Configuration Backup and Restore
You can back up and restore the configuration database that Veeam Backup & Replication uses. If the backup
server fails for some reason, you can re-install the backup server and quickly restore its configuration from the
configuration backup. You can also use configuration backups to apply the configuration of one backup server to
another backup server in the backup infrastructure. During configuration backup, Veeam Backup & Replication
exports data from the configuration database and saves it to a backup file in the backup repository.
NOTE
If you use cloud plug-ins to protect VMs in Google Cloud, AWS and other environments, you can also back
up configurations of cloud backup appliances. To back up the configurations, you must enable encryption
as described in Creating Encrypted Configuration Backups.
For more information on appliance configuration backup and restore, see the following guides:
• Integration with Google Cloud Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication, the Performing
Configuration Backup and Restore section.
• Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS, the Performing Configuration Backup and Restore section.
• Integration with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure, the Performing Configuration Backup and
Restore section.
It is recommended that you regularly perform configuration backup for every backup server in the backup
infrastructure. Periodic configuration backups reduce the risk of data loss and minimize the administrative
overhead if any problem with backup servers occurs.
NOTE
If you have a hardened repository in your backup infrastructure, you must enable data encryption for
configuration backup. Otherwise, you cannot perform configuration backups. For more information, see
Creating Encrypted Configuration Backups.
It is not recommended to back up the backup server configuration using backup jobs in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For backup, Veeam Backup & Replication uses VM snapshots. During snapshot
creation and commit, the VM freezes for some time, which can potentially lead to the following consequences:
• Disconnection from the configuration database. For more information, see the Veeam KB1681 article.
• Disconnection from network storage (for example, storage presented through iSCSI) and so on.
For this reason, you must always use the configuration backup functionality to back up and restore configuration
of the backup server.
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Configuration Backup
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication is configured to create a configuration backup daily. You can change
the schedule or run the backup manually.
Veeam Backup & Replication exports information about the following objects:
• Ba ckup infrastructure components and objects: hosts, servers, backup proxies, repositories, WAN
accelerators and jobs, global settings configured on the backup server and so on.
• Ba ckups: backups, replicas and backup copies created on the backup server.
NOTE
If you use custom configuration registry values, note that configuration backup will not apply to them. You
might want to back them up manually.
Configuration backup is job-driven. You can schedule it to run regularly or start it manually. You can choose the
backup repository in which the configuration backup must be stored and specify the necessary retention
settings.
NOTE
The configuration backup job creates a snapshot of the configuration database and retrieves data required
for successful restore from it. If the database size is large, the job may produce significant load on the
Microsoft SQL Server. Make sure that you schedule the configuration backup job for a period of low
operation intensity on the backup server.
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When you configure a new backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication offers you to change the
configuration backup file location from the default backup repository to the new backup repository. Click Y es ,
and Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically change the backup target in the configuration backup job
settings and will use this target in future.
Configuration backups that were created before the target change will remain in the default backup repository.
You can manually copy them to the new backup repository to have all restore points of the configuration backup
in one place.
IMP ORTANT
IMP ORTANT
If you plan to migrate configuration data to the database used by another backup server, stop all running
jobs and disable scheduled jobs before creating the configuration backup. In the opposite c ase, job sessions
may be failing after configuration restore. For more information, see Migrating Configuration Database.
2. Make sure that the E na ble configuration backup to the following repository check box is selected.
3. From the Ba ckup repository list, choose a backup repository on which the configuration backup must be
stored.
4. In the Restore points to keep field, specify the number of restore points that you want to maintain in the
backup repository.
5. Click Schedule next to the P erform backup on field and specify the time schedule according to which the
configuration backup must be created.
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6. To create an encrypted backup, select the E na ble backup file encryption check box. From the P a ssword
drop-down list, select a password you want to use for encryption. If you have not created a password
beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new password. For more information,
see Creating Encrypted Configuration Backups.
2. Click Notifications.
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when the job
completes successfully.
SNMP traps will be sent if you specify global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and configure
software on recipient's machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying SNMP
Settings.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive
notifications about the job completion status by email. In the field below, specify recipient’s email
address. You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
5. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the
backup server. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
o To configure a custom notification for the job, select Use custom notification settings specified below
check box. You can specify the following notification settings:
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i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %JobResult%, %JobName%, %Time% (completion time).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if the job completes successfully, fails or completes with a warning.
IMP ORTANT
If you plan to migrate configuration data to the database used by another backup server, stop all running
jobs and disable scheduled jobs before creating the configuration backup. In the opposite case, job sessio ns
may be failing after configuration restore. For more information, see Migrating Configuration Database.
2. Make sure that the E na ble configuration backup to the following repository check box is selected.
3. From the Ba ckup repository list, choose a backup repository on which the configuration backup must be
stored.
4. In the Restore points to keep field, specify the number of restore points that you want to maintain in the
backup repository.
5. To create an encrypted backup, select the E na ble backup file encryption check box. From the P a ssword
field, select a password you want to use for encryption. If you have not created a pass word beforehand,
click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new password. For more information, see Creating
Encrypted Configuration Backups.
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Veeam Backup & Replication will back up the configuration database and store a new restore point to the
selected backup repository.
When you encrypt jobs or tapes with passwords, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a set of keys that are
employed in the encryption process. Some encryption keys, for example, storage keys and metakeys, are stored
in the configuration database. If a configuration backup was non-encrypted, data from it could be freely
restored on any backup server. Encryption keys saved to the configuration database and the content of
encrypted files might become accessible for unintended a udience.
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If the Password Manager contains at least one password, and you do not enable encryption for the configuration
backup, Veeam Backup & Replication disables configuration backup. To enable the configuration backup, you
must enable encryption in the configuration backup job settings.
After you enable the encryption option, Veeam Backup & Replication will create encrypted configuration
backups. Beside encryption keys, the created backups capture credential records specified in the Credentials
Manager. When you restore data from such backup, you will not have to enter passwords for credentials records
again (unless the passwords for credentials records have changed by the time of restore).
3. From the P a ssword field, select a password you want to use for encryption. If you have not created a
password beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new password. For more
information, see Managing Passwords for Data Encryption.
NOTE
If you enable encryption and use cloud plug-ins to protect VMs in Google Cloud, AWS and other
environments, Veeam Backup & Replication will also create backups for cloud backup appliances. For more
information on appliance configuration backup and restore, see the following guides:
• Integration with Google Cloud Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication, the Performing
Configuration Backup and Restore section.
• Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS, the Performing Configuration Backup and Restore section.
• Integration with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure, the Performing Configuration Backup and
Restore section.
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Restoring Configuration Database
Restore of the configuration database is helpful in the following situations:
• The configuration database got corrupted and you want to recover data from the configuration backup.
• You want to deploy the configuration database on a new Microsoft SQL Server or PostgreSQL and restore
data from the configuration backup to it.
• You want to roll back the configuration database to a specific point in time.
• You want to restore data to a new configuration database on the same database instance, for example, for
testing purposes.
You can restore a configuration backup on the same backup server where the backup was created or on another
backup server.
NOTE
If you use cloud plug-ins to protect VMs in Google Cloud, AWS and other environments and want to restore
cloud backup server configurations, see the following guides:
• Integration with Google Cloud Plug-in for Veeam Backup & Replication, the Configuration Restore
section.
• Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS, the Configuration Restore section.
• Integration with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure, the Configuration Restore section.
Before you start the restore process, check prerequisites. Then use the Veea m Backup & Replication
Configuration Restore wizard to restore the configuration database.
• Make sure the user, who initiates the backup configuration restore process, has the Deb ug programs policy
applied. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication returns the Access is Denied error. To learn how to apply
the policy, see this Veeam KB article.
• Multi-factor authentication (MFA) for the user account must be disabled before launching configuration
database restore wizard. To learn how to disable MFA, see Multi-Factor Authentication.
• Stop all jobs that are currently running. During restore of configuration, Veeam Backup & Replication
temporary stops the Veeam Backup Service and jobs.
• Save registry values that you changed or created on the b ackup server. After restore, you will need to
recreate or change the keys manually because the configuration database does not store them.
• Check the version of the backup server. On the backup server running Veeam Backup & Replication 12, you
can restore configuration backups created with the following product versions: 11a (build 11.0.1.1261), 11
(build 11.0.0.837), and 10a (build 10.0.1.4854).
• Make sure that the certificate chain restored from a configuration backup will successfully pass validation
on the target backup server. This precaution is required if the following conditions are met:
a. You want to restore configuration database of a backup server used in the Veeam Agent management
scenario.
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b. The backup server whose configuration database you want to restore uses a custom certificate issued
by a Certificate Authority instead of the default self-signed certificate to ensure a secure connection
in the Veeam Agent management infrastructure.
• If you plan to restore configuration data to the database on another Microsoft SQL Server, make sure the
account for using Veeam Backup & Replication has sufficient permissions. For more information, see
Permissions.
• [for Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV users] After you restore the configuration database of
Veeam Backup & Replication, you must remove existing AHV backup proxies from
Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and connect to them again. Otherwise, these AHV backup
proxies will not be able to perform backup and restore due to missing authentication certificates. For
instructions on how to connect to an existing AHV backup proxy, see the Adding Nutanix AHV Backup
Proxy section in the Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV User Guide.
• After you run configuration restore for capacity tier, Veeam Backup & Replication will put the capacity tier
extents into the Sealed mode. Rescan the backup infrastructure and then remove the extents from the
Sealed mode.
• If you use a Veeam Backup & Replication server as a Veeam repository, after restore to a new host this
repository will be located in the same file path as it was before the migration
IMP ORTANT
You can start configuration restore only from the Veeam Backup & Replication console installed locally on
the backup server. You cannot start configuration restore from the console installed on a remote machine.
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Step 1. Launch Configuration Database Restore Wizard
To launch the Veeam Backup and Replication Configuration Restore wizard, do either one of the following:
• From the main menu of the Veeam Backup & Replication console, select Configuration Backup. In the
Restore section, click Restore.
• [If the configuration backup is stored on the backup server] In Microsoft Windows Explorer, open the
folder where configuration backups are stored (by default,
Backup\VeeamConfigBackup\<BackupServerName> on the volume with most disk space on the
backup server) and double-click the necessary configuration backup file.
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Step 2. Select Restore Mode
At the Restore Mode step of the wizard, choose a restore mode that you want to use.
• Select Restore if you want to restore data from the configuration backup to the database used by the
initial backup server.
In the Restore mode, Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves configuration data from the backup and stores
it to the target database. After that, Veeam Backup & Replication performs additional rescan of VM
replicas, backup repositories and tape libraries connected to the backup server. Rescan helps synchronize
potential changes between the backup infrastructure and restored database that took place from the
moment when the configuration backup was created till the present time. As a result, the target
configuration database will contain information about restore points that were created after the
configuration backup was taken, and this information is displayed in the Veeam Backup & Replication
console.
• Select Mig rate if you want to restore data from the configuration backup to the database used by another
backup server.
In the Migrate mode, Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves configuration data from the backup and stores
it to the target database. No rescan operation is performed.
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Step 3. Select Configuration Backup
At the Configuration Backup step of the wizard, select a configuration backup from which you want to restore
data.
1. From the Ba ckup repository list, select a server or backup repository on which the configuration backup
file is located.
2. Click Browse next to the Ba ckup file field and select the backup file.
If you select to restore configuration data from a backup in a remote backup repository, during restore
Veeam Backup & Replication will first copy the backup file to a temporary folder on the backup server. After you
finish the restore process and close the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically delete the
configuration file from the temporary folder.
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Step 4. Review Configuration Backup Parameters
At the Ba ckup Contents step of the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication will analyze the content of the selected
backup file and display the following settings:
• P roduct settings: version of Veeam Backup & Replication installed on the initial backup server and
configuration database version.
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Step 5. Specify Password
The P a ssword step of the wizard is available if you have enabled the encryption option in the configuration
backup properties.
2. In the P a ssword field, enter the password to decrypt the configuration backup file.
If you forgot or lost the password, click the I forgot the password link. For more information, see Decrypting
Data Without Password.
NOTE
Restoring configuration data without a password is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a
legacy socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
Also, your backup server must be connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. Otherwise, you will not
see the I forgot the password link.
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Step 6. Specify Target Database
At the Ta rget Database step of the wizard, specify the target Microsoft SQL Server or PostgreSQL instance to
which configuration data must be restored.
1. In the Da tabase field, select the database engine, PostgreSQL or Microsoft SQL Server.
o For Microsoft SQL Server, select an instance on which the database is deployed or must be deployed.
In the list of Microsoft SQL Server instances, Veeam Backup & Replication displays all servers from the
network where the backup server resides. To update the list of servers, click Refresh on the right. To
specify an instance manually, use the SERVER_NAME\INSTANCE_NAME format.
o For PostgreSQL, specify an instance on which the database is deployed or must be deployed. Use the
hostname:port format to specify an instance.
3. In the Da tabase name field, specify a name of the database to which configuration data must be restored.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the default name or port for the target database. If you
specify a name of an existing target database, Veeam Backup & Replication will overwrite this database. If
you specify a name of the database that does not exist, Veeam Backup & Replication will create it on the
specified Microsoft SQL Server or PostgreSQL instance.
NOTE
If a backup repository is located in the backup server, after configuration restore, this repository will
point to the same path as it was before the migration but in a new host. For example, if you keep
backed-up data on the D disk, after migration Veeam Backup & Replication will keep new backups on
the D disk of the new host.
4. In the Authentication section, select the authentication mode to connect to the target database instance:
o For Microsoft SQL Server, select W ind ows authentication or SQL a uthentication mode. If you select
the SQL a uthentication mode, specify credentials that will be used to connect to the target Microsoft
SQL Server instance.
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o For PostgreSQL, select W ind ows authentication or Na tive authentication mode. If you select the
Na tive authentication mode, specify credentials that will be used to connect to the target PostgreSQL
instance.
When you restore configuration to an existing database, the configuration restore process will delete the
current state of the database contents and replace it with the restored data. Veeam Backup & Replication will
display a warning. If you want to replace the contents, click Y es to confirm.
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If you do not want to lose the current data, restore the configuration to a new database. To do this, click No to
the warning and specify a non-existing database name in the Da tabase name field.
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Step 7. Specify Restore Options
At the Restore Options step of the wizard, specify additional restore options.
1. In the Restore section, select what data you want to restore from the configuration backup.
Veeam Backup & Replication always restores configuration data for backup infrastructure components,
jobs and global settings specified at the level of the backup server. You can additionally restore the
following data:
o Ba ckup and replica catalog: data about all backups and replicas registered on the backup server and
information about tapes to which backups were written and location of these tapes.
o Session history: data about all sessions performed on the backup server.
2. If you plan to use PowerShell on the restored backup server, select the E nable required PowerShell policy
for SCVMM check box. During restore, Veeam Backup & Replication will enable the PowerShell execution
policy and you will not have to enable it manually afterwards. Enabling this option is identical to running
the ‘Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned' command on the backup server.
3. If you are restoring configuration data to the same database, select the Ba ckup existing database before
configuration restore check box. This option will help you protect the current database from accidental
errors during the restore process. During restore, Veeam Backup & Replication will first back up the
current database using the native tools of Microsoft SQL Server or PostgreSQL. After that,
Veeam Backup & Replication will purge the current database and import data from the configuration
backup to it. In such scenario, if an error occurs during the restore process, you will be able to restore the
current database from the Microsoft SQL backup using Microsoft SQL Management Studio or SQL scripts.
For PostgreSQL, you will be able you will be able to restore the current database from the PostgreSQL
backup using PGadmin or SQL scripts.
The created Microsoft SQL database backup is named by the following pattern:
VeeamBackup<DatabaseName><date>.bak and stored to the default Microsoft SQL backups location, for
example: %ProgramFiles%\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL11.MSSQLSERVER\MSSQL\Backup\.
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4. Click Restore. Veeam Backup & Replication will stop currently running jobs and
Veeam Backup & Replication services and will restore the database to the specified location.
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Step 8. Review Restore Settings
At the Restore step of the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication will display the progress on the restore process.
Wait for the restore process to complete and click Nex t.
If you have chosen to restore data in the Migrate mode and the configuration backup file does not meet the
Migrate mode requirements, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning and offer you to switch to the
Restore mode. The Restore mode requires more time but guarantees that information about all new restore
points will be available in the restored database.
• To carry on data restore in the Mig rate mode, in the warning window click No.
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Step 9. Finalize Restore Process
After the restore process has finished, you may need to perform the following actions to finalize the
configuration database restore:
Specifying Credentials
At the Credentials step of the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a list of credentials records that
existed on the backup server at the time when the configuration b ackup was created. If by the time of restore
passwords for credentials records have changed, you can specify new values for these records.
IMP ORTANT
If you have not enabled encryption for configuration backups, Veeam Backup & Replication will not restore
passwords for credentials records. You need to re-enter passwords for all credentials records to make sure
that backup infrastructure components and jobs work in a proper way after you complete configuration
restore.
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Specifying Cloud Credentials
At the Cloud Credentials step of the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a list of cloud credentials
records that existed on the backup server at the time when the configuration backup was created. If by the time
of restore passwords for cloud credentials records have changed, you can specify new values for these records.
IMP ORTANT
• If you have not enabled encryption for configuration backups, Veeam Backup & Replication will not
restore passwords for cloud credentials records. You need to re-enter passwords for all cloud
credentials records to make sure that cloud services and jobs work in a proper way after you
complete configuration restore.
• You cannot edit credentials of Microsoft Azure Compute accounts and Google Cloud service account
in the configuration restore wizard. You can edit these credentials only after configuration restore in
Cloud Credentials Manager. For details, see Editing and Deleting Credentials Records.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not restore credentials records of Google Cloud service accounts
that were created automatically using the Cloud Credentials Manager. For details, see Google Cloud
Service Account.
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Performing Components Upgrade
After the restore process is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication will check if services on backup
infrastructure components must be upgraded and display a list of outdated components.
To upgrade backup infrastructure components, select check boxes next to the necessary components and click
Nex t. If some component fails to upgrade, you can get back to a previous step of the wizard and repeat the
procedure or close the wizard and upgrade the components manually. For more information, see Server
Components Upgrade.
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Step 10. Synchronize Backups and Tape Libraries
After the configuration database is restored, Veeam Backup & Replication can perform a synchronization
operation for backups and replicas created on the backup server and tape libraries connected to the backup
server.
• The synchronization operation for backups and replicas is performed if you are restoring a database from a
backup created with Veeam Backup & Replication in the Restore mode and you have selected to restore
data from the backup and replica catalog.
• The synchronization operation for tape libraries is performed if you are restoring a database from a backup
created with Veeam Backup & Replication in the Restore mode and you have selected to restore data from
the backup and replica catalog.
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Step 11. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, finalize the process of configuration data restore.
2. If you want to start Veeam Backup & Replication after you finish working with the wizard, select the
La unch the Backup & Replication user interface check box.
NOTE
• If you created custom registry values or changed the existing ones on the backup server, you must
recreate or change the registry values again.
• If you restore data from the configuration backup in the Restore mode, all jobs on the backup server
will be disabled after the restore process is complete. You need to enable them manually.
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Migrating Veeam Backup & Replication to
Another Backup Server
If you need to migrate Veeam Backup & Replication to another backup server, you can back up its configuration
database, install Veeam Backup & Replication on the target server and restore the configuration data from the
backup. As a result, you will have a new Veeam Backup & Replication server with all settings, jobs and backup
infrastructure elements from the old server.
• It is recommended that you use Veeam Backup & Replication tools to create configuration backups and
migrate the configuration database. If you use native Microsoft SQL Server tools, after migration, some
information, such as secure configuration data, may not be accessible.
• This section gives instructions on how to migrate Veeam Backup & Replication together with its
configuration database to another server. If you need to migrate only the configuration database, see
Migrating Configuration Database to Another SQL Server.
NOTE
Do not start or enable any jobs until the migration of Veeam Backup & Replication is finished. If you start a
job before migration is completed, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a new restore point in the
chain and update the chain metadata. The created configuration backup will not contain information about
this new restore point. When you migrate data from the configuration backup to the database and start the
job again, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to synchronize the chain metadata with data in the
database. As a result, the job will fail.
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Step 2. [Optional] Save registry Values That You Changed or
Created
If you have created new registry values or changed the existing keys on the backup server, you will need to
recreate the keys or change the keys manually after the migration. The configuration database does not store
registry values.
To save registry values, you can use the reg export command or you can use Registry Editor to save keys
manually. For details, see Windows Documentation.
During installation, you need to specify a new database name to store the configuration data. You can select a
Microsoft SQL Server instance on the local or remote server. It does not matter whether you select an existing
instance or create a new one. In the next steps of this guide, you will restore the previous configuration data to
the database selected at this step.
For instructions on how to install Veeam Backup & Replication, see Installing Veeam Backup & Replication.
1. On the target backup server, log in to the Veeam Backup & Replication console. For details, see Logging in
to Veeam Backup & Replication.
2. From the main menu of the Veeam Backup & Replication console, select Configuration Backup.
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3. In the Restore section, click Restore to launch the Configuration Database Restore wizard.
Before migrating the configuration backup, Veeam Backup & Replication performs an additional check. If
the configuration backup does not meet the requirements, Veeam Backup & Replication will offer you an
option to switch to the Restore mode.
5. At the Configuration Backup step of the wizard, specify the backup file of the configuration database
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b. Click Browse to specify the backup file location.
NOTE
This backup file has been created in Step 3. You must copy the backup file to the target
Veeam Backup & Replication server beforehand.
Veeam Backup & Replication will rescan VM replicas, backup repositories and tape libraries connected to
the backup server. The database will be updated to include information about new restore points, and
subsequent job sessions will work in a proper way.
• If you created custom registry values or changed the existing ones on the previous backup server, you
must recreate or change the registry values again manually on the target backup server. You can import
saved keys using the reg import command or Registry Editor.
• If you have local repositories, after migration to another VM they may be displayed as empty. In this case,
add them again and remap the jobs.
• Enable your backup jobs and backup copy jobs. Take a closer look at your backup infrastructure to ensure
that everything is working as expected.
• If you use Veeam Backup & Replication to back up storage systems, after migration they will not be added
to the backup infrastructure. In this case, you must re-add them after migration completes. Integration
with Storage Systems section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
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• If you use a hardened repository with immutability, after migration this server will not be available. In this
case, you must specify single-use credentials for this repository again. For more information, see Editing
Settings of Backup Repositories.
• If you use Linux hosts in your backup infrastructure, after migration these hosts and hosts that are
associated with them will not be available. (For example, if you have a Linux host with the backup proxy
role, the backup repositories to which this Linux backup proxy transfer during a backup job will not be
available). In this case, you must open the Edit Linux Server wizard for the necessary Linux host, follow
the steps of the wizard and click Finis h.
NOTE
If the Veeam Backup & Replication server was added to the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager or Veeam
ONE infrastructure, you must re-add the backup server after you migrate it to another server.
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Migrating Configuration Database to Another
SQL Server
It is the best practice to keep the Veeam Backup & Replication application and its configuration database on the
same server to maintain lowest latency and highest performance. However, in some scenarios a remote
Microsoft SQL Server instance can be the better choice:
• High Availability. SQL Clustering and Always On Availability Group on external SQL Servers can be used for
high availability of the configuration database. To learn about the configuration details, see this Veeam KB
article.
• Licensing. Some enterprises have dedicated virtual clusters for SQL Servers due to licensing constraints. In
such cases, you can place the Veeam configuration database on an existing instance to lower the total cost
of ownership.
If you need to migrate the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database to another SQL server, you can
connect the configuration database to a Microsoft SQL Server instance deployed on another server and restore
the configuration settings from the backup. As a result, you will be able to continue using the same
Veeam Backup & Replication server but it will be connected to a configuration database on another server.
• This section gives instructions on how to migrate a configuration database to another SQL server. If you
need to migrate the Veeam Backup & Replication application itself, see Migrating Veeam Backup &
Replication to Another Server.
• It is recommended that you use Veeam Backup & Replication tools to create configuration backups and
migrate the configuration database. If you use native Microsoft SQL Server tools or others, after
migration, some information, such as secure configuration data, may not be accessible.
• If you are migrating the configuration database to a remote SQL instance that uses Windows
Authentication, all services that had access to the remote SQL instance before a migration must have the
these permissions after migration. For more information on permissions, see Permissions.
• If a backup server and a configuration database are located in different AD domains, the AD domain where
the configuration database is located must have a trust relationship with the AD domain to which the
backup server is added.
• When you migrate the configuration database to another SQL server, you must use the Microsoft SQL
Server credentials that have CREATE ANY DATABASE permission on the target Microsoft SQL Server. For
details, see Microsoft Docs. After database creation this account automatically gets the db_owner role and
can perform all operations with the database. If the current account does not have this permission, a
Database Administrator may create an empty database in advance and grant the db_owner role to the
account that will be used for migration of the configuration database.
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3. Restore the configuration database from the backup.
NOTE
Do not start or enable any jobs until the migration of Veeam Backup & Replication is finished. If you start a
job before migration is completed, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a new restore point in the
chain and update the chain metadata. The created configuration backup will not contain information about
this new restore point. When you migrate data from the configuration backup to the database and start the
job again, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to synchronize the metadata of the backup chain with data
in the database. As a result, the job will fail.
1. From the main menu of the Veeam Backup & Replication console, select Configuration Backup.
2. Make sure that the E na ble configuration backup to the following repository check box is selected.
3. From the list of repositories, select a backup repository in which the configuration backup must be stored.
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Step 3. Restore Configuration Database from Backup
After you connect Veeam Backup & Replication to another Microsoft SQL Server instance, the configuration
database will be empty. You must restore the configuration database from the backup created in Step 2.
1. From the main menu of the Veeam Backup & Replication console, select Configuration Backup.
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3. At the Restore Mode step of the Veeam Backup & Replication Configuration Restore wizard, select
Mig rate.
If you use the Data Encryption feature to encrypt backups and your Veeam Backup & Replication server is added
to the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager infrastructure, then you must reactivate the Enterprise Manager
keyset.
1. In the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager web console, open the Settings section of the Configuration
view.
3. In the Ma naged keys section, select the necessary keyset and click Activate.
For detailed instructions, see the Activating Enterprise Manager Keyset section in the Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager Guide.
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Step 5. Finish Configuration
After restoring the configuration database from the backup, finalize the configuration:
• Configure all necessary settings to ensure that you have a working configuration database backup. You
can now perform a backup of your new configuration database in the Configuration Backup Settings
window.
Reschedule your configuration database backup. Also, check if you can see the Loss protection enabled
label.
• If you have local repositories, after migration to another VM they may be displayed as empty. In this case,
add them again and remap the jobs.
• Enable your backup jobs and backup copy jobs. Take a closer look at your backup infrastructure to ensure
that everything is working as expected.
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Migrating Configuration Database to PostgreSQL
Server
If you need to migrate the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database from the Microsoft SQL Server to
the PostgreSQL, you need to create a new configuration backup and restore it on the PostgreSQL instance. As a
result, you will be able to continue using the same Veeam Backup & Replication server but it will be connected
to a configuration database on the PostgreSQL instead of Microsoft SQL Server.
• This section gives instructions on how to migrate a configuration database to the PostgreSQL. If you need
to migrate the Veeam Backup & Replication application itself, see Migrating Veeam Backup & Replication
to Another Server.
• It is recommended that you use Veeam Backup & Replication tools to create configuration backups and
migrate the configuration database.
• If a backup server and a configuration database are located in different AD domains, the AD domain where
the configuration database is located must have a trust relationship with the AD domain to which the
backup server is added.
• You can migrate configuration database backup created only in Veeam Backup & Replication 12.
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NOTE
Do not start or enable any jobs until the migration of Veeam Backup & Replication is finished. If you start a
job before migration is completed, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a new restore point in the
chain and update the chain metadata. The created configuration backup will not contain information about
this new restore point. When you migrate data from the configuration backup to the database and start the
job again, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to synchronize the metadata of the backup chain with data
in the database. As a result, the job will fail.
1. From the main menu of the Veeam Backup & Replication console, select Configuration Backup.
2. Make sure that the E na ble configuration backup to the following repository check box is selected.
3. From the list of repositories, select a backup repository in which the configuration backup must be stored.
Make sure that PostgreSQL target instance is configured according to the recommended hardware
resources values. You can modify settings of PostgreSQL target instance using the Set-
VBRPSQLDatabaseServerLimits cmdlet. For more information, see Veeam PowerShell Reference.
After you connect Veeam Backup & Replication to the PostgreSQL instance, the configuration database will be
empty. You must restore the configuration database from the backup created in Step 2.
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To restore the configuration database, perform the following:
1. From the main menu of the Veeam Backup & Replication console, select Configuration Backup.
3. At the Restore Mode step of the Veeam Backup & Replication Configuration Restore wizard, select
Mig rate.
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Step 4. [Optional] Reactivate Enterprise Manager Keyset
After you migrate the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database to another server, Veeam Backup
Enterprise Manager still sees the Veeam Backup & Replication server. However, you might need to reactivate
encryption keys.
If you use the Data Encryption feature to encrypt backups and your Veeam Backup & Replication server is added
to the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager infrastructure, then you must reactivate the Enterprise Manager
keyset.
1. In the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager web console, open the Settings section of the Configuration
view.
3. In the Ma naged keys section, select the necessary keyset and click Activate.
For detailed instructions, see the Activating Enterprise Manager Keyset section in the Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager Guide.
• Configure all necessary settings to ensure that you have a working configuration database backup. You
can now perform a backup of your new configuration database in the Configuration Backup Settings
window.
Reschedule your configuration database backup. Also, check if you can see the Loss protection enabled
label.
• If you have local repositories, after migration to another VM they may be displayed as empty. In this case,
add them again and remap the jobs.
• Enable your backup jobs and backup copy jobs. Take a closer look at your backup infrastructure to ensure
that everything is working as expected.
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Automating Configuration Database Restore
If you want to automate the process of the configuration database restore, you can do it using the config.cfg
file.
3. Use the following command to generate the configuration file. In the genconfig parameter, specify the
path where the configuration file will be saved.
Veeam.Backup.Configuration.Restore.exe /genconfig:C:\config.cfg
When you perform the command, the configuration restore wizard will appear.
After you complete the configuration restore wizard, the configuration file will be generated by the path you
specified in the genconfig parameter. The configuration file will contain all the preferences you specified in
the configuration restore wizard. You can also edit it manually later.
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Step 3. Restore Configuration Database
To restore the configuration database, do the following:
3. Use the following command to restore the configuration file. In the config parameter, specify the path
where the configuration file will be saved.
Veeam.Backup.Configuration.Restore.exe /config:C:\config.cfg
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the preferences you specified in the config.cfg file to perform the
configuration database restore.
P a rameter Description
Default: Restore.
Default: Local.
Default: PostgreSQL.
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P a rameter Description
Default: VeeamBackup.
UseWindowsAuthentication Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will use Windows
authentication to perform the configuration restore. Accepts
values: True or False.
Default: True.
SqlUser Specifies the user name for the SQL Server authentication.
RestoreBackups Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will restore backup
and replica restore points catalog. Accepts values: True or
False.
Default: False.
RestoreSessions Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will restore session
history. Accepts values: True or False.
Default: False.
Default: False.
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P a rameter Description
Default: False.
La unchVbrConsole Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the
console after the configuration restore is complete. Accepts
values: True or False.
Default: False.
CreateDbIfNotExists Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will create a new
database if selected database does not exist. Accepts values:
Yes or No.
Default: Yes.
P roceedWithUnsupportedDb Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will proceed the
configuration restore with the selected database even if it
has unknown type. Accepts values: Yes or No.
Default: No.
UseLockedDb Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will proceed the
configuration restore with the selected database even if it is
owned by another backup server. Accepts values: Yes or No.
Default: Yes.
Default: Yes.
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P a rameter Description
SwitchRestoreMode Defines that Veeam Backup & Replication will switch to the
configuration restore mode if one or more enabled backup
jobs are found. Accepts values: Yes, No or Cancel.
Default: Cancel.
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Backup
Veeam Backup & Replication produces image-level backups of VMs. It treats VMs as objects, not as a set of files.
When you back up VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication copies a VM image as a whole, at a block level. Image-level
backups can be used for different types of restore, including Instant Recovery, entire VM restore, VM file
recovery, file-level recovery and so on.
The backup technology is typically used for VMs with lower RTOs. When the primary VM fails, you need some
time to restore VM data from a compressed and deduplicated backup file.
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About Backup
Veeam Backup & Replication is built for virtual environments. It operates at the virtualization layer and uses an
image-based approach for VM backup.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not install agent software inside the VM guest OS to retrieve VM data. To
back up VMs, it leverages VMware vSphere snapshot capabilities. When you back up a VM,
Veeam Backup & Replication requests VMware vSphere to create a VM snapshot. The VM snapshot can be
thought of as a point-in-time copy of a VM that includes virtual disks, system state, configuration and so on.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this point-in-time copy as a source of data for backup.
Veeam Backup & Replication copies VM data from the source datastore at a block level. It retrieves VM data,
compresses and deduplicates it, and stores in backup files in the backup repository in Veeam proprietary format.
In Veeam Backup & Replication, backup is a job-driven process. To perform backup, you need to configure
backup jobs. A backup job is a configuration unit of the backup activity. The backup job defines when, what, how
and where to back up. One backup job can be used to process one or several VMs. You can instruct
Veeam Backup & Replication to run jobs automatically by schedule or start them manually.
The first backup job session always produces a full backup of the VM image. Subsequent backup job sessions are
incremental — Veeam Backup & Replication copies only those data blocks that have changed since the last
backup job session. To keep track of changed data blocks, Veeam Backup & Replication uses different
approaches. For more information, see Changed Block Tracking.
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How Backup Works
Veeam Backup & Replication performs VM backup in the following way:
1. When a new backup job session starts, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the Veeam Backup Manager
process on the backup server. Veeam Backup Manager reads job settings from the configuration database
and creates a list of VM tasks to process. For every disk of VMs added to the job,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new task.
2. Veeam Backup Manager connects to the Veeam Backup Service. The Veeam Backup Service includes a
resource scheduling component that manages all tasks and resources in the backup infrastructure. The
resource scheduler checks what backup infrastructure resources are available, and assigns backup proxies
and backup repositories to process job tasks.
3. Veeam Backup Manager establishes a connection with Veeam Data Movers on the ta rget backup repository
and backup proxy, and sets a number of rules for data transfer, such as network traffic throttling rules and
so on.
4. Veeam Data Movers on the backup proxy and backup repository establish a connection with each other for
data transfer.
5. Veeam Backup Manager queries information about VMs and virtualization hosts from the Veeam Broker
Service.
6. If application-aware image processing is enabled for the job, Veeam Backup & Replication connects to VM
guest OSes, deploys non-persistent runtime components or, if necessary, persistent agent components on
VM guest OSes and performs in-guest processing tasks.
7. Veeam Backup & Replication requests vCenter Server or ESXi host to create a VM snapshot. VM disks are
put to the read-only state, and every virtual disk receives a delta file. All changes that the user makes to
the VM during backup are written to delta files.
8. The source Veeam Data Mover reads the VM data from the read -only VM disk and transfers the data to the
backup repository in one of transport modes. During incremental job sessions, the source Veeam Data
Mover uses CBT to retrieve only those data blocks that have changed since the previous job session. If CBT
is not available, the source Veeam Data Mover interacts with the target Veeam Data Mover on the backup
repository to obtain backup metadata, and uses this metadata to detect blocks that have changed since
the previous job session.
While transporting VM data, the source Veeam Data Mover performs additional processing. It filt ers out
zero data blocks, blocks of swap files and blocks of excluded VM guest OS files. The source Veeam Data
Mover compresses VM data and transports it to the target Veeam Data Mover.
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9. After the backup proxy finishes reading VM data, Veeam Backup & Replication requests the vCenter Server
or ESXi host to commit the VM snapshot.
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Backup Infrastructure for Backup
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following components for the backup process:
• Backup repository
All backup infrastructure components that are engaged in the job make up a data pipe. The source host and
backup repository produce two terminal points for the data flow. Veeam Backup & Replication processes VM
data in multiple cycles, moving VM data over the data pipe block by block.
Veeam Backup & Replication collects VM data, transforms and transports it to ta rget with the help of Veeam
Data Movers. Veeam Backup & Replication uses two-service architecture — one Veeam Data Mover controls
interaction with the source host, and the other one controls interaction with the backup repository. Veeam Data
Movers communicate with each other and maintain a stable connection.
When a new backup session starts, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication deploys non-persistent runtime components or, if necessary, persistent
agent components on VM guest OSes using the guest interaction proxy (for Microsoft Windows VMs) or
backup server (for VMs with other OSes).
2. The target-side Veeam Data Mover obtains job instructions and communicates with the source-side Veeam
Data Mover to begin data collection.
3. The source-side Veeam Data Mover copies VM data from the source storage in one of transport modes.
During incremental job runs, the source-side Veeam Data Mover retrieves only those data blocks that have
changed since the previous job session.
While copying, the source-side Veeam Data Mover performs additional data processing. It filters out zero
data blocks, blocks of swap files and blocks of excluded VM guest OS files, compresses and deduplicates
VM data blocks and moves them to the target-side Veeam Data Mover.
4. The target-side Veeam Data Mover deduplicates similar blocks of data on the target side and writes the
result to the backup file in the backup repository.
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On-Site Backup
To back up to a Microsoft Windows or Linux backup repository in the local site, you need to deploy a backup
proxy on a machine that has access to the source datastore, and point the backup job to this backup proxy. In
this scenario, the source-side Veeam Data Mover is started on the backup proxy, and the ta rget-side Veeam
Data Mover is started on the Microsoft Windows or Linux repository. VM data is sent from the backup proxy to
the backup repository over the LAN.
To back up to a shared folder in the local site, you need to deploy a gateway server that has access to the shared
folder backup repository. You can assign the role of a gateway server to the backup server itself or any
Microsoft Windows machine added to the backup infrastructure.
You can use the same Microsoft Windows machine as the backup proxy and gateway server for SMB. In this
scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the source-side and target-side Veeam Data Movers on the same
machine, and sends VM data from the backup proxy to the shared folder backup repository over the LAN.
Off-Site Backup
The common requirement for off-site backup is that one Veeam Data Mover runs in the production site (closer
to the source datastore), and the other Veeam Data Mover runs in the remote site, closer to the backup
repository. During backup, Veeam Data Movers maintain a stable connection, which allows for uninterrupted
operation over the WAN or slow links.
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To back up to a Microsoft Windows or Linux repository in the remote site, you need to deploy a backup proxy in
the production site, closer to the source datastore. In this scenario, the source-side Veeam Data Mover is started
on the backup proxy, and the target-side Veeam Data Mover is started on the Microsoft Windows or Linux
repository. VM data is sent from the backup proxy to the backup repository ov er the WAN.
To back up VMs to shared folder backup repository in the remote site, you must deploy a backup proxy in the
source site and a gateway server in the remote site. The shared folder backup repository must be pointed at the
target-side gateway server. During backup, the source-side Veeam Data Mover is started on the source backup
proxy in the production site, and the target-side Veeam Data Mover is started on the target gateway server in
the remote site. VM data is transferred between the backup p roxy and gateway server over the WAN.
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Backup Chain
Veeam Backup & Replication creates and maintains the following types of backup files:
• VIB or VRB — incremental backup files that store incremental changes of VM images.
• VBM — backup metadata files that store information about the backup job, VMs processed by the backup
job, number and structure of backup files, restore points, and so on. Metadata files facilitate import of
backups, backup mapping and other operations.
In addition to these file types, Veeam Backup & Replication can create the following files in the backup
repository:
• VSB — virtual synthetic backup files used for generation of virtual full backups on tapes. For more
information, see the Virtual Full Backup section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
• VLB, VSM and VLM — files that store Microsoft SQL Server transaction log data. For more information, see
Microsoft SQL Server Logs Backup.
• VLB, VOM and VLM — files that store Oracle archived log data. For more information, see Oracle Log
Backup.
• VLB, VPM and VLM — files that store PostreSQL WAL files. For more information, see PostgreSQL Log
Backup.
All backup files created by the backup job reside in a dedicated job folder in the backup repository. For example,
if you create a backup job with the DC Backup name, Veeam Backup & Replication will create the DC Backup
folder on the target backup repository and store all backup files produced with this job in this folde r.
Backup files make up a backup chain. The backup chain consists of first full backup file, incremental backup files
and, additionally, backup metadata file. The number of backup files and how Veeam Backup & Replication orders
them in the chain depend on the chosen backup method. For details, see Backup Methods.
Full and incremental backup files correspond to restore points of backed -up VMs. You can think of restore
points as of "snapshots" of VM data at specific points in time. Restore points let you roll back VMs to the
necessary state.
To roll back a VM to a specific point in time, you need a chain of backup files: a full backup file plus a set of
incremental backup files dependent on this full backup file. If some file in the backup chain is missing, you will
not be able to roll back to the necessary state. For this reason, you must not delete separate backup files from
the backup repository manually. Instead, you must specify retention policy settings that will let you maintain
the desired number of backup files in the backup repository.
By default, during every backup job session Veeam Backup & Replication writes data of all VMs to the same
backup file. If necessary, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to create per-machine backup chains —
that is, produce a separate backup chain for every VM added to the backup job. For details, see Backup Chain
Formats.
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• Single-file backup
The backup chain format depends on the Use per-machine backup files option in the repository settings and also
the version of Veeam Backup & Replication when the repository was added. You can find the details further in
this section.
NOTE
In the Veeam Backup & Replication guide, we use "per-machine backups" when information relates to both
per-machine backups, with single and separate metadata files. If information relates to one backup chain
format only, we name it explicitly — per-machine backup with single metadata file or per-machine with
separate metadata files.
When per-machine backup with separate metadata files format is used, a backup job writes data in a separate
stream for each workload. Veeam Backup & Replication saves data of each workload into a separate backup file
and also creates a separate metadata file (.VBM) for each workload. Veeam Backup & Replication perceives each
backup file created during one job session as one restore point. As a result, each workload has its own
independent backup chain.
Such way of storing backups is recommended and makes the environment management more flexible.
Veeam Backup & Replication can perform operations with individual workloads, for example, move a workload
and its backups from one job to another, or launch active full backups for individual workloads.
When per-machine backup with single metadata file format is used, a backup job writes data in a separate
stream for each workload. Veeam Backup & Replication saves data of each workload into a separate backup file.
However, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a single metadata file (.VBM) for all workloads and perceives all
backup files created during one job session as one restore point.
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Such way of storing backups is more efficient than single-file backup format. Compared to per-machine backup
with separate metadata files format, Veeam Backup & Replication cannot perform some operations with
individual workloads. These operations include moving backups, launching active full for individual workloads
and so on.
Single-File Backup
This is the default way of storing backup files for Veeam Backup & Replication prior to version 12. The single-file
backups are created in backup repositories for which the Use p er-machine backup files option is not selected.
When single-file backup format is used, a backup job writes workload da ta to a repository in one write stream.
Veeam Backup & Replication saves data of all workloads into the same backup file and creates one metadata file
(.VBM). Such behavior is not optimal if the target storage device is able to write data in multiple strea ms
simultaneously. In this situation, the backup repository may become the bottleneck for the data transfer, even
though its resources will not be fully utilized.
• We recommend that you use the Use per-machine backup files option, especially for deduplicating storage
appliances used as a backup repositories. Veeam Backup & Replication will write machine data to the
backup repository in several streams, which will improve the backup job performance. However,
deduplication may be less effective compared to deduplication for single-file backups. Deduplication
works within one backup file. For single-file backups, one backup file stores data for all machines, that is
why data is deduplicated for all machines. Per-machine backups store data for one machine, that is why
data is deduplicated for one machine only.
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• [For Veeam Agent backup jobs] Veeam Backup & Replication ignores the Use per-machine backup files
option. The way how Veeam Backup & Replication creates backup files depends on the objects included in
the backup job:
o If several Veeam Agent machines are included in the backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates
a separate backup file for each machine.
o If failover clusters are included in the backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a separate
backup file for each cluster.
Backup Methods
Veeam Backup & Replication provides the following methods for creating backup chains:
When the forever forward incremental (FFI) backup method is used, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a
backup chain that consists of the first full backup file (VBK) and a set of forward incremental backup files
(VIBs) following it.
This backup method helps you save space on the backup storage because Veeam Backup & Replication
stores only one full backup file and removes incremental backup files once the retention period is
exceeded. To meet retention policy settings, Veeam Backup & Replication injects data of an incremental
file into the full backup file before deleting the increment. Such transformations can lead to the
fragmentation of the full backup file, and you have to schedule the compact of full backup file operation.
This operation produces additional I/O load on the backup storage. Overall, the FFI method produces the
moderate I/O impact on the backup storage compared to other backup methods.
Restore to the earliest restore point from backup files created using the FFI method is the fastest
compared to other methods because the first available restore point is always a full backup. Restore to
other restore points can be compared by speed with FI method.
For more information on the FFI backup method and how it works, see Forever Forward Incremental
Backup.
When the forward incremental (FI) backup method is used, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a backup
chain that consists of multiple full backup files (VBKs) and sets of forward incremental backup files (VIBs)
following each full backup file. Full backups can be created using synthetic full and/or active full method.
By doing regular full backups, the backup chain is split into shorter series. This lowers the chances of
losing the backup chain completely and makes this backup method the most reliable.
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This backup method requires more storage space than other methods because the backup chains contains
multiple full backup files and sometimes Veeam Backup & Replication stores more restore points than
specified in the retention policy settings due to the specifics of the FI retention policy. For more
information on how backups are retained, see Forward Incremental Backup Retention Policy.
The FI backup method produces the lowest I/O impact on the backup storage. However, the impact on the
backup storage increases on days when synthetic full backups are scheduled, and impact on the
production storage increases on days when active full backups are scheduled.
Restore from backup files created using the FI method is the most optimal in time compared to other
methods (in cases when you you do not restore to the earliest or latest restore point). That is because the
backup chain is usually divided into short series of full backup files and incremental files and the
aggregation of the desired restore point does not take long time.
For more information on the FI backup method and how it works, see Forward Incremental Backup.
This backup method helps you save space on the backup storage beca use Veeam Backup & Replication
stores only one full backup file (if you do not schedule periodic full backups) and removes incremental
backup files once the retention period is exceeded. For more information on how backups are retained, see
Reverse Incremental Backup.
The RI method produces the heaviest I/O impact on the backup storage compared to other backup
methods. That is because during backup, Veeam Backup & Replication injects changed data blocks into the
full backup file and also creates reverse incremental backup files. Such transformations can lead to the
fragmentation of the full backup file, and you have to schedule the compact of full backup file operation.
This operation produces additional I/O load on the backup storage.
Restore to the latest restore point from backup files created using the RI method is the fastest compared
to other methods because the most recent restore point is always a full backup, and it gets updated after
every backup cycle. Restore to earlier restore points is slower than for other backup methods.
For more information on the RI backup method and how it works, see Reverse Incremental Backup.
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Veeam Backup & Replication creates a forever forward incremental backup chain in the following way:
1. During the first session of a backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a full backup file in the
backup repository.
2. During subsequent backup job sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication copies only VM data blocks that have
changed since the last backup job session (full or incremental) and saves these blocks as an incremental
backup file in the backup chain.
3. After adding a new restore point to the backup chain, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the retention
policy for the job. If Veeam Backup & Replication detects an outdated restore point, it transforms the
backup chain to make room for the most recent restore point. For more information, see Forever Forward
Incremental Backup Retention Policy.
To use the forever forward incremental backup method, you must select the following options in the backup job
settings:
2. Do not enable synthetic full backups and/or active full backups. If you enable synthetic and/or active full
backups, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a forward incremental backup chain.
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Forward Incremental Backup
The forward incremental backup method produces a backup chain that consists of the first full backup file (VBK)
and a set of forward incremental backup files (VIB) following it. Additionally, the forward incremental backup
chain contains synthetic full and/or active full backup files that “split” the backup chain into shorter series.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a forward incremental backup chain in the following way:
1. During the first backup job session, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a full backup file in the backup
repository.
2. During subsequent backup job sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication copies only VM data blocks that have
changed since the last backup job session (full or incremental) and saves these blocks as an incremental
backup file in the backup chain.
3. On a day when the synthetic full or active full backup is scheduled, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a
full backup file and adds it to the backup chain. Incremental restore points produced after this full backup
file use it as a new starting point.
4. After adding a new restore point to the backup chain, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the retention
policy set for the job. If Veeam Backup & Replication detects an outdated restore point, it attempts to
remove this point from the backup chain. For more information, see Retention for Forward Incremental
Backup.
The forward incremental backup with synthetic full backup enabled is a default method for backup chain
creation. To use the forward incremental backup method, you can leave the default settings or select the
following options in the backup job settings:
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2. Enable synthetic full backups and/or active full backups. If the synthetic full backup and/or active f ull
backups are not enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a forever forward incremental backup
chain.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a reverse incremental backup chain in the following way:
1. During the first backup job session, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a full backup file in the backup
repository.
2. During subsequent backup job sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication copies only VM data blocks that have
changed since the last backup job session. Veeam Backup & Replication “injects” copied data blocks into
the full backup file to rebuild it to the most recent state of the VM. Additionally,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a reverse incremental backup file containing data blocks that ar e
replaced when the full backup file is rebuilt, and adds this reverse incremental backup file before the full
backup file in the backup chain.
3. After adding a new restore point to the backup chain, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the retention
policy set for the job. If Veeam Backup & Replication detects an outdated restore point, it removes this
point from the backup chain. For more information, see Retention for Reverse Incremental Backup.
As a result, the most recent restore point in the backup chain is always a full backup, and it gets updated after
every successful backup job session.
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The reverse incremental backup method lets you immediately restore a VM to the most recent state without
extra processing because the most recent restore point is a full backup file. If you need to restore a VM to a
particular point in time, Veeam Backup & Replication applies the required VRB files to the VBK file to get to the
required restore point.
To use the reverse incremental backup method, you must select the Reverse incremental option in the backup
job settings.
• If you switch from the reverse incremental method to the forever forward incremental or forward
incremental method, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a set of incremental backup files next to the
reverse incremental chain. The full backup file in the reverse incremental chain is used as a starting point
for incremental backup files.
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• If you switch from the forever forward incremental or forward incremental method to the reverse
incremental method, Veeam Backup & Replication first creates a full backup file next to incremental
backup files. During every new job session, Veeam Backup & Replication transforms this full backup file
and adds reverse incremental backup files to the backup chain.
• If you switch from the forever forward incremental method to the forward incremental method,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates synthetic full backups according to the specified schedule. Old
backup chain is deleted when the number of restore points in the new chain reach the retention limit.
• If you switch from the forward incremental method to the forever forward incremental method, synthetic
full backups are no longer created. When the number of restore points created since the last full backup
reaches the retention limit, the old backup chain is deleted. Thereafter, with each restore point creation
the earliest increment file will merge with the full backup file.
When you perform active full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves VM data from the source
datastore where the VM resides, compresses and deduplicates it and writes it to the VBK file in the backup
repository.
When you perform synthetic full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication does not retrieve VM data from the
source datastore. Instead, it synthesizes a full backup from data you already have in the backup
repository. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the previous full backup file and a chain of subsequent
incremental backup files on the backup repository, consolidates VM data from these files and writes
consolidated data into a new full backup file. As a result, the created synthetic full backup file contains
the same data you would have if you created an active full backup.
TIP
You can perform both active and synthetic full backups. For more information on how to do that, see
Backup Settings.
The active full backup produces a full backup of a VM, just as if you run the backup job for the first time.
Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves data for the whole VM from the source, compresses and deduplicates it
and stores it to the full backup file — VBK.
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The active full backup resets a backup chain. All incremental backup files use the latest active full backup file as
a new starting point. A previously used full backup file remains on disk until it is automatically deleted according
to the retention policy.
You can create active full backups manually or schedule a backup job to create active full backups periodically.
• To create an active full backup manually as described in Performing Active Full Backup.
• To schedule active full backups, specify scheduling settings in the Ad vanced section of a corresponding
backup job. You can schedule active full backups to run weekly, for example, every Saturday, or monthly,
for example, every fourth Sunday of a month.
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Active Full Backup Schedule
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically triggers a backup job to create an active full backup, even if a regular
backup job session is not scheduled on this day. The job session is started at the same time when the parent
backup job is scheduled. For example, if you schedule the parent backup job at 12:00 AM Sunday through
Friday, and schedule active full backup on Saturday, Veeam Backup & Replication will start a backup job session
that will produce an active full backup at 12:00 AM on Saturday.
If the parent backup job is not scheduled to run automatically or is disabled, Veeam Backup & Replication will
not perform active full backup.
If a regular backup job is scheduled together with active full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce
only an active full backup that will contain the latest state of the source VM. An incremental backup file that
should have been created by the backup job schedule will not be added to the backup chain.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates an active full backup only once a day on which active full backup is
scheduled (unless you create a full backup manually). If you run the backup job again on the same
day, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform incremental backup in a regular manner.
IMP ORTANT
If you schedule a job to start after another job (initial job), but the initial job does not run on days when the
active full backup is scheduled for the chained job, Veeam Backup & Replication will not create active full
backups.
In terms of data, the synthetic full backup is identical to a regular full backup. Synthetic full backup produces a
VBK file that contains data of the whole VM. The difference between active and synthetic full backup lies in the
way how VM data is retrieved:
• When you perform active full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves VM data from the source
datastore where the VM resides, compresses and deduplicates it and writes it to the VBK file in the backup
repository.
• When you perform synthetic full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication does not retrieve VM data from the
source datastore. Instead, it synthesizes a full backup from data you already have in the backup
repository. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the previous full backup file and a chain of subsequent
incremental backup files on the backup repository, consolidates VM data from these files and writes
consolidated data into a new full backup file. As a result, the created synthetic full backup file contains
the same data you would have if you created an active full backup.
• The synthetic full backup does not use network resources: it is created from backup files you already have
on disk.
• The synthetic full backup produces less load on the production environment: it is synthesized right on the
backup repository.
Veeam Backup & Replication treats synthetic full backups as regular full backups. As well as any other full
backup file, the synthetic full backup file resets the backup chain. All subsequent incremental backup files use
the synthetic full backup file as a new starting point. A previously used full backup file remains on disk until it is
automatically deleted according to the retention policy.
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NOTE
• If you enable both synthetic and active full backups and schedule their creation on the same day, the
synthetic full backup is not created.
• If you schedule a job to start after another job (initial job), but the initial job does not run on days
when the synthetic full backup is scheduled for the chained job, Veeam Backup & Replication will
not create synthetic full backups.
To create synthetic full backups, you must enable the Create synthetic full backups periodically option and
schedule creation of synthetic full backups on specific days.
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How Synthetic Full Backup Works
To create a synthetic full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following steps:
1. On a day when synthetic full backup is scheduled, Veeam Backup & Replication triggers a new backup job
session. During this session, Veeam Backup & Replication first performs incremental backup in a regular
manner and adds a new incremental backup file to the backup chain.
Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves VM data for this incremental backup file from the production
storage. Incremental backup helps Veeam Backup & Replication ensure that the synthetic full backup
includes the latest changes of the source VM in the production environment.
2. At the end of the backup job session, Veeam Data Mover on the backup repository builds a new synthetic
full backup using backup files that are already available in the backup chain, including the newly created
incremental backup file.
3. When the synthetic full backup is created, Veeam Data Mover on the backup repository deletes the
incremental backup file created at the beginning of the job session. As a result, you have a backup chain
that consists of a full backup file, set of incremental backup files and synthetic full backup file.
4. Every next job session creates a new incremental restore point starting from the synthetic full backup
until the day on which synthetic full backup is scheduled. On this day, Veeam Backup & Replication creates
a new synthetic full backup.
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If a regular backup job is scheduled together with a synthetic full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication will
produce only one backup file — a synthetic full backup that will contain the latest state of the source VM. An
incremental backup file that should have been created by the backup job schedule will not be added to the
backup chain.
If an active full backup is scheduled together with a synthetic full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication will
create only the active full backup.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a synthetic full backup only once a day on which synthetic full backup is
scheduled. If you run the backup job again on the same day, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform
incremental backup in a regular manner.
To define the retention policy for a backup job, you must specify the necessary number of restore points or days
in the Retention policy field in the backup job settings. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication keeps restore
points for the last 7 days. In the Storage step of the New Backup Job wizard you can select the following units
of retention policy.
• Restore points: Veeam Backup & Replication keeps the last N restore points, where N is the specified
number of restore points.
• Da y s: Veeam Backup & Replication keeps restore points created during the last N days, where N is the
specified number of days.
The daily retention policy can be helpful if you periodically create off-schedule backups. For example, you
create a daily backup job and you want to store retention points for 14 calendar days. If you select 14
restore points and manually create off-schedule backups, there will be several restore points in one day.
So, you will have retention points for less than 14 days. In this case, you can use the d a ys option.
o The minimum number of retained restore points is 3. This number does not depend on the number of
days set in the retention policy. For example, the retention policy is set to 5 days. You launch the job
after it was stopped for 10 days. Normally, Veeam Backup & Replication would delete all previous
restore points. However, due to the minimum number of retained restore points, you will still have at
least 3 restore points: the newly created restore point and the two previous ones.
You can change the minimum number of retained restore points with a registry value. For more
information, contact Veeam Customer Support.
o If the backup job starts at the end of the day and finishes the next day, Veeam Backup & Replication
assumes that the restore point is created at the moment when the backup job started. However,
Veeam Backup & Replication starts counting retention policy days only after the backup job finishes
processing VMs.
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o When determining whether the number of allowed days is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication
ignores the day when the daily retention policy is applied.
In fact, Veeam Backup & Replication keeps restore points for the N + 1 days, where N is the number of
days that you specify in the job settings. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication applies retention
policy after the N+1 days are passed. For example, if you set retention policy to keep restore points
for 6 days, Veeam Backup & Replication will keep restore points for 7 days and will apply the
retention policy on the 8th day. Note that the retention period may be longer depending on the
specified backup method.
o When determining whether the number of allowed days is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication
also counts days when the backup job did not create any backups.
When the specified number is exceeded, the earliest restore points will be removed from the backup chain or
merged with the next closest restore point. Veeam Backup & Replication handles restore points in different
ways for forever forward incremental, forward incremental and reverse incremental backup chains:
NOTE
When the specified number of restore points or days is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the
whole backup file, not separate VMs from it. For more information, see Removal of Restore Points.
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Forever Forward Incremental Backup Retention Policy
If the number of days or restore points in forever forward incremental backup chains exceeds retention policy
settings, Veeam Backup & Replication transforms the backup chain to make room for the most recent restore
point. The transformation process is performed in the following way:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication adds a new incremental backup file to the backup chain and detects that the
number of allowed restore points or days is exceeded.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication reuses empty data blocks in the full backup file to include changes of the
incremental backup file that follows the full backup. To do that, Veeam Backup & Replication injects data
blocks from the first incremental backup file in the chain into the full backup file. As a result, the full
backup file ‘moves’ one step forward in the backup chain.
NOTE
If the forever forward incremental backup chain resides on a deduplicating storage appliance,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not reuse empty data blocks of the full backup file. Instead,
Veeam Backup & Replication appends data from the first incremental backup file in the chain to the
full backup file. As a result, the backup chain may consume more disk space on the appliance.
3. The first incremental backup file is removed from the backup chain as redundant. Its data has already been
injected into the full backup file, and the full backup file contains the same data as this incremental
backup file.
For example, you want to keep 7 restore points in the backup cha in. The backup job starts on Sunday and runs
daily. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will create the backup chain in the following way:
1. During the first backup job session on Sunday, Veeam Backup & Replication creates the first restore point
— a full backup file.
2. Monday through Saturday Veeam Backup & Replication adds six incremental backup files to the backup
chain.
3. The next Sunday, Veeam Backup & Replication adds a new incremental backup file to the backup chain.
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4. Veeam Backup & Replication detects that the number of allowed restore points is exceeded, and starts the
transformation process:
a. Veeam Backup & Replication merges data blocks from the incremental backup file created on Monday
into the full backup file created on Sunday. This way, the full backup file ‘moves’ one step forward —
from Sunday to Monday.
b. The incremental backup created on Monday becomes redundant and is removed from the backup
chain.
As a result, you have a chain of a full backup file as of Monday and six incremental backup files Tuesday through
Sunday.
For this reason, if you select forward incremental backup method, in some days there will be more restore
points on disk than specified by retention policy settings. Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the full
backup chain only after the last incremental backup file in the chain becomes outdated.
For example, the retention policy is set to 3 restore points. The first full backup file is created on Sunday,
incremental backup files are created Monday through Saturday, and the second full backup is created on
Thursday. Although the retention policy is already breached on Wednesday, the first full backup is not deleted.
Without the full backup, backup chain would be useless, leaving you without any restore point at all.
Veeam Backup & Replication will wait for the second full backup file and 2 incremental backup files to be
created, and only then will delete the whole previous chain, which will happen on Saturday.
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Reverse Incremental Backup Retention Policy
In case of reverse incremental backup, Veeam Backup & Replication immediately deletes the earliest reverse
incremental backup file as soon as it becomes outdated.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start the backup job on Sunday. Monday through Friday, it will add new restore
points to the backup chain and rebuild the full backup file. On Saturday, Veeam Backup & Replication will add a
new restore point and remove the earliest reverse incremental backup file (VRB) from the backup chain.
Retention policy for deleted items functions differently depending on the Use per-machine backup files option.
For details, see Backup Chain Formats.
• [If per-machine is enabled] When you enable retention policy for deleted items,
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove data for machines that are no longer processed by the backup
job from the backup repository.
• [If per-machine is disabled] When you enable retention policy for deleted items,
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the data about deleted items from the backup job and
Veeam Backup & Replication database. The stored blocks of deleted machines will remain in the
repository. The stored blocks of deleted machines will be removed only when the restore point retention
limit is reached or by the compact full backup file option.
Retention policy for deleted items data is set at the level of the backup job. You must enable the Remove
d eleted items data after option in backup job settings and specify the period of time for which data for deleted
items must be retained in the backup repository.
• You must use retention policy for deleted items data carefully. We strongly recommend that you set the
retention policy to 7 days or more to prevent unwanted data loss.
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• The Remove deleted items data after option lets you control data of deleted or excluded items. In
addition to it, Veeam Backup & Replication applies general retention policy rules to maintain the necessary
number of restore points in the backup chain. For more information, see Retention Policy.
1. If all machines in the job are processed with the Success status, at the end of the backup job session
Veeam Backup & Replication gets a list of machines in the backup.
2. For every machine in the backup, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the configuration database and gets
the date of the latest backup job session completed with the Success status.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication checks if any machine in the backup meets the following conditions:
o There are no successful backups for the machine for the last N days.
o There are no corrupted backups for the machine for the last N days.
Where N is the number of days specified in the Remove deleted items data after N days setting.
4. If both conditions are true for some machine, Veeam Backup & Replication removes data for this machine
from the backup. Note that if per-machine is disabled, it does not free up space in the backup repository.
It marks the space as available to be overwritten, and this space is removed during subsequent job
sessions or the full backup file compact operation.
E x ample 1
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You create a backup job for 2 VMs and set the retention policy for deleted items to 5 days . The backup job runs
once a day for 7 times and processes VMs in the following way:
• VM 2 is successfully processed during the 1st and 2nd backup job sessions. Before the 3 rd job session, VM 2 is
excluded from the job and is not processed by subsequent job sessions.
During the 8th job session, Veeam Backup & Replication will remove data for VM 2 from backups in the backup
repository since there are no successful and corrupted backups for VM 2 for the last 5 days.
E x ample 2
You create a backup job for 2 machines and set the retention policy for deleted machines to 5 days. The backup
job runs once a day for 7 times and processes machines in the following way:
• VM 2 is successfully processed during the 1st and 2nd backup job sessions. Starting from the 3 rd job session,
VM 2 fails to be processed, for example, due power loss while machine data is transported.
During the 8th job session, Veeam Backup & Replication will not remove data for VM 2 from backups in the
backup repository. Even though there are no successfully created backups for VM 2 for the last 5 days,
Veeam Backup & Replication will detect that the configuration database contains information about corrupted
backups for VM 2 for the last 5 days.
[Per-machine is enabled] Retention policy for deleted items functions without limitations.
• [For VMware Cloud Director backup jobs] To apply retention policy for deleted items,
Veeam Backup & Replication checks backups created for the vApp itself, not for a machine in this vApp.
Thus, the retention policy is applied only if the job stops creating backups for the entire vApp.
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Retention for Per-Machine Backups with Separate Metadata
Files
When you use the per-machine backup with separate metadata files format, Veeam Backup & Replication
creates a separate backup file for each workload during one session. Veeam Backup & Replication perceives each
backup file created during one job session as one restore point. As a result, each workload has its own backup
chain. When Veeam Backup & Replication needs to remove earlier restore points by retention, it analysis the
backup chain of an individual workload, not all workloads.
For example, a backup job processes 2 VMs: VM 1 and VM 2. According to the retention policy settings, the
backup chain must contain 3 restore points. The backup job ran 3 times and VMs were processed in the following
way:
• VM 2 was not backed up in 2 job sessions and has 1 valid restore point.
During the 4th job run, Veeam Backup & Replication will create new restore points for VM 1 and VM 2 — full
backups. However, Veeam Backup & Replication will not remove the earliest restore point.
Veeam Backup & Replication will wait until a full backup file and 2 incremental backup files are present in
backup chains of each VM. After that, Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the whole outdated backup
chain from the backup repository. During the 5 th job run, Veeam Backup & Replication will create new restore
point for VM 1 and VM 2.
During the 6th job run, processing of VM 2 will fail. Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the earliest restore
points only of VM 1 because the number of restore points for VM 1 in the active backup chain equals 3 — a full
backup file and 2 incremental backup files. The number of restore points in the active backup chain of the VM 2
is not sufficient to remove restore points.
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During the 7 th job run, Veeam Backup & Replication will create restore points for VM 1 and VM 2.
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the earliest restore points only for VM 2 because a new backups chain
is not started for VM1 and the number of restore points for VM 2 in the active backup chain equals 3 — a full
backup file and 2 incremental backup files.
For example, a backup job processes two VMs: VM 1 and VM 2. According to the retention policy settings, the
backup chain must contain 5 restore points. The backup job ran 5 times and VMs were processed in the following
way:
• VM 2 was not backed up in 1 job sessions and has 4 valid restore points.
During the 6th job run, Veeam Backup & Replication will create restore points for VM 1 and VM 2.
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the earliest restore point of VM 1 because the number of restore points
in the backup chain exceeds 5.
During the 7 th job run, Veeam Backup & Replication will create restore points for VM 1 and VM 2.
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the earliest restore points of VM 1 and VM 2 because the number of
restore points in the backup chain of each VM exceeds 5.
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When Veeam Backup & Replication needs to remove earlier restore points by retention policy, it removes backup
files of all workloads created during one job session. Veeam Backup & Replication does not remove data for
separate VMs. In some situations a certain VM may have fewer restore points than it is specified in retention
policy settings. This can happen if a backup job processes multiple workloads, and some workloads fail to be
processed during some job sessions.
For example, a backup job processes 2 VMs: VM 1 and VM 2. According to the retention policy settings, the
backup chain must contain 3 restore points. The backup job ran 3 times and VMs were processed in the following
way:
• VM 2 was not backed up in 2 job sessions and has 1 valid restore point.
When Veeam Backup & Replication adds a new restore point to the backup chain, it will not remove the earliest
restore point. Veeam Backup & Replication will wait until a new full backup file and 2 incremental backup files
are added to the backup chain. After that, it will remove the whole outdated backup chain from the backup
repository. Restore points in the new backup chain, at the same time, may contain data for both VMs or for one
VM only: Veeam Backup & Replication regards backup files as restore points, not separate VMs in these files.
For example, a backup job processes two VMs: VM 1 and VM 2. According to the retention policy settings, the
backup chain must contain 5 restore points. The backup job ran 5 times and VMs were processed in the following
way:
• VM 2 was not backed up in 2 job sessions and has 3 valid restore points.
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After that, Veeam Backup & Replication will run a new backup job session in which VM 1 and VM 2 will be
successfully processed. When a new restore point is added to the chain, Veeam Backup & Replication will
remove the earliest restore point because the number of restore points in the backup chain exceeds 5. As a
result, you will have 5 restore points for VM 1 and 3 restore points for VM 2.
To mark a backup file for long-term retention, Veeam Backup & Replication can assign to the file the following
types of GFS flags: weekly (W), monthly (M) and yearly (Y). The types of GFS flags that
Veeam Backup & Replication assigns depend on the configured GFS retention policy settings. Depending on
which flag is assigned to a backup, it will be stored for specified number of weeks, months or years.
IMP ORTANT
GFS flags can be assigned only to full backup files created during the time period specified in GFS policy
settings.
As soon as Veeam Backup & Replication assigns a GFS flag to a full backup file, this backup file can no longer be
deleted or modified. Also, Veeam Backup & Replication does not apply short-term retention policy settings to
the full backup file — that is, Veeam Backup & Replication ignores the backup file when determining whether
the number of allowed backup files is exceeded. For more information on how GFS flags are assigned, see
Assignment of GFS Flags.
When the specified retention period ends, Veeam Backup & Replication unassigns the GFS flag from the full
backup file. If the backup file does not have any other GFS flags assigned, it can be modified and deleted
according to the short-term retention policy. For more information on when Veeam Backup & Replication
removes GFS flags, see Removal of GFS Flags.
Limitations
When planning to use GFS retention policy, consider the following limitations:
• GFS retention policy does not apply to reverse incremental backup chains.
• GFS retention policy applies to forever forward incremental backup chain only if you periodically create
full backups manually or using scheduled scripts. For more information on cmdlets that you can use in
scripts, see the Veeam PowerShell Reference.
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• If you store backups with GFS flags in the capacity tier with immutability enabled, the GFS retention policy
is not considered. Immutability period depends on the object storage repository settings.
• As Veeam Backup & Replication does not create new full backup files while applying the GFS retention
policy, you must configure your backup jobs in a way you do not lose any essential data due to an
insufficient number of full backup files. For example, if you configure monthly GFS retention, you need at
least one full backup file per month.
• If a GFS flag is assigned to a full backup file in an active backup chain, Veeam Backup & Replication is not
able to merge data from incremental backup files into the full backup file. For forever forward incremental
backup chain, this means, that the short-term retention policy does not apply.
• Veeam Backup & Replication assigns GFS flags only after you save GFS retention policy settings. This
means that GFS flags are assigned only to those backup files created after the configuration, while bac kup
files created earlier are not affected and previously assigned flags are not modified.
• You cannot store full backups to which GFS flags are assigned in backup repositories with rotated drives.
• Retention policy for deleted items does not apply to full backup files to which GFS flags are assigned.
IMP ORTANT
When you reconfigure GFS retention policy and save it, the following applies:
• If you change the amount of time for which backups with GFS flags must be kept, the previously
created GFS backups will also be kept according to the new settings.
• If you change the time period when GFS flags must be assigned, the previously assigned GFS flags
are not considered when determining whether new GFS flags must be assigned.
Depending on the scheduled period settings, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following steps as soon
as the job finishes:
• If the job finishes within the period when a new GFS flag must be assigned (the scheduled period),
Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the backup job has created a full backup file.
o Yes, the full backup has been created: If the GFS flag has already been assigned to another backup file
during the scheduled period, Veeam Backup & Replication does not assign another GFS flag to the
backup file. If the GFS flag has not been assigned, Veeam Backup & Replication assigns it and stops
waiting for the full backup file (removes the waiting flag).
o No, the full backup has not been created: Veeam Backup & Replication waits for a full backup file to
be created (sets the waiting flag).
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• If the job finishes outside the scheduled period, Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the full
backup file is being waited for (check whether the waiting flag is set).
o Yes, the waiting flag is set: Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the backup job has created a
full backup file.
▪ Yes: Veeam Backup & Replication assigns the GFS flag and stops waiting for the full backup file
(removes the waiting flag).
▪ No: Veeam Backup & Replication does not assign a new GFS flag.
o No, the waiting flag is not set: Veeam Backup & Replication does not assign a new GFS flag.
Consider the following example. On Monday, you configure GFS policy settings of a backup job in a way weekly
GFS flags must be assigned every Wednesday. In this example, Veeam Backup & Replication will take the
following steps.
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E x ample Description
1. Until Wednesday, Veeam Backup & Replication will not assign any GFS flags because the scheduled period
has not started yet.
2. On Wednesday, the backup job will produce an incremental backup file. Veeam Backup & Replication will
start waiting for a full backup file to be created since the scheduled period is now started.
3. On Thursday, the backup job will produce another incremental backup file, while
Veeam Backup & Replication will still be waiting for a full backup file.
4. On Friday, the backup job will produce a full backup file, and Veeam Backup & Replication will
immediately assign the weekly GFS flag to the backup file.
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IMP ORTANT
The described mechanism does not apply to a situation where you select only two types of GFS flags,
yearly and weekly. If you select these two types and do not select the monthly type,
Veeam Backup & Replication treats the case as if you select only one flag type. This means that flags of
each type are assigned according to the algorithm for one flag type.
Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following steps as soon as the job finishes and performs them for GFS
flags of each level. Note that GFS flags of lower levels are processed before flags of higher levels. In the
described algorithm, the "scheduled period" is the following: for weekly GFS — the day selected in the GFS
retention policy settings; for monthly GFS — the selected week; for yearly GFS — the selected month.
• If the job finishes within the period when a new GFS flag must be assigned, Veeam Backup & Replication
checks whether the flag of a lower level is configured in the job settings.
o Yes, the flag of a lower level is configured: If the GFS flag of a lower level has already been assigned
to the backup file created by the job, Veeam Backup & Replication assigns the GFS flag of the current
level and stops waiting for the flag of the current level to be assigned (removes the current-level
waiting flag). If the GFS flag of a lower level has not been assigned, Veeam Backup & Replication
checks whether the GFS flag of current level has already been assigned to another backup file d uring
the scheduled period:
▪ Yes, the GFS flag of the current level has already been assigned: Veeam Backup & Replication
does not assign any GFS flags.
▪ No, the flag has not been assigned: Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the flag of the current
level to be assigned (sets the current-level waiting flag)
o No, the flag of a lower level is not configured: Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the
backup job has created a full backup file.
▪ Yes: If the GFS flag of current level has already been assigned to another backup file during the
scheduled period, Veeam Backup & Replication does not assign the GFS flag of the current level
to the backup file. If the GFS flag has not been assigned, assigns it and stops waiting for the GFS
flag of the current level to be assigned (removes the current-level waiting flag).
▪ No: Veeam Backup & Replication waits for a full backup file to be created (sets the current-level
waiting flag).
• If the job finishes outside the scheduled period, Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the GFS flag
of current level is being waited for (checks whether the current-level waiting flag is set).
o Yes, the flag of the current level has already been assigned: Veeam Backup & Replication does not
assign any GFS flags.
o No, the flag has not been assigned: Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the backup job has
created a full backup file.
▪ Yes: Veeam Backup & Replication assigns the flag of the current level and stops waiting for the
GFS flag of the current level to be assigned (removes the current-level waiting flag).
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▪ No: Veeam Backup & Replication does not assign any GFS flags.
Consider the following example. On Monday, you configure GFS policy settings of a backup job in a way weekly
GFS flags must be assigned every Wednesday and monthly GFS flags must be assigned every first week of a
month. In this example, Veeam Backup & Replication will take the following steps.
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E x ample Description
1. On Monday, the backup job will produce an incremental backup file. Veeam Backup & Replication will start
waiting for a full backup file since the monthly scheduled period is now started.
2. On Tuesday, the backup job will produce a full backup file. Although Veeam Backup & Replication will still
be waiting for a full backup file, the full backup file with weekly GFS flag is required.
4. On Thursday, the backup job will produce an incremental backup file. Veeam Backup & Replication will
start waiting for a full backup file to assign the weekly GFS flag to it since the weekly scheduled period is
now started.
5. On Friday, the backup job will produce a full backup file. Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately
assign the weekly GFS flag to the backup file. As the weekly GFS flag will have been assigned,
Veeam Backup & Replication will also assign the monthly GFS flag to the backup file.
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Removal of GFS Flags
When configuring GFS retention policy settings, you can specify the retention period for each type of GFS flags.
After the specified retention period exceeds, Veeam Backup & Replication removes GFS flags.
The date when Veeam Backup & Replication can remove GFS flag is calculated by the following formulas:
Where, N is the value specified in the Keep weekly/monthly/yearly full backups for field. For more information,
see Configure Long-Term Retention
NOTE
• Veeam Backup & Replication removes GFS flags only during running backup job sessions. This means
that if the backup job does not run on the calculated date, Veeam Backup & Replication will remove
the GFS flag later during the next job session.
• After you change GFS retention policy settings, the date of GFS flag removal is recalculated for
already created restore points.
Consider the following example. At the beginning of January, you create a backup job whose GFS retention
policy settings are configured to assign monthly GFS flags. You want to keep backup files with monthly flags for
1 month and set the value of the Keep monthly full backups for field to 1. Veeam Backup & Replication will
perform the following steps to assign and remove the flags.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication will assign the monthly GFS flag on 1/31/2019.
2. To calculate the date when the monthly flag must be removed, the following formula is used: date of
GFS flag assignment + 1 month. This means that the flag must be removed on 2/31/2019.
However, this date does not exist since the last date of February is 2/28/2019. That is why
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the GFS flag on 3/1/2019 (which is 2/28/2019 + 1 day).
Background Retention
In addition to applying a retention policy (short-term retention and long-term retention) within a job session,
Veeam Backup & Replication performs background retention for backups. The background retention aims mostly
at backups that are no longer processed by jobs (orphaned backups shown in the node with the ( Orphaned)
postfix). However, this retention can also be helpful for standard backups, in case backups are created by jobs
without schedule, the job retention has not been yet applied or failed for some reason and so on.
The background retention starts automatically every 24 hours at 00:30, runs in the ba ckground and consists of
the following activities:
• Backup cleanup
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Limitations
The background retention does not apply to the following backups:
• Imported backups.
• NAS backups.
• VeeamZIP backups.
• Exported backups.
• Copied backups.
Considerations
Consider the following:
• Like the job retention, the background retention cannot delete immutable backup files. The background
retention waits until the immutability and retention periods end for these files.
• The background retention deletes only backups for which the retention period is set in days. If the
retention period is set in restore points, the background retention process does not delete the backups.
You need to delete them manually.
• [For backups linked to jobs] If the retention is set in days, Veeam Backup & Replication leaves at least 3
backup files in a backup chain regardless of the set retention. If the retention is set in restore points, there
is no limit on backup files left in a backup chain.
• Unlike the job retention, the background retention does not merge data from one backup file to another,
it just deletes files. In case of forever forward incremental and forward incremental backup chains, the
background retention deletes incremental files only after the last increment in the related part of the
backup chain becomes outdated.
• The background retention does not delete backup files if they are locked by other processes. The
retention waits until the backup file is unlocked.
• [For backups created with Veeam Agents operating in standalone or managed mode] For backups stored
in an object storage repository operating in the direct connection mode, basic retention and GFS retention
do not apply. For non-orphaned backups stored on other repositories, basic retention does not apply.
• You can launch the background retention manually as described in Launching Background Retention.
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Background Basic Retention
Background basic retention process analyzes the retention period set for backup files. In case of orphaned
backups, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes the retention period that was set in the job which created this
backup. If the retention period has expired, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the backup files.
• The backup file does not have any other GFS flags assigned.
Background retention job applies to backup files created with all the types of jobs that use GFS. For more
information about GFS retention policy, see Long-Term Retention Policy (GFS).
Backup Cleanup
Backup cleanup applies only to orphaned backups. After the whole orphaned backup chain is deleted,
Veeam Backup & Replication also deletes the .VBM file and the folder where the backup chain was stored.
An outdated backup file is a backup file for which no new restore points were created and no new backup job
sessions were started within the last N days, where N is the retention period s pecified in the Veeam Agent
backup job settings.
For more information, see Retention Policy for Outdated Backups article in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows User Guide and Maintenance Settings article in the Veeam Agent Management Guide.
On the tenant side, Veeam Cloud Connect repositories are skipped from processing by the background retention
job launched automatically and manually. For more information, see the Background Retention for Tenant
Backups section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
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Changed Block Tracking
To perform incremental backup, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to know what data blocks have changed
since the previous job session.
For VMware VMs with hardware version 7 and later, Veeam Backup & Replication employs a native VMware
vSphere feature — VMware vSphere Changed Block Tracking (CBT). Instead of scanning VMware VMFS (Virtual
Machine File System), Veeam Backup & Replication queries CBT through VMware VADP (VMware vStorage API
for Data Protection) and gets a list of blocks that have changed since the last job session. Use of CBT increases
the speed and efficiency of block-level incremental backups.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses CBT for the following operations:
• Backup
• Replication
• Entire VM restore
• VM disk restore
Veeam Backup & Replication enables CBT by default. If necessary, you can disable it in job settings.
NOTE
If you back up a VM to which the backup proxy role is assigned and that uses Virtual appliance (HotAdd)
transport mode, CBT for this VM is disabled and cannot be enabled.
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NOTE
For VMs with virtual disks in thin format, Veeam Backup & Replication also uses CBT during active full
backup sessions to detect unallocated regions of virtual disks and skip them. For VMs with virtual disks on
NFS datastore, Veeam Backup & Replication uses CBT as well, but cannot leverage CBT on first full run (for
more information, see this KB article).
In some situations, Veeam Backup & Replication cannot leverage VMware vSphere CBT, for example, if VMs run
an earlier version of virtual hardware. If Veeam Backup & Replication cannot leverage VMware vSphere CBT, it
fails over to the Veeam proprietary filtering mechanism. Instead of tracking changed blocks of data,
Veeam Backup & Replication filters out unchanged data blocks.
During VM processing, Veeam Backup & Replication consolidates virtual disk content, scans through the VM
image and calculates a checksum for every data block. Checksums are stored as metadata to backup files next to
VM data. When incremental backup is run, Veeam Backup & Replication opens all backup files in the chain of
previous full and incremental backups, reads metadata from these files and compares it with checksums
calculated for a VM in its current state. If a match is found (which means the block already exists in the backup),
the corresponding block is filtered out.
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Data Compression and Deduplication
Veeam Backup & Replication provides mechanisms of data compression and deduplication. Data compression
and deduplication let you decrease traffic going over the network and disk space required for storing backup
files and VM replica files.
Data Compression
Data compression decreases the size of created files but affects duration of the backup or replication procedure.
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to select one of the following compression levels:
• None compression level is recommended if you plan to store backup files and VM replica files on storage
devices that support hardware compression and deduplication. Disabled compression can reduce
performance due to the increased amount of data to be transferred.
• Ded upe-friendly compression level is recommended for some deduplicating storage appliances and when
external WAN accelerators are used.
• Op timal compression level is the recommended compression level. It provides the best ratio between
compression and performance, the lowest backup proxy CPU usage and the fastest restore.
• Hig h compression level provides up to 60% of additional data reduction over the Op timal compression
level at the cost of 2x higher CPU usage and 2x slower restore.
• E x treme compression level provides up to 33% of additional data reduction over the Hig h compression
level at the cost of 5x higher CPU usage.
• [For backup copy job] Auto is the recommended compression level for backup copy jobs. Select this level
to use compression settings of the copied backup files.
NOTE
If encryption is enabled for a job and the Decompress backup data blocks before storing check box is
selected in the settings of the target backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication does not compress
VM data. Therefore, in the job statistics, you may observe a higher amount of transferred data (the
Tra nsferred counter) as compared to a job for which encryption is disabled. For more information on job
statistics, see Viewing Real-Time Statistics.
In the properties of the backup created with encryption, you may also see that the backup size (the Ba ckup
Size column) is larger than the original VM size (the Original Size column). For more information on backup
properties, see Viewing Backup Properties.
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However, if you use the reverse incremental backup method, the newly created backup files will contain a
mixture of data blocks compressed at different levels. For example, you have a backup job that uses the reverse
incremental backup method and the Optimal level of compression. After several job sessions, you change the
compression level to High. In the reverse incremental backup chains, the full backup file is rebuilt with eve ry job
session to include new data blocks. As a result, the full backup file will contain a mixture of data blocks: data
blocks compressed at the Optimal level and data blocks compressed at the High level. The same behavior
applies to synthetic full backups: synthetic full backups created after the compression level change will contain
a mixture of data blocks compressed at different levels.
If you want the newly created backup file to contain data blocks compressed at one level, you can create an
active full backup. Veeam Backup & Replication will retrieve data for the whole VM image from the production
infrastructure and compress it at the new compression level. All subsequent backup files in the backup chain
will also use the new compression level.
Deduplication
Data deduplication decreases the size of files. With data deduplication enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication
does not store to the resulting file identical data blocks and space that has been pre -allocated but not used.
We recommend you enable data deduplication if your backup jobs contain several VMs that have a lot of free
space on their logical disks or VMs that have similar data blocks — for example, VMs that were created from the
same template. However, note that data deduplication may decrease job performance.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses Veeam Data Movers to deduplicate VM data:
• Veeam Data Mover in the source side deduplicates VM data at the level of VM disks. Before the source -
side Veeam Data Mover starts processing a VM disk, it obtains digests for the previous restore point in the
backup chain from Veeam Data Mover in the target side. The source-side Veeam Data Mover consolidates
this information with CBT information from the hypervisor and filters VM disk data based on it. If some
data block exists in the previous restore point for this VM, the source-side Veeam Data Mover does not
transport this data block to the target. In addition to it, in case of thin disks the source -side Veeam Data
Mover skips unallocated space.
• Veeam Data Mover in the target side deduplicates VM data at the level of the backup file. It processes
data for all VM disks of all VMs in the job. The target-side Veeam Data Mover uses digests to detect
identical data blocks in transported data, and stores only unique da ta blocks to the resulting backup file.
You can change data deduplication settings for existing jobs. After you change the settings, you will not need to
create new full backups to enable or disable the deduplication. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
apply the change to the newly created backup files after you save the settings. Previously created backup files
will not be affected.
Storage Optimization
To optimize job performance and storage usage, Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to choose the
minimum data block size to process VMs. The optimal data block size depends on the type of storage you select
as a target and the size of your files.
When selecting the data block size, consider the following aspects:
• When reading the VM image, Veeam Backup & Replication "splits" the VM image into blocks of the
selected size. The more data blocks there are, the more time is required to process the VM image.
• [For replication and VMware Cloud Director replication] Veeam Backup & Replication writes information
about every data block to the VM replica metadata stored in the backup repository. The more data blocks
there are, the more metadata is written to the backup repository.
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• [For changed block tracking enabled] During incremental job runs, Veeam Backup & Replication uses CBT
to define changed data blocks in the VM. The larger the size of the found changed data block, the greater
the amount of data that is transferred to the target site.
The incorrectly chosen data block size may decrease the performance. For example, when you deduplicate a
large backup file to small data blocks, Veeam Backup & Replication produces a very large deduplication
metadata table, which can potentially overgrow memory and CPU resources of your backup repository. For large
backup files, it is better to use large data blocks.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides several storage optimization options with different block sizes used. The
following table will help you to choose the optimal option in accordance with the size of your backup files and
the storage type.
4 MB (former Loca l Recommended for files that are larger than 16 TB.
ta rget (large b locks))
This option will provide the lowest deduplication ratio and the largest size of
incremental files.
1 MB (former Local Recommended for backup and replication to SAN, DAS or local storage.
ta rget)
This option provides the fastest job performance but reduces the deduplication
ratio, because with larger data blocks it is less likely to find identical blocks.
512 KB (former LAN Recommended for backup and replication to NAS, and on-site backup and
ta rget) replication.
This option provides a better deduplication ratio and reduces the size of a file
because of reduced data block sizes.
256 KB (former W AN Recommended if you are planning to use WAN for off-site backup and replication.
ta rget)
This option provides the maximum deduplication ratio and the smallest size of files
that allows you to reduce the amount of traffic over WAN.
For Veeam Backup & Replication to apply the new settings, use the following instructions.
Ba ckup Jobs
To apply new storage optimization settings in backup jobs, you must create an active full backup after you
change storage optimization settings. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the new block size for the active full
backup and subsequent backup files in the backup chain.
To change data block size for backup copy jobs, you must perform the following actions:
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2. Create an active full backup with the initial backup job.
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Data Exclusion
When you configure a backup or replication job, you can define what data you want to back up and replicate and
exclude data that you do not need. Data exclusion helps reduce the size of the VM backup or replica and
decrease the load on the network.
You can exclude data at the VM level and at the VM guest OS level.
At the VM level:
• VM disks
NOTE
To reduce the size of the backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically excludes VM log files from
processing.
• Individual VM disks
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You can define which VMs you want to skip at the Virtual Machines step of the backup or replication job wizard.
Individual VM Disks
You can choose what VM disks you want to back up or replicate:
• All VM disks
For example, you may want to back up or replicate only the system disk instead of creating a backup or replica
of a full VM. VM disks exclusion reduces the size of the backup or replica.
You can define which VM disks you want to back up or replicate at the Virtual Machines step of the backup or
replication job wizard. You can specify disk processing settings granularly for every VM in the job or for the
whole VM container. In the latter case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the configured rule to all VMs in
this container.
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You can additionally instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to modify the configuration file of the VM. When you
start a VM from the backup or fail over to the VM replica, you will be able to use such VM immediately. You will
not have to edit its configuration file and remove excluded disks from it.
VM Templates
You can include VM templates in the backup. Backing up VM templates provides additional safety of your
production environment but requires additional space in the backup repository.
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to include a VM template only in the full backup and omit it in
incremental backups. Note that Veeam Backup & Replication cannot use Direct SAN transport mode to back up
VM templates data. If you have configured failing over to the Network mode, the Network mode will be used.
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You can define how Veeam Backup & Replication must process VM templates at the Virtual Machines steps of
the wizard.
If you do not want to exclude deleted file blocks from backups or replicas, you can disable the E x clude deleted
file blocks option in the backup or replication job settings.
NOTE
If you enable or disable the E x clude deleted file blocks setting for the existing job,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the new setting from the next job session.
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With this option enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations during the job session:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the MFT file on the VM guest OS to identify deleted file blocks, and
zeros out these blocks.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication processes and transports data blocks of the VM image in the following
manner:
o If a data block of the VM image contains only the deleted file blocks, Veeam Backup & Replication
does not read this data block from the source datastore.
o If a data block of the VM image contains zeroed out blocks and other data,
Veeam Backup & Replication copies this block to the target. Due to data compression, data blocks
that are marked as deleted are compressed, and the size of the resulting backup or replica file
reduces.
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Limitations for Deleted File Blocks Exclusion
Deleted file blocks exclusion has the following limitations:
• Veeam Backup & Replication can exclude deleted file blocks only on the VM guest OS with Microsoft
NTFS.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports both basic and dynamic disks. For the dynamic disks, simple type of
volumes is supported. Spanned, mirrored and striped volumes are not supported.
Swap Files
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to exclude pagefile.sys and hiberfil.sys files from backups or
replicas of Microsoft Windows VMs. As a result, the size of incremental backups and rep licas will be smaller.
• hiberfil.sys is a system file created by the OS for correct work of the hibernate mode.
• pagefile.sys is a swap file. Swap files are dynamic in nature and can change intensively between job
sessions, even if a VM itself does not change much.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the MFT file on the VM guest OS to identify data blocks of
pagefile.sys and hiberfil.sys files and zeros them out.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication processes and transports data blocks of the VM image in the following
manner:
o If a data block of the VM image contains only blocks of these files, Veeam Backup & Replication does
not copy this data block to the target.
o If a data block of the VM image contains blocks of these files and other data,
Veeam Backup & Replication copies this block to the target.
VM Guest OS Files
If you do not want to back up or replicate some files and folders on the VM guest OS, you can exclude them
from the backup or replica. Files exclusion reduces the size of the backup or replica but may affect the job
performance.
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You can specify file exclusion settings granularly for every VM in the job or for the whole VM container. In the
latter case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the configured rule to all VMs in this container.
To define which VM guest OS files must and must not be processed, you can use the following options:
Veeam Backup & Replication will back up or replicate all files and folders except the specified ones.
Veeam Backup & Replication will back up or replicate only the specified files and folders.
• Specify a full path to a folder on the VM guest OS, for example, C:\Documents\.
• Specify a full path to a file on the VM guest OS, for example: C:\Documents\MyReport.docx.
If a path is not full, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand it relatively the root directory on the
computer volume and attempt to detect such files on all computer volumes. For example, you have C, D
and E disks on the VM. In the list of exclusions, you specify Document.docx. Veeam Backup & Replication
will scan the whole file system and exclude the following files (if any): C:\Document.docx,
D:\Document.docx, E:\Document.docx. If there is a C:\MyDocuments\Document.docx file, it will
not be excluded — this file is not located in the root directory.
Environment variables must be defined for the user account that you use to connect to the VM guest OS
and under which the non-persistent runtime components or persistent agent components are started. For
example, you connect to the VM guest OS under the Administrator account. If you want to use the
%windir% variable in the list of exclusions or inclusions, you must make sure that the %windir% variable
is added to the list of user variables for Administrator on the VM guest OS.
• Use file masks. You can use the following characters for masks:
o (*) — a substitution for one or more characters in the file name or path. Can be used for any sequence
of characters (including no characters). For example, *.pdf.
o (?) — a substitution of one character in the file name or path. For example, repor?.pdf
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Ma sk format Affects paths/files
mask* If the asterisk character (*) is not specified at the beginning of the
mask, the mask will be applied to all volumes on the VM guest OS,
and Veeam Backup & Replication will include/exclude files and
folders in the root folder on the volume: A:\mask*, B:\mask*,
…, Z:\mask*.
<drive_letter>:\*mask* All paths on the specified volume that contain the given sequence.
*mask1*;*mask2*;*mask3* All paths that contain at least one of the given character sequences:
*mask1* or *mask2* or *mask3*.
• File exclusion is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket-based license,
Enterprise or higher edition is required.
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• To exclude VM guest OS files, Veeam Backup & Replication must be able to deploy the non-persistent
runtime components or use (in necessary, deploy) persistent agent components inside the VM. For this
reason, the VM must be running and accessible by an IP address or through the Installer Service on VM,
and credentials for application-aware processing must be valid.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports both basic and dynamic disks. For the dynamic disks, s imple type of
volumes is supported. Spanned, mirrored and striped volumes are not supported.
• It is not recommended that you use VM guest files exclusion in Microsoft Windows for volumes with
enabled Data Deduplication. If you decide to use VM guest files exclusion for such volumes and set up a
list of inclusions, you must add the System Volume Information folder to the list of inclusions.
• Be careful when using masks with double wildcard characters. If you specify masks of such ty pe,
Veeam Backup & Replication will exclude all files and paths that contain the given mask. For example, if
you specify the *.doc* mask, Veeam Backup & Replication will exclude files like MyReport.docx,
Report.doc.txt and so on.
• If you use file masks for file exclusion, Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the VM guest file system, and
thus the time of VM disk processing will increase.
• The number of entries in the list of exclusions or inclusions must not exceed a few hundreds. The number
of entries in the list influences the job performance — the more files are included or excluded from the
backup or replica, the more time Veeam Backup & Replication requires to process these files.
• It is recommended that you do not exclude system files without the necessity.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform any checks to verify the VM image integrity.
• Exclusion of small files (less than 2 KB in size) is ineffective and will not reduce the size of the backup or
replica significantly.
Data exclusion
A VM has several volumes: C:\, D:\ and E:\. You want to exclude from the backup the Archive files and
folders that are present at the root folder on all volumes of the VM. If you add the C:\Archive folder to the
list of exclusions, Veeam Backup & Replication will back up the following data:
To exclude the Archive files and folders from the root folder from all volumes of the VM, you must Archive*
to the list of exclusions.
Data inclusion
A VM has several volumes: C:\, D:\ and E:\. You want to include to the backup only the D:\Documents
folder. If you add the D:\Documents folder to the list of inclusions, Veeam Backup & Replication will back up
the following data:
• D:\Documents folder
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• Whole content of C:\ and E:\ volumes
To include only the D:\Documents folder to the backup, you must add the D:\Documents folder to the list of
inclusions and, additionally, exclude unnecessary disks (that contain C:\ and E:\ volumes) at the Virtual
Ma chines step of the wizard. For more information, see Exclude Objects from Backup Job .
1. Veeam Backup & Replication checks the job settings to identify what VM guest OS files must be excluded.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication opens the MFT file from the VM guest file system in the memory cache on
the backup proxy, and marks data blocks of excluded files as deleted.
3. When Veeam Backup & Replication copies VM data to the target, it reads data both from the VM snapshot
and memory cache on the backup proxy. On the target, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a "merged"
version of VM disks that do not contain excluded VM guest OS files. Due to data compression, data blocks
that are marked as deleted are compressed, and the size of the resulting backup or replica file reduces.
During the job session with file exclude, Veeam Backup & Replication makes changes to processed VM disks at
the NTFS level using the cache on the backup proxy. However, these changes are not visible to the CBT
mechanism. For this reason, Veeam Backup & Replication saves information about excluded data blocks in the
backup file and replica metadata. During the next job session with use of CBT, Veeam Backup & Replication
retrieves a list of data blocks that were excluded during the previous job session from the backup file or replica
metadata and analyzes what data needs to be processed during the current job session. To do this,
Veeam Backup & Replication regards the following data:
• Data blocks that were excluded during the previous job session
• Data blocks that must be excluded during the current job session
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VMware Tools Quiescence
When you back up or replicate a running VM, you need to quiesce or ‘freeze’ the VM to bring its file system and
application data to a consistent state. Data quiescence is crucial for highly -transactional applications. It helps
create transactionally consistent backups or replicas and guarantee safety of application data.
To create consistent backups and replicas for VMs that do not support Microsoft VSS (for example, Linux VMs),
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the VMware Tools to freeze the file system and application data on VMs
before it creates a backup or a replica. VMware Tools also allow you to create backups and replicas for Microsoft
Windows-based VMs that support Microsoft VSS. For this, VMware Tools use VMware VSS component. For
details on the supported OSes and quiescence features, see the VMware documentation.
To create transactionally consistent backups or replicas of VMs that do not support Microsoft VSS, you must
define the following settings at the job level:
1. Enable VMware Tools quiescence. For more information on how to enable VMware Tools quiescence, see
vSphere Settings.
2. Specify scripts that will bring applications to a transactionally consistent state before freezing and to the
initial state after freezing VMs. For more information, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
Combined Approach
It is recommended to enable VMware Tools quiescence and application-aware processing when you add
Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs to the same job. In this case, all VMs will be processed in a transactionally
consistent manner — either with application-aware processing or VMware Tools quiescence.
In such a scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication processes VMs in the job in the following way:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication first attempts to use application-aware processing to prepare VMs for backup
or replication. If Veeam Backup & Replication manages to quiesce all VMs in the job with application-
aware processing, it does not use VMware Tools quiescence.
1. At the Storage step of the wizard (for backup) or Job Settings step of the wizard (for replication), click
Ad vanced.
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2. On the vSphere tab of the Ad vanced Settings window, select E na ble VMware Tools quiescence.
3. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
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4. When you configure advanced option for individual VMs, select Try application processing, but ignore
fa ilures. You can also select the Disable application processing option for VMs that you want to process
with VMware Tools quiescence.
NOTE
If you enable application-aware processing and VMware Tools quiescence but do not select the Ig nore
a p plication processing failures option, Veeam Backup & Replication uses only application-aware processing
for the job.
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Guest Processing
If you back up or replicate running VMs, you can enable guest processing options. Guest processing options are
advanced tasks that help Veeam Backup & Replication to communicate with the VM guest OS. Using guest
processing options, Veeam Backup & Replication creates transactionally consistent backups, replicas, and
catalogs of files and folders on the VM guest OS.
To coordinate guest processing activities, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys non-persistent runtime
components or uses (if necessary, deploys) persistent agent components on the VM guest OS. For more
information, see the Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent Agent Components section. The non-
persistent runtime components run only during guest processing and are stopped immediately after the
processing is finished (depending on the selected option, during the backup job session or after the backup job
finishes).
Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following guest processing options:
Application-Aware Processing
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication does not process application logs and creates a crash-consistent backup
of VMs with applications that use transaction logs for operations. You can create a transactionally consistent
backup - in this case Veeam Backup & Replication will process application logs. In case a disaster strikes,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use backups of logs to perform recovery operations. You can create
transactionally consistent backups and replicas of VMs that run Microsoft Active Directory, Microsoft Exchange,
Microsoft SharePoint, Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle Database or PostgreSQL instances. Transactionally
consistent backups guarantee proper recovery of these applications without data loss. For information on
system requirements for the applications, see System Requirements.
When you define the job settings, you can set up the following application-aware processing settings:
• Transaction logs backup for Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle Database and PostgreSQL Instances — to back up
transaction logs from Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle server and PostgreSQL server.
• Transaction log truncation — to truncate transaction logs on the VM guest OS after the VM is successfully
processed.
• Pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts — to run pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts to quiesce VMs running
applications that do not support Microsoft VSS.
• VM guest OS files exclusion — to exclude or include individual files and folders from or to backup or
replica.
If you do not enable this option in the backup job settings, you will still be able to perform 1-click restore from
backups created with the backup job. For more information, see the Preparing for File Browsing and Searching
section in the Enterprise Manager User Guide.
NOTE
If you use Kerberos authentication, consider requirements and limitations described in the Kerberos
Authentication section.
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Requirements and Limitations
Consider the following requirements and limitations for guest processing:
• Check that accounts that you plan to use for guest processing have permissions described in Permissions.
• [For Oracle databases except Oracle RAC] Check that databases that you want to back up are listed in the
/etc/oratab file.
• To back up Microsoft SQL transaction logs with Veeam Backup & Replication, you must make sure that the
recovery model is set to Full or Bulk-logged recovery model for required databases on Microsoft SQL
Server VMs. If the recovery model is set to Simple, Veeam Backup & Replication will not detect and
process transaction logs on Microsoft SQL Server VMs.
• Veeam Backup & Replication excludes from application-aware processing Microsoft SQL databases that
are mounted to the Microsoft SQL Server using a remote UNC path. If at least one file of the database is
located on a network shared folder, this database will be backed up in the crash-consistent state. Other
databases on this server will be backed up in the transactionally consistent state. For more information,
see this Veeam KB article.
• Veeam Backup & Replication excludes the master database from guest processing and does not process
transaction logs for it.
If you want to exclude other databases from the transaction log processing workflow, see this Veeam KB
article. Consider that exclusion configured this way will be treated as a global setting.
• To back up Oracle transaction logs with Veeam Backup & Replication, you must make sure that
ARCHIVELOG is turned on for required databases on Oracle VMs. If ARCHIVELOG is turned off ,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not detect and process transaction logs on Oracle VMs.
• Due to Microsoft limitations, you cannot use Microsoft Azure Active Directory credentials to perform guest
processing on VMs running Microsoft Windows 10 (or later).
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports backup of Microsoft Exchange, SharePoint and SQL Server
databases existing in mount point volumes.
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To use non-persistent runtime components, do not select the Use persistent guest agent check box when
specifying application-aware processing settings as described in Application-Aware Processing for VM backup
jobs. Veeam Backup & Replication performs processing of the backup jobs with enabled guest processing
according to the following algorithm.
NOTE
If the Use p ersistent guest agent option is disabled but persistent agent components were previously
installed on the VM, Veeam Backup & Replication may use them for guest processing. To use non-
persistent runtime components, uninstall persistent agent components from protected VMs.
Veeam Backup & Replication deploy the non-persistent runtime components on VMs in two ways:
• For VMs running Microsoft Windows, non-persistent runtime components are deployed using guest
interaction proxies. For more information, see Guest Interaction Proxy. If there are no guest interaction
proxies or guest interaction proxies fail for some reason, Veeam Backup & Replication will deploy non-
persistent runtime components on Microsoft Windows VMs from the backup server.
• For VMs running Linux or Unix operating systems, non-persistent runtime components are deployed from
the backup server.
When you start a job with guest processing tasks enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following
operations:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication defines the machines that will perform the guest interaction proxy role.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication deploys the non-persistent runtime components on VMs:
o [For Microsoft Windows VMs] The guest interaction proxy connects to VMs and deploys the non-
persistent runtime components on them.
o [For VMs running Linux or Unix] The backup server connects to VMs and deploys the non-persistent
runtime components on them.
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3. The job session proceeds as usual.
4. When the job session completes, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the non-persistent runtime
components on VMs.
If a network connection breaks during the job session, Veeam Backup & Replication makes attempts to re-
establish the connection:
• If a network connection between the backup server/guest interaction proxy and VM guest OS breaks,
Veeam Backup & Replication makes one attempt to reconnect.
• If a network connection between the backup server and guest interaction proxy breaks,
Veeam Backup & Replication makes 10 attempts to reconnect.
If attempts are unsuccessful, guest processing tasks fail. The job proceeds with the scenario defined in the job
settings. For example, if you have instructed a backup job to try application processing but ignore failures,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not perform guest processing tasks but will proceed with the VM backup.
Prerequisites
To use persistent agent components, you must ensure that the Veeam Installer Service is installed on the guest
VM. The Installer Service can be installed in one of the following ways:
• Automatic installation by Veeam backup server when adding the VM to Managed Servers in the
Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure.
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Installing Persistent Agent Components on Microsoft
Windows VMs
For Microsoft Windows VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys persistent agent components using guest
interaction proxies. For more information, see Guest Interaction Proxy. If there are no guest interaction proxies
or guest interaction proxies fail for some reason, Veeam Backup & Replication will deploy persistent agent
components on Microsoft Windows VMs from the backup server.
To use persistent agent components, select the Use persistent guest agent check box when specifying
application-aware processing settings as described in Application-Aware Processing for VM backup jobs.
Persistent guest agents will be installed by the Installer Service during the first run of the backup job.
When you select the Use persistent guest agent option, Veeam Backup & Replication performs processing of the
backup jobs with enabled guest processing according to the following algorithm. Persistent agent components
provide closing access to the VM administrative share (ADMIN$) and access to VM over VIX API/vSphere Web
Services.
When you start a job with guest processing tasks enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following
operations:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication defines the machines that will perform the guest interaction proxy role.
2. The guest interaction proxy connects to VMs and deploys persistent agent components on them.
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NOTE
If the account used for guest processing is a local (non-domain) account, the connection may be
blocked by the remote UAC. This is a default security policy in Windows that prevents local user
accounts from being used to remotely connect to a server. In this case, either use the local
administrator account or disable the remote UAC to connect to the persistent agent. For more
information, see this Veeam KB article.
If a network connection breaks during the job session, Veeam Backup & Replication makes attempts to re-
establish the connection:
• If a network connection between the backup server/guest interaction proxy and VM guest OS breaks,
Veeam Backup & Replication makes one attempt to reconnect.
• If a network connection between the backup server and guest interaction proxy breaks,
Veeam Backup & Replication makes 10 attempts to reconnect.
If attempts are unsuccessful, guest processing tasks fail. The job proceeds with the scenario defined in the job
settings. For example, if you have instructed a backup job to try application processing but ignore failures,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not perform guest processing tasks but will proceed with the VM backup.
NOTE
For more information about Linux operating systems supported by guest processing, see Platform Support.
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To install Management Agent, perform the following steps:
1. Open the Inventory view. Select the VM and click Install Management Agent on the ribbon or right-click
the VM and select Install Management Agent.
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2. At the Credentials step of the wizard, specify credentials to connect to the VM and deploy Veeam Data
Mover. Specify a user account with root privileges or a non-root user with selected the E levate account
p rivileges automatically check box. If you did not add the user account to the sudoers file, select the Use
" su" if "sudo" fails check box and enter the password for the root account. For more information on these
check boxes, see Linux Accounts (User Name and Password).
3. Apply changes.
When you start a job with guest processing tasks enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following
operations:
1. The backup server connects to VMs using credentials specified in the backup job settings. For more
information, see Specify Guest Processing Settings.
If the transport service connection between the backup server and the VM guest OS fails,
Veeam Backup & Replication tries to use the SSH connection with credentials specified in the backup job
settings. If the SSH connection also fails, Veeam Backup & Replication uses networkless guest processing over
VIX API/vSphere Web Services.
If all attempts are unsuccessful, guest processing tasks fail. The job proceeds with the scenario defined in the
job settings. For example, if you have instructed a backup job to try application processing but ignore failures,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not perform guest processing tasks but will proceed with the VM backup.
Application-Aware Processing
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication does not process application logs and creates a crash-consistent backup
of VMs with applications that use transaction logs for operations. You can create a transactionally consistent
backup - in this case Veeam Backup & Replication will process application logs. In case a disaster strikes,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use backups of logs to perform recovery operations.
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To create transactionally consistent backups or replicas of VMs that run the following applications, you must
enable application-aware processing in job settings:
• Microsoft SharePoint
• Microsoft Exchange
• Oracle
• PostgreSQL
Application-aware processing is the Veeam technology that allows to stop applications running on the VM and
create a consistent view of application data on the VM guest OS. After the application is stopped,
Veeam Backup & Replication triggers the VM snapshot and starts to copy VM data to the target. Depending on
the VM OS, Veeam Backup & Replication utilizes the following technologies to create transactionally consistent
backups:
• For Windows-based VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication uses Microsoft Volume Snapshot Service (Microsoft
VSS). Microsoft VSS ensures that there are no unfinished database transactions or incomplete application
files. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
• For Linux-based VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the agent that connects to the VM guest OS and
prepares databases and instances for a consistent backup.
IMP ORTANT
If a VM runs an application that does not support Microsoft VSS (there is no VSS writer for this particular
type of application, for example, MySQL), Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to utilize Microsoft
VSS and application-aware processing for this VM. To process such VMs, you can use VMware Tools
quiescence with pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts. For more information, see VMware Tools Quiescence
and Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication deploys the non-persistent runtime components or, if necessary, persistent
agent components on the VM and detects if the VM runs any of the supported applications.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication collects information about applications installed on VMs — this information is
required for VSS-aware restore.
VSS-aware restore is performed when the VM is started after you restore it from the backup or fail over to
a VM replica.
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3. Veeam Backup & Replication prepares applications for VSS-aware restore.
4. Microsoft VSS communicates with applications and freezes I/O activities at a s pecific point in time.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication acts as a VSS requestor and triggers a VM VSS snapshot.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication triggers a VMware vSphere snapshot of the VM.
9. If you have instructed Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate transaction logs,
Veeam Backup & Replication truncates transaction logs on the VM guest OS after the backup or replica are
successfully created.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication installs either non-persistent components or persistent agent components to
the VM guest OS and detects if the VM runs any of the supported applications.
NOTE
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication installs non-persistent components to the VM guest OS, and
uninstalls them after the job completes. You can also install a Linux management agent to the VM
guest OS — in this case, the agent will remain installed on the VM and Veeam Backup & Replication
will use it to access the VM guest OS instead of SSH. For more information, see Persistent Agent
Components.
2. The pgsqlagent agent looks for PostgreSQL instance configuration files. It uses these files to get
information on the PostgreSQL instance settings.
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NOTE
If you keep configuration file in the custom directories, the pgsqlagent agent will use its own
configuration file that is located in the /etc/veeam/VeeamPostgreSQLAgent.xml directory. If
you want to explicitly include or exclude specific configuration files from rescan, you can add the
following commands to the /etc/veeam/VeeamPostgreSQLAgent.xml file.
3. The pgsqlagent agent returns a list of PostgreSQL configuration files to Veeam Backup & Replication.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the PostgreSQL VM guest OS over SSH.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication connects to the PostgreSQL instance, gets a list of databases added to the
instance and information that is necessary for data recovery operations.
6. The pgsqlagent agent sets the PostgreSQL instance to the ready for a backup state. During this state,
PostgreSQL server writes instance logs to WAL files.
7. Agent freezes the VM guest OS and creates a snapshot of the PostgreSQL instance.
8. Veeam Backup & Replication completes a backup of the PostgreSQL instance and resumes stopped
activities on the VM guest OS.
9. Veeam Backup & Replication saves a backup of a PostgreSQL instance to a backup repository.
You can use pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for the following types of jobs:
• Backup job
• Replication job
• VM copy job
Scripts must be created beforehand. You must specify paths to them in the job settings. Script execution
settings can be configured per VM or per container, depending on the objects included in the job.
When the job starts, Veeam Backup & Replication uploads scripts to the VM guest OS and executes them under
the account specified in the Guest OS credentials section of the job settings.
• Scripts for Microsoft Windows VMs are uploaded to \\<vmname>\admin$ over the network or VIX
API/vSphere Web Services, if Veeam Backup & Replication fails to connect to the VM guest OS over the
network. Scripts are executed from the C:\Windows directory.
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• Scripts for Linux VMs are uploaded over SSH or VIX API/vSphere Web Services, if the SSH connection fails.
Scripts are executed from the /tmp directory. If you use Renci or Rebex SSH library, and the Elevate
account privileges automatically check box is selected for the user that you have specified in Guest OS
credentials, the scripts will first be uploaded to the /home/<username> and then moved to /tmp.
The default time period for script execution is 10 minutes. If the script fails to execute before the timeout
expires, Veeam Backup & Replication displays an error message in the job session and error or warning messages
issued during script execution.
• For Microsoft Windows VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication supports scripts in the EXE, BAT, CMD, WSF, JS,
VBS and PS1 file format.
• For Linux VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication supports scripts in the SH file format.
• You cannot stop a job when the pre-freeze or post-thaw script is executed. If the script hangs up,
Veeam Backup & Replication waits for 10 minutes and terminates the job.
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• If you want to run several scripts that depend on each other, you must upload them to the VM guest OS
manually. For example, you have script1.bat that sequentially starts script2.bat, script3.bat and
script4.bat. In this case, you must specify a path to script1.bat in the job properties and upload script2.bat,
script3.bat and script4.bat to the VM guest OS.
• You must not use the standard error (STDERR) stream for error output in Linux scripts. Scripts with
STDERR cause failures in Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Truncate logs
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Truncate Logs
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate logs after a backup or VM replica is successfully
created. With this option selected, Veeam Backup & Replication behaves in the following way:
• If the job completes successfully, Veeam Backup & Replication produces a backup file or VM replica and
truncates transaction logs on the original VM. As a result, you have the backup file or replica that contains
a VM image at a specific point in time.
In this scenario, you can recover a database to the point in time when the backup file or replica was
created. As transaction logs on the VM are truncated, you cannot use them to get the restored database to
some point in time between job sessions.
• If the backup or replication job fails, Veeam Backup & Replication does not truncate transaction logs on
the VM. In this scenario, you can restore a VM from the most recent backup or replica restore point and
use database system tools to apply transaction logs and get the database system to the necessary point in
time after the restore point.
For example, you can use Veeam Backup & Replication to create a VM image backup and instruct the native
Microsoft SQL Server log backup job to back up transaction logs. If you truncate transaction logs with
Veeam Backup & Replication, the chain of transaction logs will be broken, and the Microsoft SQL Server log
backup job will not be able to produce a consistent log backup.
With this option selected, Veeam Backup & Replication produces a backup file or VM replica and does not trigger
transaction log truncation. As a result, you have a backup file or VM replica that contains a VM image captured
at a specific point in time, and transaction logs on the VM. You can use transaction logs to restore the VM to any
point in time between job sessions. To do this, you must recover the VM from the backup file or perform replica
failover and use database system tools to apply transaction logs and get the database system to the necessary
point in time.
You can choose to back up logs with Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Microsoft SQL
Server Logs Backup and Oracle Logs Backup.
For more information and recommendations on Microsoft Exchange Server backup, you can also refer to this
Veeam KB article.
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Copy-Only Backup
Some organizations prefer to back up Microsoft SQL Server databases and transaction logs with native Microsoft
SQL Server tools or 3rd party backup tools. To restore database systems in a proper way, database
administrators must be sure that they have database backups and a sequence of transaction log backups
associated with these backups at hand.
If you use native Microsoft SQL Server tools or 3rd party backup tools and also want to back up Microsoft SQL
Server VMs with Veeam Backup & Replication, you must enable the P erform copy only option in the job settings.
The P erform copy only option indicates that a chain of database backups is created with native Microsoft SQL
Server means or by a 3rd party tool, and instructs Veeam to preserve this chain (backup history).
Veeam Backup & Replication backs up the Microsoft SQL Server VM using the VSS_BS_COPY method for snapshot
creation. The VSS_BT_COPY method produces a copy-only backup — the backup that is independent of the
existing chain of database backups and does not contain transaction logs data. As a result, the copy -only backup
does not change the log sequence number and transaction log backup time.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication does not truncate transaction logs after copy-only backup. For this reason, if
you instruct the backup job to perform copy-only backup, you cannot specify transaction log handing
settings for this job.
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VM Guest OS File Indexing
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to create an index of files and folders on the VM guest OS during
backup. VM guest OS file indexing allows you to search for VM guest OS files inside VM backups and perform 1-
click restore in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager.
VM guest OS file indexing is enabled at the job level. You can specify granular indexing settings for every VM in
the job.
NOTE
VM guest OS file indexing is optional. If you do not enable this option in the backup job settings, you will
still be able to perform 1-click restore from the backup created with such backup job. For more
information, see the Preparing for File Browsing and Searching section in the Enterprise Manager User
Guide.
Note, however, that if you do not enable indexing in the backup job, during 1-click restore from Linux and
other OS backups, Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager will not display symlinks to folders in the file system
browser.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports file indexing for VMs running Microsoft Windows and Linux OS.
• [For Linux VMs] To perform guest OS file indexing, Veeam Backup & Replication requires several utilities
to be installed on the Linux VM: openssh, mlocate, gzip and tar. If these utilities are not found,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to deploy them on the VM guest OS.
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Veeam Backup Catalog
For VM guest OS file indexing, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Veeam Guest Catalog Service. In the
backup infrastructure, the Veeam Guest Catalog Service is installed on the Veeam backup server and Veeam
Backup Enterprise Manager server.
• The Veeam Guest Catalog Service on the Veeam backup server works as a local catalog service. It col lects
indexing data for backup jobs and stores this data in the Veeam Backup Catalog folder.
By default, the indexing data is stored in the VBRCatalog folder on the backup server.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates the folder on a volume with the maximum a mount of free space, for
example, C:\VBRCatalog.
• The Veeam Guest Catalog Service on Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager works as a global, federal catalog
service. It communicates with Veeam Guest Catalog Services on backup servers connected to Veeam
Backup Enterprise Manager and performs the following tasks:
o Replicates indexing data from backup servers to create a global catalog for the whole backup
infrastructure.
On the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server, the default folder for storing indexing data (the
VBRCatalog folder) is located on a volume with the maximum amount of free space.
o Allows you to search for VM guest OS files in current and archived backup files.
1. When the backup job starts, Veeam Backup & Replication connects to the VM whose file system must be
indexed and deploys non-persistent runtime components or connects to (if necessary, deploys) persistent
agent components inside this VM. These components are responsible for coordinating indexing activities
inside the VM.
2. The non-persistent runtime components or persistent agent components start indexing the VM file
system. The indexing procedure is carried out in parallel with the backup procedure. If indexing takes long,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not wait for the indexing procedure to complete. It will start copying VM
data and continue file indexing inside the VM. If you have enabled application-aware processing for the
VM, Veeam Backup & Replication performs indexing using the VSS snapshot, not the VM guest OS itself.
As a result, the created file index exactly reflects the state of the backed-up VM.
3. When file indexing is complete, the non-persistent runtime components or persistent agent components
collect indexing data and write it to the GuestIndexData.zip file. The GuestIndexData.zip file is stored to a
temporary folder on the backup server.
4. When the backup job completes, Veeam Backup & Replication notifies the local Veeam Guest Catalog
Service, and the service saves indexing data in the Veeam Catalog folder on the backup server.
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5. During the next catalog replication session, the global Veeam Guest Catalog Service replicates data from
the backup server to the Veeam Catalog folder on the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager server.
According to Microsoft limitations, applications cannot be kept frozen longer than for 60 seconds (20 seconds
for Microsoft Exchange). If the Microsoft VSS writer keeps application data frozen longer than this period, a VSS
processing timeout occurs, and Veeam Backup & Replication fails to create a transactionally consistent backup
of the VM. The VSS processing timeout is a common problem for highly tra nsactional applications such as
Microsoft Exchange.
To overcome this limitation, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the persistent VSS snapshots technology for
backup of Microsoft Exchange VMs. If Microsoft Exchange has to be kept frozen for a longer period of time than
the allowed one, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically fails over to the persistent VSS snapshot
mechanism.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication triggers the Microsoft VSS framework to prepare Microsoft Exchange on the
VM for backup.
3. If the Microsoft VSS writer fails to quiesce Microsoft Exchange within the allowed period of time, the
control is passed to the native Veeam VSS writer. The Veeam VSS writer holds the freeze operation for the
necessary amount of time.
4. After Microsoft Exchange data is brought to a consistent state, the control is passed to the Microsoft VSS
provider. The Microsoft VSS framework creates a persistent VSS snapshot for VM disks except the system
VM disk.
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6. After the backup operation is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication triggers Microsoft VSS to remove the
persistent VSS snapshot on the production VM. The persistent VSS snapshot holding consistent
application data inside the created VM backup remains.
During entire VM restore, Veeam Backup & Replication recovers data from the backup and reverts VM disks to
the persistent VSS snapshot inside the backup. As a result, the Microsoft Exchange VM is restored from the
backup in a consistent state without data loss.
• Microsoft Exchange databases and log files are located on a non-system disk of the VM. During backup,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not trigger a persistent VSS snapshot for system VM disks. As a result,
system disks are restored in a crash-consistent, not transactionally consistent state.
1006 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Microsoft SQL Server Log Backup
To protect Microsoft SQL Server VMs, you can instruct the backup job to create image -level VM backups and
periodically back up database transaction logs. If Microsoft SQL Server fails, you can restore the Microsoft SQL
Server VM from the necessary restore point of the image-level backup. After that, you can use Veeam Explorer
for Microsoft SQL Server to apply transaction logs and get databases on the Microsoft SQL Server to the
necessary state between backups.
• Parent backup job — the backup job that creates an image-level backup of the Microsoft SQL Server VM.
The parent backup job is named <job_name> , for example, DB Backup . You can configure the parent job in
the Veeam Backup & Replication console just like any other backup job.
• Child job — a transaction log backup job. To form a name of the child job, Veeam Backup & Replication
adds a suffix to the name of the parent backup job: <parent_job_name> + SQL Server Transaction Log
Backup , for example, DB Backup SQL Server Transaction Log Backup . Veeam Backup & Replication
automatically creates the child job if it detects a backup job that is scheduled to back up at least one
Microsoft SQL Server VM, and transaction log backup is enabled for this job. Session data of the
transaction log backup job is stored in the configuration database and displayed in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console.
The parent job runs in a regular manner — it starts by schedule or is started manually by the user. The
transaction log backup job is triggered by the parent backup job. This sequence ensures that the VM (and the
database) restore point is present when it comes to transaction log replay.
The transaction log backup session starts and stops in the following way:
• The initial session starts when the parent backup job schedule is enabled. After that, the session starts
with every new session of the parent backup job.
• The session ends before the next session of the parent backup job or when this parent backup job is
disabled.
• When the session ends, Veeam Backup & Replication stops the non-persistent runtime components and
uninstalls them from the VM guest OS. When a new session starts, the runtime components are deployed
again.
This component runs during the transaction log backup job session and checks the following details:
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• Verifies that it is possible to ship logs directly to the backup repository. If it is not possible,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the log shipping server.
When the transaction log backup job session ends, the component is stopped and removed from the VM guest
OS. When a new session starts, the component is installed on the VM guest OS again.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication launches the parent backup job by schedule.
2. The parent backup job creates an image-level backup of a Microsoft SQL Server VM and stores it in a
backup repository.
3. A new session of the transaction log backup starts. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the VM (directly
or through the guest interaction proxy) and installs the runtime components for guest processing,
database information collection and transaction log handing on the VM gues t OS.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication detects what databases currently exist on the Microsoft SQL Server and maps
this data with the information kept in the configuration database. This periodic mapping reveals the
databases for which Veeam Backup & Replication must process transaction logs during this time interval.
The runtime component backs up transaction log files and stores them as a *.bak file to a temporary folder
on the VM guest file system.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication transports transaction log backup copies from the temporary folder on the
Microsoft SQL Server VM to the backup repository, either directly or through the log shipping server, and
saves them as VLB files. As soon as copies of transaction log backups are saved to the backup repositor y,
transaction log backups in the temporary folder on the Microsoft SQL Server VM are removed.
The session of the transaction log backup job remains working until the next start of the parent backup job.
When a new session of the parent job starts, the transaction log backup job stops the current session and then
starts a new session, performing steps 1-5.
Transaction logs that for some reason were not processed during the log backup interval remain in the
temporary folder and are processed during the next log backup interval. To detect these remaining logs,
Veeam Backup & Replication enumerates log files in the temporary folder.
NOTE
Backup of Windows Server Failover clusters is not supported, use Veeam Agent managed by Veeam Backup
& Replication instead.
NOTE
If a new session of the transaction log backup starts and the parent backup job has not created a new
restore point yet, the transaction log backup job will remain in the idle state, waiting for a new restore
point to be created.
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Retention for Transaction Log Backups
Transaction log backups are stored in files of the proprietary Veeam format — VLB. Veeam Backup & Replication
keeps transaction log backups together with the VM image-level backup. The target location of VLB files
depend on the type of the backup repository:
• If you store the VM image-level backup in a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication writes
transaction log backups to the same folder where files of the image-level backup reside.
• If you store the VM image-level backup in a scale-out backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication
writes transaction log backups to the extent where the latest incremental backup file of the VM image -
level backup is stored.
Veeam Backup & Replication removes transaction log backups by retention. You can choose one of the following
retention methods:
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This method allows you to have both the image-level backup and necessary transaction log backups at hand. If
you need to recover a database to some state, you can restore the Microsoft SQL Database from the necessary
restore point and perform transaction log replay to bring the database to the desired state.
If you select this retention method, you must make sure that retention policies for the image-level backup and
transaction log backup are consistent. The restore point of the image-level backup must always be preserved. If
a backup of the database itself is missing, you will not be able to perform transaction log replay.
Related Topics
Microsoft SQL Server Transaction Log Settings
• If it is possible to establish a direct connection between the VM guest OS and backup repository, log files
will be shipped directly from the VM guest OS to the backup repository. This is the optimal method, as it
does not involve additional resources and puts less load on the VM guest OS.
• Otherwise, files will be shipped through log shipping servers. You can instruct
Veeam Backup & Replication to choose a log shipping server automatically from the list of available ones,
or to use a specific server.
Note that if direct connection is possible, files will be always transferred from VM guest to repository
directly (regardless of the configured log shipping server, as this server will not be involved). This
approach helps to optimize performance at file transfer.
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A log shipping server is a Microsoft Windows server added to the backup infrastructure. You can explicitly define
what servers you want to use for log shipping or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically choose
an optimal log shipping server. Veeam Backup & Replication chooses the log shipping server based on two
criteria: possible data transfer methods and location of the Microsoft SQL Server VMs and log shipping server.
• Over the network. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication obtains files from the VM guest OS and
transfers them over the network.
To offload the VM guest OS, logs are created one by one (not simultaneously). One log creation request is
issued for every DB.
• Using VIX API/vSphere Web Services. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication obtains transaction
logs from the VM guest OS over the VIX API/vSphere Web Services, bypas sing the network. For each
Microsoft SQL Server instance one log creation request is created for all DBs (grouped by instance).
1. Log shipping server is located on the same ESXi host as the Microsoft SQL Server VM.
2. Log shipping server and Microsoft SQL Server VM are located in the same network.
3. Log shipping server and Microsoft SQL Server VM are located in different networks (the production
infrastructure is isolated from the backup infrastructure).
That is, when choosing a log shipping server, Veeam Backup & Replication will give the top priority to a
Microsoft Windows VM that is located on the same ESXi host as the Microsoft SQL Server VM and that has a
network connection to the Microsoft SQL Server VM.
Log shipping servers are assigned per job session. When a new job session starts, Veeam Backup & Replication
detects log shipping servers anew. Veeam Backup & Replication can also re-detect available servers during the
job session. If a log shipping server becomes unavailable for some reason, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail
over to another log shipping server.
IMP ORTANT
If you do not want to use some servers for transaction logs transport, you can manually define what server
Veeam Backup & Replication must use as a log shipping server in the job settings. It is recommended that
you assign the log shipping server role to a number of servers for availability purposes.
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Transaction Log Backup Statistics
You can view the statistics of the transaction log backup job in the History view or in the Home view in
Veeam Backup & Replication.
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In the statistics window, you can examine the overall statistics for the transaction log backup job, as well as
view per-VM information.
In the upper part of the statistics window, Veeam Backup & Replication displays information about the
transaction log backup job for all VMs included in the parent backup job.
The La st period (all VMs) section contains statistics data for the selected session of the backup job.
• Protected — number of databases that were backed up at least once during the last session
• Unprotected — number of databases that failed to be backed up during the last session
• Excluded — databases excluded from processing. Databases may be excluded for the following reasons:
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o The database was deleted after the latest full backup.
o The database was excluded from application-aware processing. For details, see this Veeam KB article.
o The database was excluded from SQL log backup processing. For details, see this Veeam KB article.
o The database belongs to vCenter Server. For details, see this Veeam KB article.
NOTE
Unprotected databases do not comprise Excluded databases, as they have different reasons for being non-
processed.
• SLA value — how many log backup intervals completed in time with successful log backup (calculated as
percentage of total number of intervals).
• Max delay — difference between the configured log backup interval and time actually required for log
backup. If exceeded, a warning is issued.
In the Sta tus column, the following information is displayed (per job): number of VMs processed successfully,
with warnings or with errors.
The La test session section displays the following information for the latest log processing interval for the
selected VM:
• Duration — duration of log shipment from the VM guest OS to the backup repository since the current log
processing interval has started
• Bottleneck — operation with the greatest duration in the last completed interval. The operation may have
the following bottlenecks:
The La st period section displays the following statistics of log backups per VM for the latest session of the
transaction log backup job:
• The RP O column displays statistics on log processing interval (calculated as described above)
• The Sessions column includes statistics of log backups per VM, calculated as follows:
o Success — number of intervals when all database logs were backed up successfully
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o Warning — number of sequential intervals with failed log processing (if not more than 4 intervals in a
sequence)
o Errors — number of sequential intervals with failed log processing (more than 4 intervals in a
sequence)
o Average — average duration of log data transfer (through all intervals in the session)
o Max — maximal duration of log data transfer (through all intervals in the session)
o Sync interval — duration of periodic intervals specified for log backup in the parent job settings
(default is 15 min)
o Average — average amount of data read from the VM guest OS through all intervals
o Max — maximal amount of data read from the VM guest OS over all 15-min intervals
NOTE
• Statistics on transaction log processing is updated periodically, simultaneously for the parent
backup job and transaction log backup job.
• For Always On Availability groups, Veeam Backup & Replication collects logs only from one node.
Thus, in reports, the status of database replicas will be the same for all nodes (Protected or
Excluded).
Log Files
At each start of the SQL Server backup job (parent), a new .VLB is created to store log backups in the repository:
• If the Use p er-machine backup f iles option is selected for the repository, then Veeam Backup & Replication
will create a separate .VLB for each server processed by the job.
• If this option is cleared, then a single .VLB will be created for all servers processed by the job.
For example, if a job processes only one SQL Server, the repository will contain a number of .VLB files for it (a
so-called chain).
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As described in the section above, during database log backup (child) job session, transaction log backup is
performed by native means of the SQL Server and stored as .BAK file to a temporary folder in the SQL Server VM
guest file system. Then Veeam Backup & Replication copies .BAK file to the current .VLB in the repository. When
the new parent job session starts, another .VLB is created, and the .BAK files that appear after that will be
stored there during the child job session. The resulting chain of .VLBs will look like shown below, depicted for a
single SQL Server VM1:
Total number of all LOG<N>.BAK files stored at the moment in all VLBs is reported as a numb er of restore
p oints for the child job that backs up database logs. So, in the example above, the log backup job for SQL Server
VM1 has created 8 restore points by the moment.
In the Veeam Backup & Replication console this number of restore points for the log backup job can be seen in
the Restore Points column of the preview pane.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following Always On Availability Groups:
Veeam Backup & Replication does not support Always On Availability Groups based on SQL Server Failover
Cluster Instances.
Veeam Backup & Replication also detects to what cluster the database belongs. If the backup job does not
include all VMs from the cluster, an information message will be issued.
1016 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Transaction Log Backup
Transaction log backup can be performed only for those databases that were successfully backed up, either on
the primary or on the secondary node of Always On Availability Group.
The transaction logs processing interval may be the same or may differ through VMs included in Always On
Availability Group. If the interval is different, Veeam Backup & Replication will use minimal value (by default, 15
minutes).
At each log processing interval, Veeam Backup & Replication chooses the Always On Availability Group node for
which transaction logs will be backed up.
Logs are backed up from one node of the Always On Availability Group. To become a subject for a log backup,
the node must meet the following criteria:
• The necessary Veeam Backup & Replication components must be installed on this node and the VM
included in Always On Availability Group must be running. For more information on the necessary
components, see How Microsoft SQL Server Log Backup Works.
• The database backup preferences settings must allow a backup of the node that you want to process. For
example, if you want to back up the primary node, you must not exclude this node from a backup, or
select the Secondary only option in the database backup preferences settings.
• Databases in the Always On Availability Groups for this node were successfully backed up for the last two
processing intervals.
• Veeam Backup & Replication can establish a network connection to the node or VIX connection, if a
connection over the network cannot be established
NOTE
When you configure a backup job to process Distributed Availability Groups transaction logs, select either
primary or secondary distributed availability group. Otherwise, the log chain of the distributed group
databases might become inconsistent.
When you configure a backup job to back up transaction logs for other Distributed Availability Groups, use
the Perform copy only mode. See Application-Aware Processing to learn more about the copy only mode.
You can also use the exclude feature to prevent Guest-OS database from being processed. See Exclude
Objects from Backup Job to learn more on excluding objects. To read about distributed availability group
limitations, see Configure distributed availability group.
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Oracle Log Backup
Veeam Backup & Replication supports backup of Oracle database archived logs and restore of Oracle databases.
Database archived logs are created by the Oracle system. The Oracle database can run in one of the following
logging modes:
• ARCHIVELOG turned on — logs are saved and can be used for recovery purposes.
• ARCHIVELOG turned off — no logs are saved. This mode is not recommended as it does not provide proper
disaster recovery.
With ARCHIVELOG turned on, the Oracle system stores database archived logs to a certain location on the VM
guest OS, as specified by the database administrator. Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to set up the
following ways of log handling:
• Instruct the backup job to collect log files from the Oracle VM and ship them to the backup repository
where they are stored next to image-level backups of the Oracle VM.
• Skip log processing — log files remain untouched on the Oracle VM and are preserved within the image -
level backup.
If you enable application-aware processing for an Oracle VM, during the job session Veeam Backup & Replication
installs non-persistent runtime components or uses (if necessary, installs) persistent agent components on this
VM to collect information about the database and process archived logs according to job settings. Application-
specific settings are configured at the Guest Processing step of the backup job wizard — you can specify how
logs should be backed up and\or deleted for Oracle databases.
• Automatic Storage Management (ASM) is supported for Oracle Database 11 and later.
• Oracle Database Express Edition (XE) are supported if running on Microsoft Windows machines only.
• Parent backup job — the backup job that creates an image-level backup of the Oracle VM. The parent
backup job is named <job_name> , for example, Daily Job . You can configure the parent job in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console just like any other backup job.
• Child job — an archived log backup job. To form a name of the child job, Veeam Backup & Replication adds
a suffix to the name of the parent backup job: <parent_job_name> + Oracle Redo Log Backup , for example,
Daily Job Oracle Redo Log Backup . Veeam Backup & Replication automatically creates the child job if it
detects a backup job that is scheduled to back up at least one Oracle VM, and archived log backup is
enabled for this job. Session data of the archived log backup job is stored in the configuration database
and displayed in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
The parent job runs in a regular manner — it starts by schedule or is started manually by the user. The archived
log backup job is triggered by the parent backup job. This sequence ensures that the VM (and the database)
restore point is present when you need to use archived logs to restore the database.
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Sessions of Archived Log Backup Jobs
The archived log backup job runs permanently in the background, shipping archived logs to the backup
repository at a specific time interval (by default, every 15 minutes). A sequence of time intervals between
sessions of the parent backup job makes up a session of the archived log backup job.
The archived log backup session starts and stops in the following way:
• The initial session starts when the parent backup job schedule is enabled. After that, the session starts
with every new session of the parent backup job.
• The session ends before the next session of the parent backup job or when this parent backup job is
disabled.
• When the session ends, Veeam Backup & Replication stops the non-persistent runtime components and
uninstalls them from the VM guest OS. When a new session starts, the runtime components are deployed
again.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication launches the parent backup job by schedule.
2. The parent backup job creates an image-level backup of the Oracle VM and stores this backup to the
backup repository.
3. A new session of the archived log backup starts. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the VM guest OS to
perform guest processing, collect database information and handle archived log.
If Oracle runs on a Microsoft Windows server, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the VM guest OS over
a guest interaction proxy. You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to select the guest interaction
proxy automatically or assign it explicitly.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the VM guest OS over the network:
If a network connection cannot be established, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the VM guest OS
over VIX API/vSphere Web Services.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication deploys the non-persistent runtime components or uses (if necessary,
deploys) persistent agent components in the VM guest OS. The components scan the Oracle system and
collect information about databases whose logs must be processed, including:
o Paths to all database files (configuration logs and so on) and other data required for backup
Veeam Backup & Replication also detects whether it is possible to store logs to the backup repository
through a direct access or a log shipping server is required.
The non-persistent runtime components or persistent agent components copy archived log files from the
log archive destination (set by the Oracle administrator) to a temporary folder on the VM guest file
system.
1019 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
5. Veeam Backup & Replication maps information about the Oracle system collected at step 4 with
information kept in the configuration database. This periodic mapping helps reveal databases for which
Veeam Backup & Replication must ship archived logs to the backup repository during this time interval.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers archived log backup files from the temporary location on the Oracle
VM to the backup repository and saves them as VLB files. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers logs
either directly or through the log shipping server. The source-side Veeam Data Mover compresses log data
to be transferred according to its built-in settings. On the backup repository side, data is compressed
according to the parent backup job settings.
Archived logs that for some reason were not processed during the log backup interval remain in the temporary
folder and are processed during the next log backup interval. To detect these remaining logs,
Veeam Backup & Replication enumerates log files in the temporary folder.
NOTE
If a new session of the archived log backup starts and the parent backup job has not created a new restore
point yet, the archived log backup job will remain in the idle state, waiting for a new restore point to be
created.
IMP ORTANT
Before backup, Veeam Backup & Replication shuts down databases in the NOARCHIVELOG mode. For
details, see the Backing Up a Database in NOARCHIVELOG Mode section in the Oracle Database Backup and
Recovery User Guide.
• If you store the VM image-level backup in a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication writes
archived log backups to the same folder where files of the image-level backup reside.
• If you store the VM image-level backup in a scale-out backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication
writes archived log backups to the extent where the latest incremental backup file of the VM image -level
backup is stored.
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Veeam Backup & Replication removes archived log backups by retention. You can choose one of the following
retention methods:
This method allows you to have both the image-level backup and necessary archived log backups at hand. If you
need to recover a database to some state, you can restore the Oracle VM from the necessary restore point and
use archived logs to bring the database to the desired state.
If you select this retention method, you must make sure that retention policies for the image-level backup and
archived log backup are consistent. The restore point of the image-level backup must always be preserved. If a
backup of the database itself is missing, you will not be able to use archived logs.
1021 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Log Shipping Servers
For every Oracle VM whose archived logs you want to back up, Veeam Backup & Replication defines how to ship
logs to the backup repository. Archived logs can be transported in the following ways:
• Directly from the VM guest OS to the backup repository. This method is recommended — it does not
involve additional resources and puts less load on the VM guest OS.
• Via log shipping servers. If it is not possible to establish a direct connection between the VM guest OS and
backup repository, you can configure Veeam Backup & Replication to use a log shipping server.
A log shipping server is a Microsoft Windows server added to the backup infrastructure. You can explicitly define
what servers you want to use for log shipping or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically choose
an optimal log shipping server. Veeam Backup & Replication chooses the log shipping server based on two
criteria: possible data transfer methods and location of the Oracle VM and log shipping server.
• Over the network. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication obtains files from the VM guest OS and
transfers them over the network.
• Over VIX API/vSphere Web Services. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication obtains archived logs
from the VM guest OS over the VIX API/vSphere Web Services, bypassing the network.
1. Log shipping server is located on the same ESXi host as the Oracle VM.
2. Log shipping server and Oracle VM are located in the same network.
3. Log shipping server and Oracle VM are located in different networks (the production infrastructure is
isolated from the backup infrastructure).
That is, when choosing a log shipping server, Veeam Backup & Replication will give the top priority to a VM that
is located on the same ESXi host as the Oracle VM and that has a network connection to the Oracle VM
Log shipping servers are assigned per job session. When a new job session starts, Veeam Backup & Replication
detects log shipping servers anew. Veeam Backup & Replication can also re-detect available servers during the
job session. If a log shipping server becomes unavailable for some reason, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail
over to another log shipping server.
IMP ORTANT
If you do not want to use some servers for archived logs transport, you can manually define what server
Veeam Backup & Replication must use as a log shipping server in the job settings. It is recommended that
you assign the log shipping server role to a number of servers for availability purposes.
1022 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Archived Log Backup Statistics
You can view the statistics of the archived log backup job in the History view or in the Home view
in Veeam Backup & Replication.
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In the statistics window, you can examine the overall statistics for the archived log backup job, as well as view
per-VM information.
In the upper part of the statistics window, Veeam Backup & Replication displays information about the log
backup job for all VMs included in the parent backup job.
The La st period (all VMs) section contains statistics data for the selected session of the backup job.
• Protected — number of databases that were backed up at least once during the last session
• Unprotected — number of databases that failed to be backed up during the last session
• Excluded — databases excluded from processing. Databases may be excluded for the following reasons:
ARCHIVELOG mode is turned off for the database (the database is in NOARCHIVELOG mode), database
was deleted after the latest full backup, or database was added to the list of exclusions.
1024 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
NOTE
Unprotected databases do not comprise E x cluded databases, as they have different reasons for being non-
processed. See also this Veeam KB article for information on processing databases in NOARCHIVE mode.
• SLA — how many log backup intervals completed in time with successful log backup (calculated as
percentage of total number of intervals).
• Misses — how many intervals failed to complete in time with successful log backup (number of intervals).
• Max delay — difference between the configured log backup interval and time actually required for log
backup. If exceeded, a warning is issued.
In the Sta tus column, the following information is displayed (per job): number of VMs processed successfully,
with warnings or with errors.
The La test session section displays the following information for the latest log processing interval for the
selected VM:
• Duration — duration of log shipment from the VM guest OS to the backup repository since the current log
processing interval has started
• Bottleneck — operation with the greatest duration in the last completed interval. The operation may have
the following bottlenecks:
Log backup Saving archived log files to a temporary location on VM guest OS (to work around, see
the Veeam KB article: this Veeam KB article)
• The RP O column displays statistics on log processing interval (calculated as described above)
• The Sessions column includes statistics of log backups per VM, calculated as follows:
o Success — number of intervals when all database logs were backed up successfully
o Warning — number of sequential intervals with failed log processing (if not more than 4 intervals in a
sequence)
o Errors — number of sequential intervals with failed log processing (more than 4 intervals in a
sequence)
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• The Duration column includes the following information:
o Average — average duration of log data transfer (through all intervals in the session)
o Maximum — maximal duration of log data transfer (through all intervals in the session)
o Sync interval — duration of periodic intervals specified for log backup in the parent job settings
(default is 15 min)
o Average — average amount of data read from the VM guest OS through all intervals
o Maximum — maximal amount of data read from the VM guest OS over all 15-min intervals
The pane below shows all actions performed during the job run. To filter out actions with the certain status, use
the E rrors, W arnings and Success buttons.
NOTE
Statistics on archived log processing is updated periodically, simultaneously for the VM backup job (parent)
and archived log backup job (child job).
Log Files
At each start of the Oracle backup job ('parent'), a new .VLB is created to store log backups in the repository:
• If the Use p er-machine backup files option is selected for the repository, then Veeam will create a
separate .VLB for each server processed by the job.
• If this option is cleared, then a single .VLB will be created for all servers processed by the job.
For example, if a job processes only one Oracle server, the repository will contain a number of .VLB files for it (a
so-called chain).
As described in the section above, during database log backup ('child') job session, log archiving is p erformed by
native means of the Oracle server. Archived logs are stored to a temporary folder on the Oracle VM guest file
system. Then Veeam copies archived log to the current .VLB in the repository. When the new 'parent' job session
starts, another .VLB is created, and the archived log files that appear after that will be stored there during the
'child' job session. The resulting chain of .VLBs will look like shown below, depicted for a single Oracle VM1:
Total number of all archived logs files stored at the moment in all VLBs is reported as a numb er of restore points
for the 'child' job that backs up database logs. So, in the example above, the log backup job for Oracle VM1 has
created 8 restore points by the moment.
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PostgreSQL WAL Files Backup
To protect VMs with PostgreSQL instances, you can instruct the backup job to create image-level VM backups
and periodically back up write ahead log (WAL) files of PostgreSQL instances. Thus, you will create a
transactionally consistent backups of PostgreSQL instances that will contain backups of WAL files. If a
PostgreSQL instance fails, you can restore the VMs with PostgreSQL instances from the necessary restore point
of the image-level backup. After that, you can use Veeam Explorer for PostgreSQL to apply WAL files and
recover PostgreSQL instances to the necessary state.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports log backup and restore for PostgreSQL version 12, 13, 14, 15.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports only backup of PostgreSQL instances configured on Linux -based
VMs.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not support backup of PostgreSQL clusters.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not support backup of individual PostgreSQL databases.
• The archive_command parameter must not contain any values in PostgreSQL instances.
• The temporary folder that keeps logs must have enough space.
• To perform guest processing for PostgreSQL instances on Linux servers, make sure that the /tmp directory
is mounted with the exec option. Otherwise, you will get an error with the permission denial.
Related Topics
• WAL Files PostgreSQL Backup Jobs
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To back up WAL files, you must create a backup job, add PostrgreSQL VM to it and specify advanced settings for
WAL files in the job settings. The resulting job will consist of two jobs:
• Parent backup job — the job that creates an image-level backup of PostrgreSQL VMs. You specify a parent
backup job name when you define settings for a backup job, for example, Daily DB Job . For more
information. see Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description. For more information on how image-level
backup of PostrgreSQL VMs works, see Application-Aware Processing.
• Child job — the job that creates a backup of WAL files. To form a name of the child job,
Veeam Backup & Replication adds a suffix to the name of the parent backup job: <parent_job_name> +
PostrgreSQL Archive Log Backup , for example, Daily Job PostrgreSQL Archive Log Backup . When
Veeam Backup & Replication detects a backup job that contains at least one PostrgreSQL VM, it
automatically creates the child job to back up WAL files. Veeam Backup & Replication keeps ssession data
of the child job in the configuration database and displays it in the console. For more information on how
the job creates a backup of WAL files, see How PostgreSQL WAL Files Backup Works.
The parent job runs in a regular manner — it starts by schedule or is started manually by the user. The child job is
triggered by the parent backup job. This sequence ensures that the VM (and the instances) restore point is
present when you need to use WAL files to restore the database.
The child backup session starts and stops in the following way:
• The initial session starts when the parent backup job schedule is enabled. After that, the session starts
with every new session of the parent backup job.
• The session ends before the next session of the parent backup job or when this pare nt backup job is
disabled.
• When the session ends, Veeam Backup & Replication stops the non-persistent runtime components and
uninstalls them from the VM guest OS. When a new session starts, the runtime components are deployed
again.
To back up WAL files, you must enable application-aware processing for PostgreSQL VMs. After this, during the
job session Veeam Backup & Replication installs non-persistent runtime components or uses (if necessary,
installs) persistent agent components on this VM to collect information about the instance and process WAL
files according to job settings. For more information on how to configure application-specific settings for
PostgreSQL WAL files backup, see PostgreSQL WAL Files Settings step of the backup job wizard — you can
specify how logs should be backed up and\or deleted for PostgreSQL instances.
The WAL files backup for PostgreSQL VMs is performed in the following way:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication launches the parent backup job by schedule.
2. The parent backup job creates an image-level backup of the PostgreSQL VM and stores this backup to the
backup repository.
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3. A child job starts to back up WALs: Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the PostgreSQL VM guest OS
over SSH. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication installs non-persistent components to the VM guest
OS, and Veeam Backup & Replication will uninstall them after the job completes. You can also install a
Linux management agent to the VM guest OS — in this case, the agent will remain installed on the VM and
Veeam Backup & Replication will use it to access the VM guest OS. For more information, see Persistent
Agent Components.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication scans the PostgreSQL system and gets information that is necessary to back
up backup and restore a PostgreSQL instance.
o The instance state — if the instance is on or off, in which logging mode it runs.
o Paths to all Instance files (configuration logs and so on) and other data required for backup.
4. The non-persistent runtime components or persistent agent components copy WALs from the log archive
destination (set by the PostgreSQL administrator) to a temporary directory on the VM guest f ile system.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication maps information about the PostgreSQL system collected at the step 4 with
information kept in the configuration database. This periodic mapping helps to reveal instances for which
Veeam Backup & Replication must ship WALs to the backup repository during this time interval.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers WALs from the temporary location on the PostgreSQL VM to the
backup repository and saves them as VLB files. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers WALs either directly
or through the log shipping server. The source-side Veeam Data Mover compresses log data to be
transferred according to its built-in settings. On the backup repository side, data is compressed according
to the parent backup job settings.
7. Veeam Backup & Replication deletes WALs from the temporary directory on the VM guest file system.
IMP ORTANT
• Veeam Backup & Replication removes from a temporary folder only backed -up WALs. The
WALs that were not backed up during the log backup interval remain in the temporary folder.
Veeam Backup & Replication will process these logs during the next log backup interval.
• If a new session of the WALs backup starts and the parent backup job has not created a new
restore point yet, the WALs backup job will remain in the idle state, waiting for a new restore
point to be created.
The target location where Veeam Backup & Replication keeps .VLB files depends on the type of repository
where you store VM image-level backup files:
• If it is the backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication writes WAL files to the same folder where the
VM image-level backup files reside.
• If it is the scale-out backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication writes WAL files to the extent where
the latest incremental backup file of the VM image-level backup resides.
Note that Veeam Backup & Replication does not store .VLB files in capacity or archive extents added to
the scale-out backup repository.
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Veeam Backup & Replication removes WAL files by retention. You can choose one of the following retention
methods:
NOTE
If you configure a long-term retention, Veeam Backup & Replication will retains WAL files according to the
short-term retention policy and will delete them after the short-term retention is exceeded.
This method allows you to have both the image-level backup and necessary WAL files at hand. If you need to
recover a PostgreSQL instance to a specific state, you can restore the PostgreSQL VM from the necessary restore
point and use WAL files to bring the database to the necessary state.
If you select this retention method, you must make sure that retention policies for the image -level backup and
archived log backup are consistent. The restore point of the image-level backup must always be preserved. If a
backup of the PostgreSQL instance itself is missing, you will not be able to use WAL files for recovery.
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WAL Files
At each start of the parent PostgreSQL backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new .VLB to store log
backups in the repository:
• If you select the Use p er-machine backup files option for the repository, Veeam Backup & Replication will
create a separate .VLB for each server processed by the job.
• If you do not use the Use per-machine backup files option, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a
single .VLB for all servers processed by the job.
For example, if a job processes only one PostgreSQL server, the repository will contain a number of .VLB files for
it (a so-called chain).
Veeam Backup & Replication comprises native means of the PostgreSQL server to archive WAL files. During the
WAL files backup job, PostgreSQL server stores the files in a temporary folder on the PostgreSQL VM guest file
system. After the parent backup job completes, Veeam Backup & Replication copies WAL files to .VLB and stores
them in a backup repository. When a new WAL files job session starts, PostgreSQL server creates new WAL files
and keep them in the temporary folder. As a result, for a single PostgreSQL VM the job creates a chain of .VLBs
that are located in a backup repository together with .VBK and .VIB files. A total number of all WAL files stored
in .VLB sets a number of restore points. A single .VLB file can have several WAL files, and, therefore, several
restore points. For example. 1 .VLB can have 10 restore points.
• Directly from the VM guest OS to the backup repository. This method is recommended — it does not
involve additional resources and puts less load on the VM guest OS.
• Via log shipping servers. If it is not possible to establish a direct connection between the VM guest OS and
backup repository, you can configure Veeam Backup & Replication to use a log shipping server.
A log shipping server is a Linux server added to the backup infrastructure. You can explicitly define w hat servers
you want to use for log shipping or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically choose an optimal log
shipping server. Depending on the possible data transfer methods and location of the PostgreSQL VM and the
log shipping server, Veeam Backup & Replication chooses the log shipping server.
• Over the network. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication obtains files from the VM guest OS and
transfers them over the network. This is a default method that uses log shipping servers.
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• Over VIX API/vSphere Web Services. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication obtains WAL files from
the VM guest OS over the VIX API/vSphere Web Services, bypassing the network.
1. The log shipping server is located on the same ESXi host as the PostgreSQL VM.
2. The log shipping server and PostgreSQL VM are located in the same network.
3. The log shipping server and PostgreSQL VM are located in different networks (the production
infrastructure is isolated from the backup infrastructure).
That is, when choosing a log shipping server, Veeam Backup & Replication will give the top priority to a VM that
is located on the same ESXi host as the PostgreSQL VM and that has a network connection to the PostgreSQL
VM
Veeam Backup & Replication assigns log shipping servers per job session. When a new job session starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication detects a new log shipping servers. Veeam Backup & Replication can also re-detect
available servers during the job session. If the log shipping server becomes unavailable for some reason,
Veeam Backup & Replication will fail over to another log shipping server.
IMP ORTANT
If you do not want to use some servers for WAL files transport, you can manually define what server
Veeam Backup & Replication must use as a log shipping server in the job settings. It is recommended that
you assign the log shipping server role to a number of servers for availability purposes.
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WAL Files Backup Statistics
You can view the statistics of the WAL files backup job in the History view or in the Home view
in Veeam Backup & Replication.
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In the statistics window, you can examine the overall statistics for WAL files, as well as view per -VM
information.
In the upper part of the statistics window, Veeam Backup & Replication displays information about the WAL files
backup job for all VMs included in the parent backup job.
The La st period (all VMs) section contains statistics data for the selected session of the backup job.
• Protected — number of instances that were backed up at least once during the last session
• Excluded — instances excluded from processing. Instances may be excluded for the following reasons:
ARCHIVELOG mode is turned off for the database (the database is in NOARCHIVELOG mode), database
was deleted after the latest full backup, or database was added to the list of exclusions.
NOTE
Unprotected instances do not comprise E x cluded instances, as they have different reasons for being non-
processed. See also this Veeam KB article for information on processing instances in NOARCHIVE mode.
• SLA — how many log backup intervals completed in time with successful log backup (calculated as
percentage of total number of intervals).
• Misses — how many intervals failed to complete in time with successful log backup (number of intervals).
• Max delay — difference between the configured log backup interval and time actually required for log
backup. If exceeded, a warning is issued.
In the Sta tus column, the following information is displayed (per job): number of VMs processed successfully,
with warnings or with errors.
The La test session section displays the following information for the latest log processing interval for the
selected VM:
• Duration — duration of log shipment from the VM guest OS to the backup repository since the current log
processing interval has started
• Bottleneck — operation with the greatest duration in the last completed interval. The operation may have
the following bottlenecks:
Log backup Saving archived log files to a temporary location on VM guest OS (to work around, see
the Veeam KB article: this Veeam KB article)
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The La st period section displays the following statistics of log backups per VM for the latest session of the log
backup job:
• The RP O column displays statistics on log processing interval (calculated as described above)
• The Sessions column includes statistics of log backups per VM, calculated as follows:
o Success — number of intervals when all database logs were backed up successfully
o Warning — number of sequential intervals with failed log processing (if not more than 4 intervals in a
sequence)
o Errors — number of sequential intervals with failed log processing (more than 4 intervals in a
sequence)
o Average — average duration of log data transfer (through all intervals in the session)
o Maximum — maximal duration of log data transfer (through all intervals in the session)
o Sync interval — duration of periodic intervals specified for log backup in the parent job settings
(default is 15 min)
o Average — average amount of data read from the VM guest OS through all intervals
o Maximum — maximal amount of data read from the VM guest OS over all 15-min intervals
The pane below shows all actions performed during the job run. To filter out actions with the certain status, use
the E rrors, W arnings and Success buttons.
NOTE
Statistics on WAL files processing is updated periodically, simultaneously for the VM backup job (parent)
and WAL files backup job (child job).
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Backup Job Scheduling
You can start backup jobs manually or schedule them to start automatically at specific time.
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you configure the following settings for the job:
• Scheduling settings
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you configure the following scheduling settings for jobs:
• You can schedule jobs to run at specific time every day or on selected days
This type of schedule requires that you define the exact time when the job must be started. For example, you
can configure the job to start daily at 10:00 PM or every first Sunday of the month at 12:00 AM.
For periodically run jobs, reference time is midnight (12:00 AM). Veeam Backup & Replication always starts
counting defined intervals from 12:00 AM, and the first job session will start at 12:00 AM. For example, if you
configure a job to run with a 4-hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00 AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00
PM and so on.
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If necessary, you can specify an offset for periodically run jobs. The offset is an exact time within an hour when
the job must start. For example, you can configure the job to start with a 4-hour interval and specify offset
equal to 15 minutes. In this case, the job will start at 12:15 AM, 4:15 AM, 8:15 AM, 12:15 PM, 4:15 PM and so on.
If a session of a periodically run job does not fit into the specified time interval and overlap s the next planned
job session, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the next backup job session at the nearest scheduled interval.
For example, you set up a job to run with a 4-hour interval. The first job session starts at 12:00 AM, takes 5
hours and completes at 5:00 AM. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will start a new job session at 8:00
AM.
Chained Jobs
In the common practice, data protection jobs configured in the virtual environment start one after another:
when job A finishes, job B starts and so on. You can create a chain of jobs using scheduling settings. To do this,
you must define the start time for the first job in the chain. For other jobs in the chain, you must select the After
this job option and choose the preceding job from the list.
Job chaining is not limited to jobs of specific type only. You can create a chain of jobs of different types. For
example, you can:
2. Configure a SureBackup job and chain with the backup job. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will
automatically verify a backup file created with the backup job after the backup job completes.
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NOTE
• When you start the initial job manually, Veeam Backup & Replication does not start chained jobs in
the Disabled state. If at least one job chained directly to the initial job is in the Enabled state,
Veeam Backup & Replication offers you to start the chained jobs as well. Click Y es to start the whole
job chain or No to start only the first job in the chain.
• If you start the initial job manually and chain another job while the initial job is running, the chained
job will not start when the initial job completes.
• If you schedule active or synthetic full backups for the chained job, but the initial job does not run
on these days, the active and synthetic full backups will not be created for the chained job.
• If a job in the chain fails or is canceled by a user, Veeam Backup & Replication still starts the next
chained jobs. Note that if the failed or canceled job was started by a schedule,
Veeam Backup & Replication will start the chained job only after all job retries.
You should use job chaining wisely. Job chaining removes guesswork from job scheduling but has a number of
drawbacks:
• You cannot predict precisely how much time the initial job will require and when jobs chained to it will
start. Depending on the situation, the job schedule may shift, and some operations may even not be
performed as planned.
o Job 2 is scheduled to start after Job 1 daily. Synthetic full backup is scheduled on Saturday.
Imagine that Job 1 starts on Saturday and runs for 2.5 hours instead of 1 hour. Job 2 will then start after
midnight on Sunday, and the synthetic full backup planned on Saturday will not be created.
• Errors in job sessions may cause the job schedule to shift. For example, if the initial job in the chain fails,
Veeam Backup & Replication will attempt to retry it, and the schedule for chained jobs will s hift.
• Load on backup infrastructure resources may be not balanced. Some slots on backup proxies and backup
repositories may be available but will not be used since jobs are queued to run one by one. And if you use
a backup repository that supports multiple I/O streams, its resources will not be used efficiently.
Instead of job chaining, you can balance the load on backup infrastructure components. To do this, you must
limit the number of concurrent tasks on backup proxies and backup repositories. For more information, see
Limiting the Number of Concurrent Tasks.
Job Retry
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to retry a job several times if the initial job run fails. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically retries a failed job for 3 times within one job session. You can specify
a custom number of retries in the job settings.
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Veeam Backup & Replication launches a retry for a job only if the previous job session failed, and one or several
VMs in the job were not processed. Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform the retry if a job session has
finished with the Success or Warning status. During the job retry, Veeam Backup & Replication processes only
failed VMs.
The way how Veeam Backup & Replication performs the retry differs depending on the backup chain format of
the backup chain.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform automatic retry for jobs that were started or stopped
manually.
During a job retry, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to process failed VMs. If processing of failed VMs
succeeds, Veeam Backup & Replication creates new backup files and writes data of the processed VMs to these
files. If processing fails during all job retries, Veeam Backup & Replication processes the failed VMs during the
next job sessions and writes VM data to the backup files created within the current job session.
For example, you have configured a job for 2 VMs: VM 1 and VM 2. The job uses the forward incremental
method.
During the first job session, Veeam Backup & Replication successfully processes VM 1 and creates a full backup
file for it. VM 2 is not processed during all 3 job retries. On the next job session, Veeam Backup & Replication
attempts to process the VMs. If processing succeeds, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an incremental
backup for VM 1 and a full backup for VM 2. As a result, you have 3 backups:
During a job retry, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to process failed VMs. If processing of failed VMs
succeeds, Veeam Backup & Replication writes data of the processed VMs to the backup file that is created at the
initial job run. If processing fails during all job retries, Veeam Backup & Replication processes the failed VMs
during the next job sessions and writes VM data to the backup file created within the current job session.
For example, you have configured a job for 2 VMs: VM 1 and VM 2. The job uses the forward incremental
method.
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During the first job session, Veeam Backup & Replication successfully processes VM 1 and creates a full backup
file for it. VM 2 is not processed during all 3 job retries. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to
process the failed VM 2 within the next job session. Data for VM 2 is written to the backup file created within
this job session, which is an incremental backup. As a result, you have 2 files:
• Incremental backup file containing a full restore point for VM 2 and an incremental restore point for VM 1.
Backup Window
If necessary, you can specify a backup window for jobs. The backup window is a period of time on week days
when jobs are permitted to run. If the job exceeds the allowed window, Veeam Backup & Replication will
automatically stop this job.
The backup window can be helpful if you do not want data protection jobs to produce unwanted overhead for
the production environment or do not want jobs to overlap production hours. In this case, you can define the
time interval during which the job must not run.
IMP ORTANT
The backup window affects only the data transport process and health check operations. Other
transformation processes can be performed in the target repository outside the backup window. Linked
jobs that process Microsoft SQL transaction logs and Oracle archived logs are not affected by the backup
window settings.
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Backup Window for Periodically Run Jobs
If you define the backup window for a job that runs periodically at specific time intervals,
Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately start the job after the denied window is over. All subsequent
backup job sessions will be performed according to specified scheduling settings.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 4-hour interval with an offset of 15 minutes. The allowed
backup window for the job is 7:00 PM to 8:00 AM. Veeam Backup & Replication will run this job in the following
way:
1. The first job session will start at 12:15 AM (since midnight is a reference time for periodically run jobs).
3. The job session at 8:15 AM will not be performed as it falls into the denied period of the backup window.
4. The next job session will start immediately after the denied period is over: at 7:15 PM.
5. After that, Veeam Backup & Replication will run the job by the defined schedule: at 8:15 PM, 12:15 AM and
so on.
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Manual Start of Backup Jobs
You can start jobs manually if you need to capture VM data at a specific point in time and do not want to re -
configure job scheduling settings. For example, you can start a job to create a VM backup before you install new
software on a VM or enable a new feature.
When you start the job manually, Veeam Backup & Replication runs a regular job session that produces a new
restore point in the backup chain in the backup repository.
To start and stop jobs configured on the backup server, you can use the Sta rt and Stop buttons on the ribbon or
corresponding commands in the shortcut menu.
• You can stop the job immediately. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication terminates the job session
and does not create a new restore point for VMs that are currently processed.
• You can stop the job gracefully. In this scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a restore point for
the VMs that are currently processed and then terminates the job session.
• VMs that Veeam Backup & Replication has succeeded to process by the time you stop the job will have
new restore points.
• VMs that Veeam Backup & Replication is currently processing and VMs that Veeam Backup & Replication
has not started to process will not have new restore points.
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When you stop a job session immediately, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations:
1. If a snapshot for a VM has already been created, Veeam Backup & Replication instructs VMware vSphere to
remove the snapshot.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication terminates all job processes and tasks. The job is finished with the Failed
error.
All restore points created with the previous job sessions remain untouched. You can use them for restore
operations.
• VMs that Veeam Backup & Replication has succeeded to process and VMs that are being processed will
have new restore points.
• VMs that Veeam Backup & Replication has not started to process will not have new restore points.
You can use graceful job stop for the following types of jobs:
• Backup jobs
• VM copy jobs
• Replication jobs
You cannot use graceful job stop for the following types of jobs:
• Quick migration job (during quick migration, Veeam Backup & Replication processes all VMs in one task)
• Restore operations
VMs added to the job are processed in the order defined in job settings. Information about VMs that have
already been processed and VMs that are being processed is displayed in job details.
If you stop the job gracefully before Veeam Backup & Replication starts processing the first VM in the job, the
job will be finished with the Failed error. You will see the message Operation was canceled by user in job details.
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Health Check for Backup Files
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to periodically perform a health check for the latest restore point
in the backup chain. During the health check, Veeam Backup & Replication performs a cyclic redundancy check
(CRC) for metadata and a hash check for VM data blocks in the backup file to verify their integrity. The health
check helps make sure that the restore point is consistent, and you will be able to restore data from this restore
point.
The health check can be performed for all types of backup chains:
• Forward incremental
To run the health check periodically, you must enable the P erform backup files health check option in the
backup job settings and define the health check schedule. By default, the health check is performed on the last
Friday of every month. You can change the schedule and run the health check weekly or monthly on specific
days.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication performs the health check during the first job session on the day when the
health check is scheduled. If another job session runs on the same day, Veeam Backup & Replication will
not perform the health check during this job session. For example, if the job is scheduled to run several
times on Saturday, and the health check is scheduled on Saturday, the health check will be performed
during the first backup job session on Saturday.
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Verification Content
The health check always verifies only the latest restore point in the backup chain. In case of forever forward
incremental and forward incremental backup chains, if the latest restore point is incomplete, the health check
verifies the restore point preceding the latest one.
Note that the health check procedure verifies not the latest backup file in the backup chain, but the lat est
restore point for a VM. The latest restore point corresponds to the state of the VM at the date and time when
the latest backup file for this VM was created. Data blocks that are required to "compose" the VM latest state
are typically spread out across several backup files in the backup chain. Therefore, to verify the latest state of
the VM, Veeam Backup & Replication must open several backup files in the backup chain and read data blocks
from these backup files. For this reason, the health check proced ure may take long.
The health check verifies only those virtual disks of a VM that are available in the latest restore point. For
example, you added a VM with 3 virtual disks to a backup job. The VM was backed up Sunday through Tuesday.
On Wednesday, you removed 1 virtual disk, and Veeam Backup & Replication run the health check for the VM.
During the health check, Veeam Backup & Replication will verify only the 2 remaining virtual disks.
The health check verifies only those VMs that are available in the latest restore point. For example, you added 2
VMs to a backup job and ran the job several times. The health check verified 2 VMs. If you remove 1 VM from the
backup job, the next scheduled health check run will verify the latest unverified restore point f or the removed
VM, and the latest restore point for the remaining VM. In future, the health check will verify only the restore
point for the remaining VM in the job.
• The health check is not performed for offloaded restore points. For more information, see Capacity Tier.
• [For per-machine backup chains] If you add a new VM to an existing backup job that has been run for some
time, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform the health check for it during the next incremental backup
job session for the added VM.
• Linux immutable repositories do not support repair. If the health check detects corrupted data,
Veeam Backup & Replication marks the restore point as corrupted in the configuration database and
finishes the health check session. In that case, you need to perform the active full backup for this backup
chain. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will finish every backup job session creating subsequent
incremental restore points with the Error status.
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How Health Check Works
When Veeam Backup & Replication saves a new restore point to the backup repository, it calculates CRC values
for backup metadata and hash values for data blocks of VM disk in the backup file, and saves these values in the
metadata of the backup file, together with VM data. During the health check session,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses these values to make sure that a verified restore point is consistent.
NOTE
If you perform health check for encrypted backup files, Veeam Backup & Replication will pass encryption
keys to the regular backup repository or cloud repository. For more information on encryption, see Data
Encryption.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses different mechanisms of health check for different types of backup chains:
The health check for forward incremental backup chains is performed in the following way:
NOTE
• The health check runs only after all jobs and operations that process a backup are completed
(for example, a backup job, a restore job, synthetic operations with backups and so on). I f
some of these activities are started, the health check stops.
• If a health check session does not complete until the next scheduled run, this session will stop
and a new session will start according to the schedule.
• If you add new VMs to a backup job which block data has been processed by the health check,
the health check will verify only block data of new VMs and will skip backups of previously
added VMs.
2. The health check calculates CRC values for backup metadata and hash values for VM disks data blocks in
the backup file and compares them with the CRC and hash values that are already stored in the backup
file.
During the health check, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies the latest restore point in the backup chain
(restore point created with the current backup job session — the session during which the health check is
performed). If the latest restore point in the backup chain is incomplete, Veeam Backup & Replication
checks the restore point preceding the latest one.
3. If the health check does not detect data corruption, the backup job session completes in a regular way.
If the health check detects corrupted data, Veeam Backup & Replication completes the backup job with
the Error status and starts the health check retry process. The health check retry starts as a separate
backup job session.
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Depending on the revealed data corruption, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
o If the health check has detected corrupted backup metadata in the full backup file,
Veeam Backup & Replication marks the backup chain starting from this full restore point as corrupted
in the configuration database. During the health check retry, Veeam Backup & Replication transports
data blocks of the whole VM image from the source datastore, creates a new f ull backup file in the
backup repository and saves transported data blocks to it.
o If the health check has detected corrupted backup metadata in the incremental backup file,
Veeam Backup & Replication removes information about this incremental restore point and
subsequent incremental restore points from the configuration database. During the health check
retry, Veeam Backup & Replication transports incremental data relatively the latest valid restore point
in the backup chain from the source datastore, creates a new incremental backup file in the backup
repository and saves transported data blocks to it.
o If the health check has detected corrupted VM disk blocks in the full or incremental backup file,
Veeam Backup & Replication marks the restore point that includes the corrupted data blocks and
subsequent incremental restore points as corrupted in the configuration database. During the health
check, Veeam Backup & Replication transports data blocks from the source datastore. In addition,
Veeam Backup & Replication transports data blocks that have changed since the backup job session
that has triggered the health check. Veeam Backup & Replication stores these data blocks to the
latest restore point that has been created with the current backup job session (se ssion that has
triggered the health check retry).
In case of reverse incremental backup chains, the health check always verifies only the latest restore point in the
backup chain, which is always a full backup file.
2. At the end of the backup job session, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies the full backup file.
Veeam Backup & Replication calculates CRC values for backup metadata and hash values for VM disks data
blocks in the full backup file, and compares them with the CRC and hash values that are already stored in
the full backup file.
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3. If the health check does not detect data corruption, the backup job session completes in a regular way.
If the health check detects corrupted data, Veeam Backup & Replication completes the backup job with
the Error status and starts the health check retry process. The health check retry starts as a separate
backup job session.
Depending on the revealed data corruption, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
o If the health check has detected corrupted backup metadata in the full backup file,
Veeam Backup & Replication marks the whole backup chain (full backup file and preceding reverse
incremental backup files) as corrupted in the configuration database. During the health check retry,
Veeam Backup & Replication transports data blocks of the whole VM image from the source datastore,
creates a new full backup file in the backup repository and saves transported data blocks to it.
o If the health check has detected corrupted VM disk blocks in the full backup file,
Veeam Backup & Replication marks the full backup file and preceding reverse incremental backup files
as corrupted in the configuration database. During the health check retry,
Veeam Backup & Replication transports data blocks from the source datastore. In addition,
Veeam Backup & Replication transports data blocks that have changed since the backup job sess ion
that has triggered the health check. Veeam Backup & Replication stores these data blocks to the
existing full backup file in the backup repository. Corrupted data blocks that have been replaced with
data blocks from the source datastore are stored to an existing reverse incremental backup file
preceding the full backup file.
If Veeam Backup & Replication fails to fix the corrupted data during all health check retries, you must retry the
job manually. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will transport the required data blocks from the source
datastore, to fix the latest restore point. If the latest restore point in the backup chain is incomplete,
Veeam Backup & Replication will attempt to fix the restore point preceding the latest one.
For scheduled jobs, the number of health check retries is equal to the number of job retries specified in the job
settings. For jobs started manually, Veeam Backup & Replication performs 1 health check retry.
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IMP ORTANT
To allow Veeam Backup & Replication add the repaired data blocks to the latest restore point after
completing the health check, the backup job must meet the following requirements:
• You must schedule the backups job to run automatically. For more information, see the Schedule
step of the New Backup Job wizard.
• The target object storage is not set to the Maintenance mode.
• Backup window settings must allow a backup job to run after the health check completes.
If the backup job does not meet these requirements, Veeam Backup & Replication will add the repaired
data blocks to a new restore point, created during a next run of the backup job.
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Compact of Full Backup File
If you use a forever forward incremental or reverse incremental backup method, the backup job constantly
transforms the full backup file in the backup chain to meet retention policy settings. The transformation
process, however, has a side effect. In the long run, the full backup file grows large and gets fragmented. The
file data occurs to be written to non-contiguous clusters on disk, and operations of reading and writing data
from and to the backup file slow down.
To resolve the fragmentation problem, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to compact the full backup
file periodically. During the file compact operation, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new empty file and
copies to it data blocks from the full backup file. As a result, the full backup file gets defragmented and the
speed of reading and writing from and to the file increases.
To compact the full backup file periodically, you must enable the Defragment and compact full backup file
option in the backup job settings and define the compact operation schedule. By default, the compact operation
is performed on the last Saturday of every month. You can change the compact operation schedule and instruct
Veeam Backup & Replication to perform it weekly or monthly on specific days.
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Limitations for Full Backup File Compact
The full backup file compact has the following limitations:
• The Defragment and compact full backup file option works for forever forward incremental or reverse
incremental backup chains. For this reason, you must not schedule active or synthetic full backups.
Although you do not schedule active full backups for forever forward incremental or reverse increme ntal
backup chains, full backups can be created. For example, you can create them manually or
Veeam Backup & Replication can create them during the health check. On the day when active full backups
are triggered, Veeam Backup & Replication does not create compact full backups.
Veeam Backup & Replication will create them on another day during the backup job session.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not compact full backup files that have been offloaded to cloud -based
object storage. For more information, see Capacity Tier.
• The backup repository must have enough space to store a file of the full backup size. During the compact
process, Veeam Backup & Replication creates auxiliary files that exist in the backup repository until the
end of the compact operation.
• [For per-machine backup chains] If you add a new VM to an existing backup job that has been run for some
time, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform the compact full operation for it during the next
incremental backup job session for the added VM.
• If you change the block size in backup job settings, Veeam Backup & Replication does not change the
block size in the compacted backup file till the next full backup. However, if you change compression
settings in backup job settings, during the next compact file operation Veeam Backup & Replication
changes the compression level for the compacted backup file.
• The Remove deleted VMs data option is not enabled in the backup job settings.
• The Use per-machine backup files option is not enabled in backup repository settings.
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Backup Move
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to move all backups of a backup job to another repository or to move
specific workloads and their backups to another job.
Moving backups to another repository can be helpful if you are running out of free space on a repository and
want to move all backups created by a backup job to another repository, target the backup job to this repository
and continue the backup chain.
Moving workloads and their backups to another backup job can be helpful if you want to separate one backup
job into multiple backup jobs, or you want to change backup settings for specific workloads. Also, you want to
continue the existing backup chains for the workloads.
5. After the successful move, Veeam Backup & Replication enables the backup job. The enabled backup job
continues the backup chain for the existing and moved backups.
2. Copies backup files of selected workloads to the repository where the target job saves backups.
3. Excludes the selected workloads from being processed by the source job.
5. After the successful move, Veeam Backup & Replication enables the source and target jobs. The target
backup job continues the backup chain for the existing and moved backups.
*Nuances are described further in this section.
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Common Considerations
Consider the following:
• You can move individual workloads and their backups only if backups are per-machine backups with
separate metadata files and only to repositories with the Use p er-machine backup files check box enabled.
• You can move backups between repositories with the Use per-machine backup files check box selected
and not selected. However, the move operation does not change the backup chain format (single-file
backup, per-machine backup with single metadata file or per-machine backup with separate metadata
files). The job will continue the backup chain of the original backup chain format. If you want to change
the backup chain format of the chain, use the detach from job operation. For more information, see
Changing Backup Chain Formats.
[For moving to object storage repositories] You can move only per-machine backups with separate
metadata files.
• After you move workloads and their backups between jobs, you must adjust the guest processing settings
for the moved workloads. After move, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the default guest processing
setting. For more information on guest processing settings, see Guest Processing.
• You cannot move a workload and its backups to a job that already processes this workload.
• You must not move backups from encrypted jobs to unencrypted jobs and vice versa.
• You cannot move backups imported without the metadata (.VBM) file.
• You cannot launch the restore operation for backups being moved at the moment.
• You cannot move backups created by backup copy jobs in the legacy periodic copy mode. To move
backups, you first need to upgrade the backup format as described in Upgrading Backup Chain Formats.
• After you move backups between backup copy jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication does not include and
exclude workloads from the backup copy jobs. You should do that manually.
• You cannot move backups created by Veeam plug-ins for Enterprise applications, Veeam Cloud Plug-ins
(Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Google Cloud, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure), Veeam
Backup for RHV and Kasten K10.
• You cannot move backups created in Veeam Cloud Connect repositories. For more information on Veeam
Cloud Connect repositories, see the Cloud Repository section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
• [For moving to another repository operation] You cannot move backups to an object storage repository
and target a job to this repository if one of the following options is enabled in the job: reverse incremental
backup method, synthetic full backup or defragment and compact full backup file. However, you can
move such backups to a job targeted to an object storage repository.
• You can move VMware Cloud Director backups of a whole job or individual vApps. You cannot move
backups of VMs.
• If you move workloads and their backups between jobs linked to the same tape job, the tape job continues
to create incremental backups within the existing backup chain. Otherwise, the tape job will create an
active full backup for the moved workloads.
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Backup Jobs with Linked Backup Copy Jobs
If you move workloads and their backups from a backup job which is linked to a backup copy job, the following
applies:
• If the source and target backup jobs are linked to backup copy jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication also
moves backups and workloads between backup copy jobs. Note that Veeam Backup & Replication
performs move only if each backup job is linked to one backup copy job only. For example, Backup Job 1
processes VM1 and VM2 and is linked to Backup Copy Job 1. Backup Job 2 processes VM3 and VM4 and is
linked to Backup Copy 2. You move VM1 and its backups to the Backup Job 2. Veeam Backup & Replication
will also move the VM1 and its backups from Backup Copy Job 1 to Backup Copy Job 2. As a result, Backup
Job 2 and Backup Copy Job 2 will process VM3, VM4 and VM1.
If a backup job is linked to multiple backup copy jobs, you need to move workloads and backups between
the backup copy jobs manually. To do that, use the move to another job operation as describ ed in Moving
Backups. If you do not move workloads between backup copy jobs, the backup copy job linked to the
target backup job will create active full backup copies for the moved workloads.
• Before moving backup copies, Veeam Backup & Replication waits till the source backup process finishes
successfully. Only then, Veeam Backup & Replication disables the linked backup copy job and moves
backup copies.
Log Backups
If you move workloads and their backups from a backup job for which log backup is configured, the following
applies:
• Veeam Backup & Replication moves log backups along with workloads.
• Veeam Backup & Replication disables the log backup jobs gracefully before moving log backups.
• [For SQL server Always On availability groups] You cannot move individual nodes from a job.
• [For Oracle Data Guard] You must move all servers from the job. If you move only one server, application
item restore stops working. To repair the application item restore functionality, y ou will need to move the
server back to the original job.
• If guest processing is disabled in the target job, log backups are moved, however they will not be
processed by the target job. To process log backups, make sure that guest processing is enabled f or the
target job as described in Specify Guest Processing Settings.
• When you move all backups to another repository, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves all backups with
GFS flags.
• When you move a workload and its backups to another job, Veeam Backup & Replication starts to retain
backups according to the settings configured in the target job. Veeam Backup & Replication deletes all
GFS backups that do not comply with the retention policy in the target job. For example, if yearly backups
are not configured in the target job, Veeam Backup & Replication will remove them after the move
operation finishes.
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Immutable Repositories
If you move workloads and their backups from a repository for which immutability is enabled, the following
applies:
• During the move operation, Veeam Backup & Replication copies the whole backup chain. After the move
operation finishes, original backups stored in the immutable repository are moved to the node with the
( Orphaned) postfix. Other original backups are deleted.
• Veeam Backup & Replication deletes backups moved to the ( Orphaned) node after the immutability period
specified in the repository settings where the backups are stored ends.
• Veeam Backup & Replication moves backups only from the performance tier. If you want to move data
from the capacity tier, you first need to download it to the performance tier. For more information, see
Downloading Data from Capacity Tier.
• Backups stored in the capacity and archive tiers are moved to the node with the ( Orphaned) postfix. The
backups are retained according to the retention settings of the job from which the backups were moved. If
the retention period is set in days, the Veeam Backup & Replication retains the backups according to the
configured retention and deletes the backups from the repository after the retention period ends. If the
retention period is set in restore points, the background retention process does not delete the backups.
You need to delete them manually. For more information on how to delete backups manually, see
Deleting Backups from Disk.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not move backups from extents in the Maintenance mode. These
backups are deleted once the extents exit the Maintenance mode.
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Resume on Disconnect
Veeam Backup & Replication can handle a situation of an unstable network during backup, backup copy and
replication jobs. If a network connection drops for a short period of time during the data transport process,
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically resumes the dropped network connection. The data transfer process
starts from the point when the connection was lost. The resume on disconnect capability improves the reliability
of remote data transfer, reduces the backup window and minimizes the network load.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically re-establishes a connection between the following backup
infrastructure components engaged in the data transfer process:
• Backup server
• Backup proxies
• Backup repository
Resume on disconnect works only for dropped network connections. Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to
resume the connection with an interval of 15 seconds during 30 minutes. If the problem has any other nature,
Veeam Backup & Replication retries the job in a regular manner.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not create a new restore point on resume: VM data is written to the same
restore point that was created for the current job session. When resuming the data transfer process,
Veeam Backup & Replication regards VM disks, not the whole VM.
For example, a VM has two disks: disk A and disk B. Before the connection dropped,
Veeam Backup & Replication managed to transfer 20 GB of disk A and did not start transferring disk B. After the
connection is re-established, Veeam Backup & Replication will start transferring the data for disk A from the 20
GB point; data of the whole disk B will be transferred anew.
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Snapshot Hunter
The Snapshot Hunter is a Veeam technology used to detect and remove orphaned snapshots tha t may remain
after backup or replication job sessions.
The Snapshot Hunter addresses the problem of “phantom” snapshots. Under some circumstances, VMware
vSphere can report a successful removal of a snapshot but the snapshot actually remains on the datast ore.
Phantom snapshots can take substantial space on the datastore or impact VM performance. They can even cause
the production VMs to stop if the datastore runs out of free space.
To solve the problem of phantom snapshots, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the Snapshot Hunter during
each backup or replication job session. The Snapshot Hunter looks for snapshot files not registered in vSphere. If
there are no orphaned files, the Snapshot Hunter stops. If orphaned snapshot files are detected, the Snapshot
Hunter removes them in the background mode.
• Replication jobs (the source VM snapshot): regular replication, replication from storage snapshots
• VeeamZIP
NOTE
During Snapshot Hunter analysis, Veeam Backup & Replication skips VMware Cloud Director VMs.
2. VMware vSphere consolidates the data written to the delta file with the VM disks.
The problem occurs when the snapshot was removed successfully but the consolidation failed. This may happen,
for example, if the files appear to be locked when VMware vSphere attempts to consolidate the snapshot files.
In this case, the files remain on datastore.
The Snapshot Hunter is started as a separate process scheduled within every job session. The discovery of the
phantom snapshots does not affect the job: if the phantom snapshots are discovered, the Veeam Backup Service
schedules the snapshot consolidation, and the job runs in normal way.
Veeam Backup & Replication checks the datastore to discover orphaned snapshot files. To consolidate these
files with the VM disks, Veeam Backup & Replication calls a consolidation algorithm. The algorithm consists of
three steps, each representing a VMware method.
As a first attempt, Veeam Backup & Replication calls the VMware Snapshot Consolidate method. This
method is the same mechanism that VMware vSphere uses for VMs with the Needs Consolidation status.
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2. Hard consolidation without quiesce
If the first attempt fails, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new snapshot and calls the VMware Delete
all snapshots method. As a result, all VM snapshots and associated files are deleted. The snapshot is taken
without quiescing the VM.
If the snapshot deletion still fails, Veeam Backup & Replication implies another VMware method that
creates a quiesced snapshot and then removes all VM snapshots.
NOTE
Hard consolidation without quiesce and hard consolidation with quiesce are performed only if the VM does
not have any user snapshots. In case there are one or more user snapshots, these steps will not be
performed.
In case all four attempts fail, Veeam Backup & Replication sends an e-mail notification informing that the user
needs to manually troubleshoot the problem. Note that you need to have the global email notifications option
enabled. For more information, see Specifying Email Notification Settings.
The Snapshot Hunter considers the backup window set for the job. If any of the attempts does not fit the
backup window, Veeam Backup & Replication will not perform the consolidation and send the e-mail
notification.
To view information on the Snapshot Hunter sessions, in the Veeam Backup & Replication console, open the
History view and select Sy stem in the inventory pane.
In case no consolidation attempt could fit the backup window, the warning appears in the job stat istics.
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Creating Backup Jobs
To back up VMs, you must configure a backup job. The backup job defines how, where and when to back up VM
data. One job can be used to process one or more VMs. Jobs can be started manually or scheduled to run
automatically at a specific time.
Before you create a backup job, check prerequisites. Then use the New Backup Job wizard to configure the
backup job.
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Before You Begin
Before you create a backup job, check the following:
• Backup infrastructure components that will take part in the backup process must be added to the backup
infrastructure and properly configured. These include ESXi hosts on which VMs are registered, backup
proxy and backup repository.
• The backup repository must have enough free space to store created backup files. To receive alerts about
low space in the backup repository, configure global notification settings. For more information, see
Specifying Other Notification Settings.
• If you plan to map a backup job to a backup file that already exists in the backup repository, you must
perform the rescan operations for this backup repository. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will not
be able to recognize backup files in the backup repository. For more information, see Rescanning Backup
Repositories.
• If you plan to use an HPE StoreOnce repository as a target for backup jobs, check limitations and
requirements for the repository.
• If you plan to configure a secondary destination for the backup job, you can create a backup copy job or
backup to tape job beforehand. While creating the backup copy or backup to tape job, you can leave the
source empty and link the source to the job later. For more information, see the Creating Backup Copy
Jobs and Creating Backup to Tape Jobs sections in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
• If you plan to enable guest processing for the job, check Guest Processing Requirements and Limitations.
• If you plan to use pre-job and post-job scripts and/or pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts, you must create
scripts before you configure the backup job.
• If you plan to periodically perform maintenance operations with backup files, consider the following
limitations: Health Check for Backup Files, Retention Policy for Deleted VMs, Compact of Full Backup File.
• [For Dell Data Domain backup repository] The length of forward incremental and forever forward
incremental backup chains that contain one full backup and a set of subsequent incremental backups
cannot be greater than 60 restore points. To overcome this limitation, schedule full backups (active or
synthetic) to split the backup chain into shorter series. For example, to perform backups at 30 -minute
intervals, 24 hours a day, you must schedule synthetic fulls every day. In this scenario, intervals
immediately after midnight may be skipped due to the duration of synthetic processing. For more
information, see How Synthetic Full Backup Works.
• If you assign the role of a backup proxy to a VM, you should not add this VM to the list of processed VMs
in a job that uses this backup proxy. Such configuration may result in degraded job performance.
Veeam Backup & Replication will assign this backup proxy to process other VMs in the job firs t, and
processing of this VM itself will be put on hold. Veeam Backup & Replication will report the following
message in the job statistics: VM is a backup proxy, waiting for it to stop processing tasks . The job will
start processing this VM only after the backup proxy deployed on the VM finishes its tasks.
• If you use tags to categorize virtual infrastructure objects, check limitations for VM tags. For more
information, see VM Tags.
• If a job is unable to complete within 21 days period, it will be stopped with the Failed status.
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Step 1. Launch New Backup Job Wizard
To launch the New Backup Job wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Ba ckup Job > Virtual machine > VMware vSphere.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, right-click Job s and select Ba ckup > Virtual machine >
VMwa re vSphere.
• Open the Inventory view. In the working area select the VMs, click Ad d to Backup on the ribbon and select
New job or right-click the VMs and select Ad d to backup job > New job. Veeam Backup & Replication will
start the New Backup Job wizard and add the VMs to this job. You can add other VMs to the job later on,
when you pass through the wizard steps.
• You can quickly add the VMs to an already existing job. To do this, open the Inventory view, in the working
area select the VMs and click Ad d to Backup > name of the job on the ribbon or right-click the VMs and
select Ad d to backup job > name of the job .
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the backup job.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created the job, date and time when the job was created.
3. Select the Hig h priority check box if you want the resource scheduler of Veeam Backup & Replication to
prioritize this job higher than other similar jobs and to allocate resources to it in the first place. For more
information on job priorities, see Job Priorities.
TIP
In the UI, jobs with the Hig h priority option enabled will be marked with a special flag ( ).
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Step 3. Select VMs to Back Up
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select VMs and VM containers (hosts, clusters, folders, resource
pools, VirtualApps, datastores or tags) that you want to back up:
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Ad d Object window, select the necessary VMs or VM containers and click Ad d . If you select VM
containers and add new VMs to this container in future, Veeam Backup & Replication will update backup
job settings automatically to include these VMs.
You can use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views. Depending on the
view you select, some objects may not be available. For example, if you select Ta g s combination view, no
resource pools, hosts or clusters will be displayed in the tree. In the Ta g s combination view, you can select
multiple tags and only those VMs that have all the selected tags will be processed by the job.
To quickly find the necessary VMs, you can use the search field at the bottom of the Ad d Object window. If
you want to switch between types of VMs you want to search through, use the button to the left of the
search field.
NOTE
You can use a regular backup job to process VMs that are part of vApps created in vCenter Server. To back
up VMware Cloud Director vApps, you must use specifically developed VMware Cloud Director backup jobs.
For more information, see Backup and Restore of vApps.
The total size of objects added to the job is displayed in the Tota l size field. Use the Recalculate button to
refresh the total size value after you add a new object to the job.
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Step 4. Exclude Objects from Backup Job
After you have added VMs and VM containers to the job, you can specify which objects you want to exclude
from the backup. You can exclude the following types of objects:
• Specific VM disks
• VM templates
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically excludes VM log files from backup to make the backup process
faster and reduce the size of the backup file.
3. Click Ad d .
4. Use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views. Depending on the view
you select, some objects may not be available. For example, if you select Ta g s combination view, no
resource pools, hosts or clusters will be displayed in the tree. In the Ta g s combination view, you can select
multiple tags and only those VMs that have all the selected tags will be ex cluded from the job.
5. In the displayed tree, select the necessary object and click Ad d . Use the Show full hierarchy check box to
display the hierarchy of all VMware Servers added to the backup infrastructure.
6. Click OK.
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To exclude VM disks:
3. Select the VM in the list and click E d it. If you want to exclude disks of a VM added as part of the container,
click Ad d to include the VM in the list as a standalone object.
4. Choose disks that you want to back up. You can choose to process all disks, 0:0 disks (typically, system
disks) or add to the list custom IDE, SCSI or SATA disks.
5. Select the Remove excluded disks from VM configuration check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will
modify the VMX file of a backed-up VM to remove excluded disks from the VM configuration. If you
restore this VM from the backup file to a location where excluded disks are not accessible w ith the original
paths, you will not have to manually edit the VM configuration file to be able to power on the VM.
NOTE
If you exclude disks from a backup and enable application-aware processing, Veeam Backup & Replication
will still perform application-aware processing for the excluded disks. This means that VSS will process disk
data.
To exclude VM templates:
1. At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select a VM container and click E x clusions.
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4. If you want to include VM templates into the full backup only, leave the Ba ckup VM templates check box
selected and select the E x clude templates from incremental backup check box.
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Step 5. Define VM Backup Order
You can define the order in which the backup job must process VMs. Setting VM order can be helpful, for
example, if you add some mission-critical VMs to the job and want the job to process them first. You can set
these VMs first in list to ensure that their processing fits the backup window.
VMs inside a VM container are processed at random. To ensure that VMs are processed in the defined order, you
must add them as standalone VMs, not as a part of the VM container.
2. Use the Up and Down buttons on the right to move the VM or VM container up or down in the list.
NOTE
VMs may be processed in a different order. For example, if backup infrastructure resources for a VM that is
higher on the priority list are not available, and resources for a VM that is lower on the list are available,
Veeam Backup & Replication will start processing the VM that is lower on the list first.
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Step 6. Specify Backup Storage Settings
At the Storage step of the wizard, select backup infrastructure components for the job — backup proxy and
backup repository, and specify backup storage settings.
1. Click Choose next to the Ba ckup proxy field to select a backup proxy.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that have
access to the source datastore and automatically assign an optimal backup proxy to process VMs in
the job.
Veeam Backup & Replication assigns backup proxies to VMs included in the backup job one by one.
Before processing a new VM in the VM list, Veeam Backup & Replication checks available backup
proxies. If more than one backup proxy is available, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport
modes that the backup proxies can use to retrieve VM data and the current workload on the backup
proxies to select the most appropriate one for VM processing.
o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy servers specified below, you can explicitly select backup
proxies that the job must use. It is recommended that you select at least two backup proxies to ensure
that the backup job starts if one of the proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the source datastore.
2. From the Ba ckup repository list, select a backup repository where the created backup files must be stored.
When you select a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically checks how much free
space is available in the backup repository.
NOTE
• If you change the repository after the job has already run, Veeam Backup & Replication
suggests you to move the existing backups to the new repository. If you want to move the
backups, check limitation and considerations in Moving Backups.
• If you select an object storage repository or a scale-out backup repository which performance
tier consists of object storage repositories, Veeam Backup & Replication will not provide the
amount of free space in this repository since its capacity is constantly expanding.
3. You can map the job to a specific backup stored in the backup repository. Backup job mapping can be
helpful if you have moved backup files to a new backup repository and want to point the job to existing
backups in this new backup repository. You can also use backup job mapping if the configuration database
got corrupted and you need to reconfigure backup jobs.
To map the job to a backup, click the Ma p backup link and select the backup in the backup repository.
Backups can be easily identified by job names. To find the backup, you can also use the search field at the
bottom of the window.
4. In the Retention Policy field, specify retention policy settings for restore points:
o If you want to keep the last N restore points, select restore points from the drop-down list. Then
specify the number of restore points.
o If you want to keep all restore points created during the last N days, select days from the drop-down
list. Then specify the number of days.
When the specified number is exceeded, the earliest restore point is removed from the backup chain or
merged with the next closest restore point. For more information, see Short-Term Retention Policy.
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5. If you want to archive backup files created with the backup job to a secondary destination (backup
repository or tape), select the Configure secondary destination for this job check box. With this option
enabled, the New Backup Job wizard will include an additional step — Secondary Target. At the Secondary
Ta rget step of the wizard, you can link the backup job to the backup copy job or backup to tape backup
job.
You can enable this option only if a backup copy job or backup to tape job is already configured on the
backup server.
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Step 7. Configure Long-Term Retention
If you want to ignore the short-term retention policy for some full backups and store them for long -term
archiving, you can configure long-term retention policy (or GFS retention policy) for the backup job. For more
information on GFS and its limitations, see Long-Term Retention Policy (GFS).
1. At the storage step of the wizard, select the Keep some periodic full backups longer for archival purposes
check box.
2. Click Configure.
o If you want to create weekly restore points, select the Keep weekly full backups for check box. Then
specify the number of weeks during which you want to prevent restore points from being modified
and deleted.
From the If multiple full backups exist, use the one from drop-down list, select a week day when
Veeam Backup & Replication must assign the weekly GFS flag to a full restore point.
o If you want to create monthly restore points, select the Keep monthly full backups for check box.
Then specify the number of months during which you want to prevent restore points from being
modified and deleted.
From the Use weekly full backup for the following week of a month drop-down list, select a week
when Veeam Backup & Replication must assign the monthly GFS flag to a full restore point. A week
equals 7 calendar days; for example, the first week of May is days 1–7, and the last week of May is
days 25–31.
o If you want to create yearly restore points, select the Keep y early full backups for check box. Then
specify the number of years during which you want to prevent restore points from being modified and
deleted.
From the Use monthly full backup for the following month drop-down list, select a month when
Veeam Backup & Replication must assign the yearly GFS flag to a full restore point.
NOTE
If you select to assign multiple types of GFS flags, the flags begin to depend on each other. For more
information on this dependency, see Assignment of Multiple GFS Flags.
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Step 8. Specify Advanced Backup Settings
At the Storage step of the wizard, specify advanced settings for the backup job:
• Backup settings
• Maintenance settings
• Storage settings
• Notification settings
• vSphere settings
• Integration settings
• Script settings
TIP
After you specify necessary settings for the backup job, you can save them as default settings. To do this,
click Sa ve as Default at the bottom left corner of the Ad vanced Settings window. When you create a new
backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new job.
Backup Settings
To specify settings for a backup chain created with the backup job:
2. On the Ba ckup tab, select the backup method that you want to use to create the backup chain in the
backup repository:
IMP ORTANT
Dell Data Domain and HPE StoreOnce do not support the reverse incremental backup method.
Do not select this option for backup jobs targeted at these types of backup repositories.
o To create an incremental backup chain, select Incremental and enable synthetic full and/or active full
backups (see items 3-4).
o To create a forever forward incremental backup chain, select Incremental and do not enable synthetic
full and/or active full backups (see items 3-4).
3. If you choose the incremental backup method, you can select to periodically create synthetic full backups
and/or active full backups.
o To create a synthetic full backup, select the Create synthetic full backups periodically check box and
click Da y s to schedule synthetic full backups on the necessary week days.
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NOTE
For backup jobs created in Veeam Backup & Replication version prior to 11, you could enable the
Tra nsform p revious backup chains into rollbacks option. Starting from
Veeam Backup & Replication version 11, this option is deprecated. However, the transformation
functionality is still working for backup jobs where the Tra nsform previous backup chains into
rollbacks option was already enabled. For more information on the transformation, see the
Backup Chain Transformation section in Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide for version 10.
o To create full backups regularly, select the Create active full backups periodically check box. Use the
Monthly on or W eekly on selected days options to define scheduling settings.
Before you schedule periodic full backups, you must make sure that you have enough fre e space in the
backup repository. As an alternative, you can create active full backups manually when needed. For more
information, see Active Full Backup.
IMP ORTANT
• If you schedule the active full backup and synthetic full backup on the same day,
Veeam Backup & Replication will perform only active full backup. Synthetic full backup will be
skipped.
• If you schedule a job to start after another job (initial job), but the initial job does not run on days
when the synthetic or active full backup is scheduled for the chained job,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not create active or synthetic full backups. For more information
on the job schedule options, see Define Job Schedule.
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Maintenance Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to periodically perform the health check for the latest restore
point in the backup chain and run maintenance operations to make sure that the backup chain remains valid and
consistent.
To specify the health check and maintenance settings, at the Storage step of the New Backup Job wizard, click
Ad vanced and click the Ma intenance tab.
1. In the Storage-level corruption guard section, select the P erform backup files health check check box and
specify the time schedule for the health check. By default, if the health check is enabled, it is performed
monthly at 22:00 PM every last Friday.
3. In the Schedule Settings window, specify whether you want to perform the health check monthly or
weekly and specify the schedule settings.
1. To specify retention period for deleted VMs, select the Remove deleted items data after check box and
specify the number of days for which you want to keep backup data for deleted VMs.
NOTE
• If a VM is no longer available (for example, it was deleted or excluded from the job),
Veeam Backup & Replication will keep its data in the backup repository for the period that you
have specified. When this period is over, data of the deleted VM will be r emoved from the
backup repository.
• By default, the retention period for deleted VM data is 14 days. It is strongly recommended
that you set the retention period to 3 days or more to prevent unwanted data loss. For more
information, see Retention Policy for Deleted VMs.
3. To periodically compact a full backup, select the Defragment and compact full backup file check box.
4. To specify the schedule for the compact operation, click the Configure link.
5. In the Schedule Settings window, specify whether you want to compact a full backup monthly or weekly
and specify the schedule settings.
IMP ORTANT
If you schedule periodic full backups, the Remove deleted items data after and Defragment and compact
full backup file check boxes do not apply.
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Storage Settings
To specify storage settings for the backup job:
3. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication deduplicates VM data before storing it in the backup repository.
Data deduplication provides a smaller size of the backup file but may reduce the backup job performance.
For more information on data deduplication, see Deduplication.
To disable data deduplication, clear the E na ble inline data deduplication check box. When you disable data
deduplication, you also change the workflow for incremental backups. If Changed Block Tracking (CBT) is
enabled for the job, Veeam Backup & Replication will save all data blocks marked by CBT as new to the
destination storage without performing an additional check or using Veeam filtering mechanism. This will
result in faster creation of incremental backups. However, backup files may increase in size.
4. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the NTFS MFT file on VMs with Microsoft Windows OS to
identify data blocks of the hiberfil.sys file (file used for the hibernate mode) and pagefile.sys file
(swap file), and excludes these data blocks from processing. The swap file is dynamic in nature and
changes intensively between backup job sessions, even if the VM itself does not change much. Processing
of service files reduces the job performance and increases the size of incremental backup files.
If you want to include data blocks of the hiberfil.sys file and pagefile.sys file to the backup, clear
the E x clude swap file blocks check box. For more information, see Swap Files.
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5. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy deleted file blocks ("dirty" blocks on the VM guest
OS) to the target location. This option lets you reduce the size of backup files and increase the job
performance. If you want to include dirty data blocks to the backup, clear the E x clude deleted file blocks
check box. For more information, see Deleted File Blocks.
6. From the Compression level list, select a compression level for the backup: None, Dedupe-friendly ,
Optimal, High or Extreme. For more information on data compression, see Compression and
Deduplication.
7. In the Storage optimization section, select block size that will be used to process VMs. For more
information on the data blocks sizes and how they affect performance, see Storage Optimization.
8. To encrypt the content of backup files, select the E na ble backup file encryption check box. In the
P a ssword field, select a password that you want to use for encryption. If you have not created the
password beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new password. For more
information, see Managing Passwords for Data Encryption.
If the backup server is not connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, you will not be able to restore
data from encrypted backups in case you lose the password. Veeam Backup & Replication will display a
warning about it. For more information, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
NOTE
If you enable encryption for an existing backup job, during the next job session
Veeam Backup & Replication will create a full backup file. The created full backup file and subsequent
incremental backup files in the backup chain will be encrypted with the specified password.
Encryption is not retroactive. If you enable encryption for an existing job, Veeam Backup & Replication
does not encrypt the previous backup chain created with this job. If you want to start a new chain so that
the unencrypted previous chain can be separated from the encrypted new chain, see this Veeam KB article.
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Notification Settings
To specify notification settings for the backup job:
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when the job
completes successfully.
SNMP traps will be sent if you specify global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and configure
software on recipient's machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying SNMP
Settings.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive
notifications about the job completion status by email. In the field below, specify recipient’s email
address. You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
5. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the
backup server. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
o To configure a custom notification for the job, select Use custom notification settings specified below
check box. You can specify the following notification settings:
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i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %ObjectCount% (number of
VMs in the job) and %Issues% (number of VMs in the job that have finished with the Warning or
Failed status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if the job completes successfully, fails or completes with a warning.
iii. Select the Sup press notifications until the last retry check box to receive a notification about the
final job status. If you do not enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will send one
notification per every job retry.
NOTE
If you specify the same email recipient in both job notification and global notification settings,
Veeam Backup & Replication will send two separate notifications only if a subject for the email
message specified in job notification is different from the subject specified in global notification
settings. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will suppress global notification settings and will
send job notifications only.
6. Select the Set successful backup details to this VM attribute check box to write information about
successfully performed backup and backup results (backup date and time, backup server name and path to
the backup file) to a VM attribute. In the field below, enter a name of the attribute. If the specified
attribute does not exist, Veeam Backup & Replication will create it.
7. Select the Ap p end to the existing attribute's value check box to append information about successfully
performed backup to an existing value of the attribute. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will keep
values added by the user in the attribute, and will overwrite only the value added by the backup job. If you
do not select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will overwrite the existing attribute values (made
both by the user and backup job).
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vSphere Settings
To specify VMware vSphere settings for the backup job:
3. Select the E na ble VMware tools quiescence check box to freeze the file system of processed VMs during
backup.
Depending on the VM version, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the VMware FileSystem Sync Driver
(vmsync) driver or VMware VSS component in VMware Tools for VM snapshot creation. These tools are
responsible for quiescing the VM file system and bringing the VM to a consistent state suitable for backup.
For more information, see VMware Tools Quiescence.
4. In the Cha nged block tracking section, configure VMware vSphere CBT:
a. Make sure that the Use changed block tracking data check box is selected if you want to enable CBT.
b. Make sure that the E na ble CBT for all processed VMs automatically check box is selected if you want
to force using CBT even if CBT is disabled in VM configuration.
c. Make sure that the Reset CBT on each Active Full backup automatically check box is selected if you
want to reset CBT before Veeam Backup & Replication creates active full backups.
CBT reset helps avoid issues, for example, when CBT returns incorrect changed data.
IMP ORTANT
• You can use CBT for VMs with virtual hardware version 7 or later. These VMs must not have existing
snapshots.
• If you back up one VM with two different jobs, and the 1rst job performs active full according to a
schedule, the 2nd job during an incremental run will have to read the entire VMDK file of the
processed VM. Therefore, the VM processing by a second job will take longer than during a normal
incremental run. To avoid this behavior, disable the Reset CBT on each Active Full backup
a utomatically option for both jobs.
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Integration Settings
On the Integration tab, you can define whether you want to use the Backup from Storage Snapshots technology
to create the backup. Backup from Storage Snapshots lets you leverage storage snapshots for VM data
processing. The technology improves RPOs and reduces the impact of backup activities on the production
environment.
Before you start using the Backup from Storage Snapshots technology, check prerequisites. For more
information, see the Requirements and Limitations section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
3. By default, the E na ble backup from storage snapshots option is enabled. If you do not want to use Backup
from Storage Snapshots, clear this check box. For more information, see the Configuring Backup from
Storage Snapshots section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
4. If you add to the job many VMs whose disks are located on the same volume or LUN, select the Limit
p rocessed VM count per storage snapshot to <N> check box and specify the number of VMs for which one
storage snapshot must be created. Veeam Backup & Replication will divide VMs into several groups and
trigger a separate storage snapshot for every VM group. As a result, the job performance will increase.
For more information, see the Limitation on Number of VMs per Snapshot section in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
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5. If Veeam Backup & Replication fails to create a storage snapshot, VMs whose disks are located to the
storage system will not be processed by the job. To fail over to the regular VM processing mode and back
up or replicate such VMs in the regular processing mode, select the Fa ilover to standard backup check
box.
6. [For secondary NetApp, HPE Nimble and HPE 3PAR storag e systems] If Veeam Backup & Replication
cannot create a storage snapshot on secondary storage arrays, the job will not back up VMs whose disks
are located on the storage system. To fail over to Backup from Storage Snapshots on the production
storage, select the Fa ilover to primary storage snapshot check box. If Veeam Backup & Replication fails to
create a storage snapshot on secondary storage arrays, it will trigger the storage snapshot on primary
storage arrays and use it as a source for backup. Note, however, that Backup from Storage Snapshots on
primary storage arrays will put additional load on the production environment.
Script Settings
To specify script settings for the backup job:
3. If you want to execute custom scripts before and/or after the backup job, select the Run the following
script before the job and Run the following script after the job check boxes and click Browse to choose
executable files from a local folder on the backup server. The scripts are executed on the backup server.
You can select to execute pre- and post-backup actions after a number of backup sessions or on specific
week days.
o If you select the Run scripts every <N> backup session option, specify the number of the backup job
sessions after which the scripts must be executed.
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o If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, click Da y s and specify week days on
which the scripts must be executed.
NOTE
• Custom scripts that you define in the advanced job settings relate to the backup job itself, not the
VM quiescence process. To add pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for VM image quiescence, use the
Guest Processing step of the wizard.
• If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, Veeam Backup & Replication executes
scripts only once on each selected day — when the job runs for the first time. During subsequent job
runs, scripts are not executed.
• To run the script, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Service Account under which the Veeam
Backup Service is running.
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Step 9. Specify Secondary Target
The Secondary Target step of the wizard is available if you have enabled the Configure secondary destination for
this job option at the Storage step of the wizard.
At the Secondary Target step of the wizard, you can link the backup job to a backup to tape or backup copy job.
As a result, the backup job will be added as a source to the backup to tape or backup copy job. Backup files
created with the backup job will be archived to tape or copied to the secondary backup repository according to
the secondary jobs schedule. For more information, see the Linking Backup Jobs to Backup Copy Jobs and
Linking Backup Jobs to Backup to Tape Jobs sections in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
The backup to tape job or backup copy job must be configured beforehand. You can create these jobs with an
empty source. When you link the backup job to these jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
update the linked jobs to define the backup job as a source for these jobs.
To link jobs:
1. Click Ad d .
2. From the jobs list, select a backup to tape or backup copy job that must be linked to the backup job. You
can link several jobs to the backup job, for example, one backup to tape job and one ba ckup copy job. To
quickly find the job, use the search field at the bottom of the wizard.
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Step 10. Specify Guest Processing Settings
At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, you can enable the following settings:
• E na ble application-aware processing — to create a transactionally consistent backup of VMs running VSS-
aware applications. The transactionally consistent backup guarantees proper recovery of applications on
VMs without data loss. For details on application-aware processing settings, see Application-Aware
Processing.
• E na ble guest file system indexing — to create a catalog of files located on the guest OS. The catalog
allows you to browse, search and perform 1-click restores of individual files. For more information, see the
Preparing for File Browsing and Searching section in the Enterprise Manager User Guide. For details on
guest OS file indexing settings, see VM Guest OS File Indexing.
• Guest interaction proxy — to specify interaction proxy settings that Veeam Backup & Replication will use
to install non-persistent runtime components or use (if necessary, install) persistent agent components in
each VM.
• Guest OS credentials — that allow Veeam Backup & Replication connect to the VM guest OS.
1. [Only for Microsoft Windows VMs] To connect a backup server to processed VM guest OS, specify the
guest interaction proxy. On the right of the Guest interaction proxy field, click Choose and select one of
the following:
o Leave Automatic selection to let Veeam Backup & Replication automatically select the guest
interaction proxy.
o Select Use the selected guest interaction proxy servers only to explicitly define which servers will
perform the guest interaction proxy role. The list of servers contains Microsoft Windows servers
added to the backup infrastructure.
NOTE
The guest interaction proxy functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License. If you use the
legacy socket-based license, you will require Enterprise or higher edition.
2. To specify a user account that will be used to that to connect to the VM guest OS, from the Guest OS
credentials drop-down list, select a user account that has enough permissions. For more information on
the permissions and requirements for the user account, see Required Permissions for Guest Processing.
If you have installed persistent agent components for VMs running Linux operating systems, you can
select Use management agent credentials from the list. For more information, see Installing Persistent
Agent Components on Other VMs.
NOTE
Management Agent credentials have root or elevated to root permissions. If you do not want to
perform guest processing tasks under the account with such privileges, you can specify a non-root
user account. This account or custom credentials added for specific VMs will also be used for SSH
connection or networkless guest processing over VIX API/vSphere Web Services if the transport
service connection fails.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to
add credentials. For more information on adding credentials, see the Credentials Manager section.
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By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Log on as a batch job policy to connect to guest OS. If
the connection fails, Veeam Backup & Replication switches to Interactive Logon.
NOTE
If you use Kerberos authentication, consider requirements and limitations described in the Kerberos
Authentication section.
3. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the same credentials for all VMs in the job. If some VM
requires a different user account, click Credentials and enter custom credentials for the VM.
4. To check if Veeam Backup & Replication can communicate with VMs added to the job, click Test Now.
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the specified credentials to connect to all VMs in the list.
Application-Aware Processing
To create transactionally consistent backups of VMs, you must enable application-aware processing.
Application-aware processing allows you to define the method to process applications, ap plication logs and
select if you want to use the persistent agent.
To enable application-aware processing, at the Guest Processing step of the wizard select the E na ble
a p plication-aware processing check box and click Ap p lications.
1. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options window, select the VM and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM to the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the VM whose settings you want to customize.
Then select the VM in the list and define the necessary settings.
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2. To specify the behavior scenario for application-aware processing, on the General tab, in the Ap p lications
section do one of the following:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the backup process when an error occurs during
application-aware processing, select Require successful processing.
o If you want to continue the backup process when an error occurs during application-aware processing,
select Try application processing, but ignore failures . This option guarantees completion of the
backup job. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a crash consistent backup instead of
transactionally consistent backup.
IMP ORTANT
If application-aware processing fails, the backup job will not process SQL transaction logs until
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new image-level backup of the Microsoft SQL Server VM.
o If you do not want to enable application-aware processing for the VM, select Disable application
p rocessing.
3. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to process application logs or create copy-only backups, in the
VSS Settings section do one of the following:
o [For Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft SQL VMs] If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to process
application logs, select P rocess transaction logs with this job and specify settings on the SQL tab. For
more information, see Microsoft SQL Server Transaction Log Settings.
NOTE
[For Microsoft Exchange VMs] If you select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will back
up the Exchange database and its logs. The non-persistent runtime components or persistent
components that run on the VM guest OS will wait for a backup job to complete successfully.
After that, they will trigger truncation of transaction logs on a Microsoft Exchange server. If the
backup job fails, the logs on this server will remain untouched.
o [For Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft SQL VMs] If you use a third -party backup tool to perform VM
guest level backup, and this tool maintains consistency of the database state, select P erform copy
only . Veeam Backup & Replication will create a copy-only backup for the selected VM. The copy-only
backup preserves the chain of full or differential backup files and transaction logs on the VM. For
more information, see Microsoft Docs.
Note that if you select this option, the SQL tab will not be available in the P rocessing Settings
window.
o [For Oracle VMs and PostgreSQL VMs] You must specify settings for application log handling on the
Ora cle and P ostgreSQL tabs of the VM P rocessing Settings window. For more information, see Oracle
Archived Log Settings and PostgreSQL WAL Files Settings.
4. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use persistent guest agents on each protected VM for
application-aware processing, select the P ersistent guest agent check box.
IMP ORTANT
If both Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle Server are installed on one VM, and this VM is processed by a job
with log backup enabled for both applications, Veeam Backup & Replication will back up only Oracle
transaction logs. Microsoft SQL Server transaction logs will not be processed.
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Microsoft SQL Server Transaction Log Settings
To create a transactionally consistent backups of SQL VM, you must enable application-aware processing and
define settings of transaction logs processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
By default, the P rocessing Settings window will display the General tab. In the VSS Settings section, select
P rocess transaction logs with this job. For more information, see VSS settings.
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2. Specify how transaction logs must be processed. You can select one of the following options:
o Select Truncate logs to truncate transaction logs after successful backup. The non-persistent runtime
components or persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait for the backup to
complete successfully and then truncate transaction logs. If the job does not manage to back up the
Microsoft SQL Server VM, the logs will remain untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of
the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components.
NOTE
If the account specified at the Guest Processing step does not have enough rights,
Veeam Backup & Replication tries to truncate logs using the local SYSTEM account for Microsoft
SQL Server 2008 and 2008 R2. For other Microsoft SQL Server versions,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM account.
Make sure that these accounts have permissions listed in Permissions for Guest Processing.
o Select Do not truncate logs to preserve transaction logs. When the backup job completes,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not truncate transaction logs on the Microsoft SQL Server VM.
It is recommended that you enable this option for databases that use the Simple recovery model. If
you enable this option for databases that use the Full or Bulk-logged recovery model, transaction logs
on the VM guest OS may grow large and consume all disk space. In this case, the database
administrators must take care of transaction logs themselves.
o Select Ba ckup logs periodically to back up transaction logs with Veeam Backup & Replication.
Veeam Backup & Replication will periodically copy transaction logs to the backup repository and store
them together with the image-level backup of the Microsoft SQL Server VM. During the backup job
session, transaction logs on the VM guest OS will be truncated.
4. In the Ba ckup logs every <N> minutes field, specify the frequency for transaction log backup. By default,
transaction logs are backed up every 15 minutes. The maximum log backup interval is 480 minutes.
5. In the Retain log backups section, specify retention policy for transaction logs stored in the backup
repository.
o Select Until the corresponding image-level backup is deleted to apply the same retention policy for
image-level backups and transaction log backups.
o Select Keep only last <N> days of log backups to keep transaction logs for a specific number of days.
By default, transaction logs are kept for 15 days. If you select this option, you must make sure that
retention for transaction logs is not greater than retention for the image-level backups. For more
information, see Retention for Transaction Log Backups.
6. In the Log shipping servers section, click Choose to select what log shipping server you want to use to
transport transaction logs:
o Select Automatic selection if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to choose an optimal log shipping
server automatically. If the optimal shipping server is busy, Veeam Backup & Replication will direct
the data flow to another shipping server not to lose data and to comply with RPO. The process of
transaction logs shipment does not require a dedicated server — Veeam Backup & Replication can use
any Microsoft Windows server added to the backup infrastructure.
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o To define a log shipping server explicitly, select Use the specified servers only and select check boxes
next to servers that you want to use as log shipping servers. The server list includes all Microsoft
Windows servers added to the backup infrastructure.
Make sure that you select a server that is not engaged in other resource-consuming tasks. For
example, you may want not to use a server that performs the WAN accelerator role as a log shipping
server. For load balance and high availability purposes, it is recommended that you select at least 2
log shipping servers.
IMP ORTANT
• Veeam Backup & Replication automatically excludes its configuration database from application-
aware processing during backup if the database is hosted without using SQL Server Always On
Availability Group. Transaction logs for the configuration database are not backed up.
• If the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database is hosted using SQL Server Always On
Availability Group, you should manually exclude this database from application-aware processing
during backup as described in this Veeam KB article. Otherwise, job processing will fail with the
following error: Failed to freeze guest over network, wait timeout.
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Enabling Application-Aware Processing
Before configuring transaction logs processing, check that application-aware processing is enabled:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
2. In the Sp ecify Oracle account with SYSDBA privileges section, specify a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the Oracle database. The account must have privileges
for the Oracle database listed in Permissions for Guest Processing.
You can select Use guest credentials in the list of user accounts. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication
will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to access the VM guest OS and
connect to the Oracle database.
3. In the Archived logs section, specify how Veeam Backup & Replication must process archived redo logs on
the Oracle VM:
o Select Do not d elete archived logs if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to preserve archived logs
on the VM guest OS. When the backup job completes, the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components will not delete archived logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases in the NOARCHIVELOG mode. If the
database is in the ARCHIVELOG mode, archived logs on the VM guest OS may grow large and consume
all disk space. In this case, database administrators must take care of archived logs themselves.
o Select Delete logs older than < N> hours or Delete logs over <N> GB if you want
Veeam Backup & Replication to delete archived logs that are older than <N> hours or larger than <N>
GB. The log size threshold refers not to the total size of all logs for all databases, but to the log size
of each database on the selected Oracle VM.
When the parent backup job (job creating an image-level backup) runs, Veeam Backup & Replication
will wait for the backup to complete successfully, and then trigger archived logs deletion on the
Oracle VM over Oracle Call Interface (OCI). If the primary job does not manage to back up the Oracle
VM, the logs will remain untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent
runtime components or persistent components.
TIP
Veeam Backup & Replication removes redo logs only after the parent backup job session. To remove
redo logs more often, you can schedule the parent job to run more often.
4. To back up Oracle archived logs with Veeam Backup & Replication, select the Ba ckup log every <N>
minutes check box and specify the frequency for archived log backup. By default, archived logs are backed
up every 15 minutes. The maximum log backup interval is 480 minutes.
5. In the Retain log backups section, specify retention policy for archived logs stored in the backup
repository:
o Select Until the corresponding image-level backup is deleted to apply the same retention policy for
image-level backups and archived log backups.
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o Select Keep only last <n> days to keep archived logs for a specific number of days. By default,
archived logs are kept for 15 days. If you select this option, you must make sure that retention for
archived logs is not greater than retention for the image-level backups. For more information, see
Retention for Archived Log Backups.
6. In the Log shipping servers section, click Choose to select what log shipping server you want to use to
transport archived logs:
o Select Automatic selection if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select an optimal log shipping
server automatically. The process of archived logs shipment does not require a dedicated server —
Veeam Backup & Replication can use any Microsoft Windows server added to the backup
infrastructure.
o Select Use the specified servers only to define a log shipping server explicitly. In the Log Shipping
Servers window, select check boxes next to servers that you want to use as log shipping servers. The
server list includes all Microsoft Windows servers added to the backup infrastructure.
Make sure that you select a server that is not engaged in other resource-consuming tasks. For
example, you may want not to use a server that performs the WAN accelerator role as a log shipping
server. For load balance and high availability purposes, it is recommended that you select at least 2
log shipping servers.
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Enabling Application-Aware Processing
Before configuring WAL files processing, check that application-aware processing is enabled:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
2. From the Sp ecify PostgreSQL account with superuser privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the PostgreSQL instance. The account must have must
have privileges described in the Permissions section. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click
the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to add credentials.
By default, the Use guest credentials option is selected in the list. With this option selected,
Veeam Backup & Replication will connect to the PostgreSQL instance under the account In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to
access the VM guest OS and connect to the PostgreSQL instance.
Note that if you plan to select the Sy stem user without password file (peer) authentication method at the
step 3 of this procedure, you can add a user account in the Credentials Manager without specifying the
password for the account.
3. In the Sp ecifies user is section, specify how the user will authenticate against the PostgreSQL instance:
o Select Da tabase user with password if the account that you specified at the step 2 is a PostgreSQL
account, and you entered the password for this account in the Credentials Manager.
o Select Da tabase user with password file (.pgpass) if the password for the account that you specified
at the step 2 is defined in the .pgpass configuration file on the PostgreSQL VM. For more
information about the password file, see PostgreSQL documentation.
o Select Sy stem user without password file (peer) if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use the
peer authentication method. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the OS account as the
PostgreSQL account. For more information about the peer authentication method, see PostgreSQL
documentation.
IMP ORTANT
If you have added a new PostgreSQL account and want to use it with the peer authentication
method, make sure that you have added this account as a Linux user with sufficient permissions.
4. To back up PostgreSQL WAL files with Veeam Backup & Replication, select the Ba ck up log every <N>
minutes check box and specify the frequency for WAL files backup. By default, WAL files are backed up
every 15 minutes. The maximum log backup interval is 480 minutes.
5. In the Retain log backups section, specify retention policy for WAL files stored in the backup repository:
o Select Until the corresponding image-level backup is deleted to apply the same retention policy for
both image-level backups and WAL files backups.
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o Select Keep only last <n> days to keep WAL files for a specific number of days. By default, WAL files
are kept for 15 days. If you select this option, you must make sure that retention for WAL files is not
greater than retention for the image-level backups. For more information, see Retention for
PostgreSQL WAL Files.
6. In the Temp orary path on the Linux machine to store archive logs at section specify a path to the storage
location, where you want to keep WAL files.
7. In the Log shipping servers section, click Choose to select what log shipping server you want to use to
transport WAL files:
o Select Automatic selection if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select an optimal log shipping
server automatically. The process of WAL files shipment does not require a dedicated server —
Veeam Backup & Replication can use any Microsoft Windows server added to the backup
infrastructure.
o Select Use the specified servers only to define a log shipping server explicitly. In the Log Shipping
Servers window, select check boxes next to servers that you want to use as log shipping servers. The
server list includes all Microsoft Windows servers added to the backup infrastructure.
Make sure that you select a server that is not used by other resource-consuming tasks. For example,
you may want not to use a server that performs the WAN accelerator role as a log shipping server. For
load balance and high availability purposes, it is recommended that you select at least 2 log shipping
servers.
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NOTE
VM guest OS file exclusion functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy
socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
To define custom settings for a VM added as part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list as
a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose a VM whose settings you want to customize. Then
select the VM in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. Click the E x clusions tab and specify what files must be excluded from the backup:
o Select E x clude the following files a nd folders to remove the individual files and folders from the
backup.
o Select Include only the following files and folders to leave only the specified files and folders in the
backup.
5. Click Ad d and specify what files and folders you want to include or exclude. To form the list of exclusions
or inclusions, you can use full paths to files and folders, environmental variables and file masks with the
asterisk (*) and question mark (?) characters. For more information, see VM Guest OS Files.
NOTE
When you choose files to be included or excluded, consider requirements and limitations that are listed in
the Requirements and Limitations for VM Guest OS File Exclusion section.
6. Click OK.
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7. Repeat steps 5-6 for every file or folder that you want to exclude or include.
4. In the Script processing mode section, specify the scenario for scripts execution:
o Select Require successful script execution if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the backup
process if the script fails.
o Select Ig nore script execution failures if you want to continue the backup process even if script errors
occur.
o Select Disable script execution if you do not want to run scripts for the VM.
5. In the W indows scripts section, specify paths to pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for Microsoft Windows
VMs. For the list of supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
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6. In the Linux scripts section, specify paths to pre-freeze and/or post-thaw scripts for Linux VMs. For the list
of supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
If you have added to the job a VM container with Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs, you can select to
execute both Microsoft Windows and Linux scripts for the VM container. When the job starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically determine what OS type is installed on the VM and use
corresponding scripts to quiesce this VM.
TIP
Beside pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for VM quiescence, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication
to run custom scripts before the job starts and after the job completes. For more information, see Script
Settings.
2. Select a VM in the list and click E d it > W indows indexing or Linux indexing.
o Select Disable indexing if you do not want to index guest OS files of the VM.
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o Select Ind ex everything except if you want to index all VM guest OS files except those defined in the
list. By default, system folders are excluded from indexing. You can add or delete folders using the
Ad d and Remove buttons on the right. You can also use system environment variables to form the list,
for example: %windir%, %ProgramFiles% and %Temp%.
o Select Ind ex only following folders to define folders that you want to index. You can add or delete
folders to index using the Ad d and Remove buttons on the right. You can also use system
environment variables to form the list, for example: %windir%, %ProgramFiles% and %Temp%.
NOTE
To perform guest OS file indexing on Linux VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication requires several utilities to
be installed on the Linux VM: openssh, mlocate, gzip and tar. If these utilities are not found,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to deploy them on the VM guest OS.
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Step 11. Define Job Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, select to run the backup job manually or schedule the job to run on a regular
basis.
1. Select the Run the job automatically check box. If this check box is not selected, you will have to start the
job manually to create the VM backup.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Da ily at
this time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. Use the fields on the right
to configure the necessary schedule.
NOTE
When you configure the job schedule, consider possible date and time changes (for example,
related to daylight saving time transition).
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a specific time interval, select P eriodically every. In
the field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use the
time table to define the permitted time window for the job. In the Sta rt time within an hour field,
specify the exact time when the job must start.
▪ Veeam Backup & Replication always starts counting defined intervals from 12:00 AM. For
example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00
AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
▪ If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is over,
Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately start the job and then run the job by the defined
schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours
from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first run at 9:00 AM, when the
denied period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the P eriodically every option and choose Continuously from the
list on the right. A new backup job session will start as soon as the previous backup job session
finishes.
o To chain jobs, use the After this job field. In the common practice, jobs start one after another: when
job A finishes, job B starts and so on. If you want to create a chain of jobs, you must define the time
schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest of the jobs in the chain, select the After this job
op tion and choose the preceding job from the list.
Note that chained jobs have some drawbacks and limitations. For more information, see Chained Jobs.
3. In the Automatic retry section, define whether Veeam Backup & Replication must attempt to run the
backup job again if the job fails for some reason. During a job retry, Veeam Backup & Replication processes
failed VMs only. Enter the number of attempts to run the job and define time intervals between them. If
you select continuous backup, Veeam Backup & Replication will retry the job for the defined number of
times without any time intervals between the job runs.
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4. In the Ba ckup window section, define the time interval within which the backup job must complete. The
backup window prevents the job from overlapping with production hours and ensures that the job does
not provide unwanted overhead on the production environment. To set up a backup window for the job:
a. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box and click W ind ow.
b. In the Time P eriods window, define the allowed hours and prohibited hours for backup. If the job
exceeds the allowed window, it will be automatically terminated.
NOTE
The After this job function will automatically start a job if the first job in the chain is started automatically
by schedule. If you start the first job manually, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a notification. You
will be able to choose whether Veeam Backup & Replication must start the chained job as well.
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Step 12. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of backup job configuration.
2. Select the Run the job when I click Finish check box if you want to start the job right after you finish
working with the wizard.
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Performing Active Full Backup
You can create an ad-hoc full backup — active full backup, and add it to the backup chain in the backup
repository. The active full backup resets the backup chain. All subsequent incremental backups use the active
full backup as a starting point. The previously used full backup will remain in the backup repository until it is
removed from the backup chain according to the retention policy.
3. In the working area, select the necessary job and click Active Full on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can
right-click the job and select Active Full.
2. Select workloads for which you want to perform active full backup.
3. Right-click one of the selected workloads and click Active Full. Note that you will be able to launch active
full backup for other workloads in the job only after active full finishes for the selected workloads.
IMP ORTANT
You can perform active full backup for individual workloads only if their backups are per-machine with
separate metadata files.
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Quick Backup
Quick backup lets you perform on-demand incremental backup for VMs. You can use quick backup if you want to
produce an additional restore point for one or more VMs in a backup job and do not want to configure a new job
or modify the existing one. Quick backup can be run for both incremental and reverse incremental backup
chains.
Quick backup is an incremental backup task: Veeam Backup & Replication copies only changed data for selected
VMs and saves this data to a new restore point in the backup chain. Similar to incremental backup, quick backup
can only be run for VMs that have been successfully backed up at least once and has a full restore point. If there
is no full restore point for a VM, quick backup cannot be performed.
To perform quick backup, Veeam Backup & Replication uses an existing backup job. When you start a quick
backup task for a VM, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies that a backup job processing this VM exists on the
backup server. If such job is detected, Veeam Backup & Replication triggers a job and creates an incremental
restore point for the VM. If a backup job for the VM does not exist, quick backup is terminated.
You can run quick backup for one VM or more VMs at once. If you start quick backup for several VMs a nd these
VMs are processed by different backup jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication triggers a set of backup jobs. Each
triggered job creates a separate restore point and stores this restore point in a corresponding backup chain.
In some cases, a VM may be processed by several backup jobs on the backup server. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication starts the job that has created the most recent restore point for the VM.
When you start quick backup for VM01, Veeam Backup & Replication will trigger Backup job 2 to create a new
incremental restore point.
NOTE
If the quick backup task overlaps the scheduled backup job, the backup job waits for the quick backup task
to complete.
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Retention Policy for Quick Backups
When you perform quick backup, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a single VM incremental restore point.
Unlike a regular incremental restore point that contains data for all VMs in a job, single VM incremental restore
point contains data only for a specific VM.
A single VM restore point is not regarded as full-fledged restore point in the backup chain. From the retention
policy perspective, single VM restore point is grouped with a regular restore point following it. When
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to delete a single VM restore point by retention, it waits for the next regular
restore point to expire — that is, Veeam Backup & Replication increases the retention by one restore point for
some time. After the next regular restore point expires, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes two restore points
at once.
If the backup chain is stored in a repository with the Use per-machine backup files option enabled, the retention
increases in a different way. As a rule, the retention increases by the number of VMs from this chain for which
quick backup was performed. This applies to the reverse incremental and forward incremental backup chains.
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Performing Quick Backup
You can create an ad-hoc incremental backup for one or more VMs — quick backup, and add it to the backup
chain in the backup repository. Quick backup can be helpful if you want to produce an additional restore point
for one or more VMs in the backup job and do not want to configure a new job or modify the existing one.
Quick backup can be performed for VMs that meet the following requirements:
2. A full backup file for the VM exists in the backup repository configured in the backup infrastructure.
2. In the infrastructure tree, select a host or VM container (host, cluster, folder, resource pool, VirtualApp,
datastore or tag) in which the VMs that you want to back up reside.
3. In the working area, select the VMs and click Quick Backup on the ribbon. You can also right-click the VMs
and select Quick Backup.
Veeam Backup & Replication will trigger a backup job to create a new incremental restore point for
selected VMs. Details of a running quick backup task are displayed in the job session window.
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Importing Backups Manually
You may need to import backups to Veeam Backup & Replication in the following situations:
• The backup server has failed and you have restored it in a new location. You want to restore VM data from
backups created by the backup server that has failed.
• You want to restore VM data from backups created on another backup server.
• You want to restore VM data from backups in the backup repository that is not added to the backup
infrastructure (for example, if you removed it earlier).
• You want to restore VM data from VeeamZIP files created on your backup server or another backup server.
The imported backup becomes available in the Veeam Backup & Replication console. You can use any restore
operation to recover VM data from this backup.
IMP ORTANT
You can import backups created by a later version of Veeam Backup & Replication, however, restore
operations for this backup will not be available.
• The server from which you plan to import backups must be added to the backup infrastructure. Otherwise
you will not be able to access backup files.
• To be able to restore VM data from previous backup restore points, make sure that you have all required
incremental backup files (forward or reverse) in the same folder where the full backup file resides.
2. From the Computer list, select the server on which the backup you want to import is stored.
3. Click Browse and select the necessary VBM or VBK file. If you select the VBM file, the import process will
be notably faster. It is recommended that you select the VBK file only if the VBM file is not available.
4. By default, index data of the VM guest OS file system is not imported with the backup to speed up the
import process. If you want to import index data, select the Imp ort guest file system index check box.
5. Click OK to import the backup. The imported backup will be displayed in the Home view, under the
Ba ckups > Imported node in the inventory pane. Backups are imported using the original name of the
backup job with the _imported suffix appended.
TIP
If you need to import all backups stored on a server, assign a backup repository role to it and enable import
at the Review step of the wizard. If the repository is already added to the backup infrastructure, you can
rescan it. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically import backups. For more information, see
Rescanning Backup Repositories.
Note that Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to import backups if VBM files are not available. In
this case you will have to import backups manually using the VBK files.
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Importing Encrypted Backups
You can import backups that were encrypted on this backup server or on another backup server.
2. From the Computer list, select the host on which the backup you want to import is stored.
4. Click OK. The encrypted backup will appear under the Ba ckups > Disk (encrypted) node in the inventory
pane.
5. In the working area, select the imported backup and click Sp ecify Password on the ribbon or right-click the
backup and select Sp ecify password.
6. In the P a ssword field, enter the password for the backup file.
If you changed the password one or several times while the backup chain was created, you must enter
passwords in the following manner:
o If you select a VBM file for import, you must specify the latest password that was used to encrypt files
in the backup chain.
o If you select a VBK file for import, you must specify the whole set of passwords that were used to
encrypt files in the backup chain.
If you enter correct passwords, Veeam Backup & Replication will decrypt the backup file. The backup will be
moved under the Ba ckups > Disk ( Imported) node in the inventory pane.
NOTE
You can recover data from encrypted backups even if the password is lost. Restoring data without a
password is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise
or higher edition is required. Also, your backup server must be connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager. For more information, see Decrypting Data Without Password.
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Importing Transaction Logs
You cannot import transaction log backups without VM backups (as there will be no restore point to which the
transaction logs can be applied).
• Import a backup metadata file (VBM). In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically import
the database backup and log backups.
• Import a full backup file (VBK). In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will browse to corresponding log
backups and import them, too.
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Importing Backup Files from Scale-Out Backup
Repositories
You cannot import a backup directly from the scale-out backup repository. When you perform backup import,
you cannot browse through all extent of the scale-out backup repository. Veeam Backup & Replication lets you
browse only through individual extents.
To import a backup from the scale-out backup repository, you must place backup files from all extents to one
staging folder. The staging folder can reside on any server added to the backup infrastructure. After that, you
can import the backup as usual.
TIP
If you need to import all backups stored in a scale-out backup repository, rescan the repository. In this
case, you do not need to place files in one folder, Veeam Backup & Replication will import backups
automatically. For more information, see Rescanning Backup Repositories.
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Managing Backups
You can perform the following operations with backups:
• Moving backups
• Copying backups
• Exporting backups
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Viewing Backup Properties
You can view summary information about created backups. The summary information provides the following
data:
In the Ba ckup Properties window, you can see different icons whose meaning is described in Backup State
Indicators.
4. To see the list of available restore points, select the required object from the Ob jects list.
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Changing Backup Chain Formats
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following ways to store backup files: per-machine backup with
separate metadata files, per-machine backup with single metadata file and single-file backup. For more
information, see Backup Chain Formats.
Changing the Use per-machine backup files option for existing backup repositories or moving backups to other
repositories does not change the backup chain format. To change the format, follow the instructions in this
section.
IMP ORTANT
• Change the backup chain format only for backups created successfully.
• Before changing the backup chain format, Veeam Backup & Replication disables the job to which the
backups belong. After the change, the job stays disabled, you need to enable it manually.
• You must disable log backup jobs manually before changing the format.
3. In the working area, select the necessary jobs. Note that the selected jobs must be targeted to the same
repository.
4. Right-click one of the selected jobs and click Up grade backup chain format. Alternatively, click Up grade
Ba ckup Chain Format on the ribbon.
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Veeam Backup & Replication will generate new metadata files for the existing backups. After the upgrade, the
job will continue the backup chain and will create per-machine backups with separate metadata files.
Other Formats
To change the backup chain format, you must detach the existing backup chain from the job and then target the
job to the required repository:
1. Detach backups from the job for whose backups you want to change the backup chain format. For more
information, see Detaching Backups from Jobs.
2. Make sure that the job is targeted to a repository with the necessary state of the Use per-machine backup
files check box. You can edit job settings or repository settings.
The selected check box is for per-machine backups with separate metadata files, the cleared check box is
for single-file backups. You cannot upgrade the backup chain to the per-machine backup with single
metada file as this format is obsolete since Veeam Backup & Replication version 12.
3. To create backup files of the required backup chain format, launch the job. The job will create active full
backups.
Related Topics
Changing Backup Chain Formats for Backup Copy Jobs
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Moving Backups
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to move all backups of a backup job to another repository or to move
specific workloads and their backups to another job.
To move backups to another repository and target a job to this repository, do the following:
4. Right-click the job and select Move backup. Alternatively, click Move Backup on the ribbon.
5. In the Move Backup to Another Location window, select the repository to which you want to move
backups.
Veeam Backup & Replication will reconfigure and target the backup job to the selected repository.
6. Click OK.
3. In the working area, expand the necessary backup job and select workloads.
NOTE
You can move individual workloads and their backups only if backups are per-machine with separate
metadata files for each workload.
4. Right-click one of the selected workloads and click Move backup. Alternatively, click Move Backup on the
ribbon.
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5. In the Move Backup to Another Job window, select the backup job to which you want to move backups.
Veeam Backup & Replication will include workloads into the selected job and exclude workloads from the
original job. Backups of the selected workloads will be moved to the repository to which the selected job
is targeted.
6. Click OK.
NOTE
The original job will still be in the disabled state until you finalize the failed move operation.
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3. Right-click the failed move session and select the required action. Alternatively, select the required action
on the ribbon.
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Copying Backups
Copying backups can be helpful if you want to copy backups of a workload or backup job to another repository,
local or shared folder. Veeam Backup & Replication copies the whole backup chain. If you want to convert a
specific restore point into a single VBK file, use backup export. For more information, see Exporting Backups.
When Veeam Backup & Replication performs the copy operation, it disables the job, copies files to the target
location and then enables the job. After the copy operation finishes, the copied backups are shown in a node
with the ( E xported) postfix in the inventory pane.
NOTE
This section is about one-time copy operation. If you want to copy backups on a schedule, create a backup
copy job. For more information, see Backup Copy.
• The copy operation does not change backup chain format (single-file backup, per-machine with single
metadata file or per-machine with separate metadata files). If you copy backups between repositories with
and without the Use p er-machine backup files check box enabled, backups preserve their formats.
• If you copy backups from a scale-out backup repository and some backups are stored on extents in the
Maintenance mode, such backups are not copied.
• Veeam Backup & Replication copies backups only from the performance tier of the scale-out backup
repository. If you want to copy data from the capacity tier, you first must download it to the performance
tier. For more information, see Downloading Data from Capacity Tier.
• You cannot copy backups stored in Veeam Cloud Connect repositories. For more information on Veeam
Cloud Connect repositories, see the Cloud Repository section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
• [For VMware Cloud Director] You can copy backups of a whole job or individual vApps. You cannot move
backups of VMs.
• You cannot copy backups created by Veeam plug-ins for Enterprise applications, Veeam Cloud Plug-ins
(Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Google Cloud, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure), and Kasten
K10.
Copying Backups
To copy backups, do the following:
3. In the working area, select the necessary job or workload. Note that you can copy backups of an individual
workload only if its backups are per-machine backups with separate metadata files.
4. Right-click the job and select Cop y backup. Alternatively, click Cop y Backup on the ribbon.
5. In the Cop y Backup to Another Location window, choose where you want to copy backups — to a
repository or to a local or shared folder.
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6. If you want to delete the copied backups after a specific time period, select the Delete this backup
a utomatically in check box and specify the time period.
Backups that fall out of the specified retention policy will be removed automatically. If you do not specify
the time period for deletion, copies will be stored until you remove them manually.
7. Click OK.
NOTE
The original job will still be in the disabled state until you finalize the failed copy operation.
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10. Right-click the failed move session and select the required action. Alternatively, select the required action
on the ribbon.
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Exporting Backups
Exporting backups allows you to synthesize a complete and independent full backup file out of selected restore
points that are located in your backup repositories. That is, you can transform any incremental or reverse -
incremental backup chain (i.e all dependent .VBK, .VIB or .VRB files) into a standalone .VBK file. If you want to
export the whole backup chain, use backup copy. For more information, see Copying Backups.
Export applies to Full, Incremental and Reverse-incremental restore points located in:
• Backup repositories.
• The restore point that is being exported as a new full backup file is saved to the same repository, wherein
the source selected restore points reside.
• Once export is complete, exported backup files will be displayed under the Ba ckups > Disk ( VeeamZIP)
node.
• [For scale-out backup repositories] Backup files exported to the capacity tier will be displayed under the
Ba ckups > Capacity Tier (Exported) node, and backup files exported to the archive tier will be displayed
under the Ba ckups > Archive (VeeamZIP) node.
• If a restore point that is being exported resides on the tenant side, a new full backup file will also be
exported to the same repository (on the tenant side) from which the source restore point is being taken.
• If a tenant initiates export of a restore point that resides in the subtenant directory, a new full backup file
will be exported to the tenant directory.
• If you select a backup job consisting of multiple virtual machines, Veeam will synthesize a separate full
backup file per each machine.
• When exporting VMs from VMware Cloud Director backups, all the VMs will be e xported without vApps,
that is, a new full backup file will be exported as a simple VMWare backup, not VMware Cloud Director
backup. For more information about VMware Cloud Director backups, see Backup of VMware Cloud
Director VMs.
• Export session results are saved to the configuration database and available for viewing, as described in
Viewing Session Statistics.
Performing Export
To export data, do the following:
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Step 1. Launch Export Backup Wizard
To launch the E x port Backup wizard, do either of the following:
• In the Home view under the Ba ckups > Disks node, select a VM you want to transform into a full backup
file and click E x port backup.
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Step 2. Select Restore Points to Export
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, do the following:
1. Click Ad d to select a VM, the restore points of which you want to transform into full backup files.
When selecting a backup job consisting of multiple machines, then each machine will be exported as an
independent full backup file.
3. In the Ba ckups to export list, select a VM and click P oint to choose a restore point that you want to
transform into a full backup file.
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Step 3. Specify Destination
At the Ta rget step of the wizard, do the following:
1. In the E x port restore point to area, choose whether you want to export restore points to a backup
repository or to a local or shared folder.
2. If prompted, in the Credentials window, specify credentials of the user account to access the target
location.
3. To automatically delete the exported files after the specified period of time, select the Delete exported
b a ckup file a utomatically check box and specify the period.
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Step 4. Specify Export Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, provide the reason for restore.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review summary information, click Finish and wait until the restore session,
which is described in Viewing Session Statistics, is complete.
You can close the dialog by clicking the Close button in the lower-right corner and let Veeam perform export in
the background.
As each export session saves its results to the configuration database, you can review them at any time.
1. In the inventory pane, go to the History view and select the Restore > E xport node.
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2. In the working area, double-click a machine for which you want to review the session results or right-click
a machine and select Sta tistics.
• The Rea son tab — shows you the reason of export you may have provided at the Specify Export Reason
step of the wizard.
• The P a rameters tab — shows you the date when the exported backup files will be removed due to the
retention policy you may have configured at the Select Restore Points to Export step of the wizard. In this
tab you can also find a backup name and Date/time of a restore point that was synthesized into a full
backup file.
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Canceling Session
To cancel a session, open the Restore Session dialog, as described above, and click Ca ncel restore task in the
upper-right corner of the dialog.
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Detaching Backups from Jobs
If you want to detach backups from a job, you can use the Detach from job operation.
When you detach backups from a job, the job stops processing these backup files. During the next run, the job
will start a new backups chain, that is, will create active full backups.
The detached backup files remain in the backup repository and also in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
Veeam Backup & Replication shows the detached backups in the inventory pane in the node with the ( Orphaned)
postfix. If the detached backups belonged to the job with daily retention, the background retention process
retains the backups according to the configured retention and deletes the backups from the repository after the
retention period ends. If the retention period is set in restore points, the background retention process does not
delete the backups. You need to delete them manually. For more information on how to delete backups
manually, see Deleting Backups from Disk.
3. In the working area, right-click the necessary backup and select Detach from job. Alternatively, click
Delete from > Job on the ribbon.
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Removing Backups from Configuration
If you want to remove records about backups from the Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration
database, you can use the Remove from configuration operation.
When you remove a backup from the configuration, backup files remain in the backup repository. You can import
the backup to Veeam Backup & Replication at any time later later and restore data from it.
When you remove an encrypted backup from configuration, Veeam Backup & Replication removes encryption
keys from the configuration database. If you import such backup on the same backup server or another backup
server, you will have to specify the password or unlock the backup with Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager. For
more information, see Importing Encrypted Backups.
3. In the working area, press the [CTRL] key, right-click the backup that you want to remove and select
Remove from configuration.
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Deleting Backups from Disk
The Delete from disk operation is needed if you want to remove records about backups from the
Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database. This option allows you to delete the following
type of data:
When you delete backup files from a disk, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the whole chain from the backup
repository. Thus, on the next run of the backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will create full backups for
VMs included in the job.
• Do not delete backup files from the backup repository manually. Use the Delete from disk option instead.
If you delete backup files manually, subsequent backup or replication job sessions will fail.
• If the per-machine functionality is enabled, you can perform the Delete from disk operation for separate
VMs in the backup. If you delete backup files for one VM, on the next run of the backup job
Veeam Backup & Replication will create a full backup for VMs whose backup files are deleted. For all other
VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication will create increments.
To learn more about per-machine backup files, see Per-Machine Backup Files
• When you delete a separate VMs from a backup and if the per-machine functionality is enabled for this
VM, Veeam Backup & Replication behaves differently:
o [If per-machine is enabled] Veeam Backup & Replication deletes backup files of the selected VMs.
On the next run of the job, Veeam Backup & Replication will create full backups for VMs whose
backup files were deleted. For all other VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication will create increments.
o [If per-machine is disabled] Veeam Backup & Replication only marks data block that belong to the
deleted VMs as empty — the size of backup files does not change. However,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use these data blocks during such operations as merging backup
files. To reduce the size of full backup files in forever forward incremental and reverse incremental
backup chains, you can compact full backup files. In forward incremental backup chains, files with
block marked as empty will be deleted by retention.
On the next run of the job, Veeam Backup & Replication will create full backups for VMs whose
backup files were deleted. Note that full backups of these VMs will be stored in an incremental file.
For all other VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication will create incremental backups.
• If you use the scale-out backup repository, keep in mind that the Delete from disk operation will remove
the backups not only from the performance tier, but also from the capacity and archive tier. If you want to
remove backups from the performance tier only, you should move those backups to the capacity tier
instead. For details, see Moving to Capacity Tier.
Deleting Backups
To delete backup files from the backup repository, do the following:
3. In the working area, select the backup and click Delete from > Disk on the ribbon. You can also right-click
the backup and select Delete from disk.
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4. To remove backups with GFS flags (weekly, monthly and yearly), select the Remove GFS full backups
check box and click Y es .
3. In the working area, expand the necessary backup, select the VM you want to delete and click Delete from
> Disk on the ribbon. You can also right-click the backup and select Delete from disk.
4. To remove backups with GFS flags (weekly, monthly and yearly), select the Remove GFS full backups
check box and click Y es .
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Deleting Backups from Object Storage
Repositories
This section describes, how to delete backups from object storage repositories. To know how to delete backups
from an object storage repository added as an extent of the scale-out backup repository, see Deleting Backups
from Scale-Out Backup Repositories.
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage node.
3. In the working area, select a backup or VM and click Delete from Disk on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can
right-click a backup and select Delete from disk.
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Deleting Backups from Scale-Out Backup
Repositories
To delete a backup from an scale-out backup repositories, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Ba ckups and select one of the following node:
o Select the Ob ject Storage node if you want to delete a backup from the object storage repository
added as a performance extent.
IMP ORTANT
Keep in mind that the Delete from disk operation will remove the backups not only from the
performance tier, but also from the capacity and archive tier. If you want to remove backups
from the performance tier only, you should move those backups to the capacity tier instead. For
details, see Moving to Capacity Tier.
o Select the Ca pacity Tier node if you want to delete a backup from the capacity tier.
o Select the Archive Tier node if you want to delete backups from the archive tier.
3. In the working area, select a backup or VM and click Delete from Disk on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can
right-click a backup and select Delete from disk.
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Removing Missing Restore Points
In some cases, one or more restore points in the backup chain may be inaccessible. This can happen, for
example, if the backup repository is put to the Maintenance mode (for scale-out backup repositories), the
backup repository is not available or some backup file is missing in the backup chain. Backup chains that contain
missing restore points get corrupted — you cannot perform backup or restore VM data from the missing restore
point, and restore points that depend on the missing restore point.
• Forget — you can remove records about missing restore points from the configuration database.
Veeam Backup & Replication will “forget” about missing restore points and will not display them in the
console. The actual backup files will remain on disk (if backup files are still available).
• Remove — you can remove records about missing restore points from the configuration database and
delete backup files from disk (if backup files are still available).
NOTE
• The Forget and Remove from d isk options are available only for restore points that are missing from
the backup chain or points that depend on missing ones. If the restore point is available in the
backup chain and does not depend on a missing restore point, you will not be able to use the Forget
and Remove from disk options for it.
• You can manually update information about missing restore points. For this, disable a backup job
and rescan the backup repository that is the target for the job. For more information, see Disabling
and Removing Jobs and Rescanning Backup Repositories.
Manual update can be required because Veeam Backup & Replication requires some time to update
information in the configuration database for restore points that were removed from a backup chain
or became inaccessible. That is why such restore points may not be displayed in the console as
missing restore points.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not track missing restore points in backups that reside in the
cloud repository.
• If you apply the Forget or Remove from disk options to a missing restore point in a scale-out backup
repository, the backup file associated with the missing restore point will be deleted from capacity
tier and archive tier on the next offload and archiving job run.
To remove records about missing restore points from the configuration database:
3. In the working area, select the backup and click P roperties on the ribbon or right-click the backup and
select P roperties.
4. In the Ba ckup Properties window, right-click the missing restore point and select Forget.
o To remove only the selected restore point and restore points that depend on it (that is, a part of the
backup chain starting from this restore point), select This a nd dependent backups.
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o To remove all missing restore points, select All unavailable backups.
To remove missing restore points from the configuration database and disk:
3. In the working area, select the backup and click P roperties on the ribbon or right-click the backup and
select P roperties.
4. In the Ba ckup Properties window, right-click the missing restore point and select Remove from disk.
o To remove only the selected restore point and restore points that depend on it (that is, a part of the
backup chain starting from this restore point), select This a nd dependent backups.
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o To remove all missing restore points, select All unavailable backups.
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Launching Background Retention
Veeam Backup & Replication launches background retention every 24 hours at 00:30. If you need to free up disk
space from outdated backups earlier, you can launch the background retention manually.
To launch the background retention outside its automatic schedule, do the following:
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Managing Backup Jobs
To view all jobs configured on the backup server, open the Home view and select the Job s node in the inventory
pane. The list of available jobs is displayed in the working area. You can edit job properties, start and stop jobs,
restart failed jobs, clone jobs, view job statistics and delete unnecessary jobs.
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Editing Job Settings
You can edit configured jobs at any moment. For example, you may want to change scheduling settings for the
job or add some VMs to the job.
3. In the working area, select the job and click E d it on the ribbon or right-click the job and select E d it.
You will follow the same steps as you have followed when creating the job and can change job settings as
required.
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Cloning Jobs
You can create new jobs by means of job cloning. Job cloning allows you to create an exact copy of any job with
the same job settings. Configuration information of the created job copy are written to the configuration
database that stores information of the original job.
To create multiple jobs with similar settings, you can configure a set of jobs that will be used as ‘job templates’.
You can then clone these 'job templates' and edit settings of cloned jobs as required.
The name of the cloned job is formed by the following rule: <job_name_clone1> , where job_name is the name of
the original job and clone1 is a suffix added to the original job name. If you clone the same job again, the number
in the name will be incremented, for example, job_name_clone2, job_name_clone3 and so on.
When cloning job, Veeam Backup & Replication can change some job settings so that cloned jobs do not hinder
original jobs.
• If the original job is scheduled to run automatically, Veeam Backup & Replication disables the cloned job.
To enable the cloned job, select it in the job list and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the job and
select Disable.
• If the original job is configured to use a secondary target, the cloned job is created without the se condary
target settings.
To clone a job:
3. In the working area, select the job and click Clone on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Clone.S
4. After a job is cloned, you can edit all its settings, including the job name.
NOTE
The job cloning functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket -based
license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
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Disabling and Deleting Jobs
You can temporary disable scheduled jobs. The disabled job is paused for some period of time and is not run by
the specified schedule. You can enable a disabled job at any time. You can also permanently delete a job from
Veeam Backup & Replication and from the configuration database.
Disabling Job
To disable a job:
3. In the working area, select the job and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Disable.
To enable a disabled job, select it in the list and click Disable on the ribbon once again.
Deleting Job
To remove a job:
3. In the working area, select the job and click Delete on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Delete.
After the job is deleted, the backups created by this job are displayed under the Ba ckups > Disk ( Orphaned)
node. If the backup files created by this job were also stored in capacity tier or archive tier, they will also be
displayed under the Ba ck ups > Ob ject Storage (Orphaned) or Ba ckups > Archive (Orphaned) nodes.
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Starting and Stopping Jobs
You can start job manually, for example, if you want to create an additional restore point for a VM backup or
replica and do not want to change the job schedule. You can also stop a job, for example, if VM processing is
about to take long, and you do not want the job to produce workload on the production environment d uring
business hours.
Starting Jobs
To start a job:
3. In the working area, select the backup job and click Sta rt on the ribbon or right-click the job and select
Sta rt.
Stopping Jobs
You can stop a job in one of the following ways:
• Stop job immediately. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a new restore point only for
those VMs that have already been processed by the time you stop the job.
• Stop job after current VM. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a new restore point only
for those VMs that have already been processed and for VMs that are being processed at the moment.
To stop a job:
3. In the working area, select the backup job and click Stop on the ribbon or right-click the job and select
Stop . In the displayed window, click Immediately.
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3. In the working area, right-click the job and select Stop . In the displayed window, click Gra cefully.
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Starting and Stopping Transaction Log Backup
Jobs
If you create a backup job and instruct it to ship transaction logs, the backup job comprises 2 jobs:
1. A parent backup job creating an image-level backup of the VM on which the database runs. This job is
named as a regular backup job, for example: Daily Job .
2. A transaction log backup job responsible for shipping transaction logs to the backup repository . This job is
named by the following pattern:
o For MS SQL: <job_name> SQL Server Transaction Log Backup . For example, Daily Job SQL Server
Transaction Log Backup .
o For Oracle: <job_name> Oracle Redo Log Backup . For example, Daily Job Oracle Redo Log Backup .
The transaction log backup job is created automatically by Veeam Backup & Replication if it detects that you
have added to the backup job at least one Microsoft SQL Server or Oracle VM, enabled application-aware
processing and instructed Veeam Backup & Replication to back up transaction logs periodically.
If you want the backup job to create image-level backups of the VM but do not want it to ship transaction logs
anymore, you can disable transaction log backup in the backup job settings.
3. In the working area, select the backup job and click E d it on the ribbon or right-click the backup job and
select E d it.
4. Pass to the Guest Processing step of the wizard and click Ap p lications.
5. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options window, select the VM and click E d it.
6. On the SQL or Ora cle tab of the VM P rocessing Settings window, disable transaction log backup.
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If you do not want to create image-level backups of the VM and back up database transaction logs, you can
disable scheduling for the parent backup job. Veeam Backup & Replication will instruct the transaction log
backup job to complete log processing for all VMs added to the parent backup job, and will switch the parent
backup job to the non-scheduled mode. The parent backup job will no longer be started automatically by
schedule — you will have to run it manually.
3. In the working area, select the backup job and click E d it on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click
the backup job and select E d it.
4. Pass to the Schedule step of the wizard and clear the Run the job automatically check box.
3. In the working area, select the backup job and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the job and select
Disable.
To re-activate transaction log processing for all VMs in the parent backup job, select the job in the list and click
Disable on the ribbon once again.
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Retrying Jobs
The retry option is necessary if a job fails and you want to retry this operation again. When you perform a retry,
Veeam Backup & Replication restarts the operation only for the failed workloads added to the job and does not
process VMs that have been processed successfully. As a result, the retry operation takes less time compared to
running the job for all workloads.
3. In the working area, select the necessary job and click Retry on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-
click the job and select Retry.
3. Right-click one of the selected workloads and click Retry. Note that you will be able to launch retry for
other workloads in the job only after retry finishes for the selected workloads.
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IMP ORTANT
You can perform retry for individual workloads only if their backups are per-machine with separate
metadata files.
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Reconfiguring Jobs with Microsoft SQL Server
VMs
In some situations, you may need to reconfigure a backup job that processes a Microsoft SQL Server VMs and
ships transaction logs. For example, you may want to create a separate backup job to process the virtualized
database, and delete the VM running the database from the previously created job.
When you configure a new job, mind the restriction on transaction logs shipping. By default, the new backup job
that processes the VM will not ship transaction logs if transaction logs for this VM have been shipped for the
last 7 days by another backup job on the same backup server.
You can overcome this restriction with registry values. For more information, contact Veeam Customer Support.
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Targeting Jobs to Another Repository
Veeam Backup & Replication offers you two ways to target a job to another repository:
• You can use the move to another repository operation as described in Moving Backups to Another
Repository. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication moves all backups to a new repository and
reconfigures the job automatically to target to the new location.
• You can edit job settings and select a new repository at the Storage step of the wizard. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to choose whether you want to move all the existing
backups to the new repository or just start a new backup chain on the new repository. If you start a new
backup chain, the previously created backups are detached from the job and put into the node with the
( Orphaned) postfix.
For more information on how the move to another repository operation works and its considerations, see
Moving Backups.
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Reporting
When you run a job, Veeam Backup & Replication saves the job statistics and operation data to the configuration
database. You can view real-time statistics for any performed job and generate reports with statistics data for
any job or separate job session.
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Viewing Real-Time Statistics
To view real-time statistics for a job, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select one of the following nodes: Job s, Last 24 hours or
Running. In the working area, right-click the job and select Statistics.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select one of the following nodes: Job s, Last 24 hours or
Running. In the working area, double-click the running job.
The real-time statistics provides detailed data on job sessions: job progress, duration, processing rate,
performance bottlenecks, amount of processed data, read and transferred data and details of the session
performance, for example, warnings and errors that have occurred in the process of operation.
In addition to overall job statistics, the real-time statistics provides information on each object processed with
the job. To view the processing progress for a specific object, select it in the list on the left.
TIP
• To collapse and expand the real-time statistics window, use Hid e Details and Show Details buttons at
the bottom left corner of the window.
• To switch between the job sessions backward and forward, use left and right arrow keys on the
keyboard.
Statistics Counters
Veeam Backup & Replication displays jobs statistics for the following counters:
o Duration — time from the job start till the current moment or job end.
o P rocessing rate — average speed of VM data processing. This counter is a ratio between the amount of
data that has actually been read and job duration.
o Bottleneck — bottleneck in the data transmission process. To learn about job bottlenecks, see
Detecting Performance Bottlenecks.
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• The Da ta box shows information about processed VM data:
o Rea d — amount of data read from the datastore by the source-side Data Mover prior to applying
compression and deduplication. For incremental job runs, the value of this counter is typically lower
than the value of the P rocessed counter. Veeam Backup & Replication reads only data blocks that
have changed since the last job session, processes and copies these data blocks to the target.
o Tra nsferred — amount of data transferred from the source-side Veeam Data Mover to the target-side
Veeam Data Mover after applying compression and deduplication. This counter does not directly
indicate the size of the resulting files. Depending on the backup infrastructure and job settings,
Veeam Backup & Replication can perform additional activities with data: deduplicate data,
decompress data prior to writing the file to disk and so on. The activities can impact the size of the
resulting file.
• The Sta tus box shows information about the job results. This box informs how many tasks have completed
with the Success, Warning and Error statuses (1 task per 1 VM).
• The pane at the lower left corner shows a list of objects included in the job.
• The pane at the lower right corner shows a list of operations performed during the job. To see a list of
operations for a specific object included in the job, click the object in the pane on the left. To see a list of
operations for the whole job, click anywhere on the blank area in the left pane.
Colored Graph
To visualize the data transfer process, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a colored graph in the real-time
statistics window:
• The green area defines the amount of data read from source.
If the job session is still being performed, you can click the graph to view data rate for the last 5 minutes or the
whole processing period. If the job session has already ended, the graph will display information for the whole
processing period only.
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The colored graph is displayed only for the currently running job session or the latest job session. If you open
real-time statistics for past sessions other than the latest one, the colored graph will not be displayed.
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Viewing Job Session Results
You can view detailed statistics on every job session.
• Open the History view. In the inventory pane select Job s . In the working area, double-click the necessary
job session.
• Open the History view. In the inventory pane select Job s . In the working area, right-click the necessary job
session and select Sta tistics.
TIP
To switch between past job sessions, use left and right arrow keys on the keyboard.
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Viewing Job and Job Session Reports
You can generate reports with details about all sessions of a job or a single session only.
Job Report
The job report contains data on all sessions initiated for a specific job, that is, job history. The report shows data
for all sessions stored in the configuration database.
3. In the working area, select the necessary job and click Rep ort on the ribbon. You can also right-click the
job and select Rep ort.
TIP
Session Report
To generate a report for a single session:
3. In the working area, select the necessary session and click Rep ort on the ribbon. You can also right-click
the necessary session and select Rep ort.
Report Counters
Veeam Backup & Replication displays the following counters in reports:
• The Success, W arning and E rror counters show how many workloads were processed with the Success,
Warning and Error statuses.
• The Sta rt time and E nd time counters show when the job started and completed.
• The Duration counter shows time from the job start till the current moment or job end.
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• The Tota l size counter shows provisioned size (the maximum configured size) of all workload disks in the
job.
• The Da ta read counter shows the amount of data read from the datastore before compression and
deduplication. The value of this counter is typically lower than the value of the Tota l size counter.
Veeam Backup & Replication reads only data blocks that have changed since the last job session, processes
and copies these data blocks to the target.
• The Tra nsferred counter shows the amount of data transferred from the source side to the target side
after applying compression and source-side deduplication. This counter does not directly indicate the size
of the resulting files. Depending on the backup infrastructure and job settings,
Veeam Backup & Replication can perform additional activities with data: perform target-side
deduplication, decompress data prior to writing the file to disk and so on. The activities can impact the
size of the resulting file.
• The Ba ckup size counter shows the resulting backup file size.
In the Details section, you can see similar counters for each workload processed by the job.
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Replication
Replication is a technology that helps you protect mission-critical VMware virtual machines. When you replicate
a VM, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an exact copy of the VM in the native VMware vSphere format on the
target host. Veeam Backup & Replication maintains this copy in sync with the source VM. Replication provides
minimum recovery time objective (RTO) in case a disaster strikes because VM replicas are in a ready-to-start
state.
We recommend you to replicate VMs for which recovery point objective (RPO) of hours is required. If you need
RPO of seconds, consider continuous data protection (CDP).
Data Replication
To replicate VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication leverages VMware vSphere snapshot capabilities. During
replication, Veeam Backup & Replication requests VMware vSphere to create a VM snapshot. The VM snapshot
can be thought of as a point-in-time copy of a VM that includes virtual disks, system state, configuration and so
on. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the snapshot as a source of data for replication.
During the first replication cycle, Veeam Backup & Replication copies data of the source VM running on the
source host, and creates its full replica on the target host. Unlike backup files, replica virtual disks are stored
decompressed in their native format. All subsequent replication cycles are incremental.
Veeam Backup & Replication copies only those data blocks that have changed since the last replication job
session. To keep track of changed data blocks, Veeam Backup & Replication uses different approaches. For more
information, see Changed Block Tracking.
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you perform on-site replication for high availability scenarios and remote (off-
site) replication for disaster recovery scenarios. To facilitate replication over the WAN or slow connections,
Veeam Backup & Replication optimizes traffic transmission. It filters out unnecessary data blocks such as
duplicate data blocks, zero data blocks, blocks of swap files and blocks of excluded VM guest OS files, and
compresses replica traffic. Veeam Backup & Replication also allows you to use WAN accelerators and apply
network throttling rules to prevent replication jobs from consuming the entire network bandwidth.
To replicate a VM, you need to configure required backup infrastructure components and create a replication
job.
Recovery
If a disaster strikes and the production VM stops working properly, you can fail over to its replica.
When you fail over to a replica, the replica takes over the role of the source VM. After your source VM is
repaired, you can fail back to it and transfer all changes that occurred to replica to the source VM. If your source
VM cannot be repaired, you can perform permanent failover, that is, permanently switch from the source VM to
the VM replica and use this replica as the source VM. For more information, see Failover and Failback for
Replication.
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Requirements and Limitations
Replication has the following requirements and limitations:
• Due to VMware vSphere limitations, if you change the size of VM disks on the source VM,
Veeam Backup & Replication deletes all available restore points (represented as VM snapshots) on the VM
replica during the next replication job session. For more information, see this VMware KB article.
• Due to a change in ESXi 6.0 Update 1, replication and quick migration to VVol datastores are not possible
with either Veeam or native VMware vSphere replication.
• If you assign the role of a backup proxy to a VM, you should not add this VM to the list of processed VMs
in a job that uses this backup proxy. Such configuration may result in degraded job performance.
Veeam Backup & Replication will assign this backup proxy to process other VMs in the job first, and
processing of this VM itself will be put on hold. Veeam Backup & Replication will report the following
message in the job statistics: VM is a backup proxy, waiting for it to stop processing tasks . The job will
start processing this VM only after the backup proxy deployed on the VM finishes its tasks.
• If you use tags to categorize virtual infrastructure objects, check limitations for VM tags. For more
information, see VM Tags.
• Due to Microsoft limitations, you cannot use Microsoft Azure Active Directory credentials to per form
application-aware processing on VMs running Microsoft Windows 10 (or later).
• If a job is unable to complete within 21 days period, it will be stopped with the Failed status.
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Backup Infrastructure for Replication
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following components for the replication process:
• Backup server
• Backup proxies
• Backup repository
The amount and placement of these components depend on a replication scenario you use. For more
information, see Replication Scenarios.
Backup Server
During the replication process, the backup server coordinates replication tasks, controls resource allocation and
replica job scheduling. The backup server runs the Veeam Backup Service and Veeam Broker Service that
coordinate and interact with the virtual infrastructure.
The role of a target host can be assigned to a standalone ESXi host or ESXi cluster. If you assign a cluster or
vCenter Server as a target, the replication process becomes more sustainable — the replication process will not
fail if there is at least one available host in the cluster.
To replicate data from and to hosts, they must be first added to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure.
For more information on how to add hosts, see the Adding VMware vSphere Servers section.
Backup Proxies
A backup proxy collects, transforms and transports VM data during the replication process. For more
information on backup proxies, requirements and limitations for them, see Backup Proxy.
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For replication, you can deploy backup proxies on the following machines:
• P hy sical machines. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Network transport mode to populate
replica disk files. For more information, see Network Mode.
• VMs . The virtual backup proxy must be registered on an ESXi host that has a direct connection to the
target datastore. In this case, the backup proxy will be able to use the Virtual appl iance transport mode to
populate replica disk files. This results in increased writing speed and fail-safe replication to ESXi targets.
For more information, see Virtual Appliance (HotAdd). Note that if the Virtual appliance transport mode
cannot be used, the backup proxy can fail over to the network mode if you configure it while adding a
backup proxy.
We recommend you to use at least two backup proxies to ensure that the job will be performed if one of backup
proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the source datastore. For more information on how assign the role of a
backup proxy, see Adding VMware Backup Proxies. For more information on how to assign proxies to a
replication job, see Specify Data Transfer Settings.
Backup Repository
The backup repository stores replica metadata that contains information on the read data blocks (such as
checksums and digests). Metadata is required when Veeam Backup & Replication performs incremental
replication or if you fail back from a VM replica to the source VM in the original location using quick rollback.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses metadata to quickly detect changed data blocks between two replica states.
The backup repository must be deployed as close to the source backup proxy as possible and must have access
to it.
WAN Accelerators
WAN accelerators are optional components in the backup infrastructure. You can use WAN accelerators if you
replicate VMs over a slow connection or over WAN.
In the replication process, WAN accelerators are responsible for global data caching. To use WAN acceleration,
you must deploy two WAN accelerators in the following way:
• The source WAN accelerator must be deployed in the source side, close to the backup proxy.
• The target WAN accelerator must be deployed in the target side, close to the backup proxy.
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Replication Scenarios
Veeam Backup & Replication supports a number of replication scenarios that depend on the location of the
target host:
• On-site replication. If the target host is located in the same site as the source host, use the on-site
replication scenario.
• Off-site replication. If the target and source hosts are located in different sites, use the off-site replication
scenario.
Depending on the scenario you are planning to use, different backup infrastructure components will be involved
in the replication process. For more information on the components, see Backup Infrastructure for Replication.
On-Site Replication
On-site replication requires the following backup infrastructure components:
• Backup proxy. In the on-site replication scenario, the source Veeam Data Mover and target Veeam Data
Mover are started on the same backup proxy. The backup proxy must have access to the backup server,
source host, target host and backup repository that stores replica metadata.
In the on-site replication scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform data compression. Replication
traffic is transferred decompressed between the two Veeam Data Mover started on the same backup proxy.
Off-Site Replication
For the off-site replication scenario, you must use at least two backup proxies:
• One backup proxy in the production site, closer to the source host.
• One backup proxy in the remote DR site, closer to the target host.
Depending on the network speed between the production and DR sites, off -site replication can run in two ways:
• Directly over backup proxies. Transfer data directly over backup proxies if the connection between two
sites is fast and stable.
• Over a pair of W AN accelerators. Use WAN accelerators if the connection between the sites is slow.
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NOTE
With off-site replication, you can also use technologies that help reduce the amount of replication traffic
and streamline replica configuration: replica seeding and mapping, network mapping and re-IP rules.
• At least one backup proxy in the production site. The backup proxy must have access to the backup server,
source host, backup proxy in the target site and backup repository that stores replica metadata.
• At least one backup proxy in the DR site. The backup proxy must have access to the b ackup server, target
host and backup proxy in the production site.
In the off-site replication scenario, Veeam Backup & Replication uses data compression. Veeam Data Mover on
the source backup proxy compresses VM data blocks and sends them to the target backup proxy in the
compressed format. Veeam Data Mover on the target backup proxy decompresses VM data and stores it to a
datastore in a native VMware vSphere format.
o Source WAN accelerator in the production site. The source WAN accelerator must have access to the
backup server, source backup proxy and target WAN accelerator.
o Target WAN accelerator in the DR site. The target WAN accelerator must have access to the backup
server, source WAN accelerator and target backup proxy.
• At least one backup proxy in the production site. The backup proxy must have access to the backup server,
source host, source WAN accelerator and backup repository that stores replica metadata.
• At least one backup proxy in the DR site. The backup proxy must have access to the backup server, target
host and target WAN accelerator.
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• Backup repository for storing replica metadata. The backup repository must be located in the production
site, closer to the source backup proxy, and must have access to it.
In the off-site replication scenario using WAN accelerators, Veeam Backup & Replication compresses VM data.
VM data blocks are compressed on the source WAN accelerator, transported to the DR site in the compressed
format and decompressed on the target WAN accelerator.
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How Replication Works
Veeam Backup & Replication performs VM replication in the following way:
1. When a new replication job session starts, Veeam Backup & Replication reads job settings from the
configuration database and creates a list of VMs to process. For every disk of a VM added to the job,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new task.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication checks what backup infrastructure resources are available, and assigns
backup proxies and backup repositories to process the tasks. Then Veeam Backup & Replication
establishes a connection with source and target backup proxies and the backup repository, and sets a
number of rules for data transfer, such as network traffic throttling rules and so on.
3. The source proxy establishes a connection with the target proxy and backup repository.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication queries information about VMs and virtualization hosts from the vCenter
Server.
5. If application-aware image processing is enabled for the job, Veeam Backup & Replication connects to VM
guest OSes, deploys non-persistent runtime components or uses (if necessary, deploys) persistent agent
components on VM guest OSes and performs in-guest processing tasks.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication requests vCenter Server or ESXi host to create a VM snapshot. VM disks are
put to the read-only state, and every virtual disk receives a delta file. All changes that the user makes to
the VM during replication are written to delta files.
7. The source backup proxy reads the VM data from the read -only VM disk and copies it. During incremental
job sessions, the source proxy uses changed block tracking (CBT) to retrieve only those data blocks that
have changed since the previous job session. If CBT is not available, the source proxy interacts with the
backup repository to obtain replica metadata, and uses this metadata to detect blocks that have changed
since the previous job session.
While copying VM data, the source proxy performs additional processing. It filters out zero d ata blocks,
blocks of swap files and blocks of excluded VM guest OS files. The source proxy compresses VM data and
transports it to the target proxy.
8. The target proxy decompresses VM data and writes the result to the destination datastore.
9. After the backup proxy finishes reading VM data, Veeam Backup & Replication requests the vCenter Server
or ESXi host to commit the VM snapshot.
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Replication Chain
For every VM replica, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a replication chain that consists of restore points.
Veeam Backup & Replication utilizes VMware ESXi snapshot capabilities to create and manage replica restore
points.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a restore point during every replication job session. During the first
replication job session, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a copy of the source VM on the target host. During
every subsequent replication job session, it adds a new snapshot to the replication chain for the VM replica.
Blocks of data that have changed since the last job run are written to the snapshot delta file, and the snapshot
delta file acts as a restore point. You can view a replication chain created for a VM using VMware vSphere client.
You can specify how many restore points you want to store in the replication chain. For this, configure retention
policy settings for the replication job. For more information, see Specify Replication Job Settings.
VM replica restore points are stored in a native VMware vSphere format next to replica virtual disk f iles, which
allows Veeam Backup & Replication to accelerate failover operations. To fail over to the necessary point of the
VM replica, Veeam Backup & Replication does not need to apply rollback files. Instead, it uses a native VMware
vSphere mechanism of reverting to a snapshot.
IMP ORTANT
We recommend you against switching restore points for replicas and powering on replicas using VMware
vSphere client. This may disrupt further replication operations in Veeam Backup & Replication or cause loss
of important data. Instead, use Veeam Backup & Replication to perform failover operations. For more
information on how to fail over to a VM replica, see Failover.
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Replica Seeding and Mapping
Replica seeding and mapping are technologies that help reduce the amount of traffic sent over a network. With
these technologies, Veeam Backup & Replication do not have to transfer all of VM data from the source host to
the target host across the sites during the first session of a replication job (during the initial replication).
• Seeding
Configure replica seeding if, in a backup repository located in the disaster recovery (DR) site, you have
backups of VMs that you plan to replicate. During replication, Veeam Backup & Replication will restore
VMs from these backups and will synchronize the state of the restored VMs with the latest state of the
source VMs. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will use these restored VMs as replicas.
For more information on how to create backups that can be used as "seeds" for replica, see Creating
Replica Seeds.
• Ma pping
Configure replica mapping if, on the host in the DR site, you have ready -to-use copies of the source VMs.
These can be restored VMs or replicas created by other replication jobs. Veeam Backup & Replication will
synchronize the state of these ready-to-use VMs with the latest state of the source VMs and will use these
VMs as replicas. You can also use replica mapping if you need to reconfigure or recreate replication jobs,
for example, split one replication job into several jobs.
You can also configure both replica seeding and replica mapping in the same replication job. For example, if a
replication job includes 2 VMs, you can use seeding for one VM and map the other VM to an existing VM.
IMP ORTANT
If seeding or mapping is enabled in a replication job, all VMs in the job must be covered with seeding or
mapping. If a VM neither has a seed, nor is mapped to an existing VM, it will be skipped from processing.
1. As a preparatory step for replica seeding, you need to create a backup of a VM that you plan to replicate.
For more information on how to create a backup that will be used as a "seed" for replica, see Creating
Replica Seeds.
2. When you create a replication job, you should point it to a backup repository in the DR site. During the
initial synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the backup repository where the replica seed
is located, and restores the VM from the backup. The restored VM is registered on the target host in the
DR site. Files of the restored VM are placed to the location you specify as the replica destination
datastore.
Virtual disks of a replica restored from the backup preserve their format (that is, if the source VM used
thin provisioned disks, virtual disks of the VM replica are restored as thin provisioned).
3. Veeam Backup & Replication synchronizes the restored VM with the latest state of the source VM.
After successful synchronization, in the Home view in the Veeam Backup & Replication console, under
Rep licas node you will see a VM replica with two restore points. One point will contain the state of the VM
from the backup file; the other point will contain the latest state of the source VM you want to replicate.
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4. During incremental synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers only incremental changes in a
regular manner.
Replica seeding dramatically reduces traffic sent over WAN or slow connections because
Veeam Backup & Replication does not send the full contents of the VM image. Instead, it transmits only
differential data blocks.
TIP
If you add new VMs to an already existing replication job, you can enable replica seeding settings for these
VMs. In this case, the newly added VMs will be seeded from the selected backups at the next pass of the
replication job. VMs that have already been processed by the job by the time you add new VMs will be
processed in a regular manner.
1. During the first run, the replication job calculates the differences between the source and mapped VM.
Instead of copying and transferring all data of the source VM, the replication job transfers only
incremental changes to synchronize the state of the mapped VM with the state of the source VM.
After successful synchronization, in the Home view of Veeam Backup & Replication, under Rep licas node
you will see a VM replica with 2 restore points:
o One restore point will contain the latest state of the mapped VM.
o The other restore point will contain the latest state of the source VM on the source host.
2. All subsequent runs of the replication job will be performed in a regular manner:
Veeam Backup & Replication will transfer only incremental changes to the target host.
NOTE
If a VM replica to which the source VM is mapped has any snapshots, these snapshots will be removed
during the run of the replication job.
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Replica from Backup
Disaster recovery plans often require that you back up and replicate the same VM for disaster recovery (DR) and
high availability (HA) purposes. As a rule, this doubles the workload on the virtual infrastructure: two VM
snapshots need to be created independently from one another, and VM data need to be transferred from the
production site twice.
To minimize the use of compute, storage and network resources, you can use the replica from backup option.
You can use this option in both on-site and off-site replication scenarios.
When you perform replication from backup, Veeam Backup & Replication does not address hosts and storage in
the production environment to read VM data. As a source of data, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a backup
chain that already exists in a backup repository. As a result, Veeam Backup & Replication creates only one
snapshot and transfers VM data only once. Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves VM data only while a backup
or backup copy job is running. The replication job re-uses retrieved data to build VM replica restore points.
• Replica seeding uses a backup file only during the first run of a replication job. To further build VM replica
restore points, the replication job addresses the production environment and reads VM data from the
source storage.
• Replica from backup uses a backup chain in a backup repository as the only source of data. When building
a new VM replica restore point, Veeam Backup & Replication always reads data from the latest restore
point in the backup chain, either full or incremental. The backup chain in the backup repository may be
created with a backup job or a backup copy job.
• You can perform replication only from backups of VMware vSphere virtual machines created with
Veeam Backup & Replication. Replication from backups of VMware Cloud Director virtual machines is not
supported.
o Backups that backup jobs or backup copy jobs create. These jobs must be configured on the same
backup server where you configure the replication job.
o Backups to which backup jobs or backup copy jobs are mapped. These jobs must be configured on the
same backup server where you configure the replication job.
• The jobs mentioned in the previous list items must run periodically and produce new restore points.
Otherwise, the replication job will have no data to retrieve and replicas will be in an outdated state.
• Replica from backup cannot use imported backups. However, there might be a situa tion when you need to
use backups created on another backup server. In this case, use the instructions provided in Using Backups
Created on Crashed Backup Server. Note that the backup server from which you import backups must not
operate anymore, otherwise replica from backup may behave in an unexpected way.
• [For backups stored on scale-out backup repositories] Replica from backup ignores backups stored in a tier
other than the performance tier.
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How Replica from Backup Works
Replica from backup is performed along with a regular replication job. When you set up a replication job, you
define a backup repository with VM backups as a source of data. If the backups for this VM are available in
different backup repositories, you can select several backup repositories as a source. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will look for the latest VM restore point across these backup repositories.
For example, you configure two backup jobs that process the same VM, and target these jobs at two different
backup repositories. The backup jobs create the following backup files:
• Backup job 1 creates 2 restore points in Backup repository 1: full backup file on Sunday and incremental
backup file on Tuesday.
• Backup Job 2 creates 1 restore point in Backup repository 2: full backup file on Monday.
The replication job is configured to retrieve VM data from backups and is scheduled to run daily. In this case, the
replication job retrieves VM data from backups in the following way:
1. On Sunday, the replication job retrieves VM data from the full backup file in Backup repository 1.
2. On Monday, the replication job retrieves VM data from the full backup file in Backup repository 2.
3. On Tuesday, the replication job retrieves VM data from the incremental backup file in Backup repository 1.
4. Till next Sunday, the replication job does not retrieve any VM data because backup files are not created.
In some situations, a new restore point in the backup repository may not be created by the time a replication job
starts. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning notifying that the latest restore point has
already been replicated. The replication job session finishes with the Warning status.
NOTE
When you replicate a VM over a production network, Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves VM data as of
the latest VM state. When you replicate a VM from backup, Veeam Backup & Replication retrieves VM data
as of the point in time when the backup was created. The VM replica restore point has the same timestamp
as a corresponding VM backup restore point, not the time when the replica job session is run.
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Using Backups Created on Crashed Backup Server
There might be a situation when you created backups on one backup ser ver, the server crashed and you want to
use these backups for replica from backup on another backup server.
Veeam Backup & Replication considers backups created on other backup servers as imported backups. Replica
from backups cannot use imported backups, that is why you need to perform the following steps to use backups
created on the crashed server:
1. Import the backups to the backup server where you create the replication job. You have several options:
o You can connect the repository where the backups are stored to the backup server and then rescan
the repository.
o You can copy backups to a backup repository already added to the backup server and then rescan the
repository.
o You can copy backups to a backup repository already added to the backup server. Then edit repository
settings and select the Search the repository for existing backups and import them automatically
check box at the Review step of the wizard.
2. Create a new backup job or a backup copy job and map the imported backups to it. For more information
on how to map backups, see Specify Backup Storage Settings.
After you map a backup to a job, Veeam Backup & Replication stops considering the backup as imported.
3. Create a replication job. In the job settings, specify that you want to use backups as a data source and
select the backup repository where the imported backups resid e. For more information, see Specify Data
Source.
IMP ORTANT
• The backup job or backup copy job to which you map the imported backup file must run periodically
and produce new restore points. Otherwise, the replication job will have no data to retrieve and
replicas will be in an outdated state.
• No other running backup servers must use the imported backups.
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Creating Replication Jobs
To create VM replicas, you must configure a replication job. The replication job defines how, where and when to
replicate VM data. One job can be used to process one VM or multiple VMs.
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Before You Begin
Before you create a replication job, check the following p rerequisites and limitations:
• Check limitations for replication described in the Requirements and Limitations section.
• Backup infrastructure components that will take part in the replication process must be added to the
backup infrastructure and properly configured. These include source and target ESXi hosts, one backup
proxy for on-site replication scenario or two backup proxies for off-site replication scenario and backup
repository for storing replica metadata.
• The backup server must be able to resolve short names and connect to source and target virtualization
hosts.
• The target datastore must have enough free space to store disks of replicated VMs. To receive alerts about
low space on the target datastore, configure global notification settings. For more information, see
Specifying Other Notification Settings.
• If you plan to replicate VMs using WAN accelerators, source and target WAN accelerators must be added
to the backup infrastructure and properly configured. For more information, see Adding WAN
Accelerators.
• If you plan to replicate VMs using WAN accelerators, it is recommended that you pre -populate global
cache on the target WAN accelerator before you start the replication job. Global cache population helps
reduce the amount of traffic transferred over WAN. For more information, see Populating Global Cache.
• If you plan to replicate VMs from a backup, the backup job that you plan to use as the source must be
configured beforehand. For more information, see Replica from Backup.
• If you plan to use pre-job and post-job scripts and/or pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts, you must create
scripts before you configure the replication job. For the supported script format, see Pre-Freeze and Post-
Thaw Scripts.
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Step 1. Launch New Replication Job Wizard
To launch the New Replication Job wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home view. On the ribbon, click Rep lication Job > Virtual machine > VMware vSphere.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane right-click the Job s node and select Rep lication > Virtual
ma chine > VMware vSphere.
• Open the Inventory view. In the working area, select VMs that you want to replicate and right-click one of
them. Select Ad d to replication job > New job if you want to create a new replication job, or Ad d to
rep lication job > <Job Name> if you want to add VMs to an existing replication job.
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a job name and description, and configure advanced settings for the
replication job:
3. If a network between your production and disaster recovery (DR) sites has low bandwidth, and you want
to reduce the amount of traffic sent during the first run of the replication job, select the Rep lica seeding
( for low bandwidth DR sites) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Seeding step where you will have to configure replica seeding
and mapping. For more information on seeding and mapping, see Replica Seeding and Mapping.
4. If your DR site networks do not match your production site networks, select the Network remapping (for
DR sites with different virtual networks) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Network step where you will have to configure a network
mapping table.
5. If the IP addressing scheme in your production site differs from the scheme in the DR site, select the
Rep lica re-IP (for DR sites with different IP addressing scheme) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Re-IP step where you will have to configure replica re-IP rules.
6. If you want the resource scheduler of Veeam Backup & Replication to prioritize this job higher than other
similar jobs and to allocate resources to it in the first place, select the Hig h priority check box. For more
information on job priorities, see Job Priorities.
TIP
In the UI, jobs with the Hig h priority option enabled will be marked with a special flag ( ).
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Step 3. Select VMs to Replicate
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select VMs and VM containers (hosts, clusters, folders, resource
pools, VirtualApps, datastores or tags) that you want to replicate:
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Ad d Object window, select the necessary VMs or VM containers and click Ad d . If you select VM
containers and add new VMs to this container in future, Veeam Backup & Replication will update
replication job settings automatically to include these VMs.
You can use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views . Depending on the
view you select, some objects may not be available. For example, if you select Ta g s combination view, no
resource pools, hosts or clusters will be displayed in the tree. In the Ta g s combination view, you can select
multiple tags and only VMs that have all the selected tags will be processed by the job.
To quickly find the necessary VMs, you can use the search field at the bottom of the Ad d Object window. If
you want to switch between types of VMs you want to search through, use the button to the left of the
search field.
The total size of objects added to the job is displayed in the Tota l size field. Use the Recalculate button to
refresh the total size value after you add a new object to the job.
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Step 4. Specify Data Source
You can select a data source from which Veeam Backup & Replication will read VM data:
o From production storage. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will retrieve VM data from
datastores connected to the source ESXi host.
o From backup files. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will read VM data from the backup chain
already existing in the selected backup repository. This option can be used in the replica from backup
scenario. For more information, see Replica from Backup.
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Step 5. Exclude Objects from Replication Job
After you have added VMs and VM containers to the replication job, you can specify which objects you want to
exclude from replicas. You can exclude the following types of objects:
• VMs or VM containers
• VM disks
NOTE
To make the replication process faster and reduce the size of created replicas, Veeam Backup & Replication
automatically excludes the following objects from replication:
• VM log files
2. In the E x clusions window, check that the VMs tab is selected and click Ad d .
3. In the Ad d Objects window, select VMs or VM containers that you want to exclude from being replicated
and click Ad d .
You can use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views. Depending on the
view you select, some objects may not be available. For example, if you select Ta g s combination view, no
resource pools, hosts or clusters will be displayed in the tree. In the Ta g s combination view, you can select
multiple tags and only VMs that have all the selected tags will be excluded from the job.
You can also use the Show full hierarchy check box to display the hierarchy of all VMware Servers added to
the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure.
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4. Click OK.
Excluding Disks
To exclude VM disks:
b. If you want to exclude disks of VMs that are added as a part of containers, click Ad d . In the Ad d
Ob jects window, select the necessary VMs and click Ad d . Veeam Backup & Replication will include
these VMs in the list as standalone objects.
c. In the Disks to process list, select VMs or VM containers whose disks you want to exclude.
d. Click E d it.
3. In the Select Disks window, select disks that you want to replicate: all disks, 0:0 disks (as a rule, system
disks) or specific IDE, SCSI, SATA or NVMe disks. Disks that you do not select will be excluded from
processing. Click OK.
NOTE
If you exclude disks from being replicated and enable application-aware processing,
Veeam Backup & Replication will still perform application-aware processing for the excluded disks. This
means that VSS will process disk data.
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Step 6. Specify VM Processing Order
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, click Up and Down to change the processing order. VMs at the top of
the list have a higher priority and will be processed first.
NOTE
• VMs inside a VM container are processed at random. To ensure that VMs are processed in the
defined order, you must add them as standalone VMs, not as a part of containers.
• The processing order may differ from the order that you have defined. For example, if resources of a
VM that is higher in the priority are not available, and resources of a VM that is lower in the priority
are available, Veeam Backup & Replication will process the VM with the lower priority first.
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Step 7. Specify Replica Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select a target host or cluster, resource pool, folder and datastore for
replicas, and types of replica disks:
1. Next to the Host or cluster field, click Choose and select a host or cluster where replicas must be
registered. If you select a cluster or vCenter Server, the replication process will become more sustainable
— the replication process will not fail if there is at least one available host in the cluster.
If you select a cluster as a destination, Veeam Backup & Replication will request VMware to send the list of
available hosts, and will select the first host in this list as the destination for the replicas. These replicas
will be stored on the datastore with the most free disk space.
2. Next to the Resource pool field, click Choose and select a resource pool to which replicas will be added.
If you have selected to replicate multiple VMs and want to add individual replicas to other resource pools:
d. In the Choose Resource P ool window, select the necessary VMs in the Rep lica VM resource pool list.
At the bottom of the window, click Resource Pool.
e. In the Select Resource Pool window, select the necessary resource pool and click OK.
3. Next to the VM folder field, click Choose and select a folder where all VM files will be stored. Note that
the VM folder section is disabled if you have selected a standalone ESXi host as the target for replicas.
If you have selected to replicate multiple VMs and want to place individual replicas to other folders:
d. In the Choose Folder window, select the necessary VMs in the Rep lica VM folder list. At the bottom of
the window, click VM Folder.
4. Next to the Da tastore field, click Choose and select a datastore where replica files will be stored. Note
that if you have chosen to replicate VMs to a cluster, Veeam Backup & Replication displays only shared
datastores.
If you have selected to replicate multiple VMs and want to place individual replicas to other datastores:
d. In the Choose VM Files Location window, select the necessary VMs in the Files location list. At the
bottom of the window, click Da tastore.
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5. If you want to store replica configuration files and disk files in different datastores:
d. In the Choose VM Files Location window, expand the necessary VMs in the Files location list, and
select the necessary files. At the bottom of the window, click Da tastore.
e. In the Select Datastore window, select the destination for the selected type of files.
NOTE
After the first run of the replication job, you can change the target location for replicated files. However,
the target will be changed only for new files that were created on the source VM after the first run. The
target for old files will not be changed.
6. You can change types of replica disks. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication saves disks in the thin type.
c. In the Ad d Objects window, select VMs whose disk type you want to change and click Ad d .
d. In the Choose VM Files Location window, select the necessary VMs in the Files location list. At the
bottom of the window, click Disk type.
e. In the Disk Type Settings window, select a type that will be used to restore replica disk files: same as
source, thin, thick lazy zeroed or thick eager zeroed.
NOTE
Disk type change is available only for VMs that use virtual hardware version 7 or later.
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Step 8. Configure Network Mapping
The Network step of the wizard is available if you have selected the Network remapping option at the Na me
step of the wizard.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the
production site to networks in the disaster recovery (DR) site. When the replication session starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will check the network mapping table. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will
update replica configuration to replace the production networks with the specified networks in the DR site. As a
result, you will not have to re-configure network settings manually.
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Source network field.
3. In the Select Network window, select the production network to which the source workloads are
connected and click OK.
4. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Ta rget network field.
5. In the Select Network window, select a network in the DR site to which replicas will be connected and
click OK.
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Step 9. Configure Re-IP Rules
The Re-IP step of the wizard is available if you have selected the Rep lica re-IP option at the Name step of the
wizard. This step applies only to VMs with Microsoft Windows OSes.
At the Re-IP step of the wizard, configure re-IP rules. These rules map IPs in the production site to IPs in the
disaster recovery (DR) site. When you perform failover, Veeam Backup & Replication will check the configured
re-IP rules and will change replica IPs if the rules apply. VM replicas will get new IP addresses according to the
network masks specified in the rules, so that you will be able to reach replicas in the DR site.
1. Click Ad d and select whether you want to configure an IPv4 or IPv6 rule. Note that you can use IPv6
addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
2. In the Source VM section, specify an IP numbering scheme used in the production site.
To facilitate the configuration, Veeam Backup & Replication detects an IP address and subnet mask for the
backup server and pre-populates values in the Source VM section.
3. In the Ta rget VM section, specify an IP address, subnet mask and default gateway that will be used for
replicas in the DR site. If required, specify the DNS server addresses. For the IPv4 rules, you can also
specify WINS server addresses.
5. Click OK.
NOTE
• You can specify static IPs or IP ranges. Do not use 0 to specify IP address ranges. In
Veeam Backup & Replication, value 172.16.17.0 means a regular IP address 172.16.17.0, not an IP
address range. To specify a range, use the asterisk character (*).
• Replica re-IP works only if you perform replica failover using Veeam Backup & Replication. If you
power on a VM replica in some other way, for example, manually using vSphere Cl ient, re-IP rules
will not be applied to it.
• The backup server OS must support mounting of the system disks of VMs that will be replicated.
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Step 10. Specify Replication Job Settings
At the Job Settings step of the wizard, specify a backup repository for storing replica metadata, replica name
and number of restore points to keep:
1. From the Rep ository for replica metadata list, select a backup repository that will store metadata for VM
replicas.
IMP ORTANT
• You cannot store VM replica metadata on deduplicating storage appliances. During replication
jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication frequently reads and writes small portions of metadata
from/to the backup repository. Frequent access to metadata causes low performance of
deduplicating storage appliances, which may result in low performance of replication jobs.
• You cannot store replica metadata in a scale-out backup repository.
2. In the Rep lica name suffix field, enter a suffix that will be added to the source VM names.
To register a VM replica on the target host, Veeam Backup & Replication appends the specified suffix to
the name of the source VMs. Files of the VM replica are placed to the VMname_suffix folder on the
selected datastore.
3. In the Restore points to keep field, specify the number of restore points that the replication job must
maintain. Due to VMware restrictions on the number of VM snapshots, the maximum number of restore
points for VM replicas is limited to 28. When the specified number is exceeded,
Veeam Backup & Replication removes the earliest restore points.
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Step 11. Specify Advanced Replica Settings
At the Job settings step of the wizard, you can specify the following settings for the replication job:
• Traffic settings
• Notification settings
• vSphere settings
• Integration settings
• Script settings
TIP
After you specify necessary settings for the replication job, you can save them as default settings. To do
this, click Sa ve as Default at the bottom left corner of the Ad vanced Settings window. When you create a
new replication job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new
job.
Traffic Settings
You can optimize data traffic sent over network by specifying which d ata you want to replicate, data
compression level and optimize the job performance and storage usage:
2. In the Ad vanced Settings window, check that the Tra ffic tab is selected.
3. [For Microsoft Windows NTFS] By default, Veeam Backup & Replication excludes data blocks of the
hiberfil.sys and pagefile.sys system files from replicas. For more information on how
Veeam Backup & Replication excludes data blocks of these system files, see Swap Files.
If you want to include data blocks of the hiberfil.sys and pagefile.sys system files into replicas,
clear the E x clude swap file blocks check box. Note that including these files into replicas will increase
their size.
4. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy deleted file blocks ("dirty" blocks on the VM guest
OS) to the target location. For more information, see Deleted File Blocks.
If you want to include dirty data blocks into VM replicas, clear the E x clude d eleted file blocks check box.
Note that including these files into replicas will increase their size.
5. From the Compression level list, select a compression level for VM replicas. For more information on data
compression and compressions levels, see Data Compression.
NOTE
Compression is applicable only if VM data is transferred between two backup proxies. If one backup
proxy acts as the source and target backup proxy, VM data is not compressed at all.
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6. In the Storage optimization section, select block size that will be used to process VMs. For more
information on the data blocks sizes and how they affect performance, see Storage Optimization.
Notification Settings
To specify notification settings for the replication job:
3. To receive SNMP traps when the job completes successfully, select the Send SNMP notifications for this
job check box.
SNMP traps will be sent if you configure global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and
configure software on recipient machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying
SNMP Settings.
4. To receive notifications by email in case of job failure, success or warning, select the Send email
notifications to the following recipients check box. Then configure notification settings:
a. Check that you have configured global email notification settings as descr ibed in the Configuring
Global Email Notification Settings section.
b. In the text field, specify a recipient email address. If you want to specify multiple addresses, separate
them by a semicolon.
d. To specify a custom notification subject and redefine at which time notifications must be sent, select
Use custom notification settings specified below. Then specify the following settings:
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i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %JobResult%, %JobName%, %ObjectCount% (number of VMs in the job) and
%Issues% (number of VMs in the job that have been processed with the Warning or Failed
status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on error or Notify on warning check boxes to receive an
email notification if the job gets the Warning , Success or Error status.
iii. Select the Sup press notifications until the last retry check box to receive the notification
about the final job status. If you do not enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will
send one notification per every job retry.
vSphere Settings
To specify vSphere settings for the replication job:
3. Select the E na ble VMware tools quiescence check box to freeze the file system of processed VMs during
replication.
Depending on the VM version, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the VMware FileSystem Sync Driver
(vmsync) driver or VMware VSS component in VMware Tools for VM snapshot creation. These tools are
responsible for quiescing the VM file system and bringing the VM to a consistent state suitable for backup.
For more information, see VMware Tools Quiescence.
4. In the Cha nged block tracking section, configure VMware vSphere changed block tracking (CBT):
a. To enable CBT, make sure that the Use changed b lock tracking data check box is selected.
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b. To force using CBT even if CBT is disabled in VM configuration, make sure that the E na ble CBT for all
p rocessed VMs automatically check box is selected.
c. To reset CBT after the replication job starts for the first time, make sure that the Reset CBT on each
Active Full backup automatically check box is selected.
CBT reset helps avoid issues, for example, when CBT returns incorrect changed data.
IMP ORTANT
You can use CBT for VMs with virtual hardware version 7 or later. These VMs must not have existing
snapshots.
Integration Settings
On the Integration tab, define whether you want to use the Backup from Storage Snapshots technology to
create a VM replica. Backup from Storage Snapshots lets you leverage storage snapshots for VM data
processing. The technology improves RPOs and reduces the impact of replication activities on the production
environment. For more information, see the Backup from Storage Snapshot section in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
1. Check prerequisites. For more information, see the Configuring Backup from Storage Snapshots section in
the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
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3. Click the Integration tab.
4. By default, Backup from Storage Snapshots functionality is enabled. If you do not want to use it, clear the
E na ble backup from storage snapshots check box.
5. If you add to the job many VMs whose disks are located on the same volume or LUN, select the Limit
p rocessed VM count per storage snapshot to check box and specify the number of VMs for which one
storage snapshot must be created.
In a regular job processing course, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a VMware snapshot for every VM
added to the job and then triggers one storage snapshot for all VMs. In some situations, creating VMware
snapshots for all VMs may require a lot of time. If you limit the number of VMs per storage snapshot,
Veeam Backup & Replication will divide VMs into several groups, trigger a separate storage snapshot for
every VM group and read VM data from these snapshots. As a result, the job performance will increas e.
For more information, see the Limitation on Number of VMs per Snapshot section in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
6. If Veeam Backup & Replication fails to create a storage snapshot, VMs whose disks are hosted on the
storage system will not be processed by the job. To fail over to the regular data processing mode and
replicate such VMs, select the Fa ilover to standard backup check box.
Script Settings
To specify script settings for the replication job:
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3. If you want to execute custom scripts before or after the replication job, select the Run the following
script before the job or Run the following script after the job check boxes. Click Browse to choose
executable files from a local folder on the backup server. The scripts will be executed on the backup
server.
o To execute scripts after a number of job sessions, select the Run scripts every... backup session option
and then specify the number of the replication job sessions.
o To execute scripts on specific week days, select the Run scripts on selected days only option. Click
Da y s and specify week days on which scripts must be executed.
NOTE
• Custom scripts that you define in the advanced job settings relate to the job itself, not the VM
quiescence process. To add pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for VM image quiescence, use the
Guest Processing step of the wizard.
• If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, Veeam Backup & Replication executes
scripts only once on each selected day — when the job runs for the first time. During subsequent job
runs, scripts are not executed.
• To run the script, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Service Account under which the Veeam
Backup Service is running.
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Step 12. Specify Data Transfer Settings
At the Da ta Transfer step of the wizard, select backup infrastructure components that must be used for the
replication process and choose a path for VM data transfer:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select proxies automatically, leave Automatic selection in
the Source proxy and Ta rget proxy fields.
Veeam Backup & Replication will assign backup proxies for VM processing one by one. Before
processing a new VM from the list, Veeam Backup & Replication will check available backup proxies. If
more than one backup proxy is available, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport modes that
the backup proxies can use and the current workload on the backup proxies to select the most
appropriate backup proxy for VM processing.
i. Click Choose next to the Source proxy field if you want to select backup proxies in the
production site, or next to the Ta rget proxy field if you want to select backup proxies in the
disaster recovery site.
ii. In the Ba ckup Proxy window, click Use the selected backup proxy servers only. Select proxies
that you want to use and click OK.
NOTE
• If you plan to replicate VM data within one site, the same backup proxy can act as the source
and target backup proxy. For off-site replication, you must deploy at least one backup proxy
in each site to establish a stable connection for VM data transfer across sites.
• We recommend you to select at least two backup proxies to ensure that the job will be
performed if one of backup proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the source datastore.
o To transport VM data directly using backup proxies to the target datastore, select Direct.
o To transport VM data using WAN accelerators, select Through built-in W AN accelerators. From the
Source W AN accelerator list, select the WAN accelerator configured in the source site. From the
Ta rget W AN a ccelerator list, select the WAN accelerator configured in the target site.
NOTE
You should not assign one source WAN accelerator to several replication jobs that you plan to run
simultaneously. The source WAN accelerator requires a lot of CPU and RAM resources, and does not
process multiple replication tasks in parallel. As an alternative, you can create one replication job for
all VMs you plan to process over one source WAN accelerator.
The target WAN accelerator, however, can be assigned to several replication jobs. For more
information, see Adding WAN Accelerators.
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Step 13. Define Seeding and Mapping Settings
The Seeding step is available if you have selected the Rep lica seeding check box at the Name step of the wizard.
At the Seeding step of the wizard, configure replica seeding and mapping. Seeding and map ping help reduce the
amount of traffic sent during the initial replica synchronization. For more information on when to use seeding
and mapping, see Replica Seeding and Mapping.
If you use replica seeding or mapping, make sure that you select correct backup infrastructure components for
the job: source-side backup repository for metadata and backup proxies. It is recommended that you explicitly
assign backup proxies in the production site and disaster recovery (DR) site. For more information, see Specify
Data Transfer Settings.
IMP ORTANT
If the Rep lica seeding check box is enabled in a replication job, all VMs in the job must be covered with
seeding or mapping. If a VM is neither has a seed, nor is mapped to an existing VM, it will be skipped from
processing.
1. Make sure that you have backups of replicated VMs in a backup repository in the DR site. If you do not
have the backups, create them as described in the Creating Replica Seeds section.
IMP ORTANT
2. In the Initial seeding section, select the Get seed from the following backup repository check box.
3. From the list of available backup repositories, select the repository where your replica seeds are stored.
NOTE
If a VM has a seed and is mapped to an existing replica, replication will be performed using replica mapping
because mapping has a higher priority.
2. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to scan the DR site to detect existing copies of VMs that you plan
to replicate, click Detect.
If any matches are found, Veeam Backup & Replication will populate the mapping table. If
Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a match, you can map a VM to its copy manually.
3. If you want to map a VM manually, select a source VM from the list, click E d it and select the copy of this
VM on the target host in the DR site.
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If there is no existing VM replica in the DR site, you can restore a VM from the backup and map it to the source
VM.
NOTE
The mapping list does not display VMs added to the list of exclusions. For more information, see Exclude
Objects from Replication Job.
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Step 14. Specify Guest Processing Settings
At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, enable and configure guest OS processing.
Guest OS processing involves application-aware processing that allows creation of transactionally consistent
replicas and guest file system indexing (however, indexing is not available for repl icas). In its turn, application-
aware processing includes transaction log backup, log truncation, execution of custom scripts and guest OS file
exclusions. For more information on guest processing, see the Guest Processing section.
To be able to use guest processing, you must also configure user accounts to access guest OSes and guest
interaction proxies.
To enable guest OS processing and start configuring it (accounts and guest interaction proxies):
When you select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication enables application-aware processing with the
default settings for all VMs. You can further disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and
reconfigure the default settings.
2. If you have added Microsoft Windows VMs to be processed, specify which guest interaction proxy
Veeam Backup & Replication can use to perform different guest processing tasks:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select the guest interaction proxy automatically, leave
Automatic selection on the Guest interaction proxy field.
o If you want to explicitly specify which servers will perform the guest interaction proxy role, click
Choose. In the Guest Interaction Proxy window, click P refer the following guest interaction proxy
server, and select the necessary proxies.
For more information on the guest interaction proxy, requirements and limitations for it, see Guest
Interaction Proxy.
3. From the Guest OS credentials list, select a user account that will be used to connect to guest OSes and
that has enough permissions. For more information on the permissions and requirements for the user
account, see Permissions for Guest Processing.
[For Microsoft Windows VMs] Veeam Backup & Replication will also use this account to deploy the non-
persistent runtime components or use (if necessary, deploy) persistent agent. For more information on
guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent
Agent Components.
[For Linux VMs] If you installed persistent agent components for VMs running Linux or Unix operating
systems, select Use management agent credentials from the list. For more information, see Persistent
Agent Components.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click the Ad d button to
add credentials. For more information on adding credentials, see the Credentials Manager section.
NOTE
If you plan to use Kerberos authentication, check limitations and requirements listed in the Guest
Processing section.
4. To specify credentials for individual workloads, click Credentials. Then select the necessary workload and
set user credentials for it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose a VM whose settings you want to customize. Then
select the VM in the list and define the necessary settings.
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5. To check whether Veeam Backup & Replication can connect to VMs using the specified guest OS
credentials and can deploy the non-persistent runtime components or connect to persistent agent
components on the guest OSes, click Test Now.
After you have enabled application-aware processing for all VMs and configured other settings required for
guest processing, you can disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and change the default
settings. For more information, see the following sections:
To configure general application-aware processing settings and specify whether Veeam Backup & Replication
processes transaction logs or creates copy-only replicas:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
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3. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options window, select workloads for which you want to configure
application-aware processing, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Ap p lications section, specify the behavior scenario for application-aware
processing:
o Select Require successful processing if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the replication
process if any error occurs during application-aware processing.
o Select Try application processing, but ignore failures if you want to continue the replication process
even if an error occurs during application-aware processing. This option guarantees that replication
will continue working. However, the resulting replica will be crash consistent, not transactionally
consistent.
o Select Disable application processing if you want to disable application-aware processing for the
workload.
5. [For Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft SQL Server] In the VSS Settings section, specify if
Veeam Backup & Replication must process transaction logs or create copy-only replicas:
a. Select P rocess transaction logs with this job if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to process
transaction logs.
[For Microsoft Exchange VMs] With this option selected, the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait for replication to complete successfully
and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the replication job fails, the logs will remain
untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components.
[For Microsoft SQL Server] You will need to configure how to process transaction logs.
TIP
To configure log processing for Oracle and PostgreSQL databases, s witch to the Oracle and
PostrgeSQL tabs.
b. Select P erform copy only if you use another tool to perform guest level processing, and this tool
maintains consistency of the database state. Veeam Backup & Replication will create a copy-only
replica for the selected VMs. The copy only replica preserves the chain of full and differential files and
transaction logs on the VM. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
6. [For Microsoft Windows VMs] In the P ersistent guest agent section, select the Use persistent guest agent
check box to use for application-aware processing persistent guest agents on each protected VM.
For more information on guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime
Components and Persistent Agent Components.
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[For Linux VMs] To use persistent guest agents, you must install Management Agent on protected VMs.
For more information, see Persistent Agent Components.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Microsoft SQL Servers, you must check that application-
aware processing is enabled and then specify settings of transacrion log processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Microsoft SQL Sever and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
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Specifying Transaction Log Settings
In the P rocessing Settings window, switch to the SQL tab and specify how transaction logs must be processed:
• If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to trigger truncation of transaction logs only after the job
completes successfully, select Truncate logs.
In this case, the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components will wait for replication to
complete and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the replication job fails, the logs wil l remain
untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components.
o If you do not want Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate logs at all, select Do not truncate logs.
This option is recommended if you are using another backup tool to perform VM guest-level backup or
replication, and this tool maintains consistency of the database state. In such scenario,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not trigger transaction log truncation. After you fail over to the
necessary restore point of the VM replica, you will be able to apply transaction logs to get the database
system to the necessary point in time between replication job sessions.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Oracle server, you must check that application-aware
processing is enabled and then specify settings of archive log processing.
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Enabling Application-Aware Processing
Before configuring archive log processing, check that application-aware processing is enabled:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Oracle server and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
2. From the Sp ecify Oracle account with SYSDBA privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the Oracle databases. The account that you plan to use
must have privileges described in Permissions.
You can select Use guest credentials from the list of user accounts. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to
access the VM guest OS and connect to the Oracle databases.
o If you want to preserve archived logs on the VM guest OS, select Do not delete archived logs. When
the replication job completes, the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components will
not truncate transaction logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases where the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned
off. If the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned on, archived logs may grow large and consume all disk space.
o If you want to delete archived logs older than <N> hours, select Delete logs older than <N> hours and
specify the number of hours.
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o If you want to delete archived logs larger than <N> GB, select Delete logs over <N> GB and specify
the size. The specified size refers to the log size of each database, not all data bases on the selected
Oracle server.
The non-persistent runtime components or persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait
for the replication job to complete successfully and then trigger transaction logs truncation using Oracle
Call Interface (OCI). If the job does not manage to replicate the Oracle VM, the logs will remain untouched
on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or persistent
components.
PostgreSQL Settings
The P ostgreSQL tab applies to VMs that run PostgreSQL.
To create transactionally consistent backups of a PostgreSQL VM, you must check that application-aware
processing is enabled and then specify settings of WAL files processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
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3. In the displayed list, select the PostgreSQL VM and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
2. From the Sp ecify PostgreSQL account with superuser privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the PostgreSQL instance. The account must have
privileges described in Permissions. You can select Use guest credentials from the list of user accounts. In
this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the
wizard to access the VM guest OS and connect to the PostgreSQL instance.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click the Ad d button to
add credentials. Note that if you select the Sy stem user without password file (peer) option in the The
sp ecified user is area, you can add a user account without specifying a password.
3. In the The specified user is section, specify how the user selected in the Sp ecify PostgreSQL account with
sup eruser privileges drop-down list will authenticate against the PostgreSQL instance:
o Select Da tabase user with password if the account is a PostgreSQL account, and you entered the
password for this account in the Credentials Manager.
o Select Da tabase user with password file (.pgpass) if the password for the account is defined in the
.pgpass configuration file on the PostgreSQL server. For more information about the password file,
see PostgreSQL documentation.
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o Select Sy stem user without password file (peer) if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use the
peer authentication method. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the OS account as
the PostgreSQL account.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
2. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options list, select workloads for which you want to exclude files and
folders and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
3. In the P rocessing Settings window, switch to the E x clusions tab and specify whether you want to exclude
or include files and folders:
o To remove individual files and folders from replicas, select E x clude the following files and folders and
click Ad d .
o To include only the specified files and folders in replicas, select Include only the following files and
folders and click Ad d .
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4. In the Sp ecify Folder window, specify which files and folders you want to include or exclude. For the
methods that you can use to specify the list of exclusions or inclusions, see VM Guest OS Files.
NOTE
When you select files to be included or excluded, mind requirements and limitations that are listed in the
Requirements and Limitations for VM Guest OS File Exclusion section.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
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2. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options list, select workloads for which you want to configure
scripts, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
3. In the Script processing mode section, select a scenario for script execution:
o Select Require successful script execution if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the
replication process if scripts fail.
o Select Ig nore script execution failures if you want to continue the replication process even if script
errors occur.
o Select Disable script execution if you do not want to run scripts for the VM.
5. In the W indows scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Microsoft Windows VMs. For the list of
supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
6. In the Linux scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Linux VMs. For the list of supported script formats,
see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
If you plan to replicate a VM container with Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs, you can select to exec ute
both Microsoft Windows and Linux scripts. When replication starts, Veeam Backup & Replication will
automatically determine which OS type is installed on the VM and use corresponding scripts for this VM.
TIP
Beside pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for VM quiescence, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication
to run custom scripts before the job starts and after the job completes. For more information, see
Advanced Settings.
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Step 15. Define Job Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, select to run the replication job manually or schedule the job to run on a
regular basis:
1. To run the replication job automatically, select the Run the job automatically check box. If you do not
select this check box, you will have to start the job manually.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on weekdays or with specific periodicity, select Da ily at this time.
In the fields on the right of the check box, specify the time and required days.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. In the fields on the right of
the check box, specify the necessary days.
NOTE
When you configure the job schedule, keep in mind possible date and time changes (for
example, related to daylight saving time transition).
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a set time interval, do the following:
i. Select P eriodically every. In the field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or
Minutes.
ii. If you want to specify the permitted time window for the job, click Schedule. In the Time Periods
window, specify the schedule.
If you want to shift the schedule, specify the offset in the Sta rt time within a n hour field. For
example, you schedule the prohibited hours from 08:00 AM to 10:00 AM, and set the offset
value to 25. The schedule will be shifted forward, and the prohibited hours will be from 8:00
AM and to 10:25 AM.
▪ Veeam Backup & Replication always starts counting defined intervals from 12:00 AM. For
example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00
AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
▪ If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is over,
Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately start the job and then run the job by the defined
schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours
from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first run at 9:00 AM, when the
denied period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the P eriodically every option and choose Continuously from the
list on the right.
o To chain jobs, use the After this job field. For the first job in the chain, you must specify an automatic
time schedule, otherwise the chained jobs will not be started. For the chained jobs, select the After
this job option and choose the preceding job from the list. For more information on job chaining and
recommendations for it, see Chained Jobs.
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3. In the Automatic retry section, select the Retry failed VMs processing if Veeam Backup & Replication must
attempt to run the job again for VMs whose processing failed for some reason. Enter the number of
attempts to run the job and define time spans between them.
If you select continuous schedule for the job, Veeam Backup & Replication will retry the job for the
defined number of times without any time intervals between the job sessions.
4. In the Ba ckup window section, specify a time interval within which the job must be completed. The backup
window prevents the job from overlapping with production hours and ensures the job does not provide
unwanted overhead on your production environment.
a. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box and click W ind ow.
b. In the Time P eriods window, define the allowed hours and prohibited hours for VM replication. If the
job exceeds the allowed window, the job will be automatically terminated.
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Step 16. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the replication job. If you want to start the job right after
you close the wizard, select the Run the job when I click Finish check box, otherwise leave the check box
unselected. Then click Finish to close the wizard.
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Creating Replica Seeds
To use replica seeding in a replication job, you must have backups of replicated VMs in a backup repository in
the disaster recovery (DR) site. These backups are known as replica seeds. For more information on seeding and
when to use it, see Replica Seeding and Mapping.
1. Create a backup of VMs that you plan to replicate as described in the Creating Backup Jobs section. As the
target repository for this job, select a backup repository in the production site. Then run the job.
If you already have backups containing the necessary VMs, there is no need to configure and run a new
backup job. For seeding, you can use any existing backups created with Veeam Backup & Replication. The
backup must include VBK and VBM files. If you have a full backup and a chain of forward increments, you
can use VIB files together with the VBK and VBM files. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will
restore VMs from the seed to the latest available restore point.
2. Copy the backup from the backup repository in the production site to a backup repository in the DR site.
You can move the backup using a file copy job or any other appropriate method, for example, copy the
backup to a removable storage device, ship the device to the DR site and copy backups to the backup
repository in the DR site.
If you do not have a backup repository in the DR site, you need to create the repository as described in
Backup Repository.
IMP ORTANT
3. After the backup is copied to the backup repository in the DR site, perform rescan of this backup
repository as described in the Rescanning Backup Repositories section. Otherwise,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to detect the copied backup.
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Managing Replicas
To view all created replicas, open the Home view and navigate to the Rep licas node. The working area displays
the full list of the created replicas. Here, you can view replica properties and delete replicas from the
configuration database or disk.
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Viewing Replica Properties
You can view summary information about created replicas. The summary information provides the following
data:
3. In the working area, right-click the necessary replica and select P roperties. Alternatively, select P roperties
on the ribbon.
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Rescanning Replicas
You may need to perform replica rescan in the following cases:
• After you delete restore points for one or more replicas. For details, see this Veeam KB article.
• After you restore the configuration database, and the session results show that some hosts used to
register replicas were unavailable during the session.
To check whether any errors occurred during the database restore session, open the Home view and select
Sy stem in the inventory pane. In the working area, right-click the Configuration Database Resynchronize
job and select Sta tistics.
During the rescan process, Veeam Backup & Replication gathers information on replicas that are currently
available in backup repositories and updates the list of replicas in the configuration database.
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Rep licas node and select Rescan Replicas.
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Removing Replicas from Configuration
When you remove replicas from the configuration, Veeam Backup & Replication removes records about the
replicas from the configuration database, stops showing the replicas in Veeam Backup & Replication console and
also stops synchronizing their state with the state of the source VMs. However, the actual replicas remain on
hosts.
To remove records about replicas from the Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database:
3. In the working area, select replicas in the Ready state and click Remove from > Configuration on the
ribbon. Alternatively, right-click one of the selected replicas and select Remove from configuration.
NOTE
• The Remove from configuration operation can be performed only for VM replicas in the Ready state.
If the VM replica is in the Failover or Failback state, this option is disabled.
• When you perform the Remove from configuration operation for a VM that is replicated as a
standalone object, Veeam Backup & Replication removes this VM from the initial replication job.
When you perform the Remove from configuration operation for a VM that is replicated as part of a
VM container (host, cluster, folder, resource pool, VirtualApp, datastore or
tag), Veeam Backup & Replication adds this VM to the list of exclusions in the initial replication job.
For more information, see Exclude Objects from Replication Job.
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Deleting Replicas from Disk
When you delete replicas from disks, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the replicas not only from the
Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database, but also from host storage.
NOTE
• You can delete records only about replicas that are in the Ready state.
• Do not delete replica files from the destination storage manually, use the Delete from disk option
instead. If you delete replica files manually, subsequent replication sessions will fail.
• Unlike the Remove from configuration operation, the Delete from disk operation does not remove
the processed workload from the initial replication job.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Remove from > Disk on the ribbon. As an
alternative, right-click the replica and select Delete from disk.
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Failover and Failback for Replication
Failover and failback operations help you ensure that your business will function even if a disaster strikes your
production site. Failover is a process of switching from the VM on the source host to its VM replica on a host in
the disaster recovery site. Failback is a process of returning from the VM replica to the source VM.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides the following failover and failback operations:
• P erform failover
When you perform failover, you shift all processes from the source VM in the production site to the VM
replica in the disaster recovery site. Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized: you ca n
undo failover, perform permanent failover or perform failback.
When you perform planned failover, you shift all processes from the s ource VM to its replica. Planned
failover is helpful when you know that the source VM is about to go offline, for example, you plan to
perform datacenter maintenance, and you want to proactively switch the workload to the replica. The
procedure is designed to transfer the current workload, that is why it does not suggest to select a restore
point.
For more information on how planned failover is performed, see Planned Failover.
When you create a failover plan, you define the order in which Veeam Backup & Replication must perform
failover for VMs, and an interval of time for which Veeam Backup & Replication must wait before starting
the failover operation for the next VM in the list.
When you perform permanent failover, you permanently switch from the source VM to a VM replica and
use this replica as the source VM. You can use this scenario if the source VM and VM replica are located in
the same site and are nearly equal in terms of resources. Otherwise, perform failback.
For more information on how permanent failover is performed, see Permanent Failover.
• Und o failover
When you undo failover, you switch back to the source VM and discard all changes made to the VM replica
while it was running. You can use the undo failover scenario if you have failed over to the VM replica for
testing and troubleshooting purposes, and you do not need to synchronize the source VM state with the
current state of the replica.
For more information on how failover undo is performed, see Failover Undo.
• P erform failback
When you perform failback, you switch back to the source VM and send to the source VM all changes that
took place while the VM replica was running. If the source host is not available, you can recover a VM with
the same configuration as the source VM and switch to it. For more information on how failback is
performed, see Failback.
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When you perform failback, changes are only sent to the source/recovered VM but not published. You
must test whether the source/recovered VM works with these changes. Depending on the test results, you
can do the following:
o Commit failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the source/recovered VM works as
expected and you want to get back to it.
For more information on how failback commit is performed, see Failback Commit.
o Und o failback. When you undo failback, you confirm that the source/recovered VM is not working as
expected and you want to get back to the VM replica.
For more information on how failback undo is performed, see Failback Undo.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports failover and failback operations for one VM and for several VMs. In case
one or several hosts fail, you can use batch processing to restore operations with minimum downtime.
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The following scheme can help you decide at which moment which operations are preferable.
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Failover Plans
A failover plan helps you perform failover for dependent VMs one by one, as a group. To do this automatically,
you can prepare a failover plan.
In the failover plan, you define the order in which VMs must be processed and an interval of time for which
Veeam Backup & Replication must wait before starting the failover operation for the next VM in the list. The
failover plan helps ensure that some VMs, such as a DNS server, are already running at the time the dependent
VMs start.
IMP ORTANT
In case the primary VM group goes offline, you can start the failover plan manually. When you start the plan,
you can choose to fail over to the latest state or select the point in time to which VM replicas must be started.
Veeam Backup & Replication will look for the closest restore points to this point in time and use them to start
VM replicas. The source VMs will not be powered off.
1. For each VM, Veeam Backup & Replication detects its replica. The VMs whose replicas are already in the
Failover or Failback state are skipped from processing.
2. The replica VMs are started in the order they appear in the failover plan within the set time intervals.
For example, if you have added 14 VMs to the failover plan and scheduled them to start at the same time,
Veeam Backup & Replication will start the failover operation for the first 10 VMs in the list. After the 1 st VM is
processed, Veeam Backup & Replication will start the failover operation for the 11th VM in the list, then for the
12th VM and so on.
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Finalizing Failover Plans
Failover is a temporary intermediate step that needs to be finalized. You can finalize group failover in the same
ways as regular failover: undo failover, perform permanent failover or failback.
When you perform failback or permanent failover, you need to process each VM individually. For more
information, see Performing Failback and Performing Permanent Failover. When you undo failover, you can
process the whole group. For more information, see Undoing Failover by Failover Plans.
• [If you plan to select VMs from replication jobs] VMs that you plan to include in the failover plan must be
successfully replicated at least once.
• [If you plan to select VMs from replication jobs] VM replicas must be in the Ready state.
• If you plan to use pre-failover and/or post-failover scripts for the failover plan, you must create scripts
before you configure the failover plan.
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Step 1. Launch New Failover Plan Wizard
To launch the New Failover Plan wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Fa ilover Plan and select VMwa re vSphere.
• Open the Home view. In the working area, select VMs that you want to add to a failover plan. On the
ribbon, click Ad d to Failover Plan > New failover plan if you want to create a new failover plan, or Ad d to
Fa ilover Plan > <Plan Name> if you want to add VMs to an existing failover plan.
• Open the Home view. In the working area, select VMs that you want to add to a failover plan and right-
click one of them. Select Ad d to failover plan > New failover plan if you want to create a new failover plan,
or Ad d to failover plan > <Plan Name> if you want to add VMs to an existing failover plan.
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Step 2. Specify Failover Plan Name and Description
At the General step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the failover plan.
If you want to execute custom scripts before or after the failover plan, select the P re-failover script and P ost-
fa ilover script check boxes and click Browse to choose executable files. For example, you may want stop some
applications on production VMs before the failover plan starts or send an email to backup administrators after
the failover plan finishes.
The scripts will be executed on the backup server. Veeam Backup & Replication supports the script files in the
following formats: BAT, CMD, EXE and PS1.
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Step 3. Select VMs
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select VMs that you want to add to the failover plan. You can add
separate VMs and whole VM containers (hosts, clusters, folders, resource pools, VirtualApps, datastores or
tags).
1. Click Ad d VM.
o From infrastructure — browse the virtual environment and select VMs or VM containers. If you choose
a VM container, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand it to a plain VM list.
o From replicas — browse existing replication jobs and select all VMs or specific VMs from replication
jobs.
To quickly find the necessary VMs or VM containers, you can use the search fields.
NOTE
A source from which you add a VM to a failover plan does not affect whether you fail over to the latest or
specific restore point. It is the command that you select when starting a failover plan that defines the
restore point. For more information, see Running Failover Plans.
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Step 4. Define VM Failover Order
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, click Up and Down to change the processing order. VMs at the top of
the list have a higher priority and will be started first. If some VMs provide environment for other dependent
VMs, make sure that they are started first.
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Step 5. Set Time Delay
After you have set the order for VMs in the failover plan, you need to set a time delay for VMs. The delay time
defines for how long Veeam Backup & Replication must wait before starting the failover operation for the next
VM in the list. You can use time delays to make sure that some VMs are already running at the moment
dependent VMs start.
For example, you have added 2 VMs to the failover plan and set a time delay to 60 seconds for the first VM in
the list. Veeam Backup & Replication will perform failover in the following manner: Veeam Backup & Replication
will start the failover operation for the first VM in the list, then wait for 60 seconds and start the failover
operation for the second VM in the list.
NOTE
Time delays can be specified for all VMs in the list except the last one. If you do not specify time delays,
VMs will be started simultaneously.
1. Select it and click Set Delay on the right or double-click the VM in the list.
2. Enter the time interval that you consider sufficient for this VM to boot.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details for the configured failover plan and click Finish to create the
plan.
In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication searches for the latest restore point of VM replicas across all
replication jobs configured on the backup server. For example, you have 2 jobs that replicate the same VM:
Job 1 has created the most recent point at 2:00 AM and Job 2 has created the most recent restore point at
3:00 AM. When you run the failover plan using the Sta rt command, Veeam Backup & Replication will pick
the restore point created at 3:00 AM with Job 2.
4. In the working area, right-click the failover plan and select Sta rt.
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Failing Over to Specific Restore Points
To fail over to specific restore points of VM replicas:
4. In the working area, right-click the failover plan and select Sta rt to.
5. In the displayed window, select the backup date and time. Veeam Backup & Replication will find the
closest restore point prior to the entered value for each VM and will fail over to it.
Veeam Backup & Replication starts the undo failover operation for a group of 5 VMs at the same time. The time
interval between the operation starts is 10 seconds. For example, if you have added 10 VMs to the failover plan,
Veeam Backup & Replication will undo failover for the first 5 VMs in the list, then will wait for 10 seconds and
undo failover for the remaining 5 VMs in the list. Time intervals between the operation starts help
Veeam Backup & Replication reduce the workload on the production environment and the backup server.
4. In the working area, right-click the failover plan and select Und o.
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5. In the displayed dialog box, click Y es to confirm the operation.
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Failover
Failover is a process of switching from the source VM in the production site to its VM replica in the disaster
recovery site. During failover, Veeam Backup & Replication recovers the VM replica to the required restore point
and shifts all I/O processes from the source VM to its replica. As a result, you have a fully functional VM within a
couple of seconds, and your users can access services and applications with minimum disruption.
You can fail over to replicas not only when a disaster strikes the production site, but also to test replicas for
recoverability. You can perform failover while the source VM is running. After all the necessary tests, you can
undo failover and get back to the normal mode of operation. If the source VMs and VM replicas are located in
the same network, consider temporary disconnecting the source VMs from the network to avoid IP address or
machine name conflicts. As an alternative way of testing, Veeam Backup & Replication also provides the
SureReplica technology. For more details, see SureReplica.
IMP ORTANT
Use Veeam Backup & Replication to perform failover operations. Avoid powering on a replica manually —
this may disrupt further replication operations or cause loss of important data.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication rolls back the VM replica to the required restore point. To do this, it reverts
the VM replica to the necessary snapshot in the replica chain.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication powers on the VM replica. The state of the VM replica is changed from Ready
to Failover.
If you perform failover for testing or disaster recovery (DR) simulation purposes, and the source VM still
exists and is running, the source VM remains powered on.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication stops all replication activities for the source VM until its replica is
returned to the Ready state.
3. All changes made to the VM replica while it is running in the Failover state are written to the delta file of
the snapshot, or restore point, to which you have selected to roll back.
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Finalizing Failover
Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. You can use one of the following operations:
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
Performing Failover
To perform failover, use the VMwa re Failover wizard.
• The failover operation can be performed for VMs that have been successfully replicated at least once.
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Step 1. Launch Failover Wizard
To launch the Fa ilover wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from replica > Entire replica > Failover to a
rep lica.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Rep licas > Ready. In the working area, select the
necessary replica and click Fa ilover Now on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Rep licas > Ready. In the working area, right-click the
necessary replica and select Fa ilover Now.
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Step 2. Select VMs
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select one or more VMs for which you want to perform failover. You
can perform failover for separate VMs and whole VM containers (hosts, clusters, folders, resource pools,
VirtualApps, datastores or tags).
1. Click Ad d VM.
o From infrastructure — browse the virtual environment and select VMs or VM containers. If you choose
a VM container, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand it to a plain VM list.
o From replicas — browse existing replicas and select VMs or VM containers under replication jobs.
To quickly find the necessary VMs within existing replicas, you can use the search field at the top of the window.
NOTE
Make sure that VMs you select from the virtual environment have been successfully replicated at least
once.
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Step 3. Select Restore Points
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest valid restore point of the VM replica. However, you can
fail over to an earlier state of the VM. If you have chosen to perform failover for several VMs, you can select the
necessary restore point for every VM in the list.
1. In the Virtual machines to failover list, select the necessary VM and click P oint.
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Step 4. Specify Failover Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for failing over to the VM replicas. The information you provide
will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
TIP
If you do not want to display the Rea son step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this page
again check box.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the failover task and click Finish to exit the wizard. When
the failover process is complete, the VM replicas will be started on the target host.
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
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Permanent Failover
Permanent failover is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you perform permanent failover, you
permanently switch from the source VM to its replica. As a result of permanent failover, the VM replica stops
acting as a replica and starts acting as the production VM.
NOTE
We recommend you to perform permanent failover only if the source VM and its replica are located in the
same site and are nearly equal in terms of resources. In this case, users will not experience any latency in
ongoing operations. Otherwise, perform failback.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication removes snapshots (restore points) of the VM replica from the snapshot
chain and deletes associated files from the datastore. Changes that were written to the snapshot delta file
are committed to the VM replica disk files to bring the VM replica to the most recent state.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the VM replica from the list of replicas in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane navigate to the Rep licas > Active node. In the working area,
select the necessary replica and click P ermanent Failover on the ribbon.
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• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane navigate to the Rep licas > Active node. In the working area,
right-click the necessary replica and select P ermanent failover.
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Planned Failover
Planned failover is smooth manual switching from a primary VM to its replica with minimum interrupting in
operation. Planned failover is helpful when you know that your primary VMs are about to go offline and you
need to proactively switch the workload from source VMs to their replicas. You can use the planned failover, for
example, if you plan to perform datacenter migration, maintenance or software upgrade of the primary VMs.
You can also perform planned failover if you have noticed some signs of the approaching disaster.
As the procedure is designed to transfer the current workload to the replica, it does not suggest selecting a
restore point to switch.
When you start the planned failover, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations:
1. The failover process triggers the replication job to perform an incremental replication run and copy the
un-replicated changes to the replica.
If VMware Tools are installed on the VM, Veeam Backup & Replication tries to shut down the VM guest OS.
If nothing happens after 15 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the VM. If VMware Tools are
not installed on the VM or the VM is suspended, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the VM.
3. The failover process triggers the replication job to perform another incremental replication run and copy
the portion of last-minute changes to the replica. The replica becomes fully synchronized with the source
VM.
During the planned failover, Veeam Backup & Replication creates two helper restore points (steps 1 and 3) that
are not deleted afterwards. You can see these restore points in the list of restore points for the VM. You can use
the restore points later to roll back to the necessary VM replica state.
NOTE :
During planned failover, Veeam Backup & Replication always retrieves VM data from the production
infrastructure, even if the replication job uses the backup as a data source. This approach helps
Veeam Backup & Replication synchronize the VM replica to the latest state of the production VM.
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Finalizing Planned Failover
When your primary host is online again, you can switch back to it. You can finalize planned failover in the same
ways as regular failover: undo failover, perform permanent failover or failback.
• If you start planned failover for several VMs that are replicated with one replication job, these VMs will be
processed one by one, not in parallel.
• Each planned failover task for each VM is processed as a separate replica job s ession. If a backup proxy is
not available and the session has to wait for resources, job sessions for other VMs in the same task cannot
be started before the current session is finished.
• The user account under which you launch the planned failover opera tion must have the Veeam Backup
Administrator role or Veeam Backup Operator and Veeam Restore Operator roles in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Users and Roles.
• VMs for which you plan to perform planned failover must be successfully replicated at least once.
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Step 1. Launch Planned Failover Wizard
To launch the P lanned Failover wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select VMwa re vSphere > Restore from replica > Entire replica >
P la nned failover to a replica.
• Open the Home view, expand the Rep licas node. In the working area, select one or more VMs and click
P la nned Failover on the ribbon. You can also right-click one of the selected VMs and click P lanned
Fa ilover.
• Open the Inventory view. In the working, select one or more VMs and right-click one of the selected VMs
and click Restore > P lanned Failover.
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Step 2. Select VMs
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select one or more VMs for which you want to perform failover. You
can perform failover for separate VMs and whole VM containers (hosts, clusters, folders, resource pools,
VirtualApps, datastores or tags).
1. Click Ad d VM.
o From infrastructure — browse the virtual environment and select VMs or VM containers. If you choose
a VM container, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand it to a plain VM list.
o From replicas — browse existing replication jobs and select all VMs or specific VMs from replication
jobs.
To quickly find the necessary VMs or VM containers, you can use the search fields.
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Step 3. Specify Failover Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for failing over to VM replicas. The information you provide will
be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
TIP
If you do not want to display the Rea son step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this page
again check box.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the failover task and click Finish to start the failover
process. Once planned failover is complete, VM replicas will be started on the target host.
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
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Failover Undo
Failover undo is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you undo failover, you switch back from a VM replica
to the source VM. Veeam Backup & Replication discards all changes made to the VM replica while it was in the
Failover state. You can use the undo failover scenario if you have failed over to the VM replica for testing and
troubleshooting purposes and want to get back to the normal operation mode.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication reverts the VM replica to its pre-failover state. To do this,
Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the VM replica and gets it back to the state of the latest snapshot
in the snapshot chain. Changes that were written to the snapshot delta file while the VM replica was in the
Failover state are discarded.
2. The state of the VM replica gets back to Ready , and Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication
activities for the source VM on the source host.
Undoing Failover
To undo failover:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failover on the ribbon. As an alternative.
right-click one of the selected replicas and click Und o failover.
a. If you want to force failover undo, select the Force undo failover check box.
When you force failover, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to perform the undo failover
operation in a regular way. If the host on which the VM replica resides is unavailable,
Veeam Backup & Replication changes the VM replica state to Ready in the configuration database and
console. This helps avoid failure of the undo failover operation.
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b. Click Y es.
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Failback
Failback is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you perform failback, you switch back to the production
VM from a VM replica, shift I/O processes from the disaster recovery site to the production site.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides you the following options to perform failback:
• You can fail back to a VM already recovered to a new location. This VM must be recovered before you
perform failback. For example, you can recover the VM from a backup.
• You can fail back to a VM recovered from a replica to a new location, or to any location but with different
settings. The VM will be recovered from the replica during the failback process.
The first two options help you decrease recovery time and the use of the network traffic because
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer only differences between the source/recovered VM and VM
replica. For the third option, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer the whole VM data, including its
configuration and virtual disk content. Use the third option if there is no way to use the source VM or restore it
from a backup.
• First phase: Veeam Backup & Replication synchronizes the state of the production VM (the source VM, an
already recovered VM or a VM that will be recovered from the replica) with the current state of its repli ca.
This phase may take a lot of time especially if VM is large. While Veeam Backup & Replication performs the
first phase of failback, VM replicas are still up and running, users can access these VMs and perform daily
routine tasks as normal.
• Second phase: Veeam Backup & Replication switches all processes from the VM replica to the production
VM, turns off the replica and also sends to the production VM changes made to the VM replica since the
end of the first phase.
The time when the second phase starts depends on how you want to switch from the replica to the
production VM. You can switch to the production VM automatically, at the scheduled time or manually. If
you select to switch automatically, the second phase will start right after the first phase f inishes. If you
select to switch at the scheduled time or manually, the second phase will start at the time you want.
The process of failing back to the source VM or an already recovered VM differs from the process of failing back
to a VM recovered from a replica:
2. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a working failback snapshot for the production VM.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a failback protective snapshot for the VM replica. You can use this
snapshot to return to the pre-failback state of the VM replica afterwards.
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4. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference between disks of the production VM and disks of
the VM replica in the Failover state. Difference calculation helps Veeam Backup & Replication understand
what data needs to be transferred to the production VM to synchronize its state with the state of the VM
replica.
[For VMware vSphere version prior to 7.0] If you fail back to the source VM in the original location and you
have enabled the Quick rollback option, difference calculation can be performed much faster than without
this option enabled. For more information on quick rollback, see Quick Rollback.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers the data that was detected at the previous step to the production
VM. The transferred data is written to the delta file of the working failback snapshot on the production
VM.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the working failback snapshot from the production VM.
7. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the VM replica from Failover to Ready to switch.
During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a working failback snapshot on the production VM.
2. The guest OS of the VM replica is shut down or the VM replica is powered off.
If VMware Tools are installed on the VM replica, Veeam Backup & Replication tries to shut down the
replica guest OS. If nothing happens after 15 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the VM
replica. If VMware Tools are not installed on the VM or the VM is suspended, Veeam Backup & Replication
powers off the VM. The VM replica remains powered off until you commit failback or undo failback.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a failback protective snapshot for the VM replica. The snapshot acts
as a new restore point and saves the pre-failback state of the VM replica. You can use this snapshot to
return to the pre-failback state of the VM replica afterwards.
4. Sends data changed on the VM replica while it was in the Ready to switch state to the working failback
snapshot on the production VM.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the protective snapshot from the VM replica.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the working failback snapshot from the production VM. Changes
written to the delta file of this snapshot are committed to the production VM disks.
7. The state of the VM replica is changed from Ready to switch to Failback . Veeam Backup & Replication
temporarily puts replication activities for the production VM on hold.
8. [If you fail back to a VM already recovered to a new location] Veeam Backup & Replication updates the ID
of the source VM in the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database. The ID of the source VM is
replaced with the ID of the recovered VM.
9. If you have selected to power on the production VM after failback, Veeam Backup & Replication powers on
the production VM on the host.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication requests vCenter Server to create on the target host an empty VM with the
same configuration as the VM replica. vCenter Server registers the created production VM.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a working failback snapshot for the production VM.
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3. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a failback protective snapshot for the VM replica. You can use this
snapshot to return to the pre-failback state of the VM replica afterwards.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers data of the VM replica to the production VM to update the
production VM state to the VM replica state.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the working failback snapshot from the production VM.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the VM replica from Failover to Ready to switch.
During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the same operations as described in How
Failback to Source VM or Already Recovered VM Works.
Finalizing Failback
Failback is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. If the production VM works as expected and you
want to get back to it, commit failback. If the VM does not work as expected, undo failback.
Failback on VSAN
Due to specifics of VSAN data storage organization, Veeam Backup & Replication cannot get the difference
between disks of a VM replica located on VSAN and disks of the source VM in a regular manner.
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to read VM disks data anew in every failback process phase. As a result,
failback for VMs replicas on VSAN slightly differs from the regular failback course.
Before Veeam Backup & Replication starts the failback process, it checks the location of VM replica disks. If at
least one disk is located on VSAN, Veeam Backup & Replication performs failback in the following way:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a working failback snapshot for the source VM.
2. For every VM disk, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
a. If you fail back to the source VM location, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference
between the VM replica disk and the source VM disk. To do this, Veeam Backup & Replication reads
the whole amount of disk data from VSAN, and transfers only changed data to the source VM side.
b. If you fail back to a new location, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers the whole disk without
calculating the difference.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a protective failback snapshot for the VM replica. Using the
protective failback snapshot, Veeam Backup & Replication detects what changes took place on the VM
replica while VM disk data was being transported. As well as before, Veeam Backup & Replication reads
the whole amount of VM disks data but transports only those data blocks that have changed since the VM
disks transfer.
The rest of the failback process does not differ from the regular failback process.
Quick Rollback
If you fail back from a VM replica to the source VM in the original location, you can instruct
Veeam Backup & Replication to perform quick rollback. Quick rollback significantly reduces the failback time and
has little impact on the production environment.
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During failback with the quick rollback option enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication does not calculate digests
for entire VM replica disks to get the difference between the source VM and VM replica. Instead, it queries CBT
to get information about disk sectors that have changed, and calculates digests only for these disk sectors. As a
result, digest calculation is performed much faster. After that, Veeam Backup & Replication performs failback in
a regular way: transport changed blocks to the source VM, powers off the VM replica and synchronizes the
source VM with the VM replica once again.
It is recommended that you use quick rollback if you fail back to the source VM after a problem that has
occurred at the level of the guest OS of the VM replica — for example, there has been an application error or a
user has accidentally deleted a file on the VM replica guest OS. Do not use quick rollback if the problem has
occurred at the VM hardware level, storage level or due to a power loss.
• The VM replica must be created with the Use changed block tracking data option enabled.
• Due to changes in VMware vSphere 7.0 and newer, the replica failback operation forces digest
recalculation for both source and target VMs. That is why the Quick rollback option is ignored for ESXi
hosts starting from version 7.0.
• During the first replication job session after failback with quick rollback, CBT on the source VM is reset.
Due to that Veeam Backup & Replication will read data of the entire VM.
• Quick rollback can be performed in the Direct NFS access, Virtual appliance, Network transport mode. The
Direct SAN access transport mode cannot be used for quick rollback due to VMware limitations.
Performing Failback
To switch back to the source VM, use the Fa ilback wizard.
• VMs for which you plan to perform failback must be successfully replicated at least once.
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Step 1. Launch Failback Wizard
To launch the Fa ilback wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from replica > Entire replica > Failback to
p roduction.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane navigate to the Rep licas > Active node. In the working area,
select the necessary replica and click Fa ilback to Production on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane navigate to the Rep licas > Active node. In the working area,
right-click the necessary replica and select Fa ilback to production.
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Step 2. Select VM Replicas to Fail Back
At the Rep lica step of the wizard, select replicas from which you want to fail back.
To update the list of replicas that are ready for failback (replicas in the Failover state), click P op ulate.
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Step 3. Select Failback Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select a failback destination and backup proxies for data transfer during
failback:
1. Select a destination for failback. Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following options:
o Fa ilback to the original VM — select this option if you want to fail back to the source VMs that reside
on the source hosts. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the source VMs with
the current state of their replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the VM replicas while running
in the DR site.
If you select this option, you will proceed to the Summary step of the wizard.
o Fa ilback to the original VM restored in a different location — select this option if the source VMs have
already been recovered to a new location, and you want to switch to the recovered VMs from their
replicas. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the recovered VMs with the current
state of the VM replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the replicas while running in the DR
site.
If you select this option, you will proceed to the Target VM step of the wizard.
o Fa ilback to the specified location — select this option if you want to recover VMs from replicas. You
can recover VMs to a new location, or to any location but with different settings (such as network
settings, virtual disk type, configuration file path and so on). Select this option if there is no way t o
fail back to the source VM or an already recovered VM.
If you select this option, the wizard will include additional steps.
If you select one of the first two options, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the source/recovered
VMs only differences between the existing virtual disks. Veeam Backup & Replication will not send replica
configuration changes such as different IP address or network settings (if replica Re -IP and network
mapping were applied), new hardware or virtual disks added while the replicas were in the Failover state.
If you select Fa ilback to the specified location, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the specified
location whole VM data, including VM configurations and virtual disk content.
2. To select which backup proxies will be used for data transfer, click P ick backup proxies for data transfer.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication selects proxies automatically.
If you leave automatic proxy selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will check available backup proxies
before processing each VM from the VM list. If more than one backup proxy is available,
Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport modes that the backup proxies can use, the current
workload on the backup proxies to select the most appropriate resource for VM processing.
If you want to assign proxies manually, use the following instructions. If VMs and their replicas reside in
different sites, select at least one backup proxy in the production site and one proxy in the disaster
recovery site. If VMs and replicas reside in the same site, you can use the same backup proxy as the source
and target one. We recommend you to select at least two backup proxies in each site to ensure that
failback will be performed in case one proxy fails or looses the network connection.
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3. [For VMware vSphere prior to version 7.0; for failback to the original VMs] If you want to fasten failback,
and the source VMs had problems at the guest OS level, select the Quick rollback check box. For more
information on quick rollback, its requirements and limitations, see Quick Rollback.
When you click Nex t, Veeam Backup & Replication will check storage policies in the virtual environment and
compare this information with the information about the replica storage policy. If the original storage policy has
been changed or deleted, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning. You can select one of the
following options:
• Current — the restored VM will be associated with the profile with which the source VM in the prod uction
environment is currently associated.
• Default — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that is set as default for the target datastore.
• Stored — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that was assigned to the source VM a t the
moment of replication.
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Step 4. Select Target Host
The Host step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the Destination
step.
At the Host step of the wizard, specify hosts or clusters where the recovered VMs will be registered. To do this,
select the necessary VMs, click Host and select a host or cluster.
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Step 5. Select Target Resource Pool
The Resource Pool step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Resource Pool step of the wizard, select resource pools to which the recovered VMs will be added. To do
this, select VMs that you want to add to the same resource pool, click P ool and select the necessary resource
pool in the Select Resource Pool window.
As an alternative, you can select a vAPP to which the restored VM will be included. To find the necessary vAPP,
at the left bottom corner of the Select Resource P ool window, click the resource pool icon ( ) and select
VirtualApp .
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Step 6. Select Target Datastore
The Da tastore step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Da tastore step of the wizard, specify datastores where you want to store configuration files and disk files
of VMs that will be recovered. Also, you can change disk types.
1. To change a datastore where VM files will be stored, select the necessary VMs and click Da tastore. From
the list of available datastores, select the necessary datastore.
If configuration and disk files of VMs must be placed to different datastores, select files of the necessary
type, click Da tastore and select the necessary datastore.
2. To change disk type settings, select the necessary disk files and click Disk Type. In the Disk Type Settings
window, select the necessary disk type. For more information about disk types, see VMware docs.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves disk types of the source VMs.
NOTE :
You can change disk types only for VMs with Virtual Hardware version 7 or later.
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Step 7. Select Target Folder
The VM Folder step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the VM Folder step of the wizard, specify folders in the target datastores where all files of the recovered VMs
will be stored.
If you want the recovered VMs to have the same tags as the source VMs, select the Restore VM Tags check box.
NOTE
• You can select destination folders only if you recover VMs to destinations other than standalone
hosts.
• You can recover VM tags only if you recover VMs to their original locations, and the source VM tags
are still available on the source vCenter Server.
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Step 8. Select Target Network
The Network step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step. This step applies if you fail back to VMs recovered to new locations, and if networks in those
locations differ from networks in the disaster recovery (DR) site.
At the Network step of the wizard create a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the DR site to
networks in the site where the recovered VMs will reside. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the network
mapping table to update configuration files of VMs on the fly, during the failback process.
1. In the Network connections list, select the necessary VMs and click Network.
If VMs are connected to multiple networks, select networks which you want to map.
2. In the list of available networks, select a network to which the recovered VMs will be connected.
If you do not want to connect the recovered VMs to any virtual network, select the necessary VMs and click
Disconnect.
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Step 9. Map Replicas to Restored VMs
The Ta rget VM step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the original VM restored in a different
loca tion option at the Destination step.
At the Ta rget VM step of the wizard, specify to which VMs you want to fail back from replicas. These VMs must
be already restored from backups in the required location.
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Step 10. Schedule Switch to Production VMs
At the Fa ilback Mode step of the wizard, specify when switch from replicas to production VMs must be
performed:
• Select Auto if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch automatically right after the
state of the production VMs is synchronized with the state of their replicas.
• Select Scheduled if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch at a specific time.
If you select the Scheduled or Ma nual option, you can further reset/set the scheduled time or switch to the
production VM manually. For more information, see Changing Switching Time and Switching Replicas to
Production VMs Manually.
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Step 11. Review Summary and Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured failback settings and click Finish.
If you want to power on the production VMs right after the switch to production operation is performed, select
the P ower on target VM after restoring check box.
• Commit failback
• Undo failback
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
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3. Right-click a replica in the Ready to switch state and select Switch to production.
To change the time when Veeam Backup & Replication will switch from replicas to production VMs:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
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3. Right-click a replica in the Ready to switch state and select Cha nge switching time.
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Failback Commit
Failback commit is one of the ways to finalize failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the VM to
which you failed back (the production VM) works as expected. After the commit operation,
Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication activities for the production VM.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failback to Ready .
2. Further operations depend on whether you have failed back to the source VM or recovered VM:
o If you have failed back to a VM recovered from a backup or replica, Veeam Backup & Replication
reconfigures all existing jobs where the source VM is present and adds the source VM to the list of
exclusions. The recovered VM takes the role of the source VM and is included into all jobs instead of
the excluded VM. When the replication job starts, Veeam Backup & Replication processes the
recovered VM instead of the former source VM.
o If you have failed back to the source VM, the replication job is not reconfigured. When the replication
job starts, Veeam Backup & Replication still processes the source VM.
During failback commit, the failback protective snapshot that saves the pre-failback state of a VM replica is not
deleted. Veeam Backup & Replication uses this snapshot as an additional restore point for VM replica. With the
pre-failback snapshot, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer fewer changes and therefore puts less
load on the network when replication activities are resumed.
Committing Failback
To commit failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
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3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Commit Failback on the ribbon. As an
alternative, you can right-click the replica and select Commit failback.
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Failback Undo
Failback undo is one of the ways to finalize failback. When you undo failback, you confirm that the VM to which
you failed back (the production VM) works in a wrong way and you want to get back to the replica.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the protective failback snapshot on the VM replica.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication powers on the VM replica and changes the VM replica state from Failback to
Failover.
Undoing Failback
To undo failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failback on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary replica and select Und o Failback.
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Continuous Data Protection (CDP)
Continuous data protection (CDP) is a technology that helps you protect mission-critical VMware virtual
machines when data loss for seconds or minutes is unacceptable. CDP also provides minimum recovery time
objective (RTO) in case a disaster strikes because CDP replicas are in a ready -to-start state.
Data Replication
First, CDP creates replicas and, then, keeps these replicas up to date.
CDP constantly replicates I/O operations performed on VMs. To read and process I/O operations in transit
between the protected VMs and their underlining datastore, CDP uses vSphere APIs for I/O filtering (VAIO) that
gives an option not to create snapshots. Because CDP is always on and does not create snapshots, it allows
reaching a lower recovery point objective (RPO) compared to the snapshot-based replication — near-zero RPO
which means almost no data loss.
Data of I/O operations is stored on the target datastore and relates to short-term restore points. The short-term
restore points allow you to recover a VM to a state back to seconds or minutes ago (depending on the RPO that
you specify) in case a disaster strikes. Information about short-term restore points is maintained in a special
journal. This journal stores records about short-term restore points for maximum 24 hours. If you want to
recover a VM to an older state, Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to create additional restore points that
contain a VM state back to hours or days ago. Such restore points are called long -term restore points.
To facilitate replication over slow connections, Veeam Backup & Replication optimizes traffic transmission. It
filters out unnecessary data blocks such as duplicate data blocks, zero data blocks and compresses replica
traffic.
To replicate a VM, you need to configure required backup infrastructure components and create a CDP policy.
Data Recovery
To recover a VM to a short-term or long-term restore point, you need to fail over to its replica.
When you fail over to a replica, the replica takes over the role of the source VM. After your source VM is
repaired, you can fail back to it and transfer all changes that occurred to replica to the source VM. If your source
VM cannot be repaired, you can perform permanent failover, that is, permanentl y switch from the source VM to
the VM replica and use this replica as the source VM. For more information, see Failover and Failback for CDP.
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Backup Infrastructure for CDP
The following backup infrastructure components are required for CDP:
• Backup server
Backup Server
The backup server is the configuration, administration and management core of the backup infrastructure. The
backup server runs the Veeam CDP Coordinator Service. This service coordinates replication and data transfer
tasks, and controls resource allocation. We recommend you to place the backup server in the target site or as a
separate unit.
• The source host reads VM disk data, reads and processess I/O operations and sends data to source proxies.
The data is sent uncompressed.
• The target host receives data from target proxies and saves this data to replicas on the datastore. Also,
the target host manages replicas: creates replicas, retains restore points and so on.
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It is the I/O filter that reads and processes I/O operations in transit between the protected VMs and their
underlining datastore and that sends/receives data to/from VMware CDP proxies. Also, the filter communicates
with the Veeam CDP Coordinator Service on the backup server and notifies the service that the backup
infrastructure must be reconfigured if any proxy becomes unavailable. This I/O filter is built on the basis of
vSphere API for I/O filtering (VAIO).
The source and target VMware CDP proxies perform the following tasks:
• The source proxy prepares data for short-term restore points from data received from the source host,
compresses and encrypts the data (if encryption is enabled in the network traffic rules). Then sends it to
the target proxy.
• The target proxy receives the data, decompresses and decrypts it, and then sends to the target host.
For more information on VMware CDP proxies, their requirements, limitations and deployment, see VMware CDP
Proxy.
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Requirements and Limitations
CDP has a set of requirements and limitations.
Requirements
The following requirements apply to CDP:
• CDP is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket-based license, the Enterprise
Plus edition is required.
• VMware vSphere edition must be VMware vSphere Standard Edition or higher. VMware vSphe re Essentials
Kits editions are not supported.
• For supported source and target datastores, see Veeam CDP Source and Target.
• Cisco HyperFlex 4.5 (2a) and later can be used as a source or target only with VMware vSphere 7.0 U2 and
later. With the previous versions of VMware vSphere, Cisco HyperFlex is not supported.
• All hosts in a cluster must be of the same major version: 7.x or 6.x (6.5, or 6.7, or a combination of 6.5 and
6.7 is supported). In turn, all clusters managed by the same vCenter Server must also be of the same major
version.
• You can replicate data between vCenter Servers of different versions. However, if you re plicate data
within one vCenter Server, and this vCenter Server includes hosts of different versions (6.5 and 6.7), your
CDP policy may fail. In this case, go to the vSphere Client and delete the Veeam CDP Replication vm
storage policies as described in VMware Docs. Then, in the Veeam Backup & Replication console, relaunch
the CDP policy.
• The target cluster must support hardware versions of VMs on the source cluster (VMs that you plan to
protect).
• You must configure CDP for one cluster on one backup server only. If you add a cluster to another backup
server and install I/O filter (filter required for CDP) on it, CDP policies on the first backup server will fail.
For more information on I/O filter, see I/O Filter.
• VMs that you plan to protect must not have snapshots at the moment when the CDP policy starts for the
first time. Further, you can add these VMs to backup jobs that will create snapshots. However, you must
not create snapshots by other means, for example, manually or by another software. This may disrupt
further replication operations or cause loss of data.
• During the initial synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication needs double space allocation for VMs
with thick-provisioned disks on the target host. After the initial synchronization finishes,
Veeam Backup & Replication frees half of the allocated space for such VMs. This is a part of mechanism
required to support protection of disks newly added to the source VMs.
• The network between the infrastructure components must suit the load on your infrastructure. We
recommend that you use at least 100 Mbps network. Slower networks cannot handle the generated disk
traffic without interruption. The better performance is proven on 10 Gbps networks or faster and MTU
9000.
• If you enable VM encryption on VMware side, make sure that the Allow I/O filters before encryption
parameter is set to True in the Default encryption properties storage policy component.
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Limitations
When planning to use CDP, mind the following limitations:
• CDP works only for powered on VMs. However, for VMs with IDE hard drives you must power off VMs
before the initial synchronization. This is required to apply a new storage policy to VMs. For more
information, see How CDP Works.
• CDP is not supported for VMs to which VM storage policies with multiple datastore specific rule sets apply. If
you need to define datastores to be used for placement of the VMs, you can add a tag rule for vSAN instead
of a tag based placement datastore specific rule. For more information on how to create tag rules for vSAN,
see VMware Docs.
• Replicas can be powered on only using the failover operation; manual power on is disabled.
• On the target host, Veeam Backup & Replication does not allow you to migrate replicas using VMware
vSphere Storage vMotion. Note that host vMotion is supported.
• Shared disks, physical RDM and SCSI bus sharing are not supported. Note that vRDM disks are supported.
• The maximum number of CDP policies that can be created on one backup server is 100.
• The maximum supported number of disks for one VM is 50. The maximum number of disks for one ESXi
host is 500.
• The maximum number of long-term restore points for one disk is 95.
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How CDP Works
This section describes how CDP works during replication. To learn how CDP works during data recovery, see
Failover and Failback for CDP.
CDP workflow during replication is divided into two parts: backup infrastructure component configuration and
data transfer.
During the configuration, Veeam Backup & Replication configures the required backup infrastructure
components. Veeam Backup & Replication also reconfigures the components if something changes in the
infrastructure. During data transfer, Veeam Backup & Replication creates short-term and long-term restore
points by sending disk data blocks and changes made to them. For more information on restore points, see
Replication Chain.
Backup infrastructure component configuration and data transfer are constant processes.
1. Veeam CDP Coordinator Service reads policy settings from the configuration database and creates a list of
VM tasks to process. For every VM added to the CDP policy, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new
task.
2. Veeam CDP Coordinator Service checks that required backup infrastructure components are available.
3. Veeam CDP Coordinator Service queries information about VMs added to the CDP policy and virtualization
hosts from the vCenter Server.
4. Veeam CDP Coordinator Service requests vCenter Server to create on the target host empty replicas with
the same configuration as source VMs, but with empty virtual disks. vCenter Server registers the created
replicas.
5. Veeam CDP Coordinator Service requests vCenter to apply the Veeam CDP Replication storage policy to
virtual disks of VMs on the source ESXi hosts. This storage policy adds the component that is required for
CDP and that gets data of all I/O operations. For more information on storage policies, see VMware Docs.
The Veeam CDP Replication storage policy itself is created on the vCenter Server when you install the I/O
filter. For more information on how to install the filter, see Installing I/O Filter.
6. Veeam CDP Coordinator Service selects which VMware CDP proxies will be used for data transfer and sets
a number of rules for data transfer, such as network traffic throttling rules and so on.
If you select automatic proxy selection when configuring the CDP policy, Veeam Backup & Replication
analyzes the current workload on CDP proxies and selects a VMware CDP proxy according to the following
priority rules (starting from the most preferable one):
o VMware CDP proxy on a VM located on the same ESXi host — that is, the source proxy on the host
where source VMs are located, the target proxy on the host where VM replicas are located
For more information on how to specify the proxy selection mode, see Specify Data Transfer and Replica
Settings.
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7. Veeam CDP Coordinator Service sends to the backup infrastructure components configurations required
for CDP. This configuration includes such information as RPO, short-term and long-term retention
settings.
After the initial configuration finishes, Veeam Backup & Replication starts monitoring the backup infrastructure.
If something changes in the infrastructure or CDP policy settings, Veeam Backup & Replication reconfigures the
components. Consider the following examples:
• If a VMware CDP proxy becomes unavailable, Veeam CDP Coordinator Serv ice on the backup service gets a
notification that this proxy is no longer available. Then, the service selects another proxy.
NOTE
If you add new proxies to the backup infrastructure, Veeam Backup & Replication does not use these
proxies for the already created CDP policies — that is, Veeam Backup & Replication does not
reconfigure the infrastructure. If you have selected automatic proxy selection for a CDP policy and
want to use the newly added proxies, disable and then enable the CDP policy. If you have selected
the proxies manually, edit the CDP policy settings and add the required proxies.
• If virtual disks are added to source VMs, Veeam CDP Coordinator Service requests vCenter to create the
disks on the target host, applies the storage policy and selects VMware CDP proxies to transfer disk data.
• If new VMs are added to the CDP policy, Veeam CDP Coordinator Service requests vCenter to create
replicas with empty disks, applies the storage policy to the VM disks and selects which VMware CDP
proxies to use for data transfer.
• If the source VMs were migrated to other host or datastore using VMware vSphere vMotion, Veeam CDP
Coordinator Service analyzies how data will be transferred after the migration and selects VMware CDP
proxies to optimize data transfer.
Component reconfiguration requires Veeam CDP Coordinator Service to be working. If the coordinator goes
down, existing CDP policies still work, create and remove short-term restore points. Long-term restore points
are not created and removed because it is the coordinator who manages them. However, if any of the
components goes out of service, for example, VMware CDP proxy goes offline or VMware vSphere vMotion
changes the infrastructure, CDP policies start failing until Veeam CDP Coordinator Service is repaired.
As a rule, the initial synchronization is performed when disk data is sent to the target host for the first time.
During the initial synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication sends data for full copies of virtual disks and
creates the very first restore points.
During the incremental synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication mainly sends data for incremental changes
made to virtual disks and creates short-term and long-term restore points. For more information on restore
points and files created for replicas, see Replication Chain.
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Data Transfer Algorithm During Initial Synchronization
The following steps apply to data transfer during the initial synchronization:
1. On the source host, I/O filter reads all data from VM disks and sends it to the source VMware CDP proxies.
As the source VMs are still running, data for the already transferred data blocks can change. I/O filter
intercepts these changes and sends them to the proxies. Sending changes instead of whole changed data
blocks helps minimize traffic sent over the network.
2. The Veeam CDP Proxy Service on the source proxies compresses, encrypts the received data and sends it
to the target proxy.
3. The Veeam CDP Proxy Service on the target proxies decompresses and decrypts the received data. Then
sends data to the target host.
4. The I/O filter on the target host saves the received data to virtual disks. The saved data relates to the very
first long-term restore point. This restore point is crash-consistent.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication starts creating long-term and short-term restore points only after the
initial synchronization finishes. For VMware Cloud Director, the initial synchronization must finish for
all VMs in a vApp.
After the initial synchronization finishes, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the incremental synchronization.
The following steps apply when Veeam Backup & Replication transfers data for short-term restore points:
1. On the source host, I/O filter intercepts data of all I/O operations and sends this data to the source
VMware CDP proxies.
2. Once in the RPO, the Veeam CDP Proxy Service on the source proxies prepares data required for a short-
term restore point. For this, Veeam CDP Proxy Service gets the latest state of the data that the source
VMware CDP proxies has accumulated.
3. The source Veeam CDP Proxy Service compresses, encrypts data and s ends it to the target proxy.
4. The target Veeam CDP Proxy Service decompresses and decrypts the received data. Then sends data to
the target host.
5. The I/O filter on the target host saves the received data to transaction logs.
The following steps apply when long-term restore point creation is scheduled:
1. [If application-aware image processing is enabled for the CDP policy] Veeam Backup & Replication
connects to VM guest OSes, deploys non-persistent runtime components or connects/deploys persistent
agent components on VM guest OSes and performs in-guest processing tasks such as quiescing
applications on the VM and creating a consistent view of application data. For more information on guest
agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent Agent
Components.
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2. On the target datastore, the I/O filter forms a long-term restore point using data of short-term restore
points created since the creation of the previous long-term restore point. Data for the new long-term
restore point is saved to a delta disk.
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CDP Replication Chain
A replication chain is a sequence of files that allows you to roll back a replica to a specific point in time during
failover. Veeam Backup & Replication creates replication chains for each VM added to a CDP policy.
The replication chain contains short-term and long-term restore points. Short-term restore points allow you to
roll back replica data to a state created seconds or minutes ago, while long -term restore points — to a state
created hours or days ago. Short-term restore points are always crash-consistent, long-term restore points can
be crash-consistent or application-consistent depending on how long-term restore points are configured in CDP
policy settings.
The replication chain is stored on the target datastore in the <replica_VM_name> folder. The replication chain
consists of the files of the following types (only the key file types are listed):
• VMDK — virtual disk files that store contents of replica hard disk drives.
On the datastore, you can see files under the following names:
o <disk_name> .vmdk — files that store full copies of virtual disks, that is, store base disk data. These
files are created during the initial synchronization and relate to the very first long -term restore point.
This restore point is crash-consistent.
o <disk_name> -<index> .vmdk — files that store incremental changes made to virtual disks, that is, store
delta disk data. Delta disk files relate to the following:
▪ Long-term restore points. In this case, files are created according to the long -term schedule
configured in CDP policy settings. These files remain unchanged till they are retained by long-
term retention.
▪ Technical points. These technical points are required during short-term retention. The technical
points creation is connected to the transaction log creation. The technical point is created when
the transaction log file reaches its maximum size or when transaction log is created after the
short-term retention is reached. For more information on transaction log files, see the TLOG
description.
o <disk_name> -<index> .tlog.vmdk — transaction log files that store incremental changes made to
virtual disks during RPO set in CDP policy settings. These files relate to short-term restore points that
are created once in RPO set in CDP policy settings. One transaction log file stores data for multiple
short-term restore points.
▪ When a transaction log file reaches a specific size: 2 TB on VMFS datastores, 512 GB on VSAN
and VVOL.
▪ When the short-term retention is reached. For example, if you set short-term retention to 1
hour, a new transaction log file will be created every hour.
o <disk_name> -interim.vmdk — files for protective virtual disks. Changes made to virtual disks will be
written in these files when you perform failover.
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NOTE
Although VMDK files look like VMware snapshot files, they are not real snapshots. These files are
created by I/O filter installed on the target host.
To roll back a replica to a specific point in time, the chain of files created for the replica must contain files with
data for the base disk ( <disk_name> -flat.vmdk) and a set of files that contain incremental changes for disks
(<disk-name> -<index> .vmdk + .tlog.vmdk). If any file in the replication chain is missing, you will not be able to
roll back to the necessary state. For this reason, you must not delete files from the datastore manually. Instead,
you must specify retention policy settings that will let you maintain the desired number of files. For more
information on retention policies and how to configure them, see Retention Policies.
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Retention Policies
A retention policy defines for how long Veeam Backup & Replication must store restore points for replicas.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers two retention policy schemes:
• Short-term retention
• Long-term retention
Short-term Retention
Veeam Backup & Replication retains short-term restore points for the number of hours or minutes specified in
CDP policy settings. When the retention period is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication transforms the
replication chain in the following way. The example shows how short-term retention works for a replica with
one virtual disk.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the replication chain contains outdated short-term restore
points.
2. If an outdated restore point exists, Veeam Backup & Replication commits data for the short-term restore
point from the transaction log file into the nearest technical point (TP). For more information on technical
points, short-term restore points, long-term restore points and when they are created, see CDP
Replication Chain.
3. If the transaction log file does not contain data for further short-term restore points,
Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the transaction log file as redundant — its data has already been
committed into the technical delta disk file.
4. After a technical point remains without the related transaction log file, Veeam Backup & Replication
considers this technical point outdated and commits data of a newer technical point or a long-term restore
point into the outdated technical point. Mind the following:
o The newer technical restore point must not have the related transaction log.
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o The data of the long-term restore point can be committed into a technical point but not vice versa.
Long-term restore points remain unchanged till they are retained by the long -term retention.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication can store short-term restore points for a longer period than specified in the
short-term retention policy. This period is maximum 25% longer.
Long-term Retention
Veeam Backup & Replication retains long-term restore points for the number of days specified in CDP policy
settings. When the retention period is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication transforms the replication chain in
the following way. The example shows how long-term retention works for a replica with one virtual disk.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the replication chain contains outdated long -term restore
points.
2. If an outdated restore point exists, Veeam Backup & Replication rebuilds the file of an outdated long-term
restore point (LT RP) to include data of a newer long-term restore point. To do that,
Veeam Backup & Replication commits into the base disk file data from the earliest delta disk file that
relates to a long-term restore point. This way, the base disk file ‘moves’ forward in the replication chain.
For more information on technical points, short-term restore points, long-term restore points and when
they are created, see CDP Replication Chain.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the earliest delta disk file from the chain as redundant — this data
has already been committed into the base disk file.
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Guaranteed Delivery
In CDP, data delivery between any two backup infrastructure components is guaranteed by means of the TCP
protocol. However, there can be situations when Veeam Backup & Replication is not able to send all data
changes generated during CDP in time. For example, if RPO is small, a VM generates a lot of changes, but the
infrastructure performance is not enough; or a VMware CDP proxy gets out of work because of a power outage,
and all data changes stored on it are lost. This makes data inconsistent and leads to the loss of restore points.
CDP has a special mechanism and tools that return data into the consistent state. The I/O filter on the source
host has a mechanism that tracks data blocks that have changed — change tracking (CT). The I/O filter deletes
data block addresses from the list of changed blocks only after a confirmation message that data blocks were
successfully saved to the replica is received from the target host. In addition, VMware CDP proxies also store
data changes until a confirmation message is received from the target host.
How Veeam Backup & Replication uses these tools depend on whether issues occur on the source or target site:
• Source site. If the source host does not send the data changes because of the high system load,
Veeam Backup & Replication waits till the load decreases. And only then, it gets the list of changed data
blocks, reads data blocks from the disk and sends the data to the target host. The target host saves the
received data to the datastore. Until this moment, the data on the target host remains inconsistent. As a
result, there are "gaps" in the restore point journal and you are not able to restore a VM to some points in
time. However, after the target host saves the data, the CDP policy resumes the creation of consistent
restore points.
If the source proxy gets out of work, Veeam Backup & Replication selects another VMware CDP proxy and
then behaves as described above except for waiting for the load decrease.
• Ta rget site. If the target proxy gets out of work, Veeam Backup & Replication selects another VMware CDP
proxy and requests data changes from the source VMware CDP proxy. The proxy sends the changes to the
target host once again, and the data on the target host becomes consistent almost immediately, so that
you are able to restore a VM to any point in time.
If the connection between the target VMware CDP proxy and the target host is lost,
Veeam Backup & Replication checks the host state. If the host is in the Maintenance mode or has
disappeared from the cluster, Veeam Backup & Replication starts writing data changes to replicas using
another target ESXi host (provided that the host exists and is connected to the datastore where replicas
are stored). If the host is not in the Maintenance mode or has not disappeared,
Veeam Backup & Replication considers that these are temporary problems with the network and sends
data changes again after some time.
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Replica Seeding and Mapping
Replica seeding and mapping are technologies that help reduce the amount of traffic sent over a network. With
these technologies, Veeam Backup & Replication does not have to transfer all of VM data from the source host
to the target host across the sites during the initial synchronization. For more information on the initial
synchronization, see How CDP Works.
• Seeding
Configure replica seeding if, in a backup repository located in the disaster recovery (DR) site, you have
backups of VMs that you plan to replicate. During replication, Veeam Backup & Replication will restore
VMs from these backups and will synchronize the state of the restored VMs with the latest state of the
source VMs. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will use these restored VMs as replicas.
For more information on how to create backups that can be used as "seeds" for replica, see Creating
Replica Seeds.
• Ma pping
Configure replica mapping if, on the host in the DR site, you have ready -to-use copies of the source VMs.
These can be restored VMs or replicas created by other CDP policies. Veeam Backup & Replication will
synchronize the state of these ready-to-use VMs with the latest state of the source VMs and will use these
VMs as replicas.
You can also configure both replica seeding and replica mapping in the same CDP policy. For example, if a policy
includes 2 VMs, you can use seeding for one VM and map the other VM to an existing VM.
IMP ORTANT
If seeding or mapping is enabled in a policy, all VMs in the policy must be covered with seeding or
mapping. If a VM neither has a seed, nor is mapped to an existing VM, it will be skipped from processing.
1. As a preparatory step for replica seeding, you need to create a backup of a VM that you plan to replicate.
For more information on how to create a backup that will be used as a "seed" for replica, see Creating
Replica Seeds.
2. When you create a CDP policy, you should point it to a backup repository in the DR site. During the initial
synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the backup repository where the replica seed is
located, and restores the VM from the backup. The restored VM is registered on the target host in the DR
site. Files of the restored VM are placed to the location you specify as the replica destination datastore.
Virtual disks of a replica restored from the backup preserve their format (that is, if the source VM used
thin provisioned disks, virtual disks of the replica are restored as thin provisioned).
3. Veeam Backup & Replication synchronizes the restored VM with the latest state of the source VM.
After successful synchronization, in the Home view in the Veeam Backup & Replication console, under
Rep licas node you will see a replica with two restore points. One point will contain the state of the VM
from the backup file; the other point will contain the latest state of the source VM you want to replicate.
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4. During incremental synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers only incremental changes in a
regular manner.
Replica seeding dramatically reduces traffic sent over WAN or slow connections because
Veeam Backup & Replication does not send the full contents of the VM image. Instead, it transmits only
differential data blocks.
1. The first step differs depending on which VM you have selected for mapping:
o If you have selected a regular VM, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the differences between
the source and mapped VM.
o If you have selected a snapshot replica, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes all restore points and
delta disks and then calculates the differences between the source and mapped VM.
o If you have selected a CDP replica, Veeam Backup & Replication imports all restore points of this
replica and then calculates the differences between the source and mapped VM. Note that if disk sizes
of the source and mapped VM differ, Veeam Backup & Replication will delete all restore points of the
mapped VM.
2. To synchronize the state of the mapped VM with the state of the source VM, Veeam Backup & Replication
sends the calculated changes to the mapped VM.
The first and second steps take place during the initial synchronization.
3. During the incremental synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers only incremental changes
in a regular manner.
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After the successful initial synchronization, in the Home view of Veeam Backup & Replication, under Rep licas
node you will see a replica with restore points. If you have selected for mapping a regular VM or snapshot
replica, you will see two restore points: one restore point will contain the latest state of the mapped VM, the
other will contain the state of the source VM. If you have selected a CDP replica, you will see all restore points
of the mapped VM plus one restore point that will contain the state of the source VM.
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Installing I/O Filter
To be able to protect VMs with CDP, you must install I/O filter on each cluster where the VMs that you plan to
protect reside and where replicas will reside. For more information on the filter, see Source and Target Hosts.
To install the filter on a specific cluster, open the Inventory view. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Virtual
Infrastructure > VMware vSphere > vCenter Servers > <vCenter Server Name> > <Cluster Name> node and right-
click it. In the menu, select Install I/O filter.
IMP ORTANT
If vSphere LifeCycle Management is enabled for your cluster, you need first follow the instructions from
this section and then follow the instructions from this Veeam KB article.
To install I/O filter on multiple clusters in a vCenter Server, use the I/O Filter Management wizard.
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Step 1. Launch I/O Filter Management Wizard
To launch the I/O Filter Management wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Ma naged Servers > VMware
vSp here > vCenter Servers > <vCenter Server Name> node. Right-click the node and select Ma nage I/O
filters. Alternatively, click Ma nage I/O Filters on the ribbon.
• Open the Inventory view. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Virtual Infrastructure > VMware vSphere >
vCenter Servers > <vCenter Server Name> node. Right-click the node and select Ma nage I/O filters.
Alternatively, click Ma nage I/O Filters on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Select Clusters
At the Clusters step of the wizard, select check boxes near clusters on which you want to install I/O filter.
If you select check boxes near clusters where the filters are already installed, Veeam Backup & Replication will
update the filters. If you clear check boxes, Veeam Backup & Replication will delete the I/O filter from these
clusters.
NOTE
If another user has already installed the I/O filter on a cluster, you will be prompted whether to take
ownership. For more information, see Taking I/O Filter Ownership.
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Step 3. Apply Filter Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs I/O filter. Click Nex t.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review on which clusters I/O filter is installed and click Finish to exit the
wizard.
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Updating and Uninstalling I/O Filter
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to update or uninstall I/O filter from organization VDCs using the
Veeam Backup & Replication console.
Requirements
Mind the following:
• Make sure that you have disabled or deleted all CDP policies as described in the Disabling and Deleting
Policies section.
• [When uninstalling the filter] If you have manually assigned the Veeam CDP Replication storage policy to
VMs that are parts of the clusters, or replicas are still present in the Veeam Backup & Replication
configuration database, you must change the storage policy for these VMs.
For more information on how to change storage policies, see VMware Docs. To see the list of replicas,
open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click the Rep licas node.
• If VMware vSphere Distributed Resource Schedule (DRS) is disabled for the clusters, place the hosts of the
clusters in the Maintenance mode.
You can simultaneously place all hosts in the Maintenance mode or place them one by one for each
cluster. Veeam Backup & Replication will uninstall/update the filter only on the hosts in the Maintenance
mode. That is why you must repeat the procedure (place a host in the Maintenance mode and launch
installation/update) for each host in a cluster. When Veeam Backup & Replication uninstalls/updates the
filter on the last host in the cluster, it also uninstalls/updates the filter on the cluster.
If DRS is enabled and the hosts use the shared storage, you do not have to put hosts in the Maintenance
mode manually. VMware vSphere will automatically place hosts in the Maintenance mode one by one and
migrate VMs from one host to another.
1. Launch the Veea mCDP Filter Management wizard as described in Launch I/O Filter Management Wizard.
o To update the filter, make sure that check boxes are selected near the necessary clusters.
o To uninstall the filter, clear the check boxes near the necessary clusters.
3. Proceed to the last step of the wizard and close the wizard.
As an alternative, you can uninstall the I/O filter from a specific cluster. To do this, open the Inventory view. In
the inventory pane, navigate to the Virtual Infrastructure > VMware vSphere > vCenter Servers > <vCenter
Server Name> > <Cluster Name> node and right-click it. Select Uninstall I/O filter.
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NOTE
If the upgrade attempt has failed, fix the problems listed in the wizard and launch the upgrade again.
During the next upgrade operation, you may see the following error: "The specified key, name or identifier
'vibUrl' already exists. The VIB contains the same filter as the one to be upgraded" . If this is the only error,
it can be ignored. The error is shown because during the previous upgrade filters were already upgraded on
some components. The remaining components are upgraded on the current run. To make sure that upgrade
completed successfully, launch the upgrade wizard once again.
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Taking I/O Filter Ownership
After the backup server finishes installation of the I/O filter on a cluster, the backup server becomes the owner
of the I/O filter and its components.
The I/O filter can belong only to one backup server at a time. If a client B re-installs the I/O filter that was
previously installed by a client A, the client A loses the ownership privileges over the filter. Losing privileges
means that the client A will no longer be able to manage CDP policies and replicas. All policies created by the
client A will fail.
If the I/O filter is managed by another client, you will see a warning when trying to install the filter. If you are
sure that the client who installed the I/O filter first does not need it anymore, you can take the ownership. To do
that, click Y es in the Veeam Backup & Replication window and finish the I/O Filter Management wizard as
described in Installing I/O Filter.
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Creating CDP Policies
To protect VMs with CDP, you must configure a CDP policy. The CDP policy defines which VMs to protect, where
to store replicas, how often create short-term and long-term restore points, and so on. One CDP policy can
process one or multiple VMs.
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Before You Begin
Before you create a CDP policy, check the following prerequisites:
• Check that all the required components are added to the backup infrastructure. For more informat ion on
the required components, see Backup Infrastructure.
• I/O filter must be installed on each cluster where VMs that you plan to protect reside. For more
information on how to install the filter, see Installing I/O Filter.
• If you plan to use replica seeding, you must create a seed as described in the Creating Replica Seeds
section.
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Step 1. Launch New CDP Policy Wizard
To launch the New CDP Policy wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view. On the ribbon, click CDP P olicy > VMware vSphere.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, right-click Job s and select CDP Policy > VMware vSphere.
• Open the Inventory view. In the working area, right-click VMs that you want to replicate. Select Ad d to
CDP policy > New job if you want to create a new CDP policy, or Ad d to CDP policy > <Policy Name> if you
want to add VMs to an existing CDP policy.
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Step 2. Specify Policy Name and Advanced
Settings
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the CDP policy, and choose whether you
want to use replica seeding or network mapping:
3. If a network between your production and disaster recovery (DR) sites has low bandwidth, and you want
to reduce the amount of traffic sent during the initial synchronization of the CDP policy, select the Rep lica
seeding (for low bandwidth DR sites) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Seeding step where you will have to configure replica seeding
and mapping.
4. If your DR site networks do not match your production site networks, select the Network remapping (for
DR sites with different virtual networks) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Network step where you will have to configure a network
mapping table.
9. If the IP addressing scheme in your production site differs from the scheme in the DR site, select the
Rep lica re-IP (for DR sites with different IP addressing scheme) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Re-IP step where you will have to configure replica re-IP rules.
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Step 3. Select VMs to Replicate
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select VMs or VM containers that you want to replicate:
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Ad d Object window, select the necessary VMs or VM containers and click Ad d .
If you select VM containers (hosts, clusters, folders, resource pools, VirtualApps or datastores) and add
new VMs to this container in future, Veeam Backup & Replication will update CDP policy settings
automatically to include these VMs.
NOTE
Even if you add VM containers to a CDP policy, only VMs are replicated. VM templates, VM logs,
folders and so on are not replicated.
You can use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views. Depending on the
view you select, some objects may not be available. For example, if you select Ta g s combination view, no
resource pools, hosts or clusters will be displayed in the tree. In the Ta g s combination view, you can select
multiple tags and only those VMs that have all the selected tags will be processed by the policy.
IMP ORTANT
• You can replicate only VMs that are turned on, the turned off VMs will be skipped from processing.
• You cannot add to a CDP policy VMs that were already added to other CDP policies created on the
same backup server.
To quickly find the necessary VMs, you can use the search field at the bottom of the Ad d Object window. If you
want to switch between types of VMs you want to search through, use the button to the left of the search field.
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Step 4. Exclude Objects
After you have added VMs or VM containers to the CDP policy, you can specify which objects you want to
exclude from being replicated.
2. In the E x clusions window, check that the VMs tab is selected and click Ad d .
3. In the Ad d Objects window, select VMs or VM containers that you want to exclude from being replicated
and click Ad d .
You can use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views. Depending on the
view you select, some objects may not be available. For example, if you select Ta g s combination view, no
resource pools, hosts or clusters will be displayed in the tree. In the Ta g s combination view, you can select
multiple tags and only those VMs that have all the selected tags will be excluded from the policy.
Excluding Disks
To exclude disks:
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2. In the E x clusions window, do the following:
b. If you want to exclude disks of VMs that are added as a part of containers, click Ad d . In the Ad d
Ob jects window, select the necessary VMs and click Ad d . Veeam Backup & Replication will include
these VMs in the list as standalone objects.
d. Click E d it.
3. In the Select Disks window, select disks that you want to replicate: all disks, 0:0 disks (as a rule, system
disks) or specific IDE, SCSI, SATA or NVMe disks. Disks that you do not select will be excluded from
processing. Click OK.
NOTE
If you exclude disks from a backup and enable application-aware processing, Veeam Backup & Replication
will still perform application-aware processing for the excluded disks. This means that VSS will process disk
data.
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Step 5. Specify VM Processing Order
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, click Up and Down to change the processing order. VMs at the top of
the list have a higher priority and will be processed first.
NOTE
• VMs inside a VM container are processed at random. To ensure that VMs are processed in the
defined order, you must add them as standalone VMs, not as a part of containers.
• The processing order may differ from the order that you have defined. For example, if resources of a
VM that is higher in the priority are not available, and resources of a VM that is lower in the priority
are available, Veeam Backup & Replication will process the VM with the lower priority first.
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Step 6. Select Replica Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select a target host or cluster, resource pool, folder and datastore for
replicas, and types of replica disks:
1. Next to the Host or cluster field, click Choose > VMware vSphere and select a host or cluster where
replicas must be registered. If you select a cluster or vCenter Server, the replication process will become
more sustainable — the replication process will not fail if there is at least one available host in the cluster.
If you select a cluster as a destination, Veeam Backup & Replication will request VMware to send the list of
available hosts, and will select the first host in this list as the destination for the replicas. These replicas
will be stored on the datastore with the most free disk space.
2. Next to the Resource pool field, click Choose and select a resource pool to which replicas will be added.
If you have selected to replicate multiple VMs and want to add individual replicas to other resource pools:
d. In the Choose Resource P ool window, select the necessary VMs in the Rep lica VM resource pool list.
At the bottom of the window, click Resource Pool.
e. In the Select Resource Pool window, select the necessary resource pool and click OK.
3. Next to the VM folder field, click Choose and select a folder where all VM files will be stored. Note that
the VM folder section is disabled if you have selected a standalone ESXi host as the target for replicas.
If you have selected to replicate multiple VMs and want to place individual replicas to other folders:
d. In the Choose Folder window, select the necessary VMs in the Rep lica VM folder list. At the bottom of
the window, click VM Folder.
4. Next to the Da tastore field, click Choose and select a datastore where replica files will be stored. Note
that if you have chosen to replicate VMs to a cluster, Veeam Backup & Replication displays only shared
datastores.
If you have selected to replicate multiple VMs and want to place individual replicas to other datastores:
d. In the Choose VM Files Location window, select the necessary VMs in the Files location list. At the
bottom of the window, click Da tastore.
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5. If you want to store replica configuration files and disk files in different datas tores:
d. In the Choose VM Files Location window, expand the necessary VMs in the Files location list, and
select the necessary files. At the bottom of the window, click Da tastore.
e. In the Select Datastore window, select the destination for the selected type of files.
6. You can change types of replica disks. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication saves disks in the thin type.
c. In the Ad d Objects window, select VMs whose disk type you want to change and click Ad d .
d. In the Choose VM Files Location window, select the necessary VMs in the Files location list. At the
bottom of the window, click Disk type.
e. In the Disk Type Settings window, select a type that will be used to restore replica disk files: same as
source, thin, thick lazy zeroed or thick eager zeroed.
NOTE
Disk type change is available only for VMs that use virtual hardware version 7 or later.
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Step 7. Configure Network Mapping
The Network step of the wizard is available if you have selected the Network remapping option at the Na me
step of the wizard.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the
production site to networks in the disaster recovery (DR) site. When the replication session starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will check the network mapping table. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will
update replica configuration to replace the production networks with the specified networks in the DR site. As a
result, you will not have to re-configure network settings manually.
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Source network field.
3. In the Select Network window, select the production network to which the source workloads are
connected and click OK.
4. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Ta rget network field.
5. In the Select Network window, select a network in the DR site to which replicas will be connected and
click OK.
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Step 8. Configure Re-IP Rules
The Re-IP step is available if you have selected the Rep lica re-IP check box at the Name step of the wizard. This
step applies only to VMs with Microsoft Windows OSes.
At the Re-IP step of the wizard, configure re-IP rules. These rules map IPs in the production site to IPs in the
disaster recovery (DR) site. When you perform failover, Veeam Backup & Replication will check the configured
re-IP rules and will change replica IPs if the rules apply. Replicas will get new IP addresses according to the
network masks specified in the rules, so that you will be able to reach replicas in the DR site.
1. Click Ad d and select whether you want to configure an IPv4 or IPv6 rule. Note that you can use IPv6
addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
2. In the Source VM section, specify an IP numbering scheme used in the production site.
To facilitate the configuration, Veeam Backup & Replication detects an IP address and subnet mask for the
backup server and pre-populates values in the Source VM section.
3. In the Ta rget VM section, specify an IP address, subnet mask and default gateway that will be used for
replicas in the DR site. If required, specify the DNS server addresses. For the IPv4 rules, you can also
specify WINS server addresses.
5. Click OK.
NOTE
• You can specify static IPs or IP ranges. Do not use 0 to specify IP address ranges. In
Veeam Backup & Replication, value 172.16.17.0 means a regular IP address 172.16.17.0, not an IP
address range. To specify a range, use the asterisk character (*).
• Replica re-IP works only if you perform replica failover using Veeam Backup & Replication. If you
power on a replica in some other way, for example, manually using vSphere Client, re-IP rules will
not be applied to it.
• The backup server OS must support mounting of the system disks of VMs that will be replicated.
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Step 9. Configure Seeding and Mapping
The Seeding step is available if you have selected the Rep lica seeding check box at the Name step of the wizard.
At the Seeding step of the wizard, configure replica seeding and mapping. Seeding and mapping help reduce the
amount of traffic sent during the initial replica synchronization. For more information on when to use seeding
and mapping, see Replica Seeding and Mapping.
IMP ORTANT
If the Rep lica seeding check box is enabled in a policy, all VMs in the policy must be covered with seeding
or mapping. If a VM is neither has a seed, nor is mapped to an existing VM, it will be skipped from
processing.
1. Make sure that you have backups of replicated VMs in a backup repository in the DR site. If you do not
have the backups, create them as described in the Creating Replica Seeds section.
IMP ORTANT
2. Select the Get seed from the following backup repository check box.
3. From the list of available backup repositories, select the repository where your replica seeds are stored.
NOTE
If a VM has a seed and is mapped to an existing replica, replication will be performed using replica mapping
because mapping has a higher priority.
2. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to scan the DR site to detect existing copies of VMs that you plan
to replicate, click Detect.
If any matches are found, Veeam Backup & Replication will populate the mapping table. If
Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a match, you can map a VM to its copy manually.
3. If you want to map a VM manually, select a source VM from the list, click E d it and select the copy of this
VM on the target host in the DR site.
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To remove a mapping association, select a VM in the list and click Remove.
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Step 10. Specify Data Transfer and Replica
Settings
At the P olicy Settings step of the wizard, select VMware CDP proxies that must be used for the CDP policy,
specify which suffix to add to replica names and VMware CDP proxies availability:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select proxies automatically, leave Automatic selection in
the Source proxy and Ta rget proxy fields.
Veeam Backup & Replication will assign VMware CDP proxies for VM processing one by one. Before
processing a new VM from the list, Veeam Backup & Replication will check available VMware CDP
proxies.
i. Click Choose next to the Source proxy field if you want to select VMware CDP proxies in the
production site, or next to the Ta rget proxy field if you want to select VMware CDP proxies in
the disaster recovery site.
ii. In the Ba ckup Proxy window, click Use the selected backup proxy servers only. Select proxies
that you want to use and click OK.
NOTE
We recommend that you deploy at least two VMware CDP proxies: one CDP proxy in the production
site and one CDP proxy in the disaster recovery site.
2. To test whether VMware CDP proxies available in the backup infrastructure can handle replication, click
Test.
Veeam Backup & Replication will analyze available CPU on all source and all target VMware CDP proxies,
the maximum VM disk write speed during the last hour, and will calculate approximate requirements for
VMware CDP proxies. In the CDP Infrastructure Assessment window, you will see the calculated values:
o The CP U rows show CPU cores available on all proxies (source or target).
o The P roxy RAM rows show RAM required for CDP and, in parenthesis, RAM available on all proxies
(source or target). If values in the parentheses and near the paranthesis are the same, you need to
upgrade proxies for which values coincide to provide more resources. For example, you can double up
the amount of RAM.
o The P roxy Bandwidth rows show the maximum disk write speed during the last hour and, in
parenthesis, available bandwidth based on available cores of source or target proxies.
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3. In the Rep lica name suffix field, specify a suffix that will be added to names of replicas.
Related Topics
How CDP Works
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Step 11. Specify Notification Settings
At the P olicy Settings wizard, specify notification settings:
2. To receive SNMP traps on the CDP policy, select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box.
SNMP traps will be sent if you configure global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and
configure software on recipient machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying
SNMP Settings.
3. To receive notifications by email in case of policy failure, success or warning, select the Send email
notifications to the following recipients check box. Then configure notification settings:
a. Check that you have configured global email notification settings a s described in the Configuring
Global Email Notification Settings section.
b. In the text field, specify a recipient email address. If you want to specify multiple addresses, separate
them by a semicolon.
d. To specify a custom notification subject and redefine at which time notifications must be sent, select
Use custom notification settings specified below. Then specify the following settings:
i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %JobResult%, %JobName%, %ObjectCount% (number of VMs in the policy) and
%Issues% (number of VMs in the policy that have been processed with the Warning or Failed
status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on error or Notify on warning check boxes to receive
email notification if the policy gets the Warning , Success of Error status.
NOTE
A CDP policy will get the Warning or Error status according to the reporting settings configured at
the Schedule step of the wizard. The policy will get the Success status after the initial configuration
succeeds and every day at 8 A.M. if no error or warning occurs.
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Step 12. Specify Replication Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, configure the schedule and retention policies:
a. In the Recovery point objective field, specify the necessary RPO in seconds or minutes, that is, how
often to create short-term restore points.
The minimum RPO is 2 seconds, however it can be not optimal if your CDP policy contains many VMs
with high workload. The optimal RPO is not less than 15 seconds. The maximum RPO is 60 minutes.
During every specified period, Veeam Backup & Replication will prepare data for short-term restore
points for VM replicas and send this data to the target destination. Note that short-term restore
points are crash-consistent.
b. If you want to prohibit the policy to run at specific time intervals, click Schedule. In the schedule box,
click Denied and select the necessary time area.
2. To instruct the CDP policy to display a warning or error if a newly created restore points are not
transferred to the target within the set RPO, click Rep orting. Then specify when the policy must display
error and warning.
If you have configured email notification settings, Veeam Backup & Replication will mark the policy with
the Warning or Error status and will also send email notifications.
3. In the Short-term retention section, configure the short-term retention policy, that is, specify for how
long to store short-term restore points.
4. In the Long -term retention section, specify when to create long-term restore points and for how long to
store them:
a. In the Create additional restore points every field, specify how often you want to create long-term
restore points.
b. In the Keep restore points for field, specify for how long to retain these long-term restore points.
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c. To specify time periods when Veeam Backup & Replication must create application-consistent and
crash-consistent long-term restore points, click Schedule. In the schedule box, click Cra sh-consistent
or Ap p lication-consistent and select the necessary time area. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication
creates application-consistent backups if you enable application-aware processing at the Guest
P rocessing step of the wizard. If you do not enable application-aware processing,
Veeam Backup & Replication will create crash-consistent long-term restore points.
If you want to shift the schedule, specify the offset in the Sta rt time within a n hour field. For
example, you schedule creation of crash-consistent restore points from 00:00 to 01:00, and set the
offset value to 25. The schedule will be shifted forward, and the crash-consistent restore points will
be created from 0:25 and to 01:25.
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Step 13. Specify Guest Processing Settings
Settings configured at this step apply only to long-term restore points.
At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, enable and configure guest OS processing.
Guest OS processing involves application-aware processing that allows creation of transactionally consistent
replicas and guest file system indexing (however, indexing is not available for replicas). In its turn, application-
aware processing includes transaction log backup, log truncation, execution of custom scripts and guest OS file
exclusions. For more information on guest processing, see the Guest Processing section.
To be able to use guest processing, you must also configure user accounts to access guest OSes and guest
interaction proxies.
To enable guest OS processing and start configuring it (accounts and guest interaction proxies):
When you select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication enables application-aware processing with the
default settings for all VMs. You can further disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and
reconfigure the default settings.
2. If you have added Microsoft Windows VMs to be processed, specify which guest interaction proxy
Veeam Backup & Replication can use to perform different guest processing tasks:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select the guest interaction proxy automatically, leave
Automatic selection on the Guest interaction proxy field.
o If you want to explicitly specify which servers will perform the guest interaction proxy role, click
Choose. In the Guest Interaction Proxy window, click P refer the following guest interaction proxy
server, and select the necessary proxies.
For more information on the guest interaction proxy, requirements and limitations for it, see Guest
Interaction Proxy.
3. From the Guest OS credentials list, select a user account that will be used to connect to guest OSes and
that has enough permissions. For more information on the permissions and requirements for the user
account, see Permissions for Guest Processing.
[For Microsoft Windows VMs] Veeam Backup & Replication will also use this account to deploy the non-
persistent runtime components or use (if necessary, deploy) persistent agent. For more information on
guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent
Agent Components.
[For Linux VMs] If you installed persistent agent components for VMs running Linux or Unix operating
systems, select Use management agent credentials from the list. For more information, see Persistent
Agent Components.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click the Ad d button to
add credentials. For more information on adding credentials, see the Credentials Manager section.
NOTE
If you plan to use Kerberos authentication, check limitations and requirements listed in the Guest
Processing section.
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4. To specify credentials for individual workloads, click Credentials. Then select the necessary workload and
set user credentials for it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose a VM whose settings you want to customize. Then
select the VM in the list and define the necessary settings.
5. To check whether Veeam Backup & Replication can connect to VMs using the specified guest OS
credentials and can deploy the non-persistent runtime components or connect to persistent agent
components on the guest OSes, click Test Now.
After you have enabled application-aware processing for all VMs and configured other setting s required for
guest processing, you can disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and change the default
settings. For more information, see the following sections:
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To configure general application-aware processing settings and specify whether Veeam Backup & Replication
processes transaction logs or creates copy-only replicas:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
3. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options window, select workloads for which you want to configure
application-aware processing, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Ap p lications section, specify the behavior scenario for application-aware
processing:
o Select Require successful processing if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the replication
process if any error occurs during application-aware processing.
o Select Try application processing, but ignore failures if you want to continue the replication process
even if an error occurs during application-aware processing. This option guarantees that replication
will continue working. However, the resulting replica will be crash consistent, not transactionally
consistent.
o Select Disable application processing if you want to disable application-aware processing for the
workload.
5. [For Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft SQL Server] In the VSS Settings section, specify if
Veeam Backup & Replication must process transaction logs or create copy-only replicas:
a. Select P rocess transaction logs with this job if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to process
transaction logs.
[For Microsoft Exchange VMs] With this option selected, the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait for replication to complete successfully
and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the replication job fails, the logs will remain
untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components.
[For Microsoft SQL Server] You will need to configure how to process transaction logs.
TIP
To configure log processing for Oracle and PostgreSQL databases, switch to the Oracle and
PostrgeSQL tabs.
b. Select P erform copy only if you use another tool to perform guest level processing, and this tool
maintains consistency of the database state. Veeam Backup & Replication will create a copy-only
replica for the selected VMs. The copy only replica preserves the chain of full and differential files and
transaction logs on the VM. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
6. [For Microsoft Windows VMs] In the P ersistent guest agent section, select the Use persistent guest agent
check box to use for application-aware processing persistent guest agents on each protected VM.
For more information on guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime
Components and Persistent Agent Components.
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[For Linux VMs] To use persistent guest agents, you must install Management Agent on protected VMs.
For more information, see Persistent Agent Components.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Microsoft SQL Servers, you must check that application-
aware processing is enabled and then specify settings of transacrion log processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Microsoft SQL Server and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
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Specifying Transaction Log Settings
In the P rocessing Settings window, switch to the SQL tab and specify how transaction logs must be processed:
• If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to trigger truncation of transaction logs after the CDP policy
creates a long-term restore point, select Truncate logs.
In this case, transaction logs will be truncated after the CDP policy creates a long -term restore point. If
the creation fails, the logs will remain untouched until the next start of the long -term restore point
creation.
• If you do not want Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate logs at all, select Do not truncate logs.
This option is recommended if you use another tool to perform VM guest-level replication, and this tool
maintains consistency of the database state.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Oracle server, you must check that application-aware
processing is enabled and then specify settings of archive log processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
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2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Oracle server and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
2. From the Sp ecify Oracle account with SYSDBA privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the Oracle databases. The account that you plan to use
must have privileges described in Permissions.
You can select Use guest credentials from the list of user accounts. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to
access the VM guest OS and connect to the Oracle databases.
o If you want to preserve archived logs on the VM guest OS, select Do not delete archived logs. When
the replication job completes, the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components will
not truncate transaction logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases where the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned
off. If the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned on, archived logs may grow large and consume all disk space.
o If you want to delete archived logs older than <N> hours, select Delete logs older than <N> hours and
specify the number of hours.
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o If you want to delete archived logs larger than <N> GB, select Delete logs over <N> GB and specify
the size. The specified size refers to the log size of each database, not all databases on the selected
Oracle server.
Transaction logs will be deleted using Oracle Call Interface after the CDP policy creates a long -term
restore point. If the creation fails, the logs will remain untouched until the next start of the long -term
restore point creation.
Script Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to run custom scripts before the CDP policy starts the creation of a
long-term restore point and after the policy finishes the creation. For example, these can be pre -freeze and
post-thaw scripts for a VM that does not support VSS. The scripts will quiesce the VM file system and
application data to bring the VM to a consistent state before the creation of a restore point, and bring the VM
and applications to their initial state after the creation finishes.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
2. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options list, select workloads for which you want to configure
scripts, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
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3. In the Script processing mode section, select a scenario for script execution:
o Select Require successful script execution if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the
replication process if scripts fail.
o Select Ig nore script execution failures if you want to continue the replication process even if script
errors occur.
o Select Disable script execution if you do not want to run scripts for the VM.
5. In the W indows scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Microsoft Windows VMs. For the list of
supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
6. In the Linux scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Linux VMs. For the list of supported script formats,
see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
If you plan to replicate a VM container with Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs, you can select to execute
both Microsoft Windows and Linux scripts. When replication starts, Veeam Backup & Replication will
automatically determine which OS type is installed on the VM and use corresponding scripts for this VM.
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Step 14. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured settings. If you want to start the policy right after you
close the wizard, leave the E na ble the policy when I click Finish check box selected, otherwise clear the check
box. Then click Finish to close the wizard.
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Creating Replica Seeds for CDP
To use replica seeding in a CDP policy, you must have backups of replicated VMs in a backup repository in the
disaster recovery (DR) site. These backups are known as replica seeds. For more information on seeding and
when to use it, see Replica Seeding and Mapping.
1. Create a backup of VMs that you plan to replicate as described in the Creating Backup Jobs section. As the
target repository for this job, select a backup repository in the production site. Then run the job.
If you already have backups containing the necessary VMs, there is no need to configure and run a new
backup job. For seeding, you can use any existing backups created with Veeam Backup & Replication. The
backup must include VBK and VBM files. If you have a full backup and a chain of forward increments, you
can use VIB files together with the VBK and VBM files. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will
restore VMs from the seed to the latest available restore point.
2. Copy the backup from the backup repository in the production site to a ba ckup repository in the DR site.
You can move the backup using a file copy job or any other appropriate method, for example, copy the
backup to a removable storage device, ship the device to the DR site and copy backups to the backup
repository in the DR site.
If you do not have a backup repository in the DR site, you need to create the repository as described in
Backup Repository.
IMP ORTANT
3. After the backup is copied to the backup repository in the DR site, perform rescan of this backup
repository as described in the Rescanning Backup Repositories section. Otherwise,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to detect the copied backup.
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Managing CDP Policies
After you create CDP policies, you can edit, disable and delete them.
To view all created CDP policies, open the Home view and navigate to the Job s > CDP node. The working area
displays the full list of the created policies. Here, you can manage the policies.
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Viewing Session Statistics and Results
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to view real-time statistics and session results for a VM added to a CDP
policy:
• To view real-time statistics for the policy, open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Job s > CDP.
In the working area, double-click the necessary policy. Alternatively, right-click the policy and select
Sta tistics. In the opened window, you will be able to switch between statistics of individual VMs.
• To view real-time statistics for an individual VM, open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Job s,
La st 24 hours or Running. In the working area, double-click the necessary VM. Alternatively, right-click
the VM and select Sta tistics.
• To view statistics on the finished policy sessions, open the History view. In the inventory pane select CDP .
In the working area, double-click the necessary policy session.
The statistics provides detailed data on policy sessions: duration, performance bottlenecks, amount of
processed data, read and transferred data.
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Statistics Counters
Veeam Backup & Replication displays policy statistics for the following counters:
• The La st 24 hours (all VMs) section shows the general information for all VMs for which you have opened
the statistics. This information is collected during 24 hours.
▪ Rea d — amount of data read from the datastore prior to applying compression and
deduplication. The value of this counter is typically lower than the value of the Tota l size
counter. Veeam Backup & Replication reads only data blocks that have changed since the last
policy session, processes and copies these data blocks to the target.
▪ Tra nsferred — amount of data transferred from the source VMware CDP proxy to the target
VMware CDP proxy. The data is transferred after compression and deduplication.
▪ Ma x delay — difference between the configured RPO and time required to transfer and save
data.
o The Sta tus box shows information about task session results. This box informs how many task sessions
have completed with the Success, Warning and Error statuses during the 24-hour session. One task
session lasts for the period between the creation of two long -term restore points.
• The La st sync session section shows general information collected during the last synchronization session
of the 24-hour session. One synchronization session lasts for the period between the creation of the two
short-term restore points.
o Duration — time period during which data was collected and sent to the target host.
o Rea d — amount of data read from the datastore prior to applying compression and deduplication.
o Tra nsferred — amount of data transferred from the source VMware CDP proxy to the target VMware
CDP proxy. The data is sent after compression and deduplication.
• The La st period section shows general information collected during the last task session of the 24-hour
session. One task session lasts for the period between the creation of two long -term restore points.
▪ Ma x delay — difference between the configured RPO and time required to transfer and save
data.
o The Sy nc session box shows information about synchronization session results. This box informs how
many synchronization sessions have completed with the Success, Warning and Error statuses during
the last task session. One synchronization session lasts for the period between the creation of the two
short-term restore points.
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o The Duration box shows information about duration of synchronization sessions:
▪ Sy nc interval — duration of a synchronization session configured in the policy, that is, the
specified RPO.
• The pane at the left shows the list of VMs included into the session statistics.
• The pane at the bottom shows the list of operations performed during the session. If you open statistics
for a policy, you can see the list of operations for the whole policy or an individual VM. To see the list of
operations for an individual VM, click the VM in the pane on the left. To see the list of oper ations for the
whole policy, click anywhere on the blank area in the left pane.
Colored Graph
To visualize the data transfer process, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a colored graph in the statistics
window:
• The green color defines the amount of data read from the source.
• The brown color defines the amount of data transferred to the target.
If the session is still being performed, you can click the graph to view data rate for the last 5 minutes or the last
24 hours. If the session has already ended, the graph will display information for the last 24 hours only.
The colored graph is displayed only for the currently running session or the latest finished session. If you open
statistics for past sessions other than the latest one, the colored graph will not be displayed.
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Editing Policies
To edit a CDP policy:
3. In the working area, select the necessary policy and select E d it on the ribbon. As an alternative, right-click
the necessary policy and select E d it.
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Disabling and Deleting Policies
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to temporarily disable or permanently delete created CDP policies.
3. In the working area, select the necessary policy and select Disable on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click
the necessary policy and select Disable.
TIP
3. Check that you have disabled the policy that you want to delete.
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4. In the working area, select the necessary policy and select Delete on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click
the necessary policy and select Delete.
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Managing CDP Replicas
To view all created replicas, open the Home view and navigate to the Rep licas node. The working area displays
the full list of the created replicas. Here, you can view replica properties and delete replicas from the
configuration database or disk.
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Viewing Replica Properties
To view replica properties:
3. In the working area, right-click the necessary replica and select P roperties. Alternatively, select P roperties
on the ribbon.
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Rescanning CDP Replicas
You may need to perform replica rescan, for example, if the actua l states of replicas differ from the states in the
configuration database, if changes were made in the backup infrastructure and so on.
During the rescan process, Veeam Backup & Replication gathers information on replicas that are currently
available and updates the list of replicas in the configuration database.
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Rep licas node and select Rescan Replicas.
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Removing Replicas from Configuration
When you remove replicas from the configuration, Veeam Backup & Replication removes records about the
replicas from the configuration database, stops showing the replicas in Veeam Backup & Replication console and
also stops synchronizing their state with the state of the source VMs. However, the actual replicas remain on
hosts.
To remove records about replicas from the Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database:
3. In the working area, select replicas in the Ready state and click Remove from > Configuration on the
ribbon. Alternatively, right-click one of the selected replicas and select Remove from configuration.
NOTE
• You can remove records only about replicas in the Ready state.
• When you remove from the configuration a VM that is replicated as a standalone object,
Veeam Backup & Replication removes this VM from the initial replication job. When you remove
from the configuration a VM that is replicated as part of a VM container,
Veeam Backup & Replication adds this VM to the list of exclusions in the CDP policy.
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Deleting Replicas from Disk
When you delete replicas from disks, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the replicas not only from the
Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database, but also from host storage.
NOTE
• You can delete records only about replicas that are in the Ready state.
• Do not delete replica files from the destination storage manually, use the Delete from disk option
instead. If you delete replica files manually, subsequent replication sessions will fail.
• Unlike the Remove from configuration operation, the Delete from disk operation does not remove
the processed workload from the initial replication job.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Remove from > Disk on the ribbon. As an
alternative, right-click the replica and select Delete from disk.
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Failover and Failback for CDP
Failover and failback operations help you ensure that your business will function even if a disaster strikes your
production site. Failover is a process of switching from the VM on the source host to its replica on a host in the
disaster recovery site. Failback is a process of returning from the replica to the source VM.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides the following failover and failback operations:
• P erform failover
When you perform failover, you shift all processes from the source VM in the production site to the replica
in the disaster recovery site. Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized: you can undo
failover, perform permanent failover or perform failback.
When you create a failover plan, you define the order in which Veeam Backup & Replication must perform
failover for VMs, and an interval of time for which Veeam Backup & Replication must wait before starting
the failover operation for the next VM in the list.
For more information on how permanent failover is performed, see Permanent Failover.
• Und o failover
When you undo failover, you switch back to the source VM and discard all changes made to the replica
while it was running. You can use the undo failover scenario if you have failed over to the replica for
testing and troubleshooting purposes, and you do not need to synchronize the source VM state with the
current state of the replica.
For more information on how failover undo is performed, see Failover Undo.
• P erform failback
When you perform failback, you switch back to the source VM and send to the source VM all changes that
took place while the replica was running. If the source host is not available, you can recover a VM with the
same configuration as the source VM and switch to it. For more information on how failback is performed,
see Failback.
When you perform failback, changes are only sent to the source/recovered VM but not published. You
must test whether the source/recovered VM works with these changes. Depending on the test results, you
can do the following:
o Commit failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the source/recovered VM works as
expected and you want to get back to it.
For more information on how failback commit is performed, see Failback Commit.
o Und o failback. When you undo failback, you confirm that the source/recovered VM is not working as
expected and you want to get back to the replica.
For more information on how failback undo is performed, see Failback Undo.
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Veeam Backup & Replication supports failover and failback operations for one VM and for several VMs. In case
one or several hosts fail, you can use batch processing to restore operations with minimum downtime.
The following scheme can help you decide which steps are preferable when you fail over to a replica.
Related Topics
• Performing Failover
• Failover Plans
• Undoing Failover
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• Performing Failback
• Committing Failback
• Undoing Failback
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Failover
Failover is a process of switching from the source VM in the production site to its replica in the disaster recovery
site. During failover, Veeam Backup & Replication recovers the replica to the required restore point and shifts all
I/O processes from the source VM to its replica. As a result, you have a fully functional VM within a couple of
seconds, and your users can access services and applications with minimum disruption.
You can fail over to replicas not only when a disaster strikes the production site, but also to test repl icas for
recoverability. If the source VMs and VM replicas are located in the same network, consider temporary
disconnecting the source VMs from the network to avoid IP address or machine name conflicts.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication recovers a replica to the required restore point.
If you perform failover for testing purposes, and the source VM still exists and is running, the source VM
remains powered on.
5. All changes made to the replica disks while the replica is running in the Failover state are written to the
protective virtual disks ( <disk_name>-interim.vmdk files).
Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. You can perform the following operations:
• Undo failover
• Perform failback.
Performing Failover
To perform failover, use the VMwa re Failover wizard.
• You can perform failover for VMs that have been successfully replicated at least once.
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Step 1. Launch VMware Failover Wizard
To launch the VMware Failover wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from replica > Entire replica > Failover to a
rep lica.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select the Rep licas > Ready node. In the working area, select
the necessary replica and click Fa ilover Now on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane select the Rep licas > Ready node. In the working area, right-
click the necessary replica and select Fa ilover now.
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Step 2. Select VMs
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, you can modify a list of VMs from which you fail over. To add VMs or
VM containers, click Ad d > From infrastructure if you want to add VMs from the virtual infrastructure, or Ad d >
From replicas if you want to add VMs from existing replicas. Then select the necessary VMs or VM containers. If
you select VM containers, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand them to a plain VM list.
To quickly find the necessary VMs within existing replicas, you can use the search field at the top of the w indow.
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Step 3. Select Restore Points
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard select to which state of replicas you want to fail over:
1. In the Virtual machines to failover list, select the necessary VM and click P oint.
2. In the Restore Points window, select whether you want to fail over to the latest available crash-consistent
restore point, to the latest long-term application-consistent restore point or to a specific point in time.
If you fail over to a specific point in time, use the right and left arrows on the keyboard to select the
required restore point. To quickly find a long-term restore point, click a link that shows a date. In the
opened window, you will see a calendar where you can select the necessary day. In the Timestamp section,
you will see long-term restore points created during the selected day.
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Step 4. Specify Failover Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for failing over to the replicas. The information you provide will
be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the failover task and click Finish to exit the wizard.
During the failover process, Veeam Backup & Replication will request the target host to to power on the
replicas.
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
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Failover Plans
A failover plan helps you perform failover for dependent VMs one by one. In the failover plan, you define the
order in which VMs must be processed and an interval of time for which Veeam Backup & Replication must wait
before starting the failover operation for the next VM in the list. For more information on the failover plan, see
Failover Plan.
You can add a VM to an existing failover plan or to a new plan as d escribed in Creating Failover Plans. For more
information on how to manage failover plans, see Running Failover Plans and Undoing Failover by Failover
Plans.
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Permanent Failover
Permanent failover is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you perform permanent failover, you
permanently switch from the source VM to its replica. As a result of permanent failover, the VM replica stops
acting as a replica and starts acting as the production VM.
NOTE
We recommend you to perform permanent failover only if the source VM and its replica are located in the
same site and are nearly equal in terms of resources. In this case, users will not experience any latency in
ongoing operations. Otherwise, perform failback.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication removes short-term and long-term restore points of the replica from the
replication chain and deletes associated files from the datastore. Changes that were written to the
protective virtual disks ( <disk_name>-interim.vmdk ) are committed to the replica to bring the replica to
the most recent state.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the replica from the list of replicas in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console.
4. To protect the replica from corruption after permanent failover is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication
reconfigures the current CDP policy by adding the source VM to the list of exclusions. Note that other
policies and jobs are not modified automatically. When the CDP policy starts, the source VM is skipped
from processing. As a result, no data is written to the working VM replica.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane navigate to the Rep licas > Active node. In the working area,
select the necessary replica and click P ermanent Failover on the ribbon.
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• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane navigate to the Rep licas > Active node. In the working area,
right-click the necessary replica and select P ermanent failover.
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Failover Undo
Failover undo is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you undo failover, you switch back from a replica to
the source VM. Veeam Backup & Replication discards all changes made to the replica while it was in the Failover
state.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication reverts the replica to its pre-failover state. To do this,
Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the replica and gets it back to the latest restore point in the
replication chain. Changes that were written to the protective virtual disks ( <disk_name>-interim.vmdk )
while the replica was in the Failover state are discarded.
2. The state of the replica gets back to Ready , and Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication activities
for the source VM on the source host.
Undoing Failover
To undo failover:
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively,
right-click the necessary replica and select Und o Failover.
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Failback
Failback is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you perform failback, you switch back to the production
VM from a replica, shift I/O processes from the disaster recovery site to the production site.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides you the following options to perform failback:
• You can fail back to a VM already recovered to a new location. This VM must be recovered before you
perform failback. For example, you can recover the VM from a backup.
• You can fail back to a VM recovered from a replica to a new location, or to any location but with different
settings. The VM will be recovered from the replica during the failback process.
The first two options help you decrease recovery time and the use of the network traffic because
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer only differences between the source/recovered VM and replica.
For the third option, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer the whole VM data, including its
configuration and virtual disk content. Use the third option if there is no way to use the source VM or restore it
from a backup.
• First phase: Veeam Backup & Replication synchronizes the state of the production VM (the source VM, an
already recovered VM or a VM that will be recovered from the replica) with the current state of its replica .
This phase may take a lot of time especially if VM is large. While Veeam Backup & Replication performs the
first phase of failback, replicas are still up and running, users can access these VMs and perform daily
routine tasks as normal.
• Second phase: Veeam Backup & Replication switches all processes from the replica to the production VM,
turns off the replica and also sends to the production VM changes made to the replica since the end of the
first phase.
The time when the second phase starts depends on how you want to switch from the replica to the
production VM. You can switch to the production VM automatically, at the scheduled time or manually. If
you select to switch automatically, the second phase will start right after the first phase finishes. I f you
select to switch at the scheduled time or manually, the second phase will start at the time you want.
The process of failing back to the source VM or an already recovered VM differs from the process of failing back
to a VM recovered from a replica:
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2. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference between disks of the production VM and disks of
the replica in the Failover state. Difference calculation helps Veeam Backup & Replication understand
what data needs to be transferred to the production VM to synchronize its state with the sta te of the
replica.
[For VMware vSphere prior version 7.0] If you fail back to the original VM in the original location and you
have enabled the Quick rollback option, difference calculation can be performed much faster than without
this option enabled. For more information on quick rollback, see Quick Rollback.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers the data that was detected at the previous step to the production
VM. The transferred data is written to the production VM.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failover to Ready to switch.
During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations:
1. The guest OS of the replica is shut down or the replica is powered off.
If VMware Tools are installed on the replica, Veeam Backup & Replication tries to shut down the replica
guest OS. If nothing happens after 15 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the replica. If
VMware Tools are not installed on the VM or the VM is suspended, Veeam Backup & Replication powers
off the VM. The replica remains powered off until you commit failback or undo failback.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference between disks of the production VM and disks of
the replica. Difference calculation helps Veeam Backup & Replication understand what data was changed
while the replica was in the Ready to switch state.
3. Sends data changed on the replica while it was in the Ready to switch state to the production VM.
5. [If you fail back to a recovered VM] Veeam Backup & Replication updates the ID of the source VM in the
Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database. The ID of the source VM is replaced with the ID of
the recovered VM.
6. If you have selected to power on the production VM after failback, Veeam Backup & Replication powers on
the production VM on the host.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication requests vCenter Server to create on the target host an empty VM with the
same configuration as the replica. vCenter Server registers the created production VM.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers data of the replica to the production VM to update the production
VM state to the replica state.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failover to the Ready to switch.
During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the same operations as described in How
Failback to Source VM or Already Recovered VM Works except for the step 2. When you fail back to a VM
recovered from a replica, Veeam Backup & Replication does not calculate the difference between disks.
Failback is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. If the production VM works as expected and you
want to get back to it, commit failback. If the VM does not work as expected, undo failback.
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Quick Rollback
Quick rollback helps you significantly reduce the failback time. You can use quick rollback if you fail back from a
replica to the source VM in the source location.
During failback, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates differences between disks of the source VM and disks of
the replica. With the quick rollback option enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication compares only those disk
sectors that have changed during the replica was in the Failover state instead of comparing entire disks. To get
information about the changed disk sectors, Veeam Backup & Replication uses VMware vSphere Changed Block
Tracking (CBT).
As a result of enabling quick rollback, difference calculation becomes much faster. Af ter the differences are
calculated, Veeam Backup & Replication performs failback in a regular way: transport changed blocks to the
source VM, powers off the replica and synchronizes the source VM with the replica once again.
• Do not use quick rollback if the problem occurred at the VM hardware level, storage level or due to a
power loss.
Use quick rollback if you fail back to the source VM that had a problem at the guest OS level — for
example, there was an application error or a user accidentally deleted a file on the source VM guest OS.
• Due to changes in VMware vSphere 7.0 and newer, the replica failback operation forces digest
recalculation for both source and target VMs. That is why the Quick rollback option is ignored for ESXi
hosts starting from version 7.0.
• During the first replication job session after failback with quick rollback, CBT on the original VM is reset.
Due to that Veeam Backup & Replication will read data of the entire VM.
Performing Failback
To perform failback, use the Fa ilback wizard.
• VMs for which you plan to perform failback must be successfully replicated at least once.
• Replicas from which you want to fail back must be in the Failover state.
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Step 1. Launch Failback Wizard
To launch the Fa ilback wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from replica > Entire replica > Failback to
p roduction.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane navigate to the Rep licas > Active node. In the working area,
right-click the necessary replica and select Fa ilback to production. Alternatively, click Fa ilback to
P roduction on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Select Replicas
At the Rep lica step of the wizard, select replicas from which you want to fail back.
To update the list of replicas that are ready for failback (replicas in the Failover state), click P op ulate.
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Step 3. Select Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select a failback destination and backup proxies for data transfer during
failback:
1. Select a destination for failback. Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following options:
o Fa ilback to the original VM — select this option if you want to fail back to the source VMs that reside
on the source hosts. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the source VMs with
the current state of their replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the replicas while running in
the DR site.
If you select this option, you will proceed to the Summary step of the wizard.
o Fa ilback to the original VM restored in a different location — select this option if the source VMs have
already been recovered to a new location, and you want to switch to the recovered VMs from their
replicas. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the recovered VMs with the current
state of the replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the replicas while running in the DR site.
If you select this option, you will proceed to the Target VM step of the wizard.
o Fa ilback to the specified location — select this option if you want to recover VMs from replicas. You
can recover VMs to a new location, or to any location but with different settings (such as network
settings, virtual disk type, configuration file path and so on). Select this option if there is no way to
fail back to the source VM or an already recovered VM.
If you select this option, the wizard will include additional steps.
If you select one of the first two options, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the source/recovered
VMs only differences between the existing virtual disks. Veeam Backup & Replication will not send replica
configuration changes such as different IP address or network settings (if replica Re -IP and network
mapping were applied), new hardware or virtual disks added while the replica s were in the Failover state.
If you select Fa ilback to the specified location, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the specified
location whole VM data, including VM configurations and virtual disk content.
2. To select which backup proxies will be used for data transfer, click P ick backup proxies for data transfer.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication selects proxies automatically.
If VMs and their replicas reside in different sites, select at least one backup proxy in the production site
and one proxy in the disaster recovery site. If VMs and replicas reside in the same site, you can use the
same backup proxy as the source and target one.
We recommend you to select at least two backup proxies in each site to ensure that failback will be
performed in case one proxy fails or looses the network connection.
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3. [For VMware vSphere prior to version 7.0; for failback to the original VMs] If you want to fasten failback,
and the source VMs had problems at the guest OS level, select the Quick rollback check box. For more
information on quick rollback, its requirements and limitations, see Quick Rollback.
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Step 4. Select Hosts
The Host step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the Destination
step.
At the Host step of the wizard, specify hosts or clusters where the recovered VMs will be registered. To do this,
select the necessary VMs, click Host and select a host or cluster.
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Step 5. Select Resource Pools
The Resource Pool step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Resource Pool step of the wizard, select resource pools to which the recovered VMs will be added. To do
this, select VMs that you want to add to the same resource pool, click P ool and select the necessary resource
pool in the Select Resource Pool window.
As an alternative, you can select a vAPP to which the restored VM will be included. To find the necessary vAPP,
at the left bottom corner of the Select Resource P ool window, click the resource pool icon ( ) and select
VirtualApp .
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Step 6. Select Datastores
The Da tastore step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Da tastore step of the wizard, specify datastores where you want to store configuration files and disk files
of VMs that will be recovered. Also, you can change disk types.
1. To change a datastore where VM files will be stored, select the necessary VMs and click Da tastore. From
the list of available datastores, select the necessary datastore.
If configuration and disk files of VMs must be placed to different datastores, select files of the necessary
type, click Da tastore and select the necessary datastore.
2. To change disk type settings, select the necessary disk files and click Disk Type. In the Disk Type Settings
window, select the necessary disk type.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves disk types of the source VMs.
NOTE
You can change disk types only for VMs with Virtual Hardware version 7 or later.
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Step 7. Select Folders
The VM Folder step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the VM Folder step of the wizard, specify folders in the target datastores where all files of the r ecovered VMs
will be stored.
If you want the recovered VMs to have the same tags as the source VMs, select the Restore VM Tags check box.
NOTE
• You can select destination folders only if you recover VMs to destinations other than standalone
hosts.
• You can recover VM tags only if you recover VMs to their original locations, and the source VM tags
are still available on the source vCenter Server.
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Step 8. Configure Network Mapping
The Network step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step. This step applies if you fail back to VMs recovered to new locations, and if networks in those
locations differ from networks in the disaster recovery (DR) site.
At the Network step of the wizard create a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the DR site to
networks in the site where the recovered VMs will reside. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the network
mapping table to update configuration files of VMs on the fly, during the failback process.
1. In the Network connections list, select the necessary VMs and click Network.
If VMs are connected to multiple networks, select networks which you want to map.
2. In the list of available networks, select a network to which the recovered VMs will be connected.
If you do not want to connect the recovered VMs to any virtual network, select the necessary VMs and click
Disconnect.
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Step 9. Map Replicas to Restored VMs
The Ta rget VM step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the original VM restored in a different
loca tion option at the Destination step.
At the Ta rget VM step of the wizard, specify to which VMs you want to fail back from replicas. These VMs must
be already restored from backups in the required location.
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Step 10. Schedule Switch to Production VMs
At the Fa ilback Mode step of the wizard, specify when switch from replicas to production VMs must be
performed:
• Select Auto if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch automatically right after the
state of the production VMs is synchronized with the state of their replicas.
• Select Scheduled if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch at a specific time.
If you select the Scheduled or Ma nual option, you can further reset/set the scheduled time or switch to the
production VM manually. For more information, see Changing Switching Time and Switching Replicas to
Production VMs Manually.
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Step 11. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured failback settings and click Finish.
If you want to power on the production VMs right after the switch to production operation is performed, select
the P ower on target VM after restoring check box.
• Commit failback
• Undo failback
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
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3. Right-click a replica in the Ready to switch state and select Switch to production.
To change the time when Veeam Backup & Replication will switch from replicas to production VMs:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
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3. Right-click a replica in the Ready to switch state and select Cha nge switching time.
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Failback Commit
Failback commit is one of the ways to finalize failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the VM to
which you failed back (the production VM) works as expected . After the commit operation,
Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication activities for the production VM.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failback to Ready .
2. Further operations depend on whether you have failed back to the source VM or recovered VM:
o If you have failed back to a VM recovered from a backup or replica, Veeam Backup & Replication
reconfigures all existing jobs where the source VM is present and adds the source VM to the list of
exclusions. The recovered VM takes the role of the source VM and is included into all jobs instead of
the excluded VM. When the CDP policy starts, Veeam Backup & Replication processes the recovered
VM instead of the former source VM.
o If you have failed back to the source VM, the CDP policy is not reconfigured. When the CDP policy
starts, Veeam Backup & Replication still processes the source VM.
Committing Failback
To commit failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Commit Failback on the ribbon. As an
alternative, you can right-click the replica and select Commit failback.
IMP ORTANT
If you have failed back to a VM with IDE disks, you must manually power off this VM before committing the
failback.
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Failback Undo
Failback undo is one of the ways to finalize failback. When you undo failback, you confirm that the VM to which
you failed back (the production VM) works in a wrong way and you want to get back to the replica.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication reverts the replica to its pre-failback state.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication powers on the replica and changes the replica state from Failback to Failover.
Undoing Failback
To undo failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failback on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary replica and select Und o Failback.
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VeeamZIP
With Veeam Backup & Replication, you can quickly perform backup of one or several VMs with VeeamZIP.
VeeamZIP is similar to a full VM backup. The VeeamZIP job always produces a full backup file (VBK) that acts as
an independent restore point. You can store the backup file in a backup repository, in a local folder on the
backup server or in a network share.
IMP ORTANT
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not enforce backup repository throttling rules during VeeamZIP
jobs.
• You cannot use a Veeam Cloud Connect repository as a target for VeeamZIP jobs.
Backup files produced with VeeamZIP jobs are displayed in the Home view, under the Ba ckups > Disk (Exported)
node.
When you perform backup with VeeamZIP, you do not have to configure a backup job and schedule it. Instead,
you can start the backup process for selected VMs immediately. This type of a backup requires minimum
settings — you should only select the backup destination, choose the necessary compression level and enable or
disable encryption and application-aware processing if necessary. For more information, see Creating VeeamZIP
Backups.
To view the progress or results of the VeeamZIP job session, you can use the History view. For more information,
see Viewing Real-Time Statistics.
To restore VM data from VeeamZIP backups, you can right-click it in the Home view and select the necessary
restore option. You can also double-click the necessary VeeamZIP backup file on the machine where
Veeam Backup & Replication is installed.
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Creating VeeamZIP Backups
You can quickly back up running and powered off VMs with VeeamZIP. VeeamZIP can be helpful if you want to
create an ad-hoc backup for VMs, archive VMs before decommissioning and so on. You can create VeeamZIP
backups for one or more VMs.
TI P
Veeam Backup & Replication keeps settings of the latest VeeamZIP task. To quickly create VeeamZIP
backups with the same settings and store backups in the same location, right-click the necessary VM and
select VeeamZIP to.
1. Open the Inventory view. In the infrastructure tree, select a host or VM container (host, cluster, folder,
resource pool, VirtualApp, datastore or tag) in which the VMs that you want to back up reside.
2. In the working area, select the VMs and click Veea mZIP > VeeamZIP on the ribbon or right-click the VMs
and select VeeamZIP.
To quickly find the necessary VMs, type the VM name or a part of it in the search field at the top of the
working area and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
a. In the Destination section, specify a location in which you want to store VeeamZIP backups.
▪ To store VeeamZIP backups in a backup repository, select Ba ckup repository and choose the
necessary backup repository from the list. In this case, VeeamZIP backups will be saved to the
VeeamZIP subfolder of the folder where the backup repository stores backups. You can check
this folder at the Configure Backup Repository Settings step of the backup repository wizard.
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▪ To store VeeamZIP backups in a local folder on the backup server, select Local or shared folder,
click Browse on the right and select a folder in which VeeamZIP backups must be stored.
▪ To store VeeamZIP backups in a shared folder, select Loca l or shared folder and type in the UNC
name of the shared folder in the field below. Keep in mind that the UNC name always starts with
two back slashes (\\).
If the shared folder requires authentication, select the necessary credentials from the
Credentials list. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or
click Ad d on the right to add necessary credentials. For more informa tion, see Managing
Credentials.
b. If you want to specify retention settings for the created VeeamZIP backups, select the Delete this
b a ckup automatically check box. From the drop-down list, select the retention period. If you do not
want to delete VeeamZIP backups, leave the Delete this backup automatically check box unselected.
[For hardened repository] Veeam Backup & Replication sets an immutability period for backup files
with retention period as equal to the longest of these periods. For more information, see Retention
Scenarios.
c. To encrypt VeeamZIP backups, select the E na ble backup file encryption check box. From the
P a ssword list, select a password that you want to use for encryption. If you have not created a
password beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new password. For
more information, see Managing Passwords for Data Encryption.
d. From the Compression level list, select a compression level for created backups.
e. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses VMware Tools quiescence to create a transactionally
consistent image of VMs. You can disable VM quiescence. To do this, select the Disable guest
quiescence check box. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a crash-consistent VM
backup.
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f. Click OK. The VeeamZIP task will start immediately. Veeam Backup & Replication will create a full
backup file (VBK) and store it in the specified location. The VM name, date and time of the file
creation are appended to the file name so you can easily find the necessary backups afterwards.
4. As the job runs, you can track the job performance in the real-time mode. To see the job results once it
completes, open the History view, expand the Job s node and click Ba ckup. Then double-click the job
session in the list.
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Managing VeeamZIP Backups
Managing for VeeamZIP backups is practically the same as for regular backups. You can view backup properties,
copy, move or delete backups from disk. For more information, see the following sections:
• Moving Backups
• Copying Backups
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Backup Copy
The main backup purpose is to protect your data against disasters and virtual or physical machine failures.
However, having just one backup does not provide the necessary level of safety. The primary backup may get
destroyed together with production data, and you will have no backups from which you can restore data.
To build a successful data protection and disaster recovery plan, it is recommended that you follow the 3 -2-1
rule:
• 3: You must have at least three copies of your data: the original production data and two backups.
• 2: You must use at least two different types of media to store the copies of your data, for example, local
disk and cloud.
• 1: You must keep at least one backup off-site, for example, in the cloud or in a remote site.
Thus, you must have at least two backups and they must be in different locations. If a disaster takes out your
production data and local backup, you can still recover from your off-site backup.
To help you adopt the 3-2-1 rule, Veeam Backup & Replication offers backup copy capabilities. Backup copy
allows you to create several instances of the same backup data in different locations, whether on-site or off-
site. Backup copies have the same format as those created by backup jobs and you can recover your data from
them when you need it.
Backup copy is a job-driven process. Veeam Backup & Replication fully automates the backup copy process and
lets you specify retention settings to maintain the desired number of restore points, as wel l as full backups for
archival purposes.
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About Backup Copy
With backup copy, you can create several instances of the same backup file and copy them to secondary (target)
backup repositories for long-term storage. Target backup repositories can be located in the same site as the
source backup repository or can be deployed off-site. The backup copy file has the same format as the primary
backup, so you can restore necessary data directly from it in case of a disaster.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports backup copy for the following types of backups:
• Backups of VMware vSphere or VMware Cloud Director virtual machines created with
Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines created with Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of virtual and physical machines created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, Veeam Agent
for Linux, Veeam Agent for Mac, Veeam Agent for Oracle Solaris or Veeam Agent for IBM AIX
• Backups of Nutanix AHV virtual machines created with Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV
• Backups of Oracle and SAP HANA databases created with Veeam Plug-ins for Enterprise Applications
• Backups of Amazon EC2 instances created with Veeam Backup for AWS
• Backups of Microsoft Azure virtual machines created with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure
IMP ORTANT
Mind the following for copying backups created with Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft
Azure or Veeam Backup for Google Cloud:
• You can copy such backups from external repositories but not to them.
• When copying backups from external repositories, mind that there can be a situation when new
restore points were not copied. In this case, make sure the source chain for the backup copy job was
not recreated. If it was recreated (all restore points have been deleted and created anew), you must
create a new backup copy job with a new chain of backups.
When the backup copying process starts, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses backup files in the source
backup repository, retrieves data blocks for a specific machine from the backup file, copies them to the target
backup repository, and composes copied blocks into a backup file in the target backup repository. The backup
copying process does not affect virtual and physical infrastructure resources, does not require creation of
additional VM snapshots or VSS snapshots and does not produce load on machines whose backups are copied.
Backup copy is a job-driven process. To copy backups, you need to configure backup copy jobs. The backup copy
job defines when, what, how and where to copy. For more information on how to create backup copy jobs, see
Creating Backup Copy Jobs for VMs and Physical Machines. Note that to copy file share backups, you need to
configure a file share backup job, not the backup copy job. For more information, see Creating File Share Backup
Jobs.
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How Backup Copy Works
Veeam Backup & Replication performs backup copy in the following way:
1. [For VM backup copy jobs only] Veeam Backup & Replication connects to vCenter Servers and ESXi hosts
to gather information about VMs whose restore points you want to copy.
2. For backup copying process, Veeam Backup & Replication starts two Veeam Data Movers — source Veeam
Data Mover and target Veeam Data Mover. Veeam Data Movers location depends on the backup repository
type and data transport path. For more information, see Backup Copy Architecture.
3. The first backup copy run always produces a full backup file. Veeam Backup & Replication copies data
blocks that are necessary to build a full backup of a machine as of the most recent state.
Veeam Backup & Replication can copy data blocks from one or more backup files in the backup chain in the
source backup repository.
o If the backup chain is created in the reverse incremental backup method, Veeam Backup & Replication
copies data blocks of the latest full backup.
o If the backup chain is created in the forward or forever forward incremental backup method,
Veeam Backup & Replication copies data blocks from the first full backup and a set of incremental
backups.
To minimize the amount of traffic going over the network, Veeam Backup & Replication uses WAN
accelerator, the data compression and deduplication technologies.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers copied data to the target backup repository and writes all copied
data blocks to the full backup file.
o New backup copy jobs will always work in per-machine mode. In per-machine mode, data of every
machine in the job is stored to separate backup files in the target backup repository.
o If you have backup copy jobs created in previous versions of Veeam Backup & Replication, they will
continue to work in the same mode. In this case, if Use per-machine backup files option was disabled,
Veeam Backup & Replication will create one backup file in the target backup repository and will store
to it data for all machines processed by the job.
5. During every next backup copy run, when a new restore point appears in the source backup repository,
Veeam Backup & Replication copies incremental changes from this most recent restore point and transfers
them to the target backup repository. Veeam Backup & Replication writes the copied data blocks to the
incremental backup file in the target backup repository, that is, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new
restore point in the forever forward incremental backup chain.
To retain the desired number of restore points, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a retention policy. For
more information, see Short-Term Retention Policy.
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If you want to store some restore points for longer periods (for weeks, months or years) and enable long -
term retention policy (GFS retention policy), Veeam Backup & Replication creates a forward incremental
backup chain. For more information on GFS retention policy, see Long-Term Retention Policy (GFS).
In some cases, the source backup job and backup copy job may overlap. This situation can occur if the source
backup job needs to transform the source backup chain.
If a specific task in the backup copy job locks the source backup chain to read data from it, and the source
backup job that needs to write data to this backup chain starts at this moment (for example, for reverse
incremental backup), the task in the backup copy job is put on hold. The backup copy job can continue
processing other tasks that use other sources (for example, backup files created by other back up jobs). After the
source backup job releases the backup chain, the backup copy job resumes processing machines in this backup
chain.
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Backup Copy Architecture
To transport data from the source backup repository to the target backup repository, the backup copy job uses
one of the following paths:
When Veeam Backup & Replication transports data over the direct data path, it uses Veeam Data Movers on the
following backup infrastructure components:
• Microsoft Windows and Linux repositories. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the source Veeam Data
Mover on the source backup repository and target Veeam Data Mover on the target backup repository.
• Sha red folder backup repository. If you have instructed Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically
select the gateway server, Veeam Backup & Replication will use Veeam Data Movers deployed on mount
servers associated with backup repositories. In case mount servers cannot be used for some reason,
Veeam Backup & Replication will fail over to the backup server.
If you have explicitly defined the gateway server, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the source Veeam
Data Mover on the gateway server in the source site and target Veeam Data Mover on the gateway server
on the target site.
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Transport Path over WAN Accelerators
Veeam Backup & Replication transports data through a pair of WAN accelerators: one deployed on the source
side and the other one deployed on the target side. WAN accelerators remove redundant blocks before
transferring data and thus significantly reduce the amount of traffic going over the network. This type of data
transport is recommended for copying backups off-site over slow connections or WAN.
IMP ORTANT
The WAN acceleration technology is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket -
based license, the Enterprise Plus edition is required. For more information, see WAN Acceleration.
When Veeam Backup & Replication transports data using WAN accelerators, it uses Veeam Data Movers on the
following backup infrastructure components:
• Microsoft Windows and Linux repositories. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the source Veeam Data
Mover on the source backup repository and target Veeam Data Mover on the target backup repository.
• Sha red folder backup repository. If you have instructed Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically
select the gateway server, Veeam Backup & Replication will use Veeam Data Mover deployed on the
source and/or target WAN accelerator. If you have explicitly defined the gateway server,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the source Veeam Data Mover on the gateway server in the source
site and target Veeam Data Mover on the gateway server on the target site.
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Backup Copy Modes
Veeam Backup & Replication offers two backup copy modes:
• Immediate copy
In the immediate copy mode, Veeam Backup & Replication copies restore points as soon as they appear in
a source backup repository. Veeam Backup & Replication copies only restore points created by source
backup jobs (backup jobs that you select when configuring a backup copy job).
Veeam Backup & Replication can also copy transaction log backups if you enable this capability in job
settings.
The immediate copy mode is supported for the following backup types:
o Backups of VMware vSphere and Microsoft Hyper-V VMs created with Veeam Backup & Replication
o Backups created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, Veeam Agent for Linux or Veeam Agent
for Mac operating in the managed mode
Only backups created by backup jobs managed by the backup server are supported.
o Backups created with Veeam Plug-ins for Enterprise Applications (Oracle RMAN, SAP HANA, SAP on
Oracle)
• P eriodic copy
In the periodic copy mode, Veeam Backup & Replication copies the latest source restore point according to
schedule specified in backup copy job settings. Veeam Backup & Replication copies only restore points
created by source backup jobs (backup jobs that you select when configuring a backup copy job).
The periodic copy mode is supported for the following backup types:
o Backups of VMware vSphere and Microsoft Hyper-V VMs created with Veeam Backup & Replication
o Backups created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, Veeam Agent for Linux or Veeam Agent
for Mac operating in the standalone or managed mode
For the managed mode, backups created by both backup jobs managed by the backup server and jobs
managed by Veeam Agent are supported.
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If you want to change the selected backup copy mode for a backup copy job created in earlier versions of
Veeam Backup & Replication, it must have the per-machine backup with separate metadata files format. If a
backup copy job has the per-machine backup with single metadata file format, you must upgrade its backup
chain format to per-machine with separate metadata files or detach backups to start a new backup chain. For
more information, see Changing Backup Chain Formats.
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Backup Copy Intervals
A backup copy interval is a time span in which a backup copy job must copy a restore point from the source
backup repository to the target backup repository.
IMP ORTANT
There are no more backup copy intervals in new backup copy jobs. You can use backup copy intervals only
in backup copy jobs, created in earlier versions of Veeam Backup & Replication.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication uses backup copy intervals only in the periodic copy mode.
The backup copy interval affects the restore point selection process. For more information, see Restore Point
Selection.
At the beginning of a new interval, Veeam Backup & Replication checks if a new restore point is available in the
source backup repository:
• If a new restore point is found, the backup copy job starts the synchronization process and copies the
latest restore point to the target backup repository.
• If a new restore point is not found or is locked by the source backup job, the backup copy job enters the
Idle state.
By default, the backup copy interval is set to 1 day. You can change this interval when configuring a backup copy
job and set the interval in minutes or hours. Note that if you specify a too short backup copy interval or change
the interval, some issues can occur. For details, see Issues with Backup Copy Intervals.
For example, if you set the backup copy interval to 4 hours and start the backup copy job at 12:00 AM,
Veeam Backup & Replication will start new backup copy intervals at 12:00 AM, 4:00 AM, 8:00 AM and so on.
For example, if you set the backup copy interval to 1 day and instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to start new
intervals at 12:00 PM, Veeam Backup & Replication will start new backup copy intervals at 12:00 PM daily.
In some cases, the start time of the backup copy job and backup copy interval may differ.
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For example, you configure a backup copy job and set the start time of the backup copy interval to 12:00 PM.
You also specify that the job must start right after the wizard is closed, and you close the wizard at 12:00 AM. In
this case, the first backup copy interval will start immediately and will run for a shorter period of time — for 12
hours instead of one day. All subsequent backup copy intervals will start a s defined by backup copy job
schedule.
Veeam Backup & Replication handles this situation differently for the first and subsequent backup copy
intervals.
• The first backup copy interval always produces a full backup file — the starting point in the backup chain.
If Veeam Backup & Replication fails to copy data for the full backup file during the first backup copy
interval, it marks the job session as finished with the Warning status. During the next backup copy
interval, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to copy data for the full backup file in the following
manner:
a. When a new backup copy interval begins, the restore point that was previously copied no longer
corresponds to the restore point selection rules. That is, the time of the restore point creation falls
out of the search scope. For this reason, Veeam Backup & Replication waits for a new restore point to
appear in the source backup repository.
b. When a new restore point appears in the source backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication
detects what data blocks still need to be copied to make up a full backup file in the target backup
repository, and copies these data blocks.
This process continues until there is a full backup file in the target backup repository.
• At subsequent backup copy intervals, Veeam Backup & Replication copies incremental restore points. If
Veeam Backup & Replication fails to transport an incremental restore point, it marks the synchronization
task as failed. Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the expiration of the backup copy interval; after that,
Veeam Backup & Replication marks the job session as finished with the Error status.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not mark the backup copy job session with the Error status in the following
cases:
• The source backup job has not started during the backup copy interval of the backup copy job (that is, the
backup copy job has nothing to copy to the target backup repository).
• A task in the backup copy job processes a VM template, and the source backup job is set to exclude the VM
template during incremental backup jobs sessions.
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Change of the Backup Copy Interval Start Time
If you have selected to run a backup copy job with a daily backup copy interval, you must define the start time
of the backup copy interval. However, you may want to change the start time afterwards. After the start time
change, Veeam Backup & Replication behaves in the following manner:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication finishes the current backup copy interval running according to the 'old' start
time value as usual.
2. After the current backup copy interval is over, Veeam Backup & Replication immediately starts the backup
copy interval, not waiting for the 'new' start time point to come. At that, Veeam Backup & Replication
“stretches” the started interval: the interval lasts for the time remaining till the new start time plus the
time of the backup copy interval itself.
3. All subsequent backup copy intervals are created and started in a regular manner by the new schedule.
For example, when you first created a backup copy job, you set a daily backup copy interval with the start time
at 8 AM. After that, you changed the start time to 10 AM. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will first
finish the backup copy interval that is currently running — that is, the backup copy interval that was started at 8
AM — as usual. After that, it will immediately start a new backup copy interval. This interval will run for 26 hours
— from 8 AM of the current day until 10 AM of the next day. All subsequent backup copy interval s will be
started at 10 AM every day.
The first backup copy interval that is run after the start time change is typically longer than a regular one. This
happens because of the backup copy interval “stretch” mentioned above. To start the synchronization pr ocess
right away, you can use the Sy nc Now option after you change the start time value. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will behave in the following manner:
1. When you start the synchronization process manually, Veeam Backup & Replication forcibly finishes the
current backup copy interval and begins a new backup copy interval according to the new start time value.
This backup copy interval lasts until a new backup copy interval by the new schedule must be started.
2. All subsequent backup copy intervals are created and started in a regular manner.
As a result, the first backup copy interval after the start time change will begin immediately.
For example, when you first created a backup copy job, you set a daily backup copy interval with the start time
at 8 AM. After that, you changed the start time to 10 AM. On the start time change, you started the manual
synchronization process at 1 PM. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will finish the current backup copy
interval — that is, the backup copy interval that was started at 8 AM — immediately at 1 PM. After that, it will
start a new backup copy interval. This interval will run for 21 hours — from 1 PM of the current day until 10 AM
of the next day. All subsequent backup copy intervals will be started at 10 AM every day.
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Restore Point Selection
Veeam Backup & Replication always copies the most recent restore points, even if a backup copy job runs for the
first time and source backup repositories already contain chains of restore points.
In the immediate copy mode, backup copy job copies the recent complete restore point created by a source
backup job on the first run. On the next runs, Veeam Backup & Replication copies the oldest source restore
points until there are no restore points left.
In the periodic copy mode, backup copy job starts according to schedule. Backup copy job copies the recent
complete restore point created by a source backup job on the first run. On the next runs backup copy job
continues to copy the recent complete restore points.
If there are no restore points considered as recent, Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy data from source
backup repositories. Instead, it waits for new restore points to appear. Only after that,
Veeam Backup & Replication copies the most recent data blocks to the target repository.
In the periodic copy mode, you can also specify the search scope for restore points. For more information, see
Select Machines to Process.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy restore points from the target backup repository.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy restore points from imported backups.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy restore points that have already been copied by the same
backup copy job to the target backup repository.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy incomplete restore points.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy restore points that are locked by the backup transformation
process (merge, transform).
• A backup copy job does not copy a restore point if its data block size differs from the data block size of
restore points that the job has already copied to the target backup repository. To copy restore points with
the changed block size, you need to create active full backups. For details, see Change Storage
Optimization Settings for Backup Copy Job.
For example, if you have changed the block size for restore points in the source backup job (the Storage
op timization option in the Storage Settings), Veeam Backup & Replication will not copy newly created
restore points and will display the Restore point is located in backup file with different block size
message.
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Transformation Processes
Veeam Backup & Replication can perform additional transformations in the target backup repository after the
backup copying task or at the end of the backup copy interval. Transformation processes are the following:
When a new restore point is copied to the target backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication checks
the retention policy settings for the backup copy job. If the limit in restore points is exceeded,
Veeam Backup & Replication does the following:
o If only short-term retention policy is enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication transforms the backup
chain to make room for a new restore point. For more information, see Short-Term Retention Policy.
o If long-term retention policy is enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication removes unnecessary restore
points. Veeam Backup & Replication removes restore points in a way similar to the one described in
Forward Incremental Backup Retention Policy.
For more information on retention policies, see Retention Policy for Backup Copy Jobs.
After the transformation process, Veeam Backup & Replication can perform additional operations: remove
data of deleted workloads from the backup chain and compact a full backup file.
In the backup copy job settings, you can specify after which period you want to delete data of deleted
workloads from backups created by backup copy jobs. After the period ends, Veeam Backup & Replication
checks the list of workloads included in the job and removes data of deleted workloads from the backup
chain in the target backup repository. For more information on how data is deleted and which limitations
apply, see Deleted Items Retention. For more information on how to configure the deleted items
retention, see Specifying Advanced Settings.
In the backup copy job settings, you can select to periodically compact a full backup file to reduce its size
and increase the speed of read and write operations. For more information, see Compact of Full Backup
File.
NOTE
If backup copy job processes the per-machine backup files, transformation processes will be performed for
each object individually.
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Backup Copy Window
A backup copy window is a period of time when a backup copy job is allowed to transport data between source
and target repositories.
By default, the backup copy window is configured to allow data transfer at any time. If you do not want the
backup copy job to overlap the production hours, you can reduce the backup copy window and specify
"prohibited" hours.
During the prohibited hours Veeam Backup & Replication cannot transfer data between source and target
repositories. Other aspects of how Veeam Backup & Replication behaves during the prohibited hours and backup
copy window depend on the selected backup copy mode. For more information, see Backup Copy Window and
Prohibited Hours in Immediate Copy Mode and Backup Copy Window and Prohibited Hours in Periodic Copy
Mode.
NOTE
During the prohibited hours, Veeam Backup & Replication stops only data transferring operations.
Transformation processes in the target repository are still performed. For more information, see
Transformation Processes.
When the backup copy window starts, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers all restore points that were not
transferred and creates as many incremental backup files as were omitted.
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Retention Policy for Backup Copy Jobs
The retention policy of a backup copy job defines for how long Veeam Backup & Replication must retain copied
restore points in the target backup repository. The retention policy of a backup copy job does not depend on
retention policy of the source backup job. The backup copy job has its own retention policy settings.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers two retention policy schemes for backup copy jobs:
Also, there is a separate retention policy for machines that has been removed from the infrastructure. For
details, see Deleted Items Retention.
During the first backup copy session, Veeam Backup & Replication creates the first restore point — a full backup.
The next backup copy sessions add incremental backups to the backup chain. As a result, the regular backup
cycle produces a chain of a full backup and set of incremental backups in the target backup repository. When the
retention policy is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the earliest restore points from backup
chains in the target backup repositories.
Since Veeam Backup & Replication creates forever forward incremental backup chains while backup copy jobs
run, Veeam Backup & Replication applies the forever forward incremental retention policy to remove restore
points and maintain the desired number of restore points.
When configuring short-term retention policy settings for a backup copy job, you have two options:
Veeam Backup & Replication keeps restore points created during the last N days, where N is the number of
days that you specify in the settings.
o The minimum number of retained restore points is 3. This number does not depend on the number of
days set in the retention policy. For example, the retention policy is set to 5 days. You launch the job
after it was stopped for 10 days. Normally, Veeam Backup & Replication would delete all previous
restore points. However, due to the minimum number of retained restore points, you will still have at
least 3 restore points: the newly created restore point and the two previous ones.
You can change the minimum number of retained restore points with a registry value. For more
information, contact Veeam Customer Support.
o If the backup job starts at the end of the day and finishes the next day, Veeam Backup & Replication
assumes that the restore point is created at the moment when the backup job started. However,
Veeam Backup & Replication starts counting retention policy days only after the backup job finishes
processing workloads.
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o When determining whether the number of allowed days is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication
ignores the day when the daily retention policy runs. In fact, Veeam Backup & Replication keeps
restore points for the N + 1 days, where N is the number of days that you specify in the settings.
o When determining whether the number of allowed days is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication
also counts days when the backup job did not create any backups.
NOTE
If you want to create full backups periodically (weekly, monthly, yearly), enable the GFS retention policy. If
you do not enable the GFS retention, the regular backup copy cycles will create only incremental backups.
IMP ORTANT
This section describes how the short-term retention policy functions when the GFS retention policy is
disabled. If you enable the GFS retention policy, mind the following:
• The backup copy chain will contain more restore points than you have specified in the short-term
retention policy.
• With enabled GFS retention policy, Veeam Backup & Replication applies the forward-incremental
retention policy to the backup copy chain.
Example
The regular backup cycle is based on the short-term retention policy scheme. When you specify retention policy
settings, you define how many restore points you want to retain in the backup chain in the target backup
repository.
For example, you have selected to retain 7 restore points. The backup copy runs once a day and starts on
Sunday.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a full backup on Sunday and add 6 incremental backups Monday
through Saturday.
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2. On Sunday, Veeam Backup & Replication creates another increment. As a result, there will be 8 restore
points, which exceeds the retention policy. Thus, the oldest increment is merged to the full backup.
After the oldest increment is merged to the full backup, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the
increment as it is no longer needed.
Related Topics
Long-Term Retention Policy (GFS)
The GFS retention also helps you to mitigate risks that the short-term retention policy has, such as large number
of subsequent incremental backups. Large number of subsequent incremental backups can increase recovery
time, because Veeam Backup & Replication has to read data through the whole backup chain. Also, one
corrupted increment can make the whole chain useless. When you configure the GFS retention,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates weekly/monthly/yearly full backups, so instead of one backup chain
consisting of one full backup and incremental backups, you will have several backup chains.
GFS backups are always full backup files that contain data of the whole machine image as of a specific date. GFS
is a tiered retention policy and it uses a number of cycles to retain backups for different periods of time:
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In the GFS retention policy, weekly backups are known as ‘sons’, monthly backups are known as ‘fathers’ and
yearly backups are known as ‘grandfathers’. Weekly, monthly and yearly backups are also called archive
backups.
NOTE
GFS retention policy functions in combination with short-term retention policy. After you enable the GFS
retention, the backup chain switches from the forever-forward incremental policy to forward incremental
policy. Thus, the increments are no longer merged to the full backup file.
If you enable only yearly full backups without monthly and weekly backups, this can result in a large
number of increments in a backup chain. To avoid this, it is recommended to enable an additional weekly
GFS cycle. Weekly GFS cycle will update the backup chain every week which will allow to remove excessive
increment files.
Related Topics
• How GFS Retention Works
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to create archive full backups with the following methods:
• Synthetic full method — Veeam Backup & Replication synthesizes archive full backups using restore points
in the target backup repository.
• Active full method — Veeam Backup & Replication copies data for archive full backups from the source
backup repository.
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Synthetic Full Method for Archive Backups
The synthetic full backup is the default method to create archive full backups. Veeam Backup & Replication does
not copy data for archive full backups from the source backup repository. It synthesizes archive full backups
from backup files that are already stored in the target backup repository. This approach helps reduce load on
the network and production environment.
NOTE
The synthetic full method is not recommended if you use a deduplication storage appliance as a target
backup repository. Performing a synthetic full backup in such repositories requires additional time and
resources to download and decompress backup data blocks.
This recommendation does not apply to HPE StoreOnce, Dell Data Domain and ExaGrid:
• HPE StoreOnce and Dell Data Domain use virtual synthetics. Veeam Backup & Replication creates
archive full backups by virtually synthesizing data blocks from existing backup files.
• ExaGrid uses adaptive deduplication. Veeam Backup & Replication creates archive full backups from
existing backup files that are stored in complete form in ExaGrid high-speed cache.
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By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the synthetic backup method to create archive full backups.
However, synthesizing archive full backups can cause problems with storage performance on deduplicating
storage appliances. Deduplicating storage appliances are optimized for sequential data access. The synthetic
backup creation, however, takes random I/O operations — Veeam Backup & Replication reads data from existing
backup files and writes data to the synthesized archive full backup file. As a result, the storage performance can
degrade.
In addition, backups reside in the target backup repository in the deduplicated and compresse d state. Before
creating synthetic full backups, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to download and decompress data blocks of
backups, which requires additional time and resources.
NOTE
• The active full backup method does not always copy the most recent restore point from the source
backup repository. If the recent restore point is not created by the time the GFS task must start,
Veeam Backup & Replication copies the latest available restore point from the source backup
repository.
• If Veeam Backup & Replication does not manage to transfer the restore point according to backup
copy schedule, Veeam Backup & Replication will finalize the transfer anyway.
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Backup Copy GFS Cycles
When you configure the GFS schedule in the backup copy job settings, you specify for how long archive backups
must be stored and on which day certain GFS backup must be created. You can configure the GFS schedule in
the settings of a backup copy job. For details, see Backup Copy Job: Define Backup Copy Target.
There are separate schedules for weekly, monthly and yearly full cycles. For details on settings of the GFS
retention, see the following table.
W eekly GFS cycle If you want to create weekly full backups, select the Keep weekly full backups for
check box. Then, specify the number of weeks during which the weekly backup must
be stored on the target repository. During this period the weekly backup cannot be
deleted or modified.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a weekly full backup on the specified day of the
week. On this day, creation of a weekly full backup starts as soon as the backup copy
interval starts.
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GFS Backup Option Description
Monthly GFS cycle To create monthly restore points, you can select the Keep monthly full backups for
check box. Then, specify the number of months during which the monthly backup
must be stored on the target repository. During this period the monthly backup
cannot be deleted or modified.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates monthly full backups according to a schedule
that depends on whether the weekly cycle is enabled or disabled:
• If weekly backups are enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the weekly
backup schedule and adds a monthly flag to the weekly backup.
• If weekly backups are disabled, Veeam Backup & Replication creates monthly
full backups on the first day of the selected week. You can select First,
Second, Third, Fourth or La st week of a month. If you select First, monthly
backups are created on the first day of each month. If you select La st,
monthly backups are created on different dates depending on the number of
days in a month:
o For 31 days: 25th of the month.
o For 30 days: 24th of the month.
o For 29 days: 23rd of the month.
o For 28 days: 22nd of the month.
If the first day of the current week has already passed and you select the
first week for the monthly full backup cycle,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a monthly full backup even if it is
not the first day of the current week.
If you enable the monthly GFS cycle and select the first week that has
already passed, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a monthly full
backup only in the next month. Monthly full backup for the current
month will not be created.
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GFS Backup Option Description
Y ea rly GFS cycle If you want to create yearly restore points, select the Keep y early full backups for
check box. Then, specify the number of years during which the yearly backup must
be stored on the target repository. During this period the yearly backup cannot be
deleted or modified.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates yearly full backups according to a schedule that
depends on whether the monthly cycle is enabled or disabled:
• If monthly backups are enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the
monthly backup schedule and adds a yearly flag to the monthly backup.
• If monthly backups are disabled, Veeam Backup & Replication creates yearly
full backups on the first day of the selected month.
If the first day of the current month has already passed and you select the
current month for the yearly full backup cycle, Veeam Backup & Replication
creates a yearly full backup even if it is not the first day of the current month.
If you enable the yearly GFS cycle and select the month that has already
passed, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a yearly full backup only in the
next year. Yearly full backup for the current year will not be created.
When you enable the GFS retention, Veeam Backup & Replication no longer merges increments to full backups
because GFS full backups cannot be modified. Thus, the short-term retention policy counts retention points only
in the active backup chain not in the whole combination of backup chains.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication removes GFS backup files only during running backup copy job sessions. This
means that if the backup copy job does not run on the expected retention date,
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the GFS backup file later during the next job session.
The full backup can be marked as weekly, monthly and/or yearly. When transforming weekly, monthly and
yearly backup chains, Veeam Backup & Replication checks flags set for the full backup file. If the full backup file
belongs to some other retention policy tier and must be retained in the target backup repository, such backup
file will not be removed.
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Checking Which Restore Point Has GFS Flag
To check whether a restore point has a GFS flag, you can open the backup properties in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console. Weekly, monthly, yearly backups have " W ", " M" and/or " Y" flag in the
Retention column. For instructions, see Viewing Backup Properties.
• General Settings
• Changes in GFS Retention After Upgrading from Veeam Backup & Replication 10 to version 11
General Settings
Mind the following for general settings of a backup copy job:
• You cannot enable GFS retention settings if you use a backup repository with rotated drives a s the target
backup repository.
• [For yearly GFS cycle] If you enable only the yearly GFS cycle, you can encounter the case when there is
one full backup and a large number of increments for the whole year. To avoid this case, it is
recommended to enable an additional weekly GFS cycle. Weekly GFS cycle will update the backup chain
every week which will allow removing excessive increment files.
• If for some reason the GFS synthetic full was not created in the scheduled day,
Veeam Backup & Replication will create the synthetic GFS full after the next run of the backup copy job.
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• If it is the day when the GFS full backup must be created and there were no new backup files since the last
run of the backup copy, Veeam Backup & Replication will create the GFS full backup from the latest
available backup chain.
• GFS full backups cannot be merged or deleted by short-term retention. However, regular (R) full backups
can be merged and removed by short-term retention if GFS is disabled.
• [For immediate copy mode] If the backup copy job was not run when the GFS full backup must be created,
the GFS full backup will not be created on this day.
• If Veeam Backup & Replication does not manage to transfer the restore point according to backup copy
schedule, Veeam Backup & Replication will finalize the transfer anyway.
• Veeam Backup & Replication creates a GFS full backup even if the GFS full backup creation is scheduled
when the backup copy scheduled run is not finished. On the day when the GFS full backup must be
created, Veeam Backup & Replication shows a warning that the current backup copy scheduled run will be
completed. The way how Veeam Backup & Replication behaves further depends on the selected backup
copy GFS method:
o In case of the synthetic full method, Veeam Backup & Replication first copies data for an incremental
backup from the source backup repository and then, on the target backup repository, synthesizes the
GFS full backup using this data and data of the already stored backup files.
o In case of the active full method, Veeam Backup & Replication copies data for the GFS full backup
from the source backup repository and creates the GFS full backup on the target backup repository.
IMP ORTANT
If you run an upgrade from version 10 to version 12 when the GFS retention policy is disabled,
Veeam Backup & Replication will delete all GFS storages created before.
If you upgrade to Veeam Backup & Replication 12, all GFS retention settings of existing backup copy jobs are
automatically switched to the new format with minimal changes:
• W eekly GFS retention: If in version 10 the GFS setting was to keep 5 weekly backups, in version 12 the
setting is changed to keep weekly backups for 5 weeks.
• Monthly GFS retention: If in version 10 the monthly GFS schedule was set to a period between the 1st
Monday and 2nd Sunday, in version 12 the monthly GFS settings is changed to First week .
If the monthly GFS schedule was set to a period between the 3rd Monday and last Sunday, in version 12
the monthly GFS settings is changed to Last week .
• Y ea rly GFS retention: If the yearly GFS schedule was set to a certain day of the month, in version 12 the
schedule is set to the first day of the specified month.
If in version 10 the yearly GFS schedule was set to the first-fourth Monday-Sunday of the year, in version
12 the schedule is changed to the first day of January.
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If the yearly GFS schedule was set to the last Monday-Sunday of the year, in version 12 the schedule is set
to the first day of December.
• Qua rterly GFS retention: Since Veeam Backup & Replication version 11, quarterly GFS retention policy
option is deprecated.
If in version 10 the quarterly GFS policy was enabled, in version 12 three additional months are added to
the monthly GFS policy to compensate the quarterly full backups.
If in version 10, the GFS policy was set to X monthly backups and Y quarterly backups. Then, in version 12,
the retention policy is switched to store monthly backups for (X + 3Y) months.
IMP ORTANT
[For synthetic method] Before the upgrade to Veeam Backup & Replication 12 or later, make sure that all
GFS candidates (incremental restore points created on days when GFS was scheduled and that are
expected to be transformed into full GFS restore points) are already transformed into GFS restore points.
To force the backup copy job to transform all GFS candidates, you can temporarily decrease the short -term
retention to a value less than the number of restore points between the latest restore point and the most
recent GFS candidate and then wait till all the candidates are transformed.
Before Veeam Backup & Replication version 11, Veeam Backup & Replication created GFS candidates on
days when GFS was scheduled and only then transformed them into full GFS restore points according to
the short-term retention. For more information on how restore points were transformed, see Synthetic
Weekly Full Backups. Starting from Veeam Backup & Replication version 11, Veeam Backup & Replication
creates GFS restore points according to a new schedule and creates them right on the scheduled days.
After the upgrade, Veeam Backup & Replication no longer transforms previous GFS candidates into full GFS
restore points. This means, that all GFS candidates lose their GFS status, they become regular incremental
restore points and are deleted according to the short-term retention policy.
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By default, when you remove a machine protected by Veeam Backup & Replication from the virtual
infrastructure, exclude a machine from the backup copy job or stop protecting a machine with Veeam Agent, the
copied data still remains in backup files in the target backup repository. To avoid keeping redundant data on
disk, you can enable the Remove deleted items data after option in the backup copy job settings. With this
option enabled, at the end of every synchronization cycle Veeam Backup & Replication will remove data for
deleted machines from backup files in the target backup repository.
Veeam Backup & Replication removes data for deleted machine only if two conditions are met:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication has not created a valid restore points for the deleted machine for the number
of days specified in the Remove deleted items data after field.
2. The backup chain in the target backup repository does not conta in any successful incremental restore
points for the deleted machine.
This approach helps ensure that data for deleted machines can be saved by the GFS retention.
For example:
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The backup copy job has created 3 successful restore points — a full backup and two incremental backups.
During the next 4 days, no successful restore points were created. At the next synchronization cycle,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not remove data for the deleted machine from the target backup repository as
the backup chain contains successful incremental restore points for this machine.
IMP ORTANT
• The deleted items retention applies only to regular backup chains. Veeam Backup & Replication does
not remove data for deleted machines from weekly, monthly and yearly backups.
• [For single-file backups] When Veeam Backup & Replication removes data for deleted machines
from regular backup chains, it does not free up space in the backup repository. It marks the space as
available to be overwritten, and this space is overwritten during subsequent job sessions or the
backup file compact operation.
• When Veeam Backup & Replication removes data for deleted machines from per-machine backup
chains, it does not mark the space as available but deletes backup files since they contain data for 1
machine only.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not analyze the reason for which the machine has not been processed during
the backup copy session. For example, a VM may be regarded as deleted if Veeam Backup & Replication has
failed to obtain data for the VM from the virtual infrastructure, the VM has failed to be processed in time during
the backup copy session and so on.
For this reason, you must be careful when specifying the retention period for deleted machines. If the retention
period is too short, Veeam Backup & Replication may remove from the backup chain restore points that you still
require.
For example, a backup copy job is configured to process 2 VMs and has the following settings:
1. On Sunday, the backup copy job creates a full backup for 2 VMs – VM1 and VM2.
2. On Monday, the backup copy job creates an incremental backup for VM1. The backup copy job does not
manage to process VM2 in time.
3. On Tuesday, the backup copy job creates an incremental backup for VM1. The backup copy job does not
manage to process VM2 in time.
4. At the end of the backup copy job session on Tuesday, Veeam Backup & Replication transforms the backup
chain and detects deleted VMs. Veeam Backup & Replication regards VM2 as a deleted VM — the deleted
VMs retention is set to 1 day, and after transformation, there are no valid restore points for this VM in the
backup chain.
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As a result, after the backup copy session on Tuesday backup files in the target backup repository will not
contain data for VM2.
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Health Check for Backup Files
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to periodically perform a health check for the latest restore point
or backup file in the backup chain. The health check helps Veeam Backup & Replication make sure that further
restore will be possible.
The health check starts as soon as a backup copy job starts. The health check verifies restore points (full backup
files or related full and incremental backup files). Only the latest restore points are verified. On the day when
the health check is scheduled, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the health check only once, even if the
backup copy job runs several times.
NOTE
• The health check process differs for backup files stored in the HPE StoreOnce repository. For more
information, see Health Check for Backup Files Stored on HPE StoreOnce.
• If you perform the health check for the encrypted backup files, Veeam Backup & Replication will
pass encryption keys to the regular backup repository or cloud repository. For more information on
encryption, see Data Encryption.
• If the backup copy job uses WAN accelerators, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to find data
blocks in the global cache not to transfer data over the network. For more information, see WAN
Acceleration.
1. As soon as a restore point is saved to the backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates CRC
values for backup metadata and hash values for data blocks of a disk in the backup file and saves these
values in the metadata of the backup file, together with copied data.
2. On the day when the health check is scheduled, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following
actions:
a. Veeam Backup & Replication performs the health check for the latest restore point in the backup
chain. If the latest restore point in the backup chain is incomplete, Veeam Backup & Replication
checks the restore point preceding the latest one.
Veeam Backup & Replication calculates CRC values for backup metadata and hash values for disk s
data blocks in the backup file and compares them with the CRC and hash values that are already
stored in the backup file.
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b. If the health check detects corrupted data blocks, together with data blocks for the new restore point,
Veeam Backup & Replication transports valid data blocks for the corrupted restore point. The valid
data blocks are stored to the new incremental restore point created with this backup copy session. As
a result, the backup chain gets “fixed”, and you get a possibility to restore da ta from restore points
following the corrupted restore point.
Veeam Backup & Replication performs the health check in the following way:
1. As soon as a backup file is transferred to the target repository, Veeam Backup & Replication calls the HPE
StoreOnce internal method that calculates checksums for data blocks of this backup file.
The checksum calculation requires the rehydration of the verified data. This may lower the performance
on the target repository especially during the first backup copy session. During this session, the health
check verifies all backup files in source backup chains.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication compares the calculated checksums and the checksums already stored in the
backup file.
3. If the health check detects corrupted data blocks, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the backup file
from the target repository. On the next backup copy job session, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers
and performs the health check for this file again.
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Compact of Full Backup File
The backup copy job constantly transforms the full backup file in the backup chain to meet retention policy
settings. The transformation process, however, has a side effect. In the long run, the full backup file grows large
and gets fragmented. The file data occurs to be written to non-contiguous clusters on disk, and operations of
reading and writing data from and to the backup file slow down.
To resolve the fragmentation problem, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to compact the full backup
file periodically. During the file compact operation, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new full backup file in
the target repository: it copies existing data blocks from the old backup file, rearranges and stores them close to
each other. As a result, the full backup file gets defragmented, its size reduces and the speed of reading and
writing from and to the file increases.
To compact the full backup file periodically, you must enable the Defragment and compact full backup file
option in the backup copy job settings and define the compact operation schedule. By default, the compact
operation is performed on the last Sunday of every month. You can change the compact operation schedule and
instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform it weekly or monthly on specific days.
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Backup Copy Job Mapping
Backup copy job mapping helps you reduce the amount of data transferred over network and decrease the load
on WAN accelerators or slow connections. You can also use mapping to upgrade f rom legacy backup chain
formats to per-machine backup with separate metadata files format. For more information, see Backup Chain
Formats.
[For legacy periodic backup copy job] If you use the target backup repository also as a target for other backup
copy or backup jobs, you can already have a backup of machines that you want to copy. In this case, you can map
the backup copy job to this backup.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication accesses a backup to which you map the backup copy job. The backup may
have any number of restore points in the chain. This backup chain will be used as a seed for the further
backup copying process.
2. During subsequent backup copy sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication copies restore points in a regular
manner. It copies only incremental changes and stores them as new restore points next to the seed backup
chain.
A mapped backup copy job does not store copied restore points in a dedicated folder in the target backup
repository. Instead, it stores restore points to the same folder where the "seed" backup chain resides.
To create a seed for the primary backup copy job, do the following:
1. Create a backup copy job. Add jobs or repositories whose restore points you want to copy to this backup
copy job. Target the backup copy job to some backup repository on the source side. This backup repository
will be used as an intermediate one.
2. Run the backup copy job to create a full backup file (VBK) in the intermediate backup repository.
3. Transfer the created VBK file and VBM file from the intermediate backup repository to the target backup
repository.
If the initial backup file was encrypted, you must enter a password to unlock the full backup file.
Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will not display the full backup file in the list of backups in the
backup repository. For more information, see Importing Encrypted Backups.
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5. Remap the backup copy job to the full backup file that you have created and transferred to the target
backup repository.
As a result, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the full backup file as a seed. When a new restore point for the
machine is available in the source backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication will copy the restore point to
the target backup repository and store it next to the full backup seed.
Time of restore point creation >= current time – backup copy interval
That is, if you have a backup chain whose earliest restore point is 1 week old, you need to set the backup copy
interval to 1 week. If you set the backup copy interval to a smaller time interval, for example, 1 day, all restore
points that are older than 1 day will fall out of the search scope, and Veeam Backup & Replication will not
transfer such restore points. For more information, see Restore Point Selection.
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Active Full Backup Copies
You can manually create an ad-hoc full backup for the backup copy job — active full backup copy, and add it to
the backup chain in the target backup repository. To do this, you can use the Active Full button on the ribbon or
the Active Full command from the shortcut menu.
Active full backup copy can be helpful if you want to change backup copy job settings, for example, enable or
disable encryption. Veeam Backup & Replication will apply new settings starting from this full backup.
Veeam Backup & Replication treats archive full backups created with the active full backup method as regular
backups and applies regular retention policy rules to maintain the necessary number of restore points.
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Automatic Job Retries
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically retries several operations that are performed within a backup copy
job session.
The backup copy task is retried only if the previous task has failed and a restore point has not been copied to the
target backup repository. Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform a retry if a task has finished with the
Success or the Warning status.
The backup copy task is retried during the same backup copy session only. If a restore point fails to be copied
during all retries in the current backup copy session, Veeam Backup & Replication marks the current task as
failed. [For the legacy periodic mode] After that, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the necessary
transformation processes and starts a new backup copy session.
A backup copy job can process several machines. If only some machines are successfully processed by the
backup copy task, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a restore point holding data for these machines in the
target backup repository. Veeam Backup & Replication will attempt to process restore points for all machines
during the next backup copy session.
NOTE
Some errors from WAN accelerators can block backup copy job retries. For example, if there is no space in
the global cache on the target WAN accelerator, Veeam Backup & Replication puts backup copy operations
on hold and waits for the expiration of the backup copy session.
Transformation Retry
After the backup copying task, Veeam Backup & Replication may perform a number of additional transformation
processes in the target backup repository. These processes include the backup chain transformation, removing
of deleted machines from restore points and compacting a full backup file. For more information, see
Transformation Processes.
Veeam Backup & Replication may fail to perform transformation: for example, if the backup file in the target
backup repository is locked by the file-level restore session. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication
automatically retries transformation processes for 5 times. The first interval between retries is 1 minute; the
interval doubles with every new attempt. If all retries of transformation processes fail,
Veeam Backup & Replication does the following:
• [For the immediate copy mode] Stops the job with the Fail status and waits for the new job session.
• [For the periodic copy mode] Stops the job with the Fail status and waits for the job to retry according to
schedule.
• [For the legacy periodic copy mode] Puts the job to the idle state and waits for the new backup copy
interval to begin.
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Veeam Backup & Replication may fail to access the virtual infrastructure for some reason: for example, in case
the vCenter Server is not responding. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically retries access
operations for 5 times with a 5 minute interval.
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Creating Backup Copy Jobs for VMs and
Physical Machines
To copy backups to a secondary location, you must configure a backup copy job. The backup copy job defines
how, where and when to copy backups. One backup copy job can be used to process one or multiple machines.
Machines included in the job are processed in parallel. If a machine included in the backup copy job has multiple
disks, disks are processed sequentially, one after another.
NOTE
If you want to copy backups between HPE StoreOnce repositories, follow the instructions listed in Creating
Backup Copy Jobs for HPE StoreOnce Repositories.
If you want to copy file share backups, follow the instructions listed in Creating File Share Backup Jobs.
Before you create a job, check prerequisites. Then use the New Backup Copy Job wizard to configure the backup
copy job.
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Before You Begin
Before you create a backup copy job, check the following prerequisites:
• Backup infrastructure components that will take part in the backup copy process must be added to the
backup infrastructure. This include target backup repository to which backups must be copied. For more
information on adding components, see Backup Infrastructure Components.
• If you plan to use pre-job and/or post-job scripts, you must create scripts before you configure the backup
copy job.
• If you plan to copy backups to an HPE StoreOnce repository, check limitations and requirements for it.
• If you plan to use WAN accelerators, check that you use the Enterprise Plus edition of
Veeam Backup & Replication and that target and source WAN accelerators are added to the backup
infrastructure. For more information, see Adding WAN Accelerators.
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Step 1. Launch New Backup Copy Job Wizard
To run the New Backup Copy Job wizard:
o Open the Home view, in the inventory pane right-click Job s or right-click anywhere in the working
area, and click Ba ckup Copy.
o On the Home tab, click Ba ckup Copy and click Image-level backup copy or Ap p lication backup copy.
o Open the Home view, in the inventory pane right-click Job s or right-click anywhere in the working
area, click Ba ckup Copy and click Image-level backup copy or Ap plication backup copy.
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Copy Mode
At the Job step of the wizard, specify basic settings for the backup copy job:
The default description contains information on a user who created the job, date and time when the job
was created.
3. Select a backup copy mode. Note that after you finish configuring the backup copy job, you wil l not be
able to change the selected mode. For more information on copy modes and backup types supported in
each mode, see Backup Copy Modes.
o Select Immediate copy to copy new restore points and, if required, log backups as soon as they
appear.
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Step 3. Select Workloads to Process
At the Ob jects step of the wizard, select workloads whose restore points you want to copy to the target backup
repository:
1. Click Ad d .
2. Select a type of a source from which you want to copy restore points:
o From jobs. You will see existing backup jobs. Veeam Backup & Replication will copy restore points
created by the selected backup jobs.
[For the periodic copy mode] Note that if multiple jobs process one workload, Veeam Backup &
Replication copies only restore points created by the first job in the Ob jects to process list.
o From repositories. You will see all backup repositories in the backup infrastructure.
Veeam Backup & Replication will copy restore points stored on the selected backup repositories.
If you select repositories as sources, and target new jobs to the repositories in future,
Veeam Backup & Replication will update backup copy job settings automatically to include these jobs
to be copied.
o From backups. You will browse for workloads in existing backups. Veeam Backup & Replication will
search for restore points of the selected workloads in all backups of backup jobs created on the
external repositories and will copy the most recent restore points. You can limit the search scope by
selecting only specific backup policies for the backup copy job.
This source is only available for backup copy jobs that process backups of Amazon EC2 instances,
Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.
NOTE
You can use From backups source only if you have an external repository added to the backup
infrastructure and have at least one backup file stored in it.
4. Click Ad d .
5. [For the immediate copy mode] If you have configured processing of transaction log backups in the source
backup jobs, and want to copy these log backups to the target repository, select the Include database
tra nsaction log backups check box.
NOTE
If you delete the source backup job after creating the backup copy job, backup files will become orphaned.
The orphaned backup files are displayed under the Ba ckups > Disk (Orphaned) node. If the orphaned
backup files were also stored in capacity tier or archive tier, they will also be displayed under the Backups >
Ob ject Storage (Orphaned) or Ba ckups > Archive (Orphaned) nodes. The orphaned backup files can not be
processed by any job.
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NOTE
When you copy Veeam Agent backup jobs that process clusters with shared disks, the network traffic will
be higher compared to the traffic sent when Veeam Agent backup jobs run. This is because Veeam Agent
backup jobs send data of shared disks only with the owner node and then, within the target storage, clone
this data to other nodes; whereas backup copy jobs send data as it is stored on the storage — each node
with the cloned data.
As an alternative, you can create a backup copy job with an empty source — that is, do not add any workloads at
this step of the wizard. In this case, you need to configure a secondary destination for the source backup job and
link it to the created backup copy job. For more information, see Linking Backup Jobs to Backup Copy Jobs.
NOTE
Even if Use p er-machine backup files option is disabled in a repository that you are planning to use as the
target, backup copy job will always create per-machine backup files in the backup repository.
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Step 4. Exclude Objects from Backup Copy Job
This option is available only for virtual machines.
To specify which objects you want to exclude from the backup copy job:
[For the immediate copy mode] If you have added repositories as sources of restore points, you can
exclude individual VMs or backup jobs from processing. To exclude individual VMs, click Ad d > VMs . To
exclude individual jobs, click Ad d > Jobs.
When you exclude VMs, you can use the Show full hierarchy check box to display the hierarchy of all hosts
added to Veeam Backup & Replication.
4. Click Ad d .
5. Click OK.
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Step 5. Define Processing Order
IMP ORTANT
This functionality is available only when editing legacy periodic backup copy job, created in
Veeam Backup & Replication 11 or earlier.
You can define the order in which the backup copy job must process workloads. Configuring workload order can
be helpful, if you want the backup copy job to process mission-critical workloads first. For this, put these
workloads higher in the list to ensure that their processing fits the backup window.
Workloads inside a container are processed at random. To ensure that workloads are processed in the defined
order, you must add them as standalone workloads, not as part of the container.
1. At the Ob jects step of the wizard, select a workload whose order you want to change.
2. Use the Up and Down buttons on the right to move the workload up or down in the list.
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Step 6. Specify Target Repository and Retention
Settings
At the Ta rget step of the wizard, define a target backup repository and configure retention policy:
1. From the Ba ckup repository list, select a backup repository where copied backups must be stored.
2. In the Retention Policy field, configure the short-term retention policy for restore points:
o If you want to keep the last <N> restore points, select restore points from the drop-down list and
specify the number of restore points.
o If you want to keep all restore points created during the last <N> days, select days from the drop-
down list and specify the number of days.
When the specified number is exceeded, the earliest restore point will be removed from the backup chain
or will be merged with the next closest restore point. For more information on how
Veeam Backup & Replication retains the desired number of restore points, see Short-Term Retention
Policy.
NOTE
If you enable the GFS retention, the short-term retention policy will not be able to delete and merge
the GFS backup files. Thus, the backup copy chain will have more restore points than specified in the
short-term retention policy.
3. If you want to create weekly, monthly and yearly full backups, you can configure long -term retention
policy (GFS retention policy). GFS full backups will not be deleted or modified until the specified retention
period expires. For more information on the GFS retention policy and its limitations, see Long-Term
Retention Policy (GFS).
a. Select the Keep certain full backups longer for archival purposes check box.
b. Click Configure.
c. In the Configure GFS window, select the necessary GFS backup options. You can configure
Veeam Backup & Replication to create weekly, monthly and yearly restore points. For details on
settings of the GFS retention, see Backup Copy GFS Cycles.
NOTE
Before you implement the GFS retention policy, see Limitations and Considerations.
4. [For the periodic copy mode] You can define a way to create weekly, monthly and yearly full backups:
o Synthetic Full Method: With this method, during the GFS backup copy creation,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy data from the source backup repository but synthesizes
full backups from backup files that are already stored in the target backup repository. This approach
helps to reduce load on the network and production environment.
The synthetic full method is used by default. To use this method, leave the Rea d the entire restore
p oint from source instead of synthesizing it from increments option unselected.
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o Active Full Method: With this method, Veeam Backup & Replication copies data for archive full
backups from the source backup repository. This method decreases load on the target repository but
increases load on the network and production environment.
To use this method, select the Rea d the entire restore point from source instead of synthesizing it
from increments option.
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Step 7. Map Backup File
If the target backup repository already stores a backup of workloads that you want to copy, you can map the
backup copy job to this backup. The backup can be created by a backup job or another backup copy job.
The backup copy job will use the backup as a seed. As a result, Veeam Backup & Replication will transfer less
data over network. For more information, see Mapping Backup Copy Jobs.
2. In the Select Backup window, select a backup that contains restore points of workloads that you want to
copy.
• If a backup that you plan to use as a seed is encrypted, you must enable encryption for the backup copy
job. The password that you use for the backup copy job can differ from the password used for the initial
job.
o You can map the backup copy job created in Veeam Backup & Replication 11 only to a backup file
created in Veeam Backup & Replication 11. In this case, a backup file will not be upgraded to the per -
machine backup file.
o You can map the backup copy job created in Veeam Backup & Replication 12 only to the per-machine
backup file. If you map it to the non per-machine backup file, this file will be upgraded to the per-
machine backup file. Old version of the backup file will become orphaned.
o [For the legacy periodic copy mode] If you map the backup copy job to a backup created by a backup
job, this backup must be created with the incremental backup method only, that is, forever forward or
forward incremental.
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o [For the legacy periodic copy mode] You can map a Veeam Agent backup copy job only to a backup
created by backup copy job that processes backups created by Veeam Agent operating in the
standalone mode.
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Step 8. Specify Advanced Settings
At the Ta rget step of the wizard, you can specify the following settings for the backup copy job:
• Maintenance settings
• Storage settings
• Notification settings
• Script settings
• Advanced settings
TIP
After you specify advanced settings for the backup copy job, you can save them as default settings. For
this, click Sa ve as Default at the bottom left corner of the Ad vanced Settings window. When you create a
new backup copy job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new
job.
Maintenance Settings
To specify settings for backup files stored in the target backup repository:
2. If you want to periodically perform a health check of the most recent restore point in the backup chain,
select the P erform backup files health check check box. To specify the schedule for the health check, click
Configure.
By default, the health check is performed on the last Saturday of every month. For more information on
the health check, see Health Check.
3. Select the Remove deleted items data after check box and specify the retention policy settings for deleted
workloads.
By default, the deleted item retention period is 30 days. It is recommended that you set the retention
period to 3 days or more to prevent unwanted data loss. For more information on the retention policy and
its limitations, see Deleted Items Retention.
4. To periodically compact a full backup, select the Defragment and compact full backup file check box. To
specify the schedule for the compacting operation, click Configure.
By default, the compact operation is disabled. For more information on compact of full backup files, see
Compact of Full Backup File.
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IMP ORTANT
When enabling the Defragment and compact full backup file option, mind the following:
• The Defragment and compact full backup file option can be enabled only if GFS retention
policy is disabled.
• The target backup repository must have enough space to store a file of the full backup size.
During the compact process, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an auxiliary VBK file that exists
in the backup repository until the end of the compact operation.
• [For the legacy backup copy job] If you do not want to copy data for workloads that have only
one restore point in the full backup file and this restore point is older than 7 days, check that
the following conditions are met: Remove deleted items data is disabled; Use p er-machine
b a ckup files is disabled in the settings of the target backup repository.
Veeam Backup & Replication will extract data for such workloads from the full backup file and
write this data to a separate backup file. The file will be displayed under the Ba ckups > Disk
( Imported) node in the Home view.
Storage Settings
To specify compression, deduplication and encryption settings for backup files stored in the target backup
repository, do the following:
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3. In the Da ta reduction section, specify data compression and deduplication settings:
o By default, Veeam Backup & Replication performs deduplication before storing copied data in the
target backup repository. To disable data deduplication, clear the E na ble inline data deduplication
check box.
o To encrypt the backup file created with the backup copy job, select the E na ble backup file encryption
check box.
o From the P a ssword field, select a password that you want to use to encrypt the backup file. If you
have not created a password beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new
password. For more information, see Managing Passwords for Data Encryption.
NOTE
• If you enable encryption for an existing backup copy job, Veeam Backup & Replication
applies new settings only starting from the next active full backup (created manually or by the
GFS schedule). The active full backup file and subsequent incremental backup files in the backup
chain will be encrypted with the specified password.
Note that if you disable the Rea d the entire restore point from source backup instead of
sy nthesizing it from increments option in the backup copy job, you will have synthetic full
backups, not active full backups. For details, see Defining Backup Copy Target.
• Encryption is not retroactive. If you enable encryption for an existing job,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not encrypt the previous backup chain created with this job. If
you want to start a new chain so that the unencrypted previous chain can be separated from the
encrypted new chain, follow the scenario described in this Veeam KB article.
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RPO Monitor Settings
You can instruct a backup copy job to display a warning if a newly created restore point or transaction log is not
copied within the desired recovery point objective (RPO). The RPO is counted down from the moment when the
source backup job finishes and is ready to be copied.
To mark a job with the Warning status when the RPO is exceeded, do the following:
3. Select the Alert me if newly created backup is not copied within check box.
4. In the fields on the right, specify the desired RPO in minutes, hours or days.
5. If you have enabled copying of log backups, select the Alert me if newly created log backup is not copied
within check box.
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6. In the fields on the right, specify the desired RPO in minutes, hours or days.
Notification Settings
To specify notification settings for the backup copy job:
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when the job
completes successfully. In the periodic copy mode, you will receive notifications when the entire backup
copy job finishes. In the immediate copy mode — when copying of each source backup job finishes.
SNMP traps will be sent if you specify global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and configure
software on the recipient workload to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying SNMP
Settings.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive
notifications by email in case of job failure or success. In the field below, specify the recipient email
address. You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Veeam Backup & Replication sends notifications when copying of each source backup job finishes. For
example, if your backup copy job contains two source backup jobs, you will receive two emails.
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o [For the legacy periodic copy mode] Veeam Backup & Replication sends a consolidated email
notification once for the specified backup copy interval. Even if the synchronization process is started
several times within the interval, for example, due to job retries, only one email notification will be
sent.
For more information on how to configure global notification settings, see Configuring Global Email
Notification Settings.
5. In the Send daily summary at field, specify when you want to send notifications about backup copy jobs
that process log backups. Veeam Backup & Replication sends a consolidated report once a day at the
specified time.
6. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the
backup server. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
o To configure a custom notification for a job, select Use custom notification settings specified below.
You can specify the following notification settings:
i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName% (the backup copy job name and source
backup job name in the CopyJobName\SourceJobName format), %JobResult%,
%ObjectCount% (number of workloads in the job) and %Issues% (number of workloads in the
job that have been processed with the Warning or Failed status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if data processing completes successfully, completes with a warning or
fails.
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Scripts Settings
To specify script settings for the backup copy job:
3. Select the Run the following script before the job and Run the following script after the job check boxes
to execute custom scripts before and/or after the backup copy job. Note that in the immediate copy mode,
scripts are executed for every source backup job.
Then click Browse and select executable files from a local folder on the backup server. The scripts will be
executed on the backup server after the transformation processes are completed on the target repository
o To run the scripts after a specific number of backup copy sessions, select Run scripts every... backup
session option and specify the number of sessions.
o To run the scripts on specific days, select the Run scripts on selected days only option and click the
Da y s button to specify week days.
NOTE
If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, Veeam Backup & Replication
executes scripts only once on each selected day — when the job runs for the first time. During
subsequent job runs, scripts are not executed.
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Advanced
If a new restore point is not yet created, you can process the most recent restore point instead of waiting. To do
so, select the P rocess the most recent restore p oint instead of waiting check box.
NOTE
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Step 9. Specify Data Path Settings
The Da ta Transfer step of the wizard is available only if you copy backups of virtual or physical machines created
with Veeam Backup & Replication or Veeam Agents.
At this step of the wizard, you can select how Veeam Backup & Replication will transport backed up data —
directly or through WAN accelerators. By default, during the backup copy job Veeam Backup & Replication
transports data directly from the source backup repository to target backup repository. This type of transport is
recommended if you plan to copy backup files over high-speed connections.
If you plan to copy backup files over WAN or slow connections, it is recommended that you configure source and
target WAN accelerators in the backup infrastructure and copy backups through these W AN accelerators. For
more information, see WAN Acceleration.
1. At the Da ta Transfer step of the wizard, select the Through built-in W AN accelerators option.
2. From the Source WAN accelerator list, select a WAN accelerator configured in the source site.
3. From the Ta rget WAN accelerator list, select a WAN accelerator configured in the target site.
The source WAN accelerator requires a lot of CPU and RAM resources and does not process multiple
backup copy tasks in parallel. As an alternative, you can create one ba ckup copy job for all workloads you
plan to process over one source WAN accelerator. The target WAN accelerator, however, can be assigned
to several backup copy jobs.
• [For WAN accelerators with the high bandwidth mode disabled] It is recommended that you pre-populate
the global cache on the target WAN accelerator before you start the backup copy job. Global cache
population helps reduce the amount of traffic transferred over WAN. For more information, see Populating
Global Cache.
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• You cannot use WAN accelerators for backup copy jobs that copy backups of Amazon EC2 instances.
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Step 10. Define Backup Copy Window
At the Schedule step of the wizard, you can define a time span in which the backup copy job will transport data
between source and target backup repositories. For more information, see Backup Copy Window.
o Da ily at this time. You can specify the time and select the days option from the drop -down list on
which the backup copy job will run: E veryday, On weekdays or On these days. If you select On these
d a ys option, click Da ys to specify them.
o Monthly at this time. You can specify the time and select the day options from the drop -down lists on
which the backup copy job will run. Click Months to specify months on which the backup copy job will
run.
o P eriodically every. You can select the time options from the drop-down list or click Schedule to select
the desired time area. Use the P ermitted and Denied options to mark the selected time segments. Use
Sta rt time within an hour option to specify minutes.
o After this job. If you choose this option, select the job from the drop-down list after which the backup
copy job will start.
3. To configure the backup copy job automatic retries, select the Retry failed items processing check box and
specify the amount of retries and time intervals between them.
4. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box if you want the job to terminate
itself to prevent performance impact during production hours. Click W indow to select the desired backup
window time area. Use the P ermitted and Denied options to mark the selected time segments.
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To define a backup window for the immediate backup copy job:
o Any time
2. If you selected the During the following time periods only option, specify the required backup window
option. Use the E na ble and Disable options to mark the selected time segments as allowed or prohibited
for the backup copy job.
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Step 11. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of backup copy job configuration:
2. Select the E na ble the job when I click Finish check box if you want to start the job right after you finish
working with the wizard.
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Creating Backup Copy Jobs for HPE
StoreOnce Repositories
To copy backup files between HPE StoreOnce backup repositories, you must configure a backup copy job.
Unlike other backup copy jobs, the backup copy job for HPE StoreOnce mirrors data from the source repository.
This backup copy job copies backup files as they are stored in the source repository, without any transformation.
To copy the backup files, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the HPE StoreOnce Catalyst Copy technology.
The backup copy job copies only backup files created by backup jobs and other backup copy jobs. The backup
files must be of the following types:
• Backup files of VMware vSphere and Microsoft Hyper-V VMs created by Veeam Backup & Replication. Log
backup files are not copied.
• Physical machine backup files created by Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by the backup server.
• Backups copied to an HPE StoreOnce repository by other backup copy jobs (including backup copy jobs
with HPE Catalyst Copy enabled and disabled).
IMP ORTANT
• The backup jobs must be configured on the same backup server where you configure the backup
copy job with HPE Catalyst Copy enabled. Backups created by jobs configured on other backup
servers are not copied.
• The backup copy jobs with HPE Catalyst Copy enabled does not copy imported backups.
• To copy backups created by other backup copy jobs (without HPE Catalyst Copy), you must enable
the GFS retention for these backup copy jobs. For more information on how to enable the GFS
retention, see Specify Target Repository and Retention Settings.
When the backup copy job for HPE StoreOnce runs for the first time, it copies all existing backup files. Then the
backup copy job starts each time a new backup file appears in the source repository. In case of a removed
backup file, the backup copy job waits 21 days since the backup file creation and after removes the backup file
from the target repository. If 21 days have already passed at the moment of removal, the backup copy job
removes the backup file immediately. You can change this day limit in the backup copy job settings. For more
information, see Maintenance Settings.
Before creating a job, check prerequisites and limitations. Then use the New Backup Copy Job wizard to
configure the backup copy job.
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Before You Begin
Before you create a backup copy job for HPE StoreOnce backup repository, check the following requirements:
• The minimum supported software versions of HPE StoreOnce are the following:
• Make sure that all backup infrastructure components that take part in the backup copy process are added
to the backup infrastructure. These components include the source and target repositories between which
data is copied. For more information on how to add a backup repository, see Adding Backup Repositories.
• Check that repositories between which you plan to copy data have a direct connection to each other. This
is required because Veeam Backup & Replication uses the HPE StoreOnce Catalyst Copy technology to
copy backup files.
This direct connection must be of the same type as the connection that you select when adding the target
HPE StoreOnce. For example, if you connected the target HPE StoreOnce repository over Fibre Channel,
you must connect the source HPE StoreOnce to the target HPE StoreOnce over Fibre Channel.
• HPE StoreOnce repositories connected over Fibre Channel require the two-way connection. Zone the
source initiator World Wide Names (WWNs) with the destination target WWNs, and zone the destination
initiator WWNs with the source target WWNs.
• If you plan to use pre-job and/or post-job scripts, you must create scripts before you configure the backup
copy job.
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Step 1. Launch New Backup Copy Job Wizard
To run the New Backup Copy Job wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Ba ckup Copy and click Storage copy.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane right-click Job s or right-click anywhere in the working area,
click Ba ckup Copy and click Storage copy.
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description
At the Job step of the wizard, specify name and description for the backup copy job:
2. In the Description field, enter a description for the job. The default description contains information about
the user who created the job, date and time when the job was created.
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Step 3. Select Source and Target Repositories
At the Storage Mapping step of the wizard, select a source repository from which you want to copy backups and
a target repository where you want to store the copies.
2. From the Source backup repository list, select a backup repository from which you want to copy backup
files. The unsupported backup repositories are not shown in the list.
3. From the Ta rget backup repository list, select a backup repository where you want to store the copies. The
unsupported backup repositories are not shown in the list.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy all types of backups. For the list of supported backup types,
see Creating Backup Copy Jobs for HPE StoreOnce Repositories.
• The source and target backup repositories must be HPE StoreOnce backup repositories or scale-out
backup repositories that consist of HPE StoreOnce repositories only.
• [For scale-out backup repositories] The file placement policy must be Data locality. For more information,
see Data locality.
• Within one backup copy job, you can use each repository as a source only once.
• You must not create the same pairs of source and target repositories, even in different backup copy jobs.
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Requirements for Data Flow
When you create backup copy jobs, check that you do not create loops in data flow across all backup copy jobs.
This means that data copied from one repository must not be copied to it again. The following image shows
backup copy jobs configured correctly (without loops) and incorrectly (with loops).
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Step 4. Specify Advanced Settings
At the Storage Mapping step of the wizard, you can specify the following settings for the backup copy job:
• Maintenance Settings
• Notification Settings
• Script Settings
TIP
After you specify necessary settings for the backup copy job, you can save them as default settings. To do
this, click Sa ve as Default at the bottom left corner of the Ad vanced Settings window. When you create a
new backup copy job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new
job.
Maintenance Settings
In the maintenance settings, you can configure whether to perform a health check and after which period delete
from the target HPE StoreOnce repository files deleted from the source repository. Note that the health check
may lower the performance of the target repository. For details, see Health Check for Backup Files.
2. To disable the health check, clear the P erform backup files health check check box. By default the health
check is enabled.
3. In the Keep secondary copies for additional field, specify after which period delete files from the target
repository after they were deleted from the source repository.
The backup copy job waits the specified number of days since the backup file creation and af ter deletes
the backup file from the target repository. If the specified number of days has already passed at the
moment of deletion, the backup copy job deletes the backup file immediately.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform the health check for encrypted and compressed backup
files.
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Notification Settings
To specify notification settings for the backup copy job:
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when data
from each source repository is copied.
SNMP traps will be sent if you specify global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and configure
software on the recipient machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying SNMP
Settings.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive email
notifications when copying data of each source repository finishes with Success, Warning or Failed status.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
5. You can choose whether to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive typical notifications for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the
backup server.
o To configure custom notifications, select Use custom notification settings specified below. You can
specify the following notification settings:
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i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %VmCount% (number of
machines in the job) and %Issues% (number of machines in the job that have been processed
with the Warning or Failed status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notifications if data processing completes successfully, fails or completes with a
warning.
Script Settings
To specify script settings for the backup copy job:
3. Select the Run the following script before the job and Run the following script after the job check boxes
to execute custom scripts before and/or after copying data of each source repository finishes.
Then click Browse and select executable files from a local folder on the backup server. The scripts are
executed on the backup server after the transformation processes are completed on the target repository.
o To run scripts after a specific number of backup copy sessions, select Run scripts every... backup
session option and specify the number of sessions.
o To run scripts on specific days, select the Run scripts on selected days only option and click the Da y s
button to specify week days.
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NOTE
If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, Veeam Backup & Replication
executes scripts only once on each selected day — when the job runs for the first time. During
subsequent job runs, scripts are not executed.
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Step 5. Define Backup Copy Window
At the Schedule step of the wizard, you can define a time span in which the backup copy job will transport data
between source and target backup repositories. For more information, see Backup Copy Window.
o Da ily at this time. You can specify the time and select the days option from the drop -down list on
which the backup copy job will run: E veryday, On weekdays or On these days. If you select On these
d a ys option, click Da ys to specify them.
o Monthly at this time. You can specify the time and select the day options from the drop-down lists on
which the backup copy job will run. Click Months to specify months on which the backup copy job will
run.
o P eriodically every. You can select the time options from the drop-down list or click Schedule to select
the desired time area. Use the P ermitted and Denied options to mark the selected time segments. Use
Sta rt time within an hour option to specify minutes.
o After this job. If you choose this option, select the job from the drop-down list after which the backup
copy job will start.
3. To configure the backup copy job automatic retries, select the Retry failed items processing check box and
specify the amount of retries and time intervals between them.
4. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box if you want the job to terminate
itself to prevent performance impact during production hours. Click W indow to select the desired backup
window time area. Use the P ermitted and Denied options to mark the selected time segments.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of backup copy job configuration:
2. Select the E na ble the job when I click Finish check box if you want to start the job right after you finish
working with the wizard.
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Creating Backup Copy Jobs for Oracle and
SAP HANA Databases
To create copies of Veeam Plug-in backups of Oracle and SAP HANA databases, you must configure a backup
copy job. For more details, see the following sections of the Veeam Plug -ins for Enterprise Applications Guide:
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Linking Backup Jobs to Backup Copy Jobs
You can link backup jobs to backup copy jobs. This option lets you create a secondary target for the backup job
and store backups created with the backup job in the secondary backup repository.
When you link a backup job to the backup copy job, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically updates
properties of the backup copy job and adds to it the backup job as a source of data. During every backup copy
session, the backup copy job checks the source backup repository for new restore points. As soon as a backup
job session is finished and a new restore point appears in the source backup repository, the backup copy job
automatically copies this restore point to the target backup repository .
You can link a backup job to an existing backup copy job using the Ba ckup Job wizard. To link jobs:
1. Open the backup job settings for editing. For more information, see Editing Job Settings.
3. Select the Configure secondary destination for this job check box.
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4. At the Secondary Target step of the wizard, click Ad d and choose a backup copy job to which the backup
job must be linked. The backup copy job must be already configured on the ba ckup server.
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Managing Backups
To view all backups created by backup copy jobs, open the Home view and select the Ba ck ups > Disk (Copy)
node in the inventory pane. The list of available backups is displayed in the working area. You can view backup
properties, remove unnecessary backups and remove missing restore points.
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Viewing Backup Properties
You can view summary information about backups created by backup copy jobs. The summary information
provides the following data: available restore points, date of restore points creation, compression and
deduplication ratios, data size and backup size.
NOTE
Da ta Size represents the size of a backup file before compression and deduplication. Ba ckup Size
represents the size of a backup file after compression and deduplication.
In the summary information, Veeam Backup & Replication displays data about restore points created by the
short-term retention scheme and archive restore points created by the GFS retention scheme (if GFS retention is
enabled). Archive restore points are marked with the following letters:
• R — full backups created with the short-term retention scheme or active full backups
• W — weekly backups
• M — monthly backups
• Y — yearly backups
In the summary information, you can also see the following icons:
Icon Sta te
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3. In the working area, right-click the backup copy and select P roperties.
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Upgrading Backup Chain Formats
Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following ways to store backup files: per-machine backup with
separate metadata files, per-machine backup with single metadata file and single-file backup. For more
information, see Backup Chain Formats.
Changing the Use per-machine backup files option for existing backup repositories or moving backups to other
repositories does not change the backup chain format. To change the format, follow the instructions in this
section.
IMP ORTANT
• Before upgrading the backup chain format of backup copy backups, upgrade the backup chain
format of source backups first.
• [For immediate copy mode] If the backup chain is mixed, consists of sinle-file backups and per-
machine backups with single metadata file, and the last part is per-machine backups with single
metadata file, you cannot change the backup chain format. You need to wait until the backup chain
becomes per-machine.
• Before upgrading the backup chain format, Veeam Backup & Replication disables the job to which
the backups belong. After the upgrade, the job stays disabled, you need to enable it manually.
• You must disable log backup jobs manually before changing the format.
• [For format upgrade using mapping] During the upgrade, Veeam Backup & Replication synthesizes
full backups in the per-machine backup with separate metadata files format using the existing
backup (the source for mapping). That is why you need enough space on the repository to store full
backups. After the successful change operation, the backup used as the source for mapping is placed
to the node with the (Orphaned) postfix. After the successful upgrade, you can delete this orphaned
backup.
3. In the working area, select the necessary backup copy jobs. Note that the selected jobs must be targeted
to the same repository.
4. Right-click one of the selected jobs and click Up grade backup chain format. Alternatively, click Up grade
Ba ckup Chain Format on the ribbon.
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Veeam Backup & Replication will generate new metadata files for the existing backups. After the upgrade, the
job will continue the backup chain and will create per-machine backups with separate metadata files.
1. Detach backups from the backup copy job for whose backups you want to change the backup chain
format. For more information, see Detaching Backups from Jobs.
2. Edit the backup copy job from which you have detached backups.
3. At the Ta rget step of the wizard, map the backup copy job to the detached backups as described in Map
Backup File.
Alternatively, you can create a new backup copy job as described in Periodic Copy Mode.
2. At the Ob jects step of the wizard, select the same sources as in the backup copy job whose backups you
want to upgrade. Note that you can also add other sources.
3. At the Ta rget step of the wizard, select the backup repository where the backups whose format you want
to change are stored.
4. At the Ta rget step of the wizard, map the backup copy job to the backups as described in Map Backup File.
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Moving Backups
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to move all backups of a backup copy job to another repository or to
move specific workloads and their backups to another backup copy job.
To move backups to another repository and target a job to this repository, do the following:
4. Right-click the job and select Move backup. Alternatively, click Move Backup on the ribbon.
5. In the Move Backup to Another Location window, select the repository to which you want to move
backups.
Veeam Backup & Replication will reconfigure and target the backup job to the selected repository.
6. Click OK.
3. In the working area, expand the necessary backup job and select workloads.
NOTE
You can move individual workloads and their backups only if backups are per-machine with separate
metadata files for each workload.
4. Right-click one of the selected workloads and click Move backup. Alternatively, click Move Backup on the
ribbon.
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5. In the Move Backup to Another Job window, select the backup job to which you want to move backups.
Veeam Backup & Replication will include workloads into the selected job and exclude workloads from the
original job. Backups of the selected workloads will be moved to the repository to which the selected job
is targeted.
6. Click OK.
NOTE
The original job will still be in the disabled state until you finalize the failed move operation.
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3. Right-click the failed move session and select the required action. Alternatively, select the required action
on the ribbon.
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Copying Backups
Copying backups can be helpful if you want to copy backups of a workload or backup job to another repository,
local or shared folder. Veeam Backup & Replication copies the whole backup chain. If you want to convert a
specific restore point into a single VBK file, use backup export. For more information, see Exporting Backups.
When Veeam Backup & Replication performs the copy operation, it disables the job, copies files to the target
location and then enables the job. After the copy operation finishes, the copied backups are shown in a node
with the ( E xported) postfix in the inventory pane.
NOTE
This section is about one-time copy operation. If you want to copy backups on a schedule, create a backup
copy job. For more information, see Backup Copy.
• The copy operation does not change backup chain format (single-file backup, per-machine with single
metadata file or per-machine with separate metadata files). If you copy backups between repositories with
and without the Use p er-machine backup files check box enabled, backups preserve their formats.
• If you copy backups from a scale-out backup repository and some backups are stored on extents in the
Maintenance mode, such backups are not copied.
• Veeam Backup & Replication copies backups only from the performance tier of the scale-out backup
repository. If you want to copy data from the capacity tier, you first must download it to the performance
tier. For more information, see Downloading Data from Capacity Tier.
• You cannot copy backups stored in Veeam Cloud Connect repositories. For more information on Veeam
Cloud Connect repositories, see the Cloud Repository section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
• [For VMware Cloud Director] You can copy backups of a whole job or individual vApps. You cannot move
backups of VMs.
• You cannot copy backups created by Veeam plug-ins for Enterprise applications, Veeam Cloud Plug-ins
(Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Google Cloud, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure), and Kasten
K10.
Copying Backups
To copy backups, do the following:
3. In the working area, select the necessary job or workload. Note that you can copy backups of an individual
workload only if its backups are per-machine backups with separate metadata files.
4. Right-click the job and select Cop y backup. Alternatively, click Cop y Backup on the ribbon.
5. In the Cop y Backup to Another Location window, choose where you want to copy backups — to a
repository or to a local or shared folder.
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6. If you want to delete the copied backups after a specific time period, select the Delete this backup
a utomatically in check box and specify the time period.
Backups that fall out of the specified retention policy will be removed automatically. If you do not specify
the time period for deletion, copies will be stored until you remove them manually.
7. Click OK.
NOTE
The original job will still be in the disabled state until you finalize the failed copy operation.
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10. Right-click the failed move session and select the required action. Alternatively, select the required action
on the ribbon.
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Removing Backups
You can detach backups from backup copy jobs or permanently delete backups from the target backup
repositories.
Veeam Backup & Replication detaches the whole backup chain including GFS backups. The detached backup files
remain in the backup repository and also in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
Veeam Backup & Replication shows the detached backups in the inventory pane in the node with the ( Orphaned)
postfix. If the detached backups belonged to the job with daily retention, the background retention process
retains the backups according to the configured retention and deletes the backups from the repositor y after the
retention period ends. If the retention period is set in restore points, the background retention process does not
delete the backups. You need to delete them manually. For more information on how to delete backups
manually, see Deleting from Disk.
3. In the working area, right-click the backup copy and select Detach from job. Alternatively, click Remove
from > Job on the ribbon.
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To permanently remove backup copies from the target backup repository:
3. In the working area, right-click the backup copy or a workload in the backup copy and select Delete from
d isk.
4. To remove all weekly, monthly, quarterly and yearly backups from disk, select the Include archived full
b a ckups check box and click Y es .
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Removing Missing Restore Points
In some cases, one or more restore points in the backup chain may be inaccessible. This can happen, for
example, if the backup repository is put to the Maintenance mode (for scale-out backup repositories), the
backup repository is not available or some backup file is missing in the backup chain. Backup chains that contain
missing restore points get corrupted — you cannot perform backup copy or restore data from the missing restore
point, and restore points that depend on the missing restore point.
• Forget — you can remove records about missing restore points from the configuration database.
Veeam Backup & Replication will ignore the missing restore points and will not display them in the
console. The backup files will remain on disk (if backup files are still available).
• Remove — you can remove records about missing restore points from the Veeam Backup & Replication
console and configuration database, and delete backup files from disk (if backup files are still available).
NOTE
• The Forget and Remove from d isk options are available only for restore points that are missing from
the backup chain or that depend on missing ones.
• You can manually update information about missing restore points. For this, disable a backup copy
job and rescan the backup repository that is the target for the backup copy job. For more
information, see Disabling and Removing Jobs and Rescanning Backup Repositories.
Manual update can be required because Veeam Backup & Replication requires some time to update
information in the configuration database for restore points that were removed from a backup chain
or became inaccessible. That is why such restore points may not be displayed in the console as
missing restore points.
To remove records about missing restore points from the configuration database:
3. In the working area, select the backup and click P roperties on the ribbon or right-click the backup and
select P roperties.
4. In the Ba ckup Properties window, right-click the missing restore point and select Forget.
o To remove only the selected restore point and restore points that depend on it (that is, a part of the
backup chain starting from this restore point), select This a nd dependent backups.
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o To remove all missing restore points, select All unavailable backups.
To remove missing restore points from the configuration database and disk:
3. In the working area, select the backup and click P roperties on the ribbon or right-click the backup and
select P roperties.
4. In the Ba ckup Properties window, right-click the missing restore point and select Remove from disk.
o To remove only the selected restore point and restore points that depend on it (that is, a part of the
backup chain starting from this restore point), select This a nd dependent backups.
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o To remove all missing restore points, select All unavailable backups.
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Reporting
The way how you perform reporting operations for backup copy jobs and for backup jobs differs but slightly:
• For backup copy jobs in the periodic mode, the process is the same as described in the Backup: Reporting
section.
• For backup jobs in the immediate mode, the process differs as described further.
The following list shows the reporting operations and highlights the differences for backup jobs in the
immediate mode:
You can view real-time statistics for the whole job if you select the job in the working area of the Job s
node. The whole job report shows general information about the job itself and child jobs — tasks that copy
backup jobs added as sources to the backup copy job. You can also view real-time statistics for an
individual child job if you select the child job in the working area of the La st 24 Hours or Running node.
This statistics shows detailed information about the selected child job including the processed VMs.
The job report shows results for the last job run and does not provide details on child jobs. If you want to
get reports once a child job finishes, configure notifications. For more information, see Notification
Settings.
You can view session reports only if you configured notifications for a job. In this case, you get reports
once a child job finishes. For more information, see Notification Settings.
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Managing Jobs
To view all configured jobs, open the Home view and select the Job s > Ba ckup Copy node in the inventory pane.
The list of available jobs is displayed in the working area. You can edit job properties, start and stop jobs, and
delete unnecessary jobs.
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Editing Backup Copy Jobs
You can edit backup copy job settings after you create it. For example, you may want to change scheduling
settings for the job or add some machines to the job.
3. In the working area, select the job and click E d it on the ribbon or right-click the job and select E d it.
You will follow the same steps as you have followed when creating the job and can change job settings as
required.
Related Topics
• Creating Backup Copy Jobs for VMs and Physical Machines
• Creating Backup Copy Jobs for Oracle and SAP HANA Databases
• Click Y es to remove archive full backups from the target backup repository. Archive full backups will be
removed during the next retention cycle (next backup cop y session). The backup copy job will not create
archive full backups.
• Click No to keep archive full backups in the target backup repository. Archive full backups will be
displayed under the Ba ck ups > Disk (Imported) node in the Veeam Backup & Replication console. The
backup copy job will not create archive full backups.
NOTE
If you disable the Keep certain full backups longer for archival purposes option and enable it again later,
archive full backups that remained on disk will not be linked to the backup copy job. They will still be
displayed under the Ba ck ups > Disk (Imported) node in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
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Starting Backup Copy Jobs Manually
Manual start can be helpful if the backup copy job was disabled for some time and restore points were not
copied to the target repository. This procedure differs for the periodic and immediate copy modes. You can find
details in the following sections:
3. In the working area, select the backup copy job and click Sy nc now on the ribbon or right-click the backup
copy job and select Sy nc now.
o If you want to copy all restore points created by the source jobs but that were not copied since the
last backup copy job session, click All.
o If you want to copy only the latest restore point for each source job, click La test.
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2. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckup Copy node under Job s.
3. In the working area, select the backup copy job and click Sta rt on the ribbon or right-click the backup copy
job and select Sta rt.
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Creating Active Full Backups
You can manually create an ad-hoc full backup — active full backup, and add it to the backup chain in the target
backup repository. Active full backup can be helpful if you want to change backup copy job settings, for
example, enable or disable encryption. Veeam Backup & Replication will apply new settings starting from this
full backup.
2. In the inventory pane, select the Ba ckup Copy node under Job s.
3. In the working area, select the backup copy job and click Active full on the ribbon or right-click the backup
copy job and select Active full. Veeam Backup & Replication will start a new backup copy session, copy
data from the source backup repository and save it in a full backup file in the target backup repository.
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Disabling and Deleting Jobs
You can temporarily disable backup copy jobs. The disabled job is paused for some period of time and is not run
by the specified schedule. You can enable a disabled job at any time. You can also permanently delete a job from
Veeam Backup & Replication and from the configuration database.
Disabling Job
To disable a job:
3. In the working area, select the job and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Disable.
To enable a disabled job, select the job in the list and click Disable once again.
Deleting Job
To delete a job:
3. In the working area, select the job, click Delete on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Delete.
NOTE
If you want to delete an active backup copy job, you must first stop the synchronization process. To
do this, disable the backup job. After the job is disabled, you can delete it.
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After the job is deleted, the backups created by this job are displayed under the Ba ckups > Disk ( Orphaned)
node. If the backup files created by this job were also stored in an object storage repository, they will also be
displayed under the Ba ck ups > Ob ject Storage (Orphaned) node.
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VM Copy
With Veeam Backup & Replication, you can run a VM copy job to create an independent fully-functioning copy of
a VM or VM container (host, cluster, folder, resource pool, VirtualApp, datastore or tag) on the selected storage.
VM copying can be helpful if you want to move your datacenter, create a test lab and so on.
The produced copy of a VM is stored decompressed, in a native VMware vSphere format, so it can be started
right away. Although VM copy is similar to replication in many respects, there are several important differences.
• VM copy is a single-use process (that is, every run of a VM copy job mirrors a VM in its latest state). Due to
their nature, VM copy jobs do not support incremental runs.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not create and maintain restore points for VM copies. If you schedule to
run a VM copy job periodically, every new run will overwrite the existing copy.
• With the VM copy job, all VM disks are copied as thick, while replication allows you to preserve the format
of disks or convert the disk format on the fly.
VM copy jobs use the same infrastructure components as backup jobs (for details, see Backup Architecture). In
addition to available scenarios, you can also copy VMs to a target folder on any server or host connected t o the
backup server.
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Copying VMs
With VM copy jobs you can create a fully-functional copy of a VM and store this copy in the backup repository or
storage device. VM copying may be helpful if you want to move your datacenter to another location, archive a
VM before decommissioning and so on.
To create a VM copy, you must configure a VM copy job. One job can be used to process one VM or more VMs.
You can configure a job and start it immediately or save the job to start it later. Jobs can be started manually o r
scheduled to run automatically at specific time.
Before you create a VM copy job, check prerequisites. Then use the New VM Copy Job wizard to configure a VM
copy job.
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Before You Begin
Before you create a VM copy job, check the following prerequisites:
• Backup infrastructure components that will take part in the VM copying process must be added to the
backup infrastructure and properly configured. These include the source ESXi host and server or backup
repository on which you plan to store the VM copy.
• The target storage device must have enough free space to store created VM copies. To receive alerts
about low space on the storage device, configure global notification settings. For more information, see
Specifying Other Notification Settings.
• If you plan to use pre-freeze and/or post-thaw scripts, you must create scripts before you configure the
VM copy job.
• Due to Microsoft limitations, you cannot use Microsoft Azure Active Directory credentials to perform
application-aware processing on VMs running Microsoft Windows 10 (or later).
• If you use tags to categorize virtual infrastructure objects, check limitations for VM tags. For more
information, see VM Tags.
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Step 1. Launch VM Copy Job Wizard
To run the VM Copy Job wizard, do either of the following:
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, right-click Job s and select VM Copy.
• Open the Inventory view, in the working area select the VMs, click Ad d to VM Copy on the ribbon and
select New job or right-click the VMs area and select Ad d to VM copy job > New job. In this case, the
selected VMs will be automatically added to the VM copy job. You can add other VMs to the job when
passing through the wizard steps.
• You can quickly add the VMs to an already existing job. To do this, open the Inventory view, in the working
area select the VMs and click Ad d to VM Copy > name of the job on the ribbon or right-click the VMs and
select Ad d to VM copy job > name of the job .
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the VM copy job.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created a job, date and time when the job was created.
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Step 3. Select VMs to Copy
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select VMs and VM containers (hosts, clusters, folders, resource
pools, VirtualApps, datastores or tags) that you want to copy.
Jobs with VM containers are dynamic in their nature. If a new VM is added to the container in the virtual
infrastructure after the VM copy job is created, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically update the job
settings to include the added VM.
1. Click Ad d .
2. Use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch b etween views: Hosts and Clusters, VMs
a nd Templates, Datastores and VMs and Tags. Depending on the view you select, some objects may not be
available. For example, if you select the VMs a nd Templates view, no resource pools, hosts or clusters will
be displayed in the tree.
To quickly find the necessary object, you can use the search field at the bottom of the Ad d Objects window.
1. Click the button to the left of the search field and select the necessary type of object to search for:
Everything , Folder, Cluster, Host, Resource pool, VirtualApp or Virtual machine.
3. Click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
The initial size of VMs and VM containers added to the VM copy job is displayed in the Size column in the list.
The total size of objects is displayed in the Tota l size field. Use the Reca lculate button to refresh the total size
value after you add a new object to the job.
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Step 4. Exclude Objects from VM Copy Job
After you have added VMs and VM containers to the job, you can specify which objects you want to exclude
from the VM copy. You can exclude the following types of objects:
• Specific VM disks
• VM templates
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically excludes VM log files from VM copies to make copying process
faster and reduce the size of the resulting file.
1. At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select a VM container added to the job and click E x clusions.
3. Click Ad d .
4. Use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views: Hosts and Clusters, VMs
a nd Templates, Datastores and VMs and Tags. Depending on the view you select, some objects may not be
available. For example, if you select the VMs a nd Templates view, no resource pools, hosts or clusters will
be displayed in the tree.
5. In the displayed tree, select the necessary object and click Ad d . Use the Show full hierarchy check box to
display the hierarchy of all VMware Servers added to Veeam Backup & Replication.
6. Click OK.
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To exclude VM disks:
1. At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select a VM or VM container added to the job and click
E x clusions.
3. Select the VM in the list and click E d it. If you want to exclude disks of a VM added as a part of the
container, click Ad d to include the VM in the list as a standalone object.
4. Choose disks that you want to copy. You can choose to process all disks, 0:0 disks (typically, the system
disks) or add to the list custom IDE, SCSI or SATA disks.
5. Select the Remove excluded disks from VM configuration check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will
modify the VMX file of a copied VM to remove excluded disks from the VM configuration. If you use the
VM copy to register the VM in a location where excluded disks are not accessible with the original paths,
you will not have to manually edit the VM configuration file to be able to power on the VM.
To exclude VM templates:
1. At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select a VM or VM container added to the job and click
E x clusions.
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4. If you want to include VM templates into the full VM copy only, leave the Ba ckup VM templates check box
selected and select the E x clude templates from incremental backup check box.
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Step 5. Specify Copy Destination
At the Storage step of the wizard, select which backup proxy must be used for VM data transporting and specify
the destination for the VM copy.
1. Click Choose next to the Ba ckup proxy field to select a backup proxy.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that have
access to the source datastore and automatically assign an optimal backup proxy for processing VM
data.
Veeam Backup & Replication assigns backup proxies to VMs included in the VM copy job one by one.
Before processing a new VM in the VM list, Veeam Backup & Replication checks available backup
proxies. If more than one backup proxy is available, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport
modes that the backup proxies can use for data retrieval and the current workload on the backup
proxies to select the most appropriate one for VM processing.
o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy servers only, you can explicitly select backup proxies
that the job must use. It is recommended that you select at least two backup proxies to ensure that
the VM copy job starts if one of the proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the source datastore.
2. In the Cop y destination section, select a location where the created VM copy must be stored.
o Select a backup repository from the list if you want to create a VM copy in the backup repository
configured in the backup infrastructure. When you select a backup repository,
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically checks how much free space is available on it.
IMP ORTANT
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o Select Server if you want to store the VM copy on a disk or storage device attached to the server.
From the Server list, select a server added to the backup infrastructure. In the P a th to folder field,
specify a folder on the server where the created VM copy must be stored.
Use the Check button to see how much free space is available in the target location.
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Step 6. Specify Guest Processing Settings
At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, you can enable the following settings for VM guest OS processing:
• Application-aware processing
To coordinate guest processing activities, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys non-persistent runtime
components or uses (if necessary, deploys) persistent agent components on the VM guest OS.
The non-persistent runtime components run only during guest processing and are stopped immediately after
the processing is finished (depending on the selected option, during the VM copy job session or after the
replication job completes).
You must specify a user account that will be used to connect to the VM g uest OS and deploy the non-persistent
runtime components or connect to (if necessary, deploy) persistent agent components:
1. From the Guest OS credentials list, select a user account that has enough permissions. For more
information on the permissions and requirements for the user account, see Permissions for Guest
Processing.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click the Ad d button to
add credentials. For more information on adding credentials, see the Credentials Manager section.
2. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the same credentials for all VMs in the job. If some VM
requires a different user account, click Credentials and enter custom credentials for the VM.
IMP ORTANT
Credentials for application-aware processing and guest OS file indexing for Microsoft Windows VMs must
be specified in the following format:
3. If you have added Microsoft Windows VMs to the job, specify which guest interaction proxy
Veeam Backup & Replication can use to deploy the non-persistent runtime components or connect to (if
necessary, deploy) persistent agent components on the VM guest OS. On the right of the Guest interaction
p roxy field, click Choose.
o Leave Automatic selection to let Veeam Backup & Replication automatically select the guest
interaction proxy.
o Select Use the selected guest interaction proxy servers only to explicitly define which servers will
perform the guest interaction proxy role. The list of servers contains Microsoft Windows servers
added to the backup infrastructure.
To check if Veeam Backup & Replication can communicate with VMs added to the job and deploy the non-
persistent runtime components or connect to (if necessary, deploy) persistent agent components on their guest
OSes, click Test Now. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the specified credentials to connect to all VMs in the
list.
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NOTE
The guest interaction proxy functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy
socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
Application-Aware Processing
If you add to the VM copy job VMs running VSS-aware applications, you can enable application-aware
processing to create a transactionally consistent VM copy. The transactionally consistent VM copy guarantees
proper recovery of applications on VMs without data loss.
2. Click Ap p lications.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of the VM container, you must include the VM in the
list as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose a VM whose settings you want to customize.
Then select the VM in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Ap p lications section specify the VSS behavior scenario:
o Select Require successful processing if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the VM copy
process if any VSS errors occur.
o Select Try application processing, but ignore failures if you want to continue the VM copy process
even if VSS errors occur. This option is recommended to guarantee completion of the job. The created
VM image will not be transactionally consistent but crash consistent.
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o Select Disable application processing if you do not want to enable quiescence for the VM.
5. [For Microsoft Exchange, Microsoft SQL and Oracle VMs] In the Tra nsaction logs section, specify if
Veeam Backup & Replication must process transaction logs or copy-only VM copies must be created.
a. Select P rocess transaction logs with this job if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to process
transaction logs.
[For Microsoft Exchange VMs] With this option selected, the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait for the VM copy job to complete
successfully and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the VM copy job fails, the logs will
remain untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components
or persistent components.
[For Microsoft SQL Server VMs and Oracle VMs] You will have to specify settings for transaction log
handling on the SQL and Ora cle tabs of the VM P rocessing Settings window. For more information,
see Microsoft SQL Server Transaction Log Settings and Oracle Archived Log Settings.
b. Select P erform copy only if you use another backup tool to perform VM guest level backup or
replication, and this tool maintains consistency of the database state. Veeam Backup & Replication
will create a copy-only VM image for the selected VMs. The copy-only VM image preserves the chain
of full/differential backup files and transaction logs on the VM. For more informa tion, see Microsoft
Docs.
6. In the P ersistent guest agent section, specify if Veeam Backup & Replication must use persistent guest
agents on each protected VM for application-aware processing.
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Select the Use p ersistent guest agent check box to enable persistent agent components for guest
processing. For more information, see Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent Agent
Components.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Microsoft SQL Server VM and click E d it.
4. In the Tra nsaction logs section, select P rocess transaction logs with this job.
o Select Truncate logs if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to trigger truncation of transaction logs
only after the job completes successfully. In this case, the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components will wait for the job to complete and then trigger truncation of transaction
logs. If the VM copy job fails, the logs will remain untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start
of the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components.
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o Select Do not truncate logs if you do not want Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate logs at all.
This option is recommended if you are using another backup tool to perform VM guest-level backup
or replication, and this tool maintains consistency of the database state. In such scenario,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not trigger transaction log truncation. After you fail over to the
necessary restore point of the VM copy, you will be able to apply transaction logs to get the database
system to the necessary point in time between VM copy job sessions.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
4. In the Tra nsaction logs section, select P rocess transaction logs with this job.
6. In the Sp ecify Oracle account with SYSDBA privileges section, specify a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the Oracle database. The account must have SYSDBA
rights on the Oracle database.
You can select Use guest credentials in the list of user accounts. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication
will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to access the VM guest OS and
connect to the Oracle database.
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7. In the Archived logs section, specify if Veeam Backup & Replication must truncate transaction logs on the
Oracle VM:
o Select Do not truncate archived logs if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to preserve archived
logs on the VM guest OS. When the VM copy job completes, the non-persistent runtime components
or persistent components will not truncate transaction logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases for which the ARCHIVELOG mode is
turned off. If the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned on, transaction logs on the VM guest OS may grow
large and consume all disk space. In this case, the database administrators must take care of
transaction logs themselves.
o Select Truncate logs older than <N> hours or Truncate logs over <N> GB if you want
Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate archived logs that are older than <N> hours or larger than
<N> GB. The non-persistent runtime components or persistent components running on the VM guest
OS will wait for the VM copy job to complete successfully and then trigger transaction logs truncation
using Oracle Call Interface (OCI). If the job does not manage to copy the Oracle VM, the logs will
remain untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components
or persistent components.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
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2. Click Ap p lications.
2. From the Sp ecify PostgreSQL account with superuser privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the PostgreSQL instance. The account must have must
have privileges described in the Permissions section. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click
the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to add credentials.
By default, the Use guest credentials option is selected in the list. With this option selected,
Veeam Backup & Replication will connect to the PostgreSQL instance under the account In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to
access the VM guest OS and connect to the PostgreSQL instance.
Note that if you plan to select the Sy stem user without password file (peer) authentication method at the
step 3 of this procedure, you can add a user account in the Credentials Manager without specifying the
password for the account.
3. In the Sp ecifies user is section, specify how the user will authenticate against the PostgreSQL instance:
o Select Da tabase user with password if the account that you specified at the step 2 is a PostgreSQL
account, and you entered the password for this account in the Credentials Manager.
o Select Da tabase user with password file (.pgpass) if the password for the account that you specified
at the step 2 is defined in the .pgpass configuration file on the PostgreSQL VM. For more
information about the password file, see PostgreSQL documentation.
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o Select Sy stem user without password file (peer) if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use the
peer authentication method. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the OS account as
the PostgreSQL account.
4. In the Script processing mode section, specify the scenario for scripts execution:
o Select Require successful script execution if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the VM
copy process if the script fails.
o Select Ig nore script execution failures if you want to continue the VM copy process even if script
errors occur.
o Select Disable script execution if you do not want to run scripts for the VM.
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5. In the W indows scripts section, specify paths to pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for Microsoft Windows
VMs. For the list of supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
6. In the Linux scripts section, specify paths to pre-freeze and/or post-thaw scripts for Linux VMs. For the list
of supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
If you have added to the job a VM container with Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs, you can select to
execute both Microsoft Windows and Linux scripts for the VM container. When the job starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically determine what OS type is installed on the VM and apply
corresponding scripts to quiesce this VM.
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Step 7. Define Job Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, select to run the VM copy job manually or schedule the job to run on a
regular basis.
1. Select the Run the job automatically check box. If this check box is not selected, you will have to start the
job manually to perform VM replication.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Da ily at
this time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. Use the fields on the right
to configure the necessary schedule.
NOTE
When you configure the job schedule, keep in mind possible date and time changes (for example,
related to daylight saving time transition).
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a set time interval, select P eriodically every. In the
field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use the time
table to define the permitted time window for the job. In the Sta rt time within an hour field, specify
the exact time when the job must start.
▪ Veeam Backup & Replication always starts counting defined intervals from 12:00 AM. For
example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00
AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
▪ If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is over,
Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately start the job and then run the job by the defined
schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours
from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first run at 9:00 AM, when the
denied period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the P eriodically every option and choose Continuously from the
list on the right.
o To chain jobs, use the After this job field. In the common practice, jobs start one after another: when
job A finishes, job B starts and so on. If you want to create a chain of jobs, you should define the time
schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest of the jobs in the chain, select the After this job
op tion and choose the preceding job from the list.
3. In the Automatic retry section, define whether Veeam Backup & Replication must attempt to run the job
again if the job fails for some reason. During a job retry, Veeam Backup & Replication processes failed VMs
only. Enter the number of attempts to run the job and define time spans between them. If you select
continuous schedule for the job, Veeam Backup & Replication will retry the job for the defined number of
times without any time intervals between the job sessions.
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4. In the Ba ckup window section, determine a time interval within which the job must be completed. The
backup window prevents the job from overlapping with production hours and ensures it does not provide
unwanted overhead on your production environment. To set up a backup window for the job:
a. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box and click W ind ow.
b. In the Time P eriods window, define the allowed hours and prohibited hours for VM copying. If the job
exceeds the allowed window, it will be automatically terminated.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of VM copy job configuration.
2. Select the Run the job when I click Finish check box if you want to start the job right after you finish
working with the wizard.
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File Copy
You can copy and move files and folders between servers and hosts added to the backup infrastructure. For file
copying operations, Veeam Backup & Replication offers a Windows Explorer-like user interface familiar to a
Microsoft Windows user. You can copy files manually or schedule file copy jobs to run automatically by the
defined schedule.
The file copy functionality is not intended for creating backups of VM guest OS file s. Use backup jobs to create
VM image-level backups instead.
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Creating File Copy Jobs
To schedule a copying process for files and folders, you must configure a file copy job. You can run the file copy
job immediately after its creation, schedule or save the job.
File copy jobs let you copy files between the following backup infrastructure objects:
• Virtualization hosts
• Linux servers
• Quantum DXi
• Infinidat InfiniGuard
Before you configure a file copy job, check prerequisites. Then use the New File Copy Job wizard to create a job.
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Before You Begin
Before you configure a file copy job, check the following prerequisites:
Backup infrastructure components that will take part in the file copying process must be added to the backup
infrastructure and properly configured. These include a source and target host or server between which files and
folders will be copied.
• File copy is not supported for Unix systems, for example, Solaris, FreeBSD and AIX.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not preserve the Access Control List (ACL) settings for copied guest OS
folders. The ACL settings are preserved for files only.
TIP
You can restore the ACL settings for recovered guest OS files and folders using Instant File-Level Restore.
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Step 1. Launch New File Copy Job Wizard
To launch the New File Copy Job wizard, do either of the following:
• Open the Files view, in the working area right-click the necessary files and folders and select Ad d to File
Cop y Job > New job. Veeam Backup & Replication will start the New File Copy Job wizard and add selected
files and folders to this job. You can add other files and folders to the job later on, when you pass through
the wizard steps.
You can add files and folders to already existing jobs. To do this, open the Files view, in the working area right-
click necessary objects and select Ad d to file copy job > name of the job.
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, enter a name and description of the created job.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created a job, date and time when the job was created.
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Step 3. Select Files and Folders to Be Copied
At the Source step of the wizard, select files and folders that you want to copy.
1. From the Host list, choose a host or server on which files or folders that you want to copy reside.
2. Click Ad d and select files or folders that must be copied. The selected items will be added to the list.
IMP ORTANT
If the list contains files/folders with the same names and extensions, Veeam Backup & Replication copies
only one instance of a file/folder. This limitation applies even if you add files/folders from different hosts
or servers. To avoid this limitation, you can rename files/folders on the source or add parent folders to the
list.
To remove a file or folder from the list, select it and click Remove.
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Step 4. Select Destination for Copying
At the Destination step of the wizard, select a destination to which files or folders must be copied.
2. Click Details on the right of the Server field to view or edit server properties.
3. Click Browse next to the P a th to folder field and select a folder where copied items must be stored. To
create a dedicated folder for copied files or folders, use the New Folder button at the bottom of the Select
Fold er window.
IMP ORTANT
If the target folder already contains files/folders with the same names and extensions as the files/folder
that must be copied, Veeam Backup & Replication will replace files/folders in the target folder with new
files/folders.
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Step 5. Define Job Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, you can select to run the file copy job manually or schedule the job to run on
a regular basis.
1. Select the Run the job automatically check box. If this check box is not selected, you will have to start the
job manually to copy files or folders.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Da ily at
this time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. Use the fields on the right
to configure the necessary schedule.
NOTE
When you configure the job schedule, keep in mind possible date and time changes (for example,
related to daylight saving time transition).
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a set time interval, select P eriodically every. In the
field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use the time
table to define the permitted time window for the job. In the Sta rt time within an hour field, specify
the exact time when the job must start.
▪ Veeam Backup & Replication always starts counting defined intervals from 12:00 AM. For
example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00
AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
▪ If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is ov er,
Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately start the job and then run the job by the defined
schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours
from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first run at 9:00 AM, when the
denied period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the P eriodically every option and choose Continuously from the
list on the right.
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o To chain jobs, use the After this job field. In the common practice, jobs start one after another: when
job A finishes, job B starts and so on. If you want to create a chain of jobs, you should define the time
schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest of the jobs in the chain, at the Schedule step of the
wizard, select the After this job option and choose the preceding job from the list.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of file copy job configuration.
2. Select the Run the job when I click Finish check box if you want to start the job right after you finish
working with the wizard.
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Copying Files and Folders Manually
You can manually copy and move files and folders between servers and hosts added to the backup
infrastructure.
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you copy files manually between the following backup infrastructure objects:
• Virtualization hosts
• Linux servers
IMP ORTANT
You cannot copy backup files (VBK, VIB and VRB) to HPE StoreOnce storage appliances used as backup
repositories. To copy such files, use backup copy jobs.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the file tree of the source server or host.
3. Right-click files and folders that you want to copy and select Cop y.
4. In the inventory pane, expand the file tree of the target server or host.
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You can also use a drag-n-drop operation to copy files and folders between the source and target hosts or
servers.
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Managing Folders
You can create, rename and delete folders in the Files view of Veeam Backup & Replication.
To create a folder:
2. In the inventory pane, expand the file tree of the necessary server or host.
3. In the working area, right-click anywhere on the blank area and select New Folder.
To rename a folder:
2. In the inventory pane, expand the file tree of the necessary server or host.
3. In the working area, select the folder and click Rename on the ribbon or right-click the folder and select
Rena me.
4. Enter a new name for the folder and press [Enter] on the keyboard.
To remove a folder:
2. In the inventory pane, expand the file tree of the necessary server or host.
3. In the working area, select the folder and click Delete on the ribbon or right-click the folder and select
Delete.
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Editing and Deleting Files
You can edit files and delete them in the Files view of Veeam Backup & Replication. For example, you may want
to edit a configuration file of the VM (VMX) or need to delete from the storage files of unused VMs.
To edit a file:
2. In the inventory pane, expand the file tree of the necessary server or host.
3. In the working area, select the file and click E d it on the ribbon or right-click the folder and select E d it.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication will open the selected file in the editor. Edit the file as required and click
Sa ve on the file editor toolbar or press [Ctrl+S] on the keyboard.
To delete a file:
2. In the inventory pane, expand the file tree of the necessary server or host.
3. In the working area, select the file and click Delete on the ribbon or right-click the folder and select
Delete.
NOTE
To delete a folder on VSAN, you must remove a real folder, not a symbolic link to this folder. The real
folder is named with GUID, for example, c07a2953-8096-5b20-a11a-002590c5857c, while the symbolic
link contains the folder name, for example, srv02_vm. If you delete the folder symbolic link, the delete
operation will fail, and the folder will not be removed.
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Quick Migration
Quick Migration allows you to migrate VMs or virtual disks between ESXi hosts and datastores.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports migration of VMs or their disks in any state with minimum disruption to
business operations. You can use Quick Migration as a self-contained capability or as a way to finalize the Instant
Recovery and Instant Disk Recovery processes.
When you perform Quick Migration, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes your virtual environment, its
configuration, the state of VMs and selects the most appropriate VM relocation method:
Veeam Quick Migration is the Veeam Backup & Replication proprietary technology.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this method when VMware vCenter methods cannot be used. For
example, if your VMware vSphere license does not provide support for vMotion and Storage vMotion, or
you need to migrate VMs from one standalone ESXi host to another.
o Sma rtSwitch
With SmartSwitch, Veeam Backup & Replication suspends a VM, then moves the VM configuration file
and copies changes made to the VM disk after snapshot creation to the target host. After the
migration is completed, the VM is resumed on the target host.
o ColdMigration
With ColdMigration, Veeam Backup & Replication stops the VM, then copies changes made to the VM
disk after snapshot creation to the new host. After, the VM is started on the target host.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication copies VM configuration file (.VMX) to the target host and registers the VM.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication triggers a VM snapshot creation and copies VM disk content to the new
destination.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication uses different modes when moving the VM between hosts with compatible
and non-compatible CPUs.
o If you move a VM between two hosts with compatible CPUs, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the
SmartSwitch mode.
o If you move a VM between two hosts with non-compatible CPUs or VM RAM is more than 8 GB,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the ColdMigration mode.
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2. Veeam Backup & Replication copies the disk from the original datastore to the temporary VM on the target
datastore.
3. If the original VM is powered on, Veeam Backup & Replication suspends it.
4. If changes were made to the original disk during the copy process performed at step 3,
Veeam Backup & Replication copies these changes to the disk of the temporary VM.
5. On the original VM, Veeam Backup & Replication replaces old path to the disk with the path to the disk of
the temporary VM.
6. If the original VM was suspended during the migration, Veeam Backup & Replication powers the VM on.
IMP ORTANT
Before the migration, VM disks must be recovered using Instant Disk Recovery.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication gets information about the target datastore.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication connects to one of the ESXi hosts of a cluster to which the target datastore is
mounted.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication migrates FCDs from the source datastore to the target datastore.
4. If redo logs are stored on a custom datastore, Veeam Backup & Replication will delete FCDs snapshots
after migration.
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Quick Migration Architecture
Quick Migration architecture in a VMware vSphere environment comprises the following components:
Similar to the backup architecture, Quick Migration uses two-service architecture: the source-side Veeam Data
Mover interacts with the source host, and the target-side Veeam Data Mover interacts with the target host. To
perform on-site migration, you can deploy one backup proxy for data processing and transfer. This backup proxy
must have access to the source host and to the target host at the same time. In this scenario, the source-side
Veeam Data Mover and the target-side Veeam Data Mover are started on the same backup proxy.
The common requirement for off-site migration is that one Veeam Data Mover runs in the production site (closer
to the source host and datastore), and the other Veeam Data Mover runs in the remote target site (closer to the
target host and datastore). During backup, Veeam Data Movers maintain a stable connection, which allows for
uninterrupted operation over WAN or slow links.
For off-site migration, you need to deploy at least one local backup proxy in each site: a source backup proxy in
the production site, and a target backup proxy in the remote target site.
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Migrating VMs
You can relocate one or more VMs with quick migration. Quick migration can be used to move VMs from one
ESXi host to another one. You can perform "hot" quick migration for running VMs or "cold" quick migration for
VMs that are powered off.
Quick migration is not job-driven: it cannot be saved as a job or scheduled to run later.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start relocating VMs immediately after you finish working with the Quick
Mig ration wizard.
Before you start quick migration, check prerequisites. Then use the Quick Migration wizard to migrate VMs.
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Before You Begin
Before you perform quick migration, check the following prerequisites and limitations:
• Backup infrastructure components that will take part in quick migration must be added to the backup
infrastructure and properly configured. These include the source and target ESXi hosts.
• The target datastore must have enough free space to store disks of the VMs that you plan to migrate. To
receive alerts about low space on the target datastore, configure global notification settings. For more
information, see Specifying Other Notification Settings.
• If you want to use VMware vSphere vMotion to relocate VMs between hosts and/or VMware vSphere
Storage vMotion to relocate VM disks between datastores, make sure that you have a VMware vSphere
license covering these features.
• If you use tags to categorize virtual infrastructure objects, check limitations for VM tags. For more
information, see VM Tags.
Encryption
Veeam Backup & Replication does not keep encryption settings if a VM is migrated with VMware vMotion. After
the migration process is finished, you will need to enable encryption for the migrated VM manually.
Veeam Quick Migration was designed to complement Instant Recovery. Instead of pulling data from vPower NFS
datastore, Quick Migration registers the VM on the target host, restores the VM contents from the backup file
located in the backup repository and synchronizes the VM restored from backup with the running VM.
NOTE
Virtual appliance (HotAdd) transport mode cannot be used if the role of the backup proxy and mount
server or backup repository where the backup file is stored are assigned to the same VM.
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Step 1. Launch Quick Migration Wizard
If you use Quick Migration as a way to finalize the Instant Recovery or Instant Disk Recovery processes, you must
launch Quick Migration as described in Finalizing Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere and Finalizing Instant
Disk Recovery.
2. In the infrastructure tree, select a host or VM container (host, cluster, folder, resource pool, VirtualApp,
datastore or tag) in which the VMs that you want to relocate reside.
3. In the working area, select the VM and click Quick Migration on the ribbon or right-click the VMs and
select Quick Migration.
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Step 2. Select VMs to Relocate
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select the VMs and VM containers that you want to relocate:
1. Click Ad d .
2. Use the toolbar at the top right corner of the window to switch between views: Hosts and Clusters, VMs
a nd Templates, Datastores and VMs and Tags. Depending on the view you select, some objects may not be
available. For example, if you select the VMs a nd Templates view, no resource pools, hosts or clusters will
be displayed in the tree.
To quickly find the necessary object, you can use the search field at the bottom of the Ad d Objects window.
1. Click the button to the left of the search field and select the necessary type of object to search for:
Everything , Folder, Cluster, Host, Resource pool, VirtualApp or Virtual machine.
3. Click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
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Step 3. Specify VM Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select the destination to which the selected VMs must be relocated:
1. Click Choose next to the Host or cluster field and select an ESXi host or cluster where the relocated VM
must be registered.
2. If all or majority of relocated VMs must belong to the same resource pool, click Choose next to the
Resource pool field and select the target resource pool.
b. In the Choose Resource P ool window, click Ad d VM on the right and select the VMs.
c. Select the added VM in the VM resource pool list and click Resource Pool at the bottom of the
window.
d. From the list of available resource pools, select the target resource pool.
3. If all or majority of relocated VMs must be placed to the same folder, click Choose and select the folder.
b. In the Choose Folder window, click Ad d VM on the right and select the VMs.
c. Select the added VM in the VM folder list and click VM Folder at the bottom of the window.
The VM folder section is disabled if you selected a standalone ESXi host as a target for VM relocation.
4. If all or majority of relocated VMs must be stored on the same datastore, click Choose and select the
datastore. Veeam Backup & Replication displays only those datastores that are accessible by the selected
ESXi host. If you have chosen to relocate VMs to a cluster, Veeam Backup & Replication will display only
shared datastores.
IMP ORTANT
• If you migrate VMs to the same datastore cluster that is used as the destination for redirecting
virtual disk updates (the Datastore step of the Instant Recovery to VMware wizard), you must
enable the Force Veeam transport usage check box at the Transfer step of the Quick Migration
wizard. Otherwise, your relocated VM may be deleted.
• If you migrate workloads to the same datastore that is used as the destination for redirecting
virtual disk updates, Veeam Backup & Replication uses Veeam Quick Migration instead of
Storage vMotion. Such behavior prevents data loss due to a bug in VMware Storage vMotion.
For more information on migration, see the Quick Migration section.
If you want to place relocated VMs to different datastores:
b. In the Choose VM Files Location window, click Ad d VM on the right and select the VM that must be
placed on datastores.
c. Select the added VM in the Files location list and click Da tastore at the bottom of the window.
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d. From the list of available datastores, select the target datastore.
You can also place the configuration file and individual disk files of a VM to different datastores:
a. Add a VM to the Files location list, expand the VM and select the required files.
b. Click Da tastore at the bottom of the window and choose the destination for the files.
5. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication saves disks of relocated VMs in the thin format. If necessary, you
can change the disk format. For example, if the original VM uses thick disks, you can change the disk
format of the relocated VM to thin provisioned and save on disk space required to store VM data.
Disk format change is available only for VMs using virtual hardware version 7 or later.
b. In the Choose VM Files Location window, click Ad d VM on the right and select the VM whose disk
format you want to change.
c. Select the added VM in the list and click Disk type at the bottom of the window.
d. In the Disk Type Settings section, choose the format that will be used to restore VM disk files: same as
the source disk, thin or thick.
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Step 4. Select Infrastructure Components for
Data Transfer
At the Tra nsfer step of the wizard, assign infrastructure components to relocate the VMs:
1. In the Da ta transfer section, select backup proxies that must be used to transfer VM data from source to
target.
If you plan to migrate VMs within one site, the same backup proxy can act as the source backup proxy and
target backup proxy. For off-site migration, you must deploy at least one backup proxy in each site to
establish a stable connection across the sites for data transfer.
Click Choose next to the Source proxy and Target proxy fields to select backup proxies for migration. In
the Ba ckup P roxy window, you can choose automatic proxy selection or assign proxies explicitly.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that have
access to the source datastore and will automatically assign optimal proxy resources for processing
VM data.
During migration, VMs are processed one by one. Before processing a new VM in the VM list,
Veeam Backup & Replication checks available backup proxies. If more than one backup proxy is
available, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport modes that the backup proxies can use for
data retrieval and the current workload on the backup proxies to select the most appropriate resource
for VM processing.
o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy servers only, you can explicitly select backup proxies
that must be used to perform migration.
2. Select which migration mechanism to use: VMware vMotion or Veeam Quick Migration.
Veeam Backup & Replication can use VMware vMotion only if your VMware license covers this
functionality.
o If you want to use VMware vMotion to relocate the VMs, leave the Force Veeam transport usage
check box not selected. Veeam Backup & Replication will attempt to use the VMware vMotion
mechanism to migrate the selected VMs. If VMware vMotion cannot be used for some reason (for
example, if using it can cause data loss or if you do not have a VMware vSphere license for this
functionality), Veeam Backup & Replication will fail over to its native migration mechanism.
o If you do not want to use VMware vMotion, select the Force Veeam transport usage check box.
Veeam Backup & Replication will use its native migration mechanism.
IMP ORTANT
If you use a native Veeam mechanism to relocate a VM, Veeam Backup & Replication suspends the initial
VM on the source ESXi host (SmartSwitch) or powers off the initial VM (cold switch) for a short period of
time during quick migration. For more information, see Quick Migration.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Rea dy step of the wizard, your actions differ depending on the method you have chosen to use for
migration.
If VMware vMotion is used for migration, review details and click Finish. In this case, all existing jobs to which
the source VM is added will switch to the VM on the target host (target VM). The backup chains will be
continued, thus, the next job sessions for the VM will be incremental.
If Veeam Quick Migration is used, you must also choose whether you want to delete files of the VM for which
the migration was launched after Veeam Backup & Replication receives a heartbeat signal from the VM on the
target host (target VM):
• If you want to delete the VM for which the migration was launched (source VM; for Instant Recovery, this
is the VM created during Instant Recovery but before finalization), leave the Delete source VM files upon
successful migration check box selected. All jobs to which the VM is added will switch to the target VM.
The backup chains will be continued, thus, the next job sessions for the VM will be incremental.
If the heartbeat signal is not received from the target VM, the source VM will not be deleted and the
target VM will not be added to any jobs. To protect the target VM, you must add it to a backup job
manually.
• If you want to leave the VM for which the migration was launched (source VM; for Instant Recovery, this is
the VM created during Instant Recovery but before finalization), clear the selection of the Delete source
VM files upon successful migration check box. In this case, the source VM will not be deleted. All jobs to
which the source VM is added will still process this VM and continue existing backup chains. To protect the
target VM, you must add it to a backup job manually.
During Veeam Quick Migration, Veeam Backup & Replication names the VMs as follows:
• Ta rget VM: source_vm_name_GUID at the start of migration; source_vm_name at the end of migration.
NOTE
The Delete source VM files upon successful migration option applies if the following conditions are met:
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Migrating First Class Disks (FCDs)
You can relocate First Class Disks (FCDs) between datastores using Quick Migration. Migration of FCDs supports
only the vMotion method. Depending on whether FCDs that you want to migrate are attached to a VM or not,
Veeam Backup & Replication defines the migration scenario:
• If FCDs are not attached, Veeam Backup & Replication will migrate only the FCDs that you have selected.
• If FCDs are attached to a VM, Veeam Backup & Replication will also look for other FCDs attached to this
VM and will perform migration of these FCDs as well.
Quick migration is not a job-driven process: it cannot be saved as a job or scheduled to run later. To initiate a
quick migration of FCDs, you must complete FCD Quick Migration wizard and launch the FCD Quick Migration
wizard.
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Before You Begin
Before you perform FCD quick migration, check the following prerequisites and limitations.
• All FCDs that you plan to migrate, must be located on a vPower NFS datastore that is mounted to the
target cluster.
• If redo logs are stored on a custom datastore, Veeam Backup & Replication checks that these redo logs are
available on this datastore.
• The target datastore to which you want to migrate FCDs must meet the following requirements:
o The datastore must be added to the infrastructure of the vCenter which you specified to perform FCD
quick migration.
o The datastore must be mounted to all ESXi hosts of a cluster which you have selected to perform FCD
quick migration.
o The datastore must have enough free space for all migrated FDCs.
• You can not migrate FCDs to the same datastore where they have already been registered.
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Step 1. Launch FCD Quick Migration Wizard
To launch the FCD Quick Migration wizard
3. In the working area, right-click the VM to which disks were recovered and select Mig rate to production.
Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the FCD Quick Migration wizard.
After you finish working with the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication migrates the disks with all changes made
after the disk recovery and before its migration.
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Step 2. Select FCDs to Migrate
At the Disks step of the wizard, specify the FCDs that you want to migrate. To add FCDs, click Ad d and select
necessary FCDs from the virtual environment. If you want to exclude specific FDCs from migration, select the
necessary FCD and click Remove.
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Step 3. Specify FCD Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, specify the datastore to which you want to migrate FCDs. You can migrate
different FCDs to various datastores.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Rea dy step of the wizard, review details on FCDs quick migration and click Finish to exit the wizard.
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Recovery Verification
Veeam Backup & Replication offers two technologies to verify recoverability of VM backups and replicas:
• SureBackup
• SureReplica
IMP ORTANT
When using a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required. If you use the Standard
edition, you can manually verify VM backups with Instant Recovery. For more information, see Manual
Recovery Verification.
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SureBackup
SureBackup is the Veeam technology that allows you to test machines backups and check if you can recover data
from them. You can verify any restore point of a backed -up machine.
During a SureBackup job, Veeam Backup & Replication performs “live” verification: scans the backed-up data for
malware, boots the machine from the backup in the isolated environment, runs tests for the machine, powers
the machine off and creates a report on recovery verification results.
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How SureBackup Works
For SureBackup, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a regular image-based backup. During recovery verification,
Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
1. If the SureBackup job is configured to perform malware scan, Veeam Backup & Replication scans data of
the machines from the application group with antivirus software.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication publishes the machines from the application group and the machine under
verification in the isolated environment — virtual lab. Machines are started directly from compressed and
deduplicated backup files that reside in the backup repository. To achieve this,
Veeam Backup & Replication utilizes the Veeam vPower NFS Service.
3. If the SureBackup job is configured to perform malware scan, Veeam Backup & Replication scans data of
the machine under verification with antivirus software.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication performs a number of tests against the machines in the application group and
machine under verification: heartbeat test, ping test and application test.
5. If the SureBackup job is configured to validate backup files, Veeam Backup & Replication performs a cyclic
redundancy check for the backup file from which the machine under verification is started and, optionally,
for backup files from which the machines in the application group are started. The backup file validation is
performed after all verification tests are complete.
6. When the recovery verification process is over, Veeam Backup & Replication unpublishes machines and
creates a report on their state. The report is sent to the backup administrator by email.
During verification, a backed-up machine image remains in read-only state. All changes that take place when the
machine is running are written to redo log files that are stored on the datastore selected in the virtual lab
settings. When the recovery process is complete, the redo logs are removed.
1. Application group. During recovery verification, the verified machine may need to be started with a group
of machines on which it is dependent. The application group enables full functionality of applications
running inside the machine and lets you run these applications just like in the production environment.
2. Virtual lab. The virtual lab is the isolated virtual environment in which the verified machine and machines
from the application group are started and tested.
3. SureBackup job. The SureBackup job is a task to perform recovery verification. You can run the SureBackup
job manually or schedule it to run automatically by schedule.
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Backup Recovery Verification Tests
To verify machines with a SureBackup job, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to run the following
backup recovery verification tests:
• Predefined tests
Predefined Tests
Veeam Backup & Replication can verify machines with the following predefined tests:
• Hea rtbeat test. When the machine starts, Veeam Backup & Replication performs a heartbeat test. It waits
for a heartbeat signal from VMware Tools installed inside the machine to determine that the machine
guest OS is running. If the signal comes regularly at specific time intervals, the test is passed.
• P ing test. Veeam Backup & Replication sends ping requests to the machine from the backup server and
checks if the machine can respond to them. If the machine responds to ping requests, the test is passed.
• Ap p lication test. Veeam Backup & Replication waits for applications inside the machine to start and runs a
script against these applications. Veeam Backup & Replication uses two types of predefined scripts:
o For DNS servers, domain controllers, Global Catalog servers, mail servers and web servers,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses a script that probes an application-specific port. For example, to
verify a domain controller, Veeam Backup & Replication probes port 389 for a response. If the
response is received, the test is passed.
o For Microsoft SQL Server, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a script that attempts to connect to
instances and databases on the Microsoft SQL Server. For more information, see Microsoft SQL Server
Checker Script.
NOTE
To run the heartbeat and ping tests, you must have VMware Tools installed on the machine. If VMware
Tools are not installed, these tests will be skipped.
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You can run verification tests for machines added to the application group or processed with a linked
SureBackup job. You can specify and customize settings for verification tests in the application group or
SureBackup job settings.
3. Employs the USE SQL statement to connect to databases and check their availability.
The script is located on the backup server in the Veeam Backup & Replication product folder. The path by
default: C:\Program Files\Veeam\Backup and
Replication\Backup\Veeam.Backup.SqlChecker.vbs.
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Credentials for Script Execution
To execute the script, Veeam Backup & Replication connects to Microsoft SQL Server. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the account under which the Veeam Backup Service is running. If you need to
run the script under another account, you can specify credentials for this account. The script supports the
following authentication methods:
• Microsoft Windows authentication mode. To use it, you must specify credentials for the account on the
Credentials tab in the application group or SureBackup job settings.
• SQL Server authentication mode. To use it, you must pass credentials of the account to the script. You can
pass credentials the following ways:
o By running the Microsoft SQL Server Checker Script from the PowerShell. To do it, use the following
command in the PowerShell console:
You can find the results of a script execution in the log file by the following path:
%programdata%\Veeam\Backup\<name of the job>\<VM name>_SQLChecker.log. If
necessary, you can change the log file location. To do this, specify a new path in the PowerShel l
command:
IMP ORTANT
IMP ORTANT
If you use the Microsoft SQL Server authentication mode, you may need to specify credentials of the
account to connect to the machine on which Microsoft SQL Server is installed. To do this, use the
Credentials tab in the application group or SureBackup job settings.
Da tabase Exclusion
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies all databases on all instances of Microsoft SQL Server.
However, you can exclude specific databases from verification. For example, vCenter Server database. To
exclude an instance or a database, you must open the script in the text editor and edit the Settings section in
the following way:
• To exclude a specific databases, uncomment the gDBsToExclude.Push "dbname" line in the script and
specify the names of a database that you want to exclude. To exclude several databases, specify a
separate line for each database.
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gDBsToExclude.Push "dbname1"
gDBsToExclude.Push "dbname2"
gInstancesToExclude.Push "instancename1"
gInstancesToExclude.Push "instancename2"
IMP ORTANT
Log ging
To define whether the script has completed successfully or not, Veeam Backup & Replication publishes the
following return codes in the SureBackup job session statistics:
• 4 — error occurred while Veeam Backup & Replication was getting the list of databases.
• 5 — unknown error
Results of script execution are written to the log file located by the following path:
%programdata%\Veeam\Backup\<name of the job>\<VM name>_SQLChecker.log. If necessary, you
can change the log file location. To do this, pass a new path to the log file in the %log_path% argument in the
application group or SureBackup job settings.
To validate the backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the checksum algorithm. When
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a backup file for a machine, it calculates a checksum for every data block in
the backup file and stores this data in the backup file, together with machine data. During the backup file
validation test, Veeam Backup & Replication decompresses the backup file, recalculates checksums for data
blocks in the decompressed backup file and compares them with initial checksum values. If the results match,
the test is passed.
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The backup file validation test is started after recovery verification tests. As soon as
Veeam Backup & Replication completes all "live" verification for all machines in the SureBackup job, it
unpublishes machines and starts the backup file validation test.
The result of the backup file validation test impacts the state of the SureBackup job session. If the verification
tests are completed successfully but the backup validation is not passed, Veeam Backup & Replication marks the
SureBackup job session with the Failed status.
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Application Group
In most cases, a machine works not alone but in cooperation with other services and components. To verify such
machine, you first need to start all services and components on which this machine is dependent. To this aim,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the application group.
The application group creates the “surroundings” for the verified machine. The application group contains one
or several machines on which the verified machine is dependent. These machines run applications and services
that must be started to enable fully functional work of the verified machine. Typically, the application group
contains at least a domain controller, DNS server and DHCP server.
When you set up an application group, you specify a role of every machine, its boot priority and boot delay.
Additionally, you can specify what tests must be performed to verify machines in the application group.
When a SureBackup job is launched, Veeam Backup & Replication first starts in the virtual lab machines from the
application group in the required order and performs necessary tests against them. This way,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates the necessary environment for the verified machine. Only after all
machines from the application group are started and tested, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the verified
machine in the virtual lab.
For example, if you want to verify a Microsoft Exchange Server, you need to test its functionality in cooperation
with the domain controller and DNS server. Subsequently, you must add to the application group a virtualized
domain controller and DNS server. When Veeam Backup & Replication runs a SureBackup job, it will first start
and verify the domain controller and DNS server in the virtual lab to make verification of the Microsoft Exchange
Server possible.
• A valid license for Enterprise edition of Veeam Backup & Replication must be installed on the backup
server.
• All applications and services on which verified VMs are dependent must be virtualized in your
environment.
• If you plan to scan VMs data for malware, check requirements and limitations.
• If you plan to verify VMs with a ping test, the firewall on tested VMs must allow ping requests.
• If you plan to verify VMs with a heartbeat test, VMware Tools must be installed in tested machines.
• [For storage snapshots] The storage system must be added to the backup infrastructure.
• VM replicas must be in the Ready state. If a VM replica is in the Failover or Failback state, you will not be
able to add it to the application group.
• You cannot add to application groups VMs from backups of VMware Cloud Director VMs, backups created
with backup copy jobs and backups stored in cloud backup repositories.
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Step 1. Launch New Application Group Wizard
To launch the New Application Group wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select SureBackup. In the working area, click
Ad d Application Group.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select Ap p lication Groups under SureBackup
and click Ad d App Group.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane right-click Ap p lication Groups under
SureBackup and select Ad d App Group.
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Step 2. Specify Application Group Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the application group.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created the group, date and time when the group was created.
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Step 3. Add Machines to Application Group
At the Ma chines step of the wizard, add machines to the created application group. You can add machines from
different sources:
• Machine backups
• VM replicas
• Storage snapshots
You can add machines from backups, storage snapshots and VM replicas to the same application groups. Keep in
mind the following limitations:
• Machines must have at least one valid restore point or must reside on a storage snapshot.
• You cannot add the same machine twice. For example, if you add a machine from the storage snapshot,
you will not be able to add the same machine from the backup.
1. Click Ad d and select From backups, From replicas or From storage snapshots.
2. In the displayed window, expand the job or storage snapshot, select the machine and click Ad d .
3. Machines in the list are specified in the order of their boot priority. To move a machine up and down in the
list, select it and click Move Up or Move Down.
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Step 4. Specify Recovery Verification Options and Tests
You must specify verification options for every VM in the application group:
1. At the Ma chines step of the wizard, select the machine in the list.
Role Settings
On the Role tab, select a role that the VM performs. Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following
predefined roles for VMs:
• DNS Server
• Global Catalog
• Mail Server
• SQL Server
• Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365 (machine on which Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365 is installed)
• Web Server
After you select a role for the VM, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically configure startup options and
assign predefined test scripts for the chosen role. You can use these settings or specify custom settings on the
Sta rtup Options and Test Scripts tabs.
To verify VMs that perform roles other than those specified in the list, you will have to manually configure
startup options and specify test scripts that must be run for these VMs.
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IMP ORTANT
If you want to add several domain controllers to the ap plication group, you must assign the Doma in
Controller (Authoritative Restore) role to the first domain controller started in the virtual lab. Other
domain controllers must have the Doma in Controller (Non-Authoritative Restore) role.
Startup Settings
To configure VM startup settings:
1. In the Verification Options window, click the Sta rtup Options tab.
2. In the Memory section, specify the amount of memory that you want to pre-allocate to the VM when this
VM starts. The amount of pre-allocated memory is defined in percent. The percentage rate is calculated
based on the system memory level available for the production VM. For example, if 1024 MB of RAM is
allocated to the VM in the production environment and you specify 80% as a memory rate, 820 MB of
RAM will be allocated to the verified VM on startup.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not allow you to change machine CPU manually, it does this
automatically. If the VM has more CPU than the host can provide, Veeam Backup & Replication scales
down the CPU of the VM.
3. In the Sta rtup time section, specify the Ma ximum allowed boot time value and the Ap p lication
initialization timeout value.
Ap p lication initialization timeout. Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the applications installed in the
VM, for example, Microsoft SQL Server, to start. Depending on the software installed in a VM, the
application initialization process may require more time than specified in the job settings. If applications
installed in a VM are not initialized within the specified period of time, test scripts can be completed with
errors. If such an error situation occurs, you need to increase the Ap p lication initialization timeout value
and start the job once again.
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Ma x imum allowed boot time. Be careful when specifying the Ma x imum allowed boot time value. Typically,
a VM started by the SureBackup job requires more time to boot than a VM started in the p roduction
environment. If VM is not initialized within the specified interval of time, the recovery verification process
fails with the timeout error. If such error occurs, you need to increase the Ma x imum allowed boot time
value and run the job again.
4. In the Boot verification section, specify when the VM must be considered to have been booted
successfully:
o VM heartbeat is present. If you enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform a
heartbeat test for the verified VM.
o VM responds to ping on any network interface. If you enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication
will perform a ping test for the verified VM.
o Automatically disable Windows Firewall. If you select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will
disable Windows Firewall for the the verified VM.
If you enable both heartbeat test and ping test options, Veeam Backup & Replication will require that both
tests are completed successfully.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication performs a heartbeat test only if a VM has VMware Tools installed. If VMware
Tools are not installed, the VM will be started but the test will not be performed. VMs without VMware
Tools can still be used as auxiliary VMs: they can be started to enable proper work of other machines. In
this case, you do not need to select any role for such machines.
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Test Script Settings
When you select a VM role, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically assigns a predefined script that must be
run to verify applications inside this VM. If you want to verify a VM that has some other role not listed on the
Role tab:
2. Click Ad d .
3. In the Test Scripts window, select Use the following test script.
5. In the P a th field, define a path to an executable script file that must be run to verify the VM. You can do
one of the following:
o If you have your own custom script, define a path to it in the P a th field.
o If you do not have a custom script, you can use a standard utility by Veeam,
Veeam.Backup.ConnectionTester.exe , that probes application communication ports. The utility is
located in the installation folder of Veeam Backup & Replication: %ProgramFiles%\Veeam\Backup
and Replication\Backup\Veeam.Backup.ConnectionTester.exe . Specify this path in the P a th field.
6. In the Arg uments field, specify an IP address of the verified VM and the port that you want to probe (if the
selected test probes the port). You can use the %vm_ip% variable to define the VM IP address or the
%vm_fqdn% variable to define the VM fully qualified domain name.
For Microsoft SQL Server, you can also specify a path to the log file in the %log_path% argument. For
more information, see Backup Recovery Verification Tests.
To edit test settings, select the test in the list and click E d it. To delete a test, select the test in the list and click
Remove.
IMP ORTANT
NOTE
If a VM performs several roles and runs a number of applications, you can add several verification scripts to
verify work of these applications. It is recommended that you specify the maximum startup timeout value
and allocate the greatest amount of memory for such VMs.
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Credentials Settings
By default, to run the verification script Veeam Backup & Replication uses the account under which the Veeam
Backup Service is running. If you need to run the script under some other account, you can specify credentials
for this account in the application group settings.
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2. From the Credentials list, select credentials for the account under which you want to run the script.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to
add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
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Step 5. Review Application Group Settings and Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of application group configuration.
2. Click Finish to save the application group settings and close the wizard.
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Virtual Lab
The virtual lab is an isolated virtual environment in which Veeam Backup & Replication verifies VMs. In the
virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication starts VMs from the application group and the verified VM. The virtual
lab is used not only for the SureBackup verification procedure, but also for U-AIR, On-Demand Sandbox and
staged restore.
The virtual lab itself does not require that you provision extra resources for it. However, VMs running in the
virtual lab consume CPU and memory resources of the ESXi host where the virtual lab is deployed. All VM
changes that take place during recovery verification are written to redo log files. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication stores redo logs on the datastore selected in the virtual lab settings and removes
redo logs after the recovery process is complete.
The virtual lab is fully fenced off from the production environment. The network configuration of the virtual lab
mirrors the network configuration of the production environment. For example, if verified VMs and VMs from
the application group are located in two logical networks in the production environment, the virtual lab will also
have two networks. The networks in the virtual lab will be mapped to corresponding production networks.
VMs in isolated networks have the same IP addresses as in the production network. This lets VMs in the virtual
lab function just as if they function in the production environment.
Proxy Appliance
To enable communication between the production environment and isolated networks in the virtual lab,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses a proxy appliance. The proxy appliance is an auxiliary Linux -based VM that is
deployed on the ESXi host where the virtual lab is created. The proxy appliance VM is assigned an IP address
from the production network and placed to the dedicated virtual lab folder and resource pool on the ESXi host.
The proxy appliance is connected to the production network and to the isolated network, so that it has visibility
of the production environment and virtual lab. In essence, the proxy appliance acts as a gateway between the
two networks — it routes requests from the production environment to VMs in the virtual lab.
To connect to isolated networks, the proxy appliance uses network adapters. Veeam Backup & Replication adds
to the proxy appliance one network adapter per every isolated network. For example, if there are two networks
in the virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication will add two network adapters to the proxy appliance. The
network adapter gets an IP address from the isolated network. Typically, this IP address is the same as the IP
address of the default gateway in the corresponding production network.
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The proxy appliance is an optional component for recovery verification. Technically, you can create a virtual lab
without the proxy appliance. However, in this case, you will not be able to perform automatic recovery
verification of VMs. VMs will be started from backups in the virtual lab; you will have to access them using the
VM console and perform necessary tests manually.
IP Masquerading
To let the traffic into the virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication uses masquerade IP addressing.
Every VM in the virtual lab has a masquerade IP address, along with the IP address from the production network.
The masquerade IP address resembles the IP address in the production network. For example, if the IP address
of a VM is 172.16.1.13, the masquerade IP address may be 172.18.1.13.
The masquerade IP address is an "entry point" to the VM in the virtual lab from the production environment.
When you want to access a specific VM in the virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication addresses it by its
masquerade IP address.
The rules that route requests to VMs in the virtual lab are specified in the routing table on the server from which
you want to access VMs in the virtual lab. The routing table can be updated on the following servers:
• Ba ckup server. Veeam Backup & Replication automatically creates the necessary static routes in the
routing table on the backup server at the moment you launch a SureBackup job and
Veeam Backup & Replication starts the virtual lab.
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• Client machine. If you want to provide your users with access to VMs in the virtual lab, you need to
manually update routing tables on their machines and add new static routes. For more information, see
Static IP Mapping.
The added static route destines the masquerade network traffic to the proxy appliance. The proxy appliance acts
as a NAT device: it resolves the masquerade IP address, replaces it with “real” IP address of the VM from the
production network and then directs the request to the necessary VM in the virtual lab. The static route is non-
persistent: when you power off the virtual lab, the route is removed from the routing table on the backup server
or client machine.
For example, when trying to access a VM with IP address 172.16.10.10 in the isolated network,
Veeam Backup & Replication sends a request to the masquerade IP address 172.18.10.10. According to the
routing rule added to the IP routing table, all requests are first sent to the next hop — the proxy appliance. The
proxy appliance performs address translation, substitutes the masquerade IP address with the IP address in the
isolated network, and forwards the request to the necessary VM in the isolated network — in this example, to
172.16.10.10.
Static IP Mapping
Sometimes it is necessary to provide many clients with access to a restored VM, which is especially the case for
user-directed application item-level recovery. For example, you may want to provide users with access to the
Microsoft Exchange Server started in the virtual lab using web -based access (like Outlook Web Access).
Technically, you may update the routing table on every client machine; however, this will demand a lot of
administrative effort.
For such situations, Veeam Backup & Replication lets you get access to a VM in the virtual lab directly from the
production environment. To access to a VM in the virtual lab, you must reserve a static IP address in the pool of
production IP addresses and map this IP address to the IP address of a VM in the virtual lab.
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The static IP address is assigned to the proxy appliance network adapter connected to the production network.
IP traffic directed to the specified static IP address is routed by the proxy appliance to the VM in the isolated
network.
For example, for a VM with IP address 192.168.1.20 in the isolated network, you ca n reserve IP address
192.168.1.99 (a free IP address from the production network). As a result, you will be able to use IP address
192.168.1.99 to access the VM in the virtual lab from the production side.
You can also register an alias record in the production DNS server for the reserved IP address. For example, you
can register backup.exchange.local as an alias for the IP address 192.168.1.99, and users will be able to access
Microsoft Exchange Server by this alias.
NOTE
You can also verify VM backups in Advanced Multi-Host virtual labs with DVS. This scenario can be helpful
if you want to test VM backups and VM replicas in the same virtual lab or want to add verified VM backups
and replicas to the same SureBackup job.
For more information, see Advanced Multi-Host Virtual Labs.
For the basic single-host virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication creates one virtual network that is mapped to
the corresponding production network. Veeam Backup & Replication automatically adds a number of new
objects on the ESXi host where the virtual lab is created:
• A resource pool
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• A VM folder
• A standard vSwitch
The vSwitch is only used by the VMs started in the virtual lab. There is no routing outside the virtual lab to other
networks.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically configures all settings for the basic single-host virtual lab. The proxy
appliance is also created and configured automatically on the ESXi host where the virtual lab is created.
In the advanced single-host virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication creates several virtual networks for the
virtual lab. The number of virtual networks corresponds to the number of production networks to which verified
VMs are connected. Networks in the virtual lab are mapped to production networks.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically adds a number of new VMware objects on the ESXi host where the
virtual lab is created:
• A resource pool
• A VM folder
• A standard vSwitch
The vSwitch is only used by the VMs started in the virtual lab. There is no routing outside the virtual lab to other
networks.
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When you create an advanced single-host virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication configures basic settings for
networks that are created in the virtual lab. You need to review these settings and manually adjust them.
• A valid license for Enterprise edition of Veeam Backup & Replication must be installed on the backup
server.
• The ESXi host on which you plan to deploy a virtual lab must have a VMkernel interface. Otherwise the
vPower NFS datastore will not be mounted on the ESXi host. For more information, see Veeam vPower
NFS Service.
• If you plan to use the advanced multi-host networking mode for VM replicas verification, you must
configure a DVS beforehand. For more information, see Advanced Multi-Host Virtual Labs.
NOTE
Starting from Veeam Backup & Replication 12, you can verify Microsoft Hyper-V backups and Veeam Agent
backups using VMware vSphere virtual lab. To learn about SureBackup limitations for Veeam Agent
backups, see Veeam Agent Management Guide.
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Step 1. Launch New Virtual Lab Wizard
To launch the New Virtual Lab wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select SureBackup. In the working area, click
Ad d Virtual Lab > VMware.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select Virtual Labs node under SureBackup
and click Ad d Virtual Lab > VMware vSphere.
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane right-click Virtual Labs under SureBackup and
select Ad d Virtual Lab > VMware vSphere.
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Step 2. Specify Virtual Lab Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the virtual lab.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created the virtual lab, date and time when the lab was created.
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Step 3. Select Host
At the Host step of the wizard, select an ESXi host on which the virtual lab must be created.
1. Click Choose.
2. Select an ESXi host on which the new virtual lab must be created. You can select a standalone ESXi host or
an ESXi host being part of a cluster or vCenter Server hierarchy.
3. For every new virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a dedicated folder and resource pool on the
ESXi host. By default, the folder and pool have the same name as the virtual lab . To change the name of
the folder and/or resource pool, click Configure. In the Destination Options window, enter the necessary
names.
IMP ORTANT
You cannot create resource pools in clusters with disabled DRS. If the target host is a part of such a cluster,
the Create a designated resource pool option will be disabled in the Destination Options window. For more
information, see this VMware KB article.
You cannot create folders on standalone ESXi hosts or ESXi hosts that are managed by the vCenter Severs
but are added to Veeam Backup & Replication as standalone hosts. To overcome this situation, add the
corresponding vCenter Server to Veeam Backup & Replication.
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Selecting an ESXi Host for VM Replicas Verification
When you select an ESXi host for the virtual lab where VM replicas will be verified, mind the location of verified
VM replicas and VM replicas added to the application group:
• If verified VM replicas and VM replicas from the application group are located on the same ESXi host, you
must select the ESXi host on which these VM replicas are registered. Verified VM replicas and VMs from
the application group will be started on the selected ESXi host. If the application group contains VMs
added from VM backups or storage snapshots, these VMs will also be started on the selected ESXi host.
For this type of virtual lab configuration, you need to choose one of single-host networking modes: Basic
single-host or Advanced single-host. For more information, see Selecting a Networking Mode.
• If verified VM replicas and/or VM replicas from the application group are located on different ESXi hosts,
you can select any ESXi host in your virtual environment. Veeam Backup & Replication will create the
virtual lab on the selected ESXi host. Verified VM replicas and VM replicas from the application group will
be started on ESXi hosts where they are registered and connected to the virtual lab with the help of
VMware DVS technology.
The ESXi host on which the virtual lab is created must meet the following requirements:
o The ESXi host must be located in the same datacenter where VM replicas are registered.
o The ESXi host must have enough CPU and RAM resources. If the application group contains VMs that
are started from backups or storage snapshots, these VMs will be star ted on the same ESXi host
where the virtual lab is located, which will require a lot of resources.
o For this type of virtual lab configuration, you must use the Advanced multi-host networking mode.
For more information, see Selecting a Networking Mode.
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Step 4. Select Datastore
At the Da tastore step of the wizard, you can select where redo logs for verified VMs must be stored. Redo logs
are auxiliary files used to keep changes that take place when VMs run in the virtual lab. B y default, redo logs are
stored on the vPower NFS server. However, you can store redo logs on any datastore in the virtual environment.
Redirecting redo logs improves verification performance. As soon as a recovery verification job completes,
Veeam Backup & Replication deletes redo logs.
If you perform staged restore, the Red irect write cache option allows you to select a datastore where VM
delta files will be stored. Delta files are auxiliary files that keep changes made to a VM during script
execution. For more information, see Staged Restore.
IMP ORTANT
If disks of verified VMs are greater than 2 TB, you must not place redo logs on a VSAN datastore.
Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to create snapshots for verified VMs. For more
information, see VMware Docs.
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Step 5. Set Up Proxy Appliance
At the P roxy step of the wizard, configure proxy appliance settings.
1. Select the Use p roxy appliance in this virt ual lab check box to enable automatic recovery verification of
VMs. The proxy appliance acts as a gateway that provides access from the backup server to VMs in the
virtual lab. If you do not select this check box, during recovery verification Veeam Backup & Replication
will only start VMs in the virtual lab and perform the heartbeat test for VMs. You will have to manually
test VMs or perform manual item-level restore over the VM console.
2. By default, the proxy appliance is placed on a datastore with the maximum amount of free space. The
default name of the proxy appliance is the virtual lab name that you have specified at the Na me step of
the wizard. To change a name or a datastore for the proxy appliance, click E d it and specify a new name or
choose a different datastore.
3. Click Configure and select a production network in which the proxy appliance will be created. Select IPv4
or IPv6 or use both. Specify an IP address for the proxy appliance in the production network and settings
of the DNS server to be used. You can choose to automatically obtain an IP address for the backup proxy
and DNS server settings or set them manually.
IMP ORTANT
• If you assign to the proxy appliance an IP address from the same network where the backup server is
located, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically add a new route to the routing table on the
backup server. If you assign to the proxy appliance an IP address from a different network, you will
have to manually add a new route to the routing table on the router in the production network. If
you do not add a new route, tests and application scripts will fail and you will not be able to access
VMs in isolated networks.
• When Veeam Backup & Replication starts a virtual lab, it verifies if the proxy appliance is available
by sending a ping request to it. If the corresponding route is not added to the routing table, the
SureBackup job will fail.
4. By default, VMs in the virtual lab work in the isolated environment and do not have access to internet. If
you want to let VMs in the virtual lab access the internet, select the Allow proxy appliance to act as
internet proxy for virtual machines in this lab check box. In the P ort field, specify a port for HTTP traffic.
By default, port 8080 is used. In the P roduction proxy field, you can optionally specify an IP address or a
fully qualified domain name of an internet-facing proxy server that VMs must use to access internet.
5. On every VM that you plan to start in the virtual lab, adjust proxy settings in the internet opt ions. To do
this, on the VM open Internet Options > Connections > LAN Settings > P roxy server and specify an IP
address of the proxy appliance on the isolated network and port number.
NOTE
When you allow the proxy appliance to act as an internet proxy, you enable the HTTP(S) internet access for
VMs in the virtual lab. The proxy appliance does not proxy other protocols (such as ICMP protocol used for
ping tests) for VMs in the virtual lab.
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Step 6. Select Networking Mode
At the Networking step of the wizard, select the type of network settings configuration. The virtual lab
configuration depends on objects that you plan to verify in the virtual lab:
• Backups
• Replicas
• Ba sic single-host. This networking mode is recommended if all VMs that you plan to verify, VMs from the
application group and the backup server are located in the same production network. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically define all networking settings for the virtual lab.
• Ad vanced single -host. This networking mode is recommended if VMs that you plan to verify and/or VMs
from the application group are located in different networks. In this case, you will have to manually define
settings for isolated networks in the virtual lab.
If you select the Ad vanced single-host option, the New Virtual Lab wizard will include additional steps for
customizing network settings.
NOTE
You can also verify VM backups in Advanced Multi-Host virtual labs with DVS. This scenario can be helpful
if you want to test VM backups and replicas in the same virtual lab or want to add verified VM backups and
replicas to the same SureBackup job.
For more information, see Advanced Multi-Host Virtual Labs.
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Selecting Networking Mode for Verifying Replicas
Veeam Backup & Replication offers three networking modes for the virtual lab in which VM replicas are verified:
• Ba sic single-host. This type of networking is recommended if VM replicas that you plan to verify are
located on the same ESXi host and are connected to the same production network. The backup server
must also be located in this network. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically define all
networking settings for the virtual lab.
• Ad vanced single -host. This type of networking is recommended if VM replicas that you plan to verify are
located on the same ESXi host but connected to different networks. In this case, you will have to manually
define settings for isolated networks in the virtual lab.
• Ad vanced multi-host. This type of networking is recommended if VM replicas that you plan to verify are
located on the different ESXi hosts. For multi-host configuration of the virtual lab,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses VMware DVS technology.
If you select the Ad vanced multi-host option, click Choose and select the necessary DVS in your virtual
environment. Note that Veeam Backup & Replication does not configure a DVS automatically: you must
configure it beforehand.
If the Ad vanced single-host or Ad vanced multi-host option is selected, the New Virtual Lab wizard will include
additional steps for customizing network settings.
IMP ORTANT
For every isolated network in the virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication adds a new port group to the
DVS. If you use a production DVS, you must isolate port groups created with Veeam Backup & Replication
from the production environment. For more information, see Isolated Networks on DVS.
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Selecting Network Mode for Verifying VMs on Storage
Snapshots
For verifying VMs from storage snapshots, you can select any networking mode.
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Step 7. Create Isolated Networks
The Isolated Networks step of the wizard is available if you have selected the advanced networking option at
the Networking step of the wizard.
At the Isolated Networks step of the wizard, you must configure isolated networks to which verified VMs and
VMs from the application group will be connected and map these networks to production networks where
original VMs are located.
To add a network:
1. Click Ad d .
2. From the P roduction network list, select a production network in which a VM from the application group
or verified VM resides.
3. In the Isolated network field, specify a name for the isolated network that must be mapped to the
selected production network. You can specify a new name to create a new isolated network or select the
existing isolated network from the drop-down list.
4. In the VLAN ID field, enter an ID for the created network. In the advanced multi-host virtual lab, VLAN IDs
help ensure that the created network is isolated from the production environment. Alternatively, you can
manually connect the DVS that you plan to use to the isolated network. For more information, see
Advanced Multi-Host Virtual Lab.
IMP ORTANT
• You can map several production networks to the same isolated network. The production networks
that you plan to map must have the same network masks and pools of IP addresses.
• You cannot map one production network to several isolated networks.
• You can assign only up to 9 isolated networks per virtual lab.
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Step 8. Specify Network Settings
The Network Settings step of the wizard is available if you have selected the advanced networking option at the
Networking step of the wizard.
At the Network Settings step of the wizard, you must specify settings for every created isolated network and
define how production networks map to isolated networks in the virtual lab.
Communication between production networks and isolated networks is carried out through vNIC adapters on the
proxy appliance. A new vNIC adapter must be added for every isolated network. If you are planning to use IPv4
and IPv6 in your virtual lab, you must create a vNIC for each protocol.
2. If you have both IPv4 and IPv6 enabled, select the required IP address.
3. Select a network to which the vNIC adapter must be connected. Specify an IP address that the proxy
appliance must have in the isolated network and a subnet mask for this isolated network. For IPv6, specify
a prefix length instead of a subnet mask. Typically, the IP address set for the proxy appliance coincides
with the IP address of the gateway in the corresponding production network.
4. After you specify the IP address, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically configure a masquerade
IP address for accessing VMs in the virtual lab from the prod uction network. You can change the
masquerade network IP address if necessary.
5. Select the E na ble DHCP service on this interface check box if you need to dynamically assign IP addresses
for machines. The assigned IP addresses belong to the current isolated network.
6. Click the DNS Servers button and specify settings of a virtualized DNS server if necessary. Click OK.
7. To enable communication between isolated networks, select the Route network traffic b etween vNICs
check box. Make sure that the IP address of the proxy appliance in the isolated network matches the IP
address of the gateway in the production network.
IMP ORTANT
• You cannot assign more than one vNIC to a single isolated network for each protocol.
• Network addresses specified for different vNIC adapters must belong to different networks. For
example, if the first network adapter has the 192.168.0.1 IP address and the network mask is
255.255.255.0, and the second one — 192.168.0.2 and the network mask is 255.255.255.0, such
configuration will not work. In this situation, you need to assign to the second adapter an IP address
from a different network, for example, 172.16.0.1.
• If you assign more than 1 network adapter (or IP address) to one production VM,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the predefined tests only to one of these IP addresses. For
more information on the predefined tests, see Predefined tests.
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Step 9. Specify Static IP Mapping Rules
The Sta tic Mapping step of the wizard is available if you have selected the advanced networking option at the
Networking step of the wizard.
At the Sta tic Mapping step of the wizard, you can specify static IP address mapping rules to make VMs in the
virtual lab accessible from any machine in the production network.
2. Click Ad d .
3. If you have both IPv4 and IPv6 enabled, select the required address mapping.
a. From the P roduction network drop-down list, select a production network in which a VM from the
application group or verified VM resides.
b. In the Isolated IP field, specify the IP address of the VM in the production network.
c. In the Access IP field, specify the IP address in the production network that you want to use to access
the VM in the virtual lab. You must use an IP address that is not allocated to any machine yet.
NOTE
It is recommended that you assign an access IP from the same subnet where the proxy appliance resides. I n
the opposite case, you will have to configure routing rules for the access IP manually.
For example, a DNS server that you plan to start in the virtual lab has IP address 172.17.53.15 in the production
network. To set static mapping for the DNS server:
1. In the Isolated IP field, you must define its production IP address — 172.17.53.15.
2. In the Access IP field, you must define any free IP address from the production network, for example,
172.17.53.162.
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After a virtual lab is created and VMs are started in the virtual lab, you will be able to access the DNS server in
the virtual lab from the production environment by IP address 172.17.53.162.
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Step 10. Apply Parameters
At the Rea dy to Apply step of the wizard, complete the procedure of virtual lab configuration.
3. At the last step of the wizard, click Finish to exit the wizard.
2. In the inventory pane, select Virtual Labs under SureBackup and click Connect Virtual Lab > VMware on
the ribbon or right-click Virtual Labs and select Connect Virtual Lab > VMware.
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3. Select the virtual lab and click Connect. To quickly find a virtual lab, use the search field at the bottom of
the Select Virtual Lab window: enter a virtual lab name or a part of it in the field below and press [Enter]
on the keyboard.
Always use Veeam Backup & Replication to modify or delete a virtual lab. If you edit virtual lab settings or
delete any of its components from outside, for example, in vSphere Client, the lab will be corrupted and its
component such as the created vSwitch, resource pool will remain in the virtual infrastructure.
3. In the working area, select a virtual lab and click E d it Virtual Lab on the ribbon or right-click the virtual lab
and select P roperties.
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3. In the working area, select a virtual lab and click Remove Virtual Lab on the ribbon or right-click the
virtual lab and select Delete.
4. If you want to remove virtual lab object from the virtual infrastructure, in the displayed window select the
Remove virtual lab objects from host check box. If you do not enable this option,
Veeam Backup & Replication will disconnect the virtual lab from the backup server. You will be able to
connect to this virtual lab later.
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SureBackup Job
A SureBackup job is a task for recovery verification. The SureBackup job aggregates all settings and policies of
the recovery verification task such as application group and virtual lab to be used, machine backups that must
be verified in the virtual lab, and so on. You can run the SureBackup job manually or schedule it to run
automatically.
When a SureBackup job runs, Veeam Backup & Replication first creates an environment for recovery verification:
2. In the virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication starts machines from the application group in the required
order. Machines from the application group remain running until verified machines (machines from the
linked job) are booted from backups and tested.
If Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a valid restore point for any of machines from the application
group, the SureBackup job fails.
3. When the virtual lab is ready, Veeam Backup & Replication starts verified machines to the necessary
restore point and, depending on the job settings, verifies them one by one or creates several streams and
verifies a number of machines simultaneously.
If Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a valid restore point for any of verified machines, verification
of this machine fails, but the job continues to run.
By default, you can start and test up to three machines at the same time. You can also increase the number of
machines to be started and tested simultaneously. Keep in mind that if these machines are resource demanding,
performance of the SureBackup job as well as performance of the ESXi host on which the virtual lab resides may
decrease.
Once the verification process is complete, machines from the application group are powered off. Optionally, you
can leave machines from the application group running to perform manual verification or enable user-directed
application item-level recovery.
In some cases, the SureBackup job schedule may overlap the schedule of the backup job linked to it. The backup
file may be locked by the backup job and the SureBackup job will be unable to verify such backup. In this
situation, Veeam Backup & Replication will not start the SureBackup job until the corresponding backup job is
over.
To overcome the situation of job overlapping, you may chain the backup and SureBackup jobs or define the
timeout period for the SureBackup job. For more information, see Specifying Job Schedule.
1. Getting virtual lab configuration. Veeam Backup & Replication gets information about configuration of the
virtual lab where verified VMs must be started.
2. Sta rting virtual lab routing engine . Veeam Backup & Replication starts a proxy appliance used as a
gateway to provide access to the virtual lab.
3. P erforming malware scan. If the recovery verification process includes malware scan,
Veeam Backup & Replication scans VM data with antivirus software.
After the malware scan is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication registers the VM on the selected ESXi
host, powers it on, and runs recovery verification tests for this VM.
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Veeam Backup & Replication verifies VMs sequentially — one after another. For example, when the
malware scan and recovery verification tests for VM A complete, Veeam Backup & Replication verifies VM
B, and so on.
4. P ub lishing. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a vPower NFS datastore with a VM backup and registers it
on the selected ESXi server. Veeam Backup & Replication does not deploy the whole VM from the backup
file, it deploys VM configuration files only. Virtual disks are deployed per force and per required data
blocks.
5. Reconfiguring. Veeam Backup & Replication updates configuration files for VMs that must be started in
the isolated network.
6. Reg istering. Veeam Backup & Replication registers the verified VM on the selected ESXi host.
7. Configuring DC. If a verified VM has the Domain Controller or Global Catalog role, the VM is reconfigured.
8. P owering on. Veeam Backup & Replication powers on the verified VM in the isolated network.
9. P erforming heartbeat test . Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the VMware Tools heartbeat
signal (green or yellow) is coming from the VM or not. If the VM has no VMware Tools, the test is not
performed, and a notification is written to the session details.
10. Running p ing tests. Veeam Backup & Replication checks if the VM responds to the ping requests or not. If
the VM has no NICs and mapped networks for them and/or has no VMware Tools installed, the ping test is
not performed, and a notification is written to the session details.
11. Ap p lication initialization. Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the applications installed in the VM, for
example, Microsoft SQL Server, to start. The application initialization period is defined in settings of the
SureBackup job and by default equals to 120 sec. Depending on the software installed in a VM, the
application initialization process may require more time than specified in the job settings. If applications
installed in a VM are not initialized within the specified period of time, test scripts can be completed with
errors. If such an error situation occurs, you need to increase the Ap p lication initialization timeout value
and start the job once again.
12. Running test scripts. Veeam Backup & Replication runs scripts to test whether the application installed in
the VM is working correctly or not. If the VM has no VMware Tools installed and/or there are no NICs and
mapped networks for them, Veeam Backup & Replication skips tests that use the %vm_ip% and
%vm_fqdn% variables as the IP address and FQDN of the VM cannot be determined.
Test results are written to the job session details. To define whether the script is completed successfully
or not, Veeam Backup & Replication uses return codes. If the return code is equal to 0, the script is
considered to complete successfully. Other values in the return code mean that the script failed.
13. P owering off. After all tests were performed, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the verified VM.
14. Unregistering. Veeam Backup & Replication unregisters the verified VM on the selected ESXi host.
15. Clearing redo logs. Veeam Backup & Replication deletes redo logs from the datastore in the production
environment. Redo logs store changes made to the VM while it is running from the backup file.
16. Unp ublishing. Veeam Backup & Replication unpublishes the content of the backup file on the ESXi host.
17. Running backup validation test. After a VM was verified, powered off and unpublished,
Veeam Backup & Replication runs a CRC check to verify the VM backup at the file level and make sure that
this file is not corrupted.
18. Stopping virtual lab engine. Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the proxy appliance in the virtual lab.
19. Deleting network routes. Veeam Backup & Replication deletes added network routes from the routing
table on the backup server.
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Stabilization Algorithm
To be able to perform tests for a verified VM without errors, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to know that
the VM is ready for testing. To determine this, Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the VM to reach a
stabilization point: that is, waits for the VM to boot completely and report it is ready for tests. After the
stabilization point has been established, Veeam Backup & Replication can start performing heartbeat tests, ping
tests and running test scripts against the VM.
Veeam Backup & Replication establishes the stabilization point with the help of VMware parameters that it gets
from the VM. Depending on the VM configuration, it uses one of three algorithms to do that:
• Sta bilization by IP. This algorithm is used if the VM has VMware Tools installed, there are NICs and
mapped networks for these NICs. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication waits for an IP address of the
VM for mapped networks that is sent by VMware Tools running in the VM. The sent IP address must be
valid and must not change for a specific period of time. For more information, see Recovery Verification
Tests.
• Sta bilization by heartbeat . This algorithm is used if the VM has VMware Tools installed but there are no
vNICs and mapped networks for them. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication waits for a green or
yellow heartbeat signal from the VM. The signal is sent by VMware Tools running in the VM.
• Sta bilization by Maximum allowed b oot time. This algorithm is used if the VM has neither VMware Tools
installed, nor NICs and mapped networks for them. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the
time specified in the Ma x imum a llowed boot time field, which is considered to be a stabilization period for
the VM. Once this time interval is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication considers that the VM runs
successfully and it is ready for testing.
When the stabilization point has been established, Veeam Backup & Replication runs ping, heartbeat tests and
performs test scripts against the verified VM.
The stabilization process cannot exceed the time specified in the Ma x imum allowed boot time field. For this
reason, you should be careful when specifying this value. Typically, a VM started by a SureBackup job requires
more time to boot than a VM started in the production environment. If the stabilization point cannot be
determined within the Ma x imum allowed boot time, the recovery verification process is finished with the
timeout error. When such an error occurs, you need to increase the Ma ximum allowed boot time value and start
the job again.
• A valid Veeam Universal License of Veeam Backup & Replication must be installed on the backup server.
When using a legacy socket-based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
• All applications and services on which verified machines are dependent must be virtualized in your
environment.
• You must create or connect a virtual lab. For more information, see sections Creating Virtual Lab and
Connecting to Existing Virtual Lab.
• If you plan to scan machine data for malware, check requirements and limitations.
• If you plan to verify machines with a ping test, the firewall on tested machines must allow ping requests.
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• If you plan to verify machines with a heartbeat test, VMware Tools must be installed in tested machines.
• [For storage snapshots] The storage system must be added to the backup infrastructure.
• Verified VM replicas must be in the Ready state. If a VM replica is in the Failover or Failback state, you will
not be able to verify it with the SureBackup job.
• You cannot link to SureBackup job VMs from backups of VMware Cloud Director VMs, backups created
with backup copy jobs and backups stored in cloud backup repositories.
• The source backup or replication job has a higher priority than the SureBackup job. If the source backup or
replication job starts when the SureBackup job is running, and this job is about to modify the restore point
from which the VM is started, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically powers off VMs in the virtual lab
and completes the SureBackup job.
• The Microsoft SQL Server Checker script runs on the backup server side. For this reason, Named Pipes or
TCP/IP connections must be enabled for the Microsoft SQL Server running in the virtual lab. For more
information, see Microsoft Docs.
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Step 1. Launch New Sure Backup Job Wizard
To launch the New SureBackup Job wizard, do either of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view, in the inventory pane select SureBackup. In the working area, click
Ad d SureBackup Job.
• Open the Home view. On the Home tab, click SureBackup Job on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, right-click SureBackup under Job s and select SureBackup.
You can use this method if you already have at least one SureBackup job. If there are no SureBackup jobs,
the SureBackup node will not be displayed in the inventory pane. In this case, you can right-click Job s in
the inventory pane and select SureBackup.
NOTE
SureBackup UI elements become available in the Veeam Backup & Replication console only after you create
or connect a virtual lab. For more information, see sections Creating Virtual Lab and Connecting to Existing
Virtual Lab.
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the SureBackup job.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created the job, date and time when the job was created.
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Step 3. Select Virtual Lab
At the Virtual Lab step of the wizard, select a virtual lab that you want to use for recovery verification.
1. From the Virtual Lab list, select a virtual lab. The list contains all virtual labs that are created or connected
to the backup server.
2. In the Virtual lab info section, review information about the selected virtual lab.
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Step 4. Select Application Group
At the Ap p lication Group step of the wizard, select an application group that you want to use for recovery
verification.
You can select an application group or skip this step. If the application group is not selected, you must link at
least one backup or replication job to the SureBackup job at the Linked Jobs step of the wizard. In this case,
when the SureBackup job starts, Veeam Backup & Replication will only run machines from the linked job in the
virtual lab and verify these machines.
1. From the Ap p lication group list, select an application group. The list contains all application groups that
are created on the backup server.
2. In the Ap p lication group info list, refer to the Source Status column to make sure that backups and
replicas for VMs in the application group are created.
3. To leave machines from the application group running after the SureBackup job finishes, select the Keep
the a pplication group running after the job completes check box. With this option enabled, the lab will not
be powered off when the SureBackup job completes, and you will be able to perform application item -
level restore (U-AIR) and manually test machines started in the virtual lab.
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Step 5. Link Backup or Replication Job
At the Link ed Jobs step of the wizard, select backup or replication jobs with machines that you want to verify
with the SureBackup job.
You can link a backup or replication job to the SureBackup job or skip this step. If you do not link a backup or
replication job, Veeam Backup & Replication will only start machines from the application group in the virtual
lab and verify them. You have an option not to link a backup or replication job to the SureBackup job only if you
have selected an application group at the Application Group step of the wizard.
2. Click Ad d .
4. In the P rocess simultaneously up to … machines field, specify the maximum number of machines (from a
linked job) that can be started at the same time. For example, if you select to start three machines at the
same time, Veeam Backup & Replication will create three streams — one stream per every verified
machine. All three machines will be tested together. But if you select to start one machine, then only one
machine will been tested and powered off, and the next machine will be started in the available stream.
After all machines are verified, machines from the application group will be powered off or will be left
running (if the Keep the application group running after the job completes option has been enabled at the
Application Group step of the wizard).
To remove a backup or replication job from the list, select it and click Remove.
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Step 6. Specify Recovery Verification Options and Tests
You must specify verification options for every machine from the jobs linked to the SureBackup job:
If all machines in the linked job perform the same role, you can specify startup options and test settings for the
whole job in bulk. If machines have different roles, you can granularly specify startup options and test settings
for every machine in the job.
• To specify startup options and select tests for the whole job, select a job in the list and click E d it on the
right.
• To specify startup options and select tests for every machine in the job separately, select a job in the list
and click Ad vanced on the right. Click Ad d and in the Ad d Objects window select a machine. Select the
added machine in the list, click E d it and specify settings as described below.
If you use tags to categorize virtual infrastructure objects, check limitations for VM tags. For more
information, see VM Tags.
IMP ORTANT
If you specify startup options and tests individually for every machine, Veeam Backup & Replication will
apply these options and tests only. Options and tests specified at the level of the SureBackup job will be
ignored for this machine.
Role Settings
On the Role tab, select the role that the machine performs. Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following
predefined roles for machines:
• DNS Server
• Global Catalog
• Mail Server
• SQL Server
• Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365 (machine on which Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365 is installed)
• Web Server
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Machine roles are described in XML files stored in the %ProgramFiles%\Veeam\Backup and
Replication\Backup\SbRoles folder. You can add your own roles. To do this, you need to create a new XML file
and specify role and test scripts settings in it. For more information, see Creating XML files with Machine Roles
Description.
After you select the necessary role, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically configure startup options
and assign predefined test scripts for the chosen role. You can use these settings or specify custom settings on
the Sta rtup Options and Test Scripts tabs.
To verify machines that perform roles other than those specified in the list, you will have to manually configure
startup options and specify test scripts that must be run for these machines.
VM Startup Settings
To configure VM startup settings:
1. In the Verification Options window, click the Sta rtup Options tab.
2. In the Memory section, specify the amount of memory that you want to pre-allocate to the VM when this
VM starts. The amount of pre-allocated memory is defined in percent. The percentage rate is calculated
based on the system memory level available for the production VM. For example, if 1024 MB of RAM is
allocated to the VM in the production environment and you specify 80% as a memory rate, 820 MB of
RAM will be allocated to the verified VM on startup.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not allow you to change VM CPU manually, it does this automatically. If
the VM has more CPU than the host can provide, Veeam Backup & Replication scales down the CPU of the
VM.
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3. In the Sta rtup time section, specify the allowed boot time for the VM and timeout to initialize applications
on the VM.
Be careful when specifying the Ma x imum allowed boot time value. Typically, a VM started by a
SureBackup job requires more time to boot than a VM started in the production environment. If a VM fails
to be initialized within the specified interval of time, the recovery verification process fails with the
timeout error. If such error occurs, you need to increase the Ma x imum a llowed boot time value and run
the SureBackup job again.
4. In the Boot verification section, specify when the VM is considered to be successfully booted:
o VM heartbeat is present. If you enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform a
heartbeat test for the verified VM.
o VM responds to ping on any network interface. If you enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication
will perform a ping test for the verified VM.
o Automatically disable Windows Firewall. If you select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will
disable Windows Firewall for the the verified VM.
If you enable both options, Veeam Backup & Replication will require that both tests are completed
successfully: heartbeat test and ping test.
IMP ORTANT
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication performs a heartbeat test only if a machine has VMware Tools installed. If
VMware Tools are not installed, the machine will be started but the test will not be performed.
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Test Script Settings
When you select a machine role, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically assigns a predefined script that
must be run to verify applications inside the machine. If you want to verify a machine that has some other role
not listed on the Role tab, do the following:
2. Click Ad d .
3. In the Test Scripts window, select Use the following test script.
5. In the P a th field, define a path to an executable script file that must be run to verify the machine. You can
do one of the following:
o If you have your own custom script, define a path to it in the P a th field.
o If you do not have a custom script, you can use Veeam standard utility,
Veeam.Backup.ConnectionTester.exe, that probes application communication ports. The utility
is located in the installation folder of Veeam Backup & Replication:
%ProgramFiles%\Veeam\Backup and
Replication\Backup\Veeam.Backup.ConnectionTester.exe. Specify this path in the P a th
field.
6. In the Arg uments field, specify an IP address of the verified machine and the port that you want to probe
(if the selected test probes the port). You can use the %vm_ip% variable to define the machine IP address
or the %vm_fqdn% variable to define the machine FQDN.
For Microsoft SQL Server, you can also specify a path to the log file in the %log_path% argument. For
more information, see Backup Recovery Verification Tests.
To edit test settings, select the test in the list and click E d it. To delete a test, select it in the list and click
Remove.
NOTE
If a VM performs several roles and runs a number of applications, you can add several verification scripts to
verify work of these applications. It is recommended that you specify the maximum startup timeout value
and allocate the greatest amount of memory for such VMs.
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Credentials Settings
In the Credentials tab, specify credentials to authenticate in the machine where you need to run the script.
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2. From the Credentials list, select credentials for the account under which you want to run the script.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to
add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
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Step 7. Specify Additional Job Settings
On the Settings step of the wizard, specify additional settings for the SureBackup job:
1. [For VM backups only] If you want to validate the backup file with a CRC check and make sure that the file
is not corrupted, select the Va lidate entire virtual disk contents check box. You can optionally exclude
VMs being a part of the application group from this test. To do this, select the Sk ip validation for
a p plication group VMs check box. For more information, see Recovery Verification Tests.
2. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to scan VM data with antivirus software, select the Sca n the
selected restore p oint for malware check box. For more information, see Secure Restore.
o if you want the antivirus software to continue scanning VM data after the first malware is found,
select the Sca n the entire image check box. For information on how to view results of the malware
scan, see Viewing Recovery Verification Job Statistics.
o If you do not want to scan VMs from the application group, select the Sk ip application group machines
from malware scan check box. In this case, the antivirus will only scan VMs from linked jobs.
Veeam Backup & Replication scans VM data with antivirus before running verification tests. Mind that the
SureBackup job may take considerable time to complete if you are verifying backups of large sized VMs.
NOTE
If you enable the Keep the application group running after the job completes option at the Ap p lication
Group step of the wizard, the Sk ip validation for application group VMs option will be automatically
enabled.
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To configure notifications settings, click Configure and specify notification settings:
1. If you want to receive SNMP notifications, select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box.
SNMP notifications will be sent only if you configure global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication
and on recipient’s computer. For more information, see Specifying SNMP Settings.
2. If you want to receive notifications by email, select the Send email notifications to the following recipients
check box. In the field below, specify recipient’s email address. You can enter several addresses separated
by a semicolon.
Email notifications will be sent only if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Specifying Email Notification Settings.
3. If you want to receive notifications only if the job finishes with specific states, select the required check
boxes. For example, Notify on warning and Notify on error. If you want to receive all notifications, select
all the check boxes.
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Step 8. Specify Job Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, select to manually run the SureBackup job or schedule the job at specific
time, for example, after the corresponding backup or replication job completes.
1. To define a job schedule, select the Run the job automatically check box. If this check box is not selected,
you will have to manually start the job to perform recovery verification.
o Da ily at to start the job at specific time every day, on week days or on specific days.
NOTE
When you configure the job schedule, keep in mind possible date and time changes (for
example, related to daylight saving time transition).
o After this job to chain the job. Typically, a SureBackup job should run after the linked backup or
replication job completes. In this case, the SureBackup job will verify the VM backup or VM replica
created by the source backup or replication job.
To create a chain of jobs, you must define the time schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest
of the jobs in the chain, at the Schedule step of the wizard, select the After this job option and choose
the preceding job from the list.
3. In some cases, the linked backup or replication job may not complete until the SureBackup job starts. If
Veeam Backup & Replication finds out that the linked job is still running, the SureBackup job will fail to
start. To overcome this situation, select the If some linked backup jobs are still running, wait up to <N>
minutes check box and specify the necessary time period in the field on the right. If the linked job is still
running, Veeam Backup & Replication will wait for the defined period of time and check the linked job
after this period elapses.
o If the linked job is finished within the specified period, the SureBackup job will start.
o If the linked job is still running, the SureBackup job will not start.
NOTE
The After this job function will only start a job if the first job in the chain is started automatically by
schedule. If the first job is started manually, jobs chained to it will not be started.
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Step 9. Review Job Summary and Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of SureBackup job configuration.
2. If you want to start the job right after you finish working with the wizard, select the Run the job when I
click Finish check box.
3. Click Finish to save the job settings and close the wizard.
3. In the working area, select the SureBackup job and click Sta rt on the ribbon. You can also right-click the
SureBackup job and select Sta rt. Veeam Backup & Replication will start VMs in the application group and
verified VMs from the latest restore point and perform necessary tests for them.
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3. In the working area, select the SureBackup job and click Sta rt to on the ribbon. You can also right-click the
SureBackup job and select Sta rt to.
4. In the Restore Point window, select an approximate date of the restore point creation.
Veeam Backup & Replication will pick the most recent restore point prior to the selected day and start
VMs from the application group and verified VMs from this restore point.
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3. In the working area, select the SureBackup job and click Stop on the ribbon. You can also right-click the
SureBackup job and select Stop .
3. In the working area, right-click a recovery verification job and select Sta tistics. You can also double-click
the job in the list.
The job session window displays statistics for all VMs that are started during the SureBackup job: VMs from the
application group in the specified order and VMs from linked jobs. For your convenience, these VMs are marked
with different icons.
After the verified VM is powered on, its name is displayed as a hyperlink. You can click the link to open the VM
console to see what is happening inside the VM or perform manual testing.
If some VM fails to be verified automatically, you can start it manually when this VM is powered off. To start a
VM, right-click the VM in the list and select Sta rt. If the application group has already been powered off by that
time, it will be started again. After that, you can open the VM console and perform verification and testing
manually.
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If you enabled malware scan at the Settings step of the SureBackup job wizard, you can view the detailed
logging of the scan process. To view logs, click the Sca n Log button that will appear at the bottom of the job
session window after the scan is complete.
The SureBackup job report contains data on all sessions initiated for a specific job. To generate a SureBackup job
report:
3. In the working area, select the SureBackup job and click Rep ort on the ribbon. You can also right-click the
SureBackup job and select Rep ort.
The session report contains data on a single job session. To generate a session report:
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3. In the working area, select the session and click Rep ort on the ribbon. You can also right-click the session
and select Rep ort.
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XML Files with Machine Roles Description
Machine roles that you can assign to verified machines and machines from the application group are descr ibed in
XML files. These XML files are stored in the %ProgramFiles%\Veeam\Backup and
Replication\Backup\SbRoles folder on the backup server.
To add a new role, you must create a new XML file and save it to the SbRoles subfolder on the backup server. Do
not save the XML file on the machine where the Veeam Backup & Replication console is installed — this will not
affect the list of roles in Veeam Backup & Replication.
<SbRoleOptions>
<Role>
<SbRole>
<Id>4CDC7CC4-A906-4de2-979B-E5F74C44832F</Id>
<Name>Web Server</Name>
</SbRole>
</Role>
<Options>
<SbVerificationOptions>
<ActualMemoryPercent>100</ActualMemoryPercent>
<MaxBootTimeoutSec>300</MaxBootTimeoutSec>
<AppInitDelaySec>120</AppInitDelaySec>
<TestScripts>
<TestScripts>
<TestScript>
<Name>Web Server</Name>
<Type>Predefined</Type>
<TestScriptFilePath>Veeam.Backup.ConnectionTester.exe</TestScriptFilePath>
<Arguments>%vm_ip% 80</Arguments>
</TestScript>
</TestScripts>
</TestScripts>
<HeartbeatEnabled>True</HeartbeatEnabled>
<PingEnabled>True</PingEnabled>
</SbVerificationOptions>
</Options>
</SbRoleOptions>
The XML file with the role description contains the following tags and parameters:
Ta g Required/ Description
Op tional
< Role> Required Parent tag for a role assigned to a machine. <SbRole>, <Id> and
<Name> are children of this tag.
< Sb Role> Required Encapsulates basic information for a machine role: ID and name.
< Na me> Required Name of a machine role. The machine role name is displayed in
the roles list on the Role tab.
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Ta g Required/ Description
Op tional
< Op tions> Required Parent tag for startup and test script options to be used for the
defined role. <SbVerificationOptions>,
<ActualMemoryPercent>, <MaxBootTimeoutSec>,
<AppInitDelaySec>, <TestScripts>, <Name>, <Type>,
<TestScriptFilePath>, <Arguments>, <HeartbeatEnabled>,
<PingEnabled > are children of this tag.
< ActualMemoryPercent> Optional Percent of the original memory level that must be pre-allocated
to a verified machine on the system boot.
< Ap pInitDelaySec> Optional Duration of time for which Veeam Backup & Replication must
wait after the machine is successfully booted in the virtual lab.
After this time elapses, Veeam Backup & Replication will run
test scripts. Time is specified in seconds.
< TestScripts> Optional Encapsulates test script data for a machine role.
< Na me> Optional Name of a machine role. The machine role name is displayed on
the Test Scripts tab.
< TestScriptFilePath> Optional Path to an executable file of the test script to be performed. The
path can be absolute or relative.
< Arguments> Optional Arguments to be passed to the script. You can use the following
variables:
or
%vm_fqdn% — a fully qualified domain name of a verified
machine.
• %log_path% — path to a log file to which verification
results are stored.
< HeartbeatEnabled> Required Must a heartbeat test be enabled for this machine role: True or
False.
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Ta g Required/ Description
Op tional
< P ingEnabled> Required Must a ping test be enabled for this machine role: True or False.
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Manual Recovery Verification
Beside automatic recovery verification, you can perform manual verification of machine backups. Manual
verification can be performed with all editions of Veeam Backup & Replication.
Boot Test
To perform a machine boot test, perform Instant Recovery for the verified machine. Power on the machine but
do not connect the machine to the production network to avoid conflicts with the original machine.
Application Test
To perform an application test:
2. Use the Instant Recovery wizard to restore the verified machine. At the Rea dy to Apply step of the wizard,
clear the Connect VM to network check box.
The same procedure must be performed for all machines that run applications on which the verified machine is
dependent such as domain controller and DNS. All machines must be connected to the same isolated network
and started in the correct order: for example, DNS > domain controller > verified machine.
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SureReplica
To guarantee recoverability of your data, Veeam Backup & Replication complements the SureBackup recovery
verification technology with SureReplica.
SureReplica is in many respects similar to the SureBackup recovery verification. It lets you validate your disaster
recovery environment without impacting the production infrastructure. You can automatically verify every
created restore point of every VM replica and ensure that they are functioning as expected.
The SureReplica technology is not limited only to VM replica verification. Just like SureBackup, it provides the
following capabilities:
• On-Demand Sandbox: an isolated environment for testing VM replicas, training and troubleshooting
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How SureReplica Works
SureReplica is Veeam’s technology that lets you test a VM replica for recoverability. To ensure that the VM
replica is functioning properly, Veeam Backup & Replication performs its “live” verification.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically boots the VM replica from the necessary restore point in the isolated
environment, performs tests against the VM replica, powers it off and creates a report on the VM replica state.
The SureReplica technology does not require the vPower engine. A VM replica is essentially an exact copy of a
VM with a set of restore points. The VM replica data is stored in the raw decompressed format native to
VMware. Therefore, to start a VM replica in the virtual lab, you do not need to present its data via the vPower
NFS datastore to the ESXi host. Veeam Backup & Replication re-configures the VM replica settings for recovery
verification, connects the VM replica to the isolated virtual lab and powers it on.
As there is no need to publish the VM from the backup file, the SureReplica processing is typically faster than
SureBackup. Subsequently, the U-AIR and On-Demand Sandbox operations are faster, too.
During VM replica verification, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication triggers a VMware snapshot for a VM replica. The snapshot protects the VM
replica from changes while it is running. All changes made to the VM replica are written to the delta file.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication starts the VM replica in the virtual lab.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication performs tests against the verified VM replica.
4. When the verification process is over, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the delta file of the VM replica
snapshot, powers off the VM replica and creates a report on its state. The report is sent to the backup
administrator by email.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication verifies only VM replicas in the Ready state. If a VM replica is in the Failover or
Failback state, the verification process fails.
When Veeam Backup & Replication verifies the VM replica, it puts the VM replica to the SureBackup state.
You cannot perform failback and failover operations for a VM replica in the SureBackup state until recovery
verification or the U-AIR process is over and the VM replica returns to the Ready state.
1. Application group. During recovery verification, the VM replica is not started alone: it is started together
with VMs on which the VM replica is dependent. Starting a VM replica in conjunction with other VMs
enables full functionality of applications running inside the VM replica and lets you run these applications
just like in the production environment.
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2. Virtual lab. The virtual lab is the isolated virtual environment in which the VM replica and VMs from the
application group are started and tested.
3. SureBackup job. The SureBackup job is a task for VM replica verification process. You can run the
SureBackup job manually or schedule it to run automatically by schedule.
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Replica Recovery Verification Tests
To verify a VM replica, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the same tests as for VM backup verification,
except the backup validation test. You can run predefined tests or perform your own tests against VMs. The
predefined tests include the following ones:
• Heartbeat test
• Ping test
• Application test
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Application Group
You can add to the same application groups both VMs from backups and VMs from replicas. Keep in mind that
all VMs from the application group must have at least one valid restore point created by the time the
SureBackup job starts.
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Virtual Lab Configuration
Veeam Backup & Replication offers three types of the virtual lab configuration for VM replica verification:
• All VM replicas that you want to verify are registered on the same ESXi host.
• All VM replicas that you want to verify are connected to the same network.
IMP ORTANT
For this configuration type, the virtual lab must be created on the same ESXi host where VMs replicas are
located. If you create the virtual lab on some other ESXi host, the SureBackup job will fail.
For the basic single-host virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication creates one virtual network that is mapped to
the production network. Additionally, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically adds a number of new VMware
objects on the ESXi host where the virtual lab is created:
• A resource pool
• A VM folder
• A standard vSwitch
The vSwitch is only used by the VMs started in the virtual lab. There is no routing outside the virtual lab to other
networks.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically configures all settings for the basic single-host virtual lab. The proxy
appliance is also created and configured automatically and placed to the virtual lab folder and resource pool on
the ESXi host.
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Advanced Single-Host Virtual Labs
The advanced single-host virtual lab configuration can be used if your virtual environment is configured in the
following way:
• All VM replicas that you want to verify are located on the same ESXi host.
IMP ORTANT
For this configuration type, the virtual lab must be created on the same ESXi host where VMs replicas are
located. If you create the virtual lab on some other ESXi host, the SureBackup job will fail.
In the advanced single-host virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication creates several virtual networks. The
number of virtual networks corresponds to the number of production networks to which verified VM replicas are
connected. Networks in the virtual lab are mapped to corresponding production networks.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically adds a number of new VMware objects on the ESXi host where the
virtual lab is created:
• A resource pool
• A VM folder
• A standard vSwitch
The vSwitch is only used by the VMs started in the virtual lab. There is no routing outside the virtual lab to other
networks.
When you create an advanced single-host virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication configures basic settings for
networks that are created in the virtual lab. You need to review these settings and ma nually adjust them.
When you create or edit a virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new port group for each isolated
network in the virtual lab. All VMs in the isolated network are added to this port group. Such configuration helps
differentiate the traffic passing through the standard vSwitch to the isolated network in the virtual lab.
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However, the standard vSwitch has a restriction: it is “limited” to one ESXi host. A standard vSwitch is
configured on a specific ESXi host. The configuration of the standard vSwitch, such as information about port
groups, resides on the ESXi host where the vSwitch is configured. Other ESXi hosts in the virtual environment do
not have access to this information.
For this reason, the single-host configuration can only be used if all VM replicas are registered on the same ESXi
host. If attempt to verify VM replicas registered on different ESXi hosts in the single -host virtual lab, VMs from
different port groups will not be able to “see” each other and communicate with each other.
To overcome this limitation and verify VM replicas that are registered on different ESXi hosts, you can use
advanced multi-host virtual labs.
• VM replicas that you want to verify are located on different ESXi hosts.
• VM replicas that you want to verify are connected to one or several networks.
The advanced multi-host virtual lab leverages the VMware Distributed vSwitch (DVS) technology. For more
information, see VMware Docs.
When you configure an advanced multi-host virtual lab, you must select an ESXi host on which the proxy server
will be created and DVS on which Veeam Backup & Replication will create isolated networks.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not offer an option to automatically configure the DVS. The DVS must be
preconfigured in your virtual environment.
IMP ORTANT
DVS is limited to one datacenter. For this reason, all verified VM replicas and VM replicas from the
application group must belong to the same datacenter. If VM replicas belong to different datacenters, you
will be able to start them in the virtual lab but Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to
automatically verify them.
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Isolated Networks on DVS
For every isolated network in the virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication adds a new DVS port group to the
DVS. The added port group is named after the isolated network.
The port groups created on the DVS must be isolated from the production environment. To isolate port groups,
you can use one of the following methods:
1. Connect DVS uplinks to the isolated network. You can link the DVS that you plan to use for recovery
verification to an external isolated network using uplink adapters. This operation must be performed
manually by the backup administrator.
2. Use VLAN tagging. This method can be used only if your router supports VLAN ID tagging. When you
specify settings for isolated networks in the New Virtual Lab wizard, you can define different VLAN IDs for
different isolated networks. Setting VLAN IDs restricts communication of VM replicas in the isolated
network from the production environment.
IMP ORTANT
If your network does not support VLAN ID tagging or the virtual lab is configured incorrectly, VM replicas
will be started in the virtual lab but Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to automatically verify
them.
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When Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new port group, it performs a check for the DVS selected for the
virtual lab:
• If a port group with the specified name already exists, Veeam Backup & Replication starts using it for the
virtual lab. However, in this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be the owner of this port group.
• If a port group with the specified name does not exist, Veeam Backup & Replication creates it and
becomes the owner of the created port group.
When a virtual lab is removed, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the ownership of the port group:
• If Veeam Backup & Replication is not the owner of the port group, the port group remains on the DVS.
Veeam Backup & Replication stops using it.
• If Veeam Backup & Replication is the owner of the port group, Veeam Backup & Replication removes this
port group from the DVS.
Several virtual labs can use the same port group. For this reason, you should be extremely careful when
removing virtual labs. If Veeam Backup & Replication is the owner of the virtual lab and the port group is
removed, other virtual labs using this port group may fail to start.
• If VLAN ID settings are specified correctly, Veeam Backup & Replication will be able to configure the
virtual lab and verify VM replicas in it.
• If VLAN ID settings are specified not correctly, Veeam Backup & Replication will report an error informing
that the selected port group exists but cannot be used due to incorrect VLAN ID settings.
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SureBackup Job for VM Replicas
You can verify VM replicas with the SureBackup job. The SureBackup job aggregates all settings and policies of a
recovery verification task, such as application group and virtual lab to be used, VM replicas that must be verified
in the virtual lab and so on. The SureBackup job can be run manually or scheduled to be performed
automatically.
When a SureBackup job runs, Veeam Backup & Replication first creates an environment for VM replica
verification:
2. In the virtual lab, it starts VMs from the application group in the required order . VMs from the application
group remain running until the verified VM replicas are booted and tested. If Veeam Backup & Replication
does not find a successful VM replica or backup for any of VMs from the application group, the SureBackup
job will fail.
When the virtual lab is ready, Veeam Backup & Replication starts VM replicas from the necessary restore point,
tests and, depending on the specified settings, verifies them one by one or creates several streams and tests VM
replicas simultaneously. If Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a successful restore point for any of
verified VM replicas, verification of this VM replica fails, but the job continues to run.
By default, you can start and test up to three VM replicas at the same time. You can also increase the number of
VMs to be started and tested simultaneously. Keep in mind that if these VMs are resource demanding,
performance of the SureBackup job may decrease.
When the verification process is complete, VMs from the application group are powered of f. Optionally, you can
leave the VMs from the application group running to perform manual testing or enable user -directed application
item-level recovery.
In some cases, the SureBackup job schedule may overlap the schedule of the replication job linked to it. The VM
replica files may be locked by the replication job and the SureBackup job will be unable to verify such replica. In
this situation, Veeam Backup & Replication will not start the SureBackup job until the replication job is over.
To overcome the situation of job overlapping, you may chain the replication and SureBackup jobs or define the
timeout period for the SureBackup job. For more information, see Specifying Job Schedule.
NOTE
You can mix VM backups and replicas in the recovery verification job. For example, the application group
may contain VMs that will be started from backup files and the job linked to the recovery verification job
may be a replication job. Veeam Backup & Replication supports any type of a mixed scenario. Note that
VMs that you verify with a SureBackup job must belong to the same platform — VMware or Hyper-V.
1. Getting virtual lab configuration. Veeam Backup & Replication gets information about configuration of the
virtual lab where verified VM replicas must be started.
2. Sta rting virtual lab routing engine . Veeam Backup & Replication starts a proxy appliance. The proxy
appliance is used as a gateway that provides access to VM replicas the virtual lab.
3. P ub lishing. Veeam Backup & Replication triggers a protective VMware snapshot for the verified VM
replica.
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4. Reconfiguring. Veeam Backup & Replication updates configuration files of the VM replica to connect the
VM replica to the isolated network in the virtual lab.
5. Configuring DC. If the VM replica has the Domain Controller or Global Catalog role, the VM replica is
reconfigured.
6. P owering on. Veeam Backup & Replication powers on the VM replica in the isolated network.
7. Hea rtbeat test. Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether the green or yellow VMware Tools heartbeat
signal is coming from the VM replica or not. If the VM replica has no VMware Tools, the test is not
performed and a notification is written to the session details.
8. Running p ing tests. Veeam Backup & Replication checks if the VM replica responds to the ping requests or
not. If the VM replica has no NICs and mapped networks for them and/or has no VMware Tools installed,
the ping test is not performed and a notification is written to the session details.
9. Ap p lication initialization. Veeam Backup & Replication waits for applications installed in the VM replica,
for example, Microsoft SQL Server, to start. The application initialization period is defined in the
properties of the SureBackup job and by default is equal to 120 sec. Depending on the software installed
in a VM, the application initialization process may require more time than specified in the SureBackup job
settings. If applications installed in a VM are not initialized within the specified period of time, test scripts
can be completed with errors. If such error situation occurs, you need to increase the Application
initialization timeout value and start the job once again.
10. Running test scripts. Veeam Backup & Replication runs scripts to test whether the application installed in
the VM replica is working correctly or not. If the VM replica has no VMware Tools installed and/or there
are no NICs and mapped networks for them, Veeam Backup & Replication skips tests that use variables
%vm_ip% and %vm_fqdn%, as the IP address of the VM cannot be determined. Test results are written to
the session details. To define whether the script has completed successfully or not,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses return codes. If the return code is equal to 0, the script is considered to
complete successfully. Other values in the return code mean that the script has failed.
11. P owering off. After all tests have been performed, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the verified
VM replica.
12. Unp ublishing. Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the protective VMware snapshot and rollbacks all
changes made to the VM replica while it was running in the virtual lab.
13. Stopping virtual lab engine. Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the proxy appliance in the virtual lab.
Stabilization Algorithm
To perform tests for a VM replica without errors, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to know that the VM replica
is ready for testing. To determine this, Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the VM replica to reach a
"stabilization point": — the moment when the VM replica booted and reports it is ready for tests. After the
stabilization point has been reached, Veeam Backup & Replication can start heartbeat tests, ping tests and test
scripts against the VM replica.
Veeam Backup & Replication establishes the stabilization point with the help of VMware parameters that it gets
from the VM replica. Depending on the VM replica configuration, it uses one of the three algorithms:
• Sta bilization by IP. This algorithm is used if the VM replica has VMware Tools installed, there are NICs and
mapped networks for these NICs. In this case,Veeam Backup & Replication waits for an IP address of the
VM replica for mapped networks that is sent by VMware Tools running in the VM replica. The sent IP
address must be valid and must not change for a specific period of time.
• Sta bilization by heartbeat . This algorithm is used if the VM replica has VMware Tools installed but there
are no NICs and mapped networks for them. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication waits for the green
or yellow heartbeat signal from VMware Tools installed inside the VM replica.
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• Sta bilization by Maximum allowed b oot time. This algorithm is used if the VM replica has neither VMware
Tools installed, nor NICs and mapped networks for them. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will
wait for the time specified in the Ma x imum allowed boot time field, which is considered to be a
stabilization period for the VM replica. Once this time interval is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication
considers that the VM replica is successfully booted and is ready for testing.
Once the stabilization point has been established, Veeam Backup & Replication runs ping, heartbeat tests and
test scripts against the verified VM replica.
The stabilization process cannot exceed the value specified in the Ma x imum allowed b oot time field. If the
stabilization point cannot be determined within the Ma x imum allowed boot time, the recovery verification
process will be finished with the timeout error. For this reason, you should be careful when specifying this value.
Typically, a VM replica started by a recovery verification job requires more time to boot that a VM started
regularly. When such error situation occurs, you need to increase the Ma x imum allowed boot time value and
start the job again.
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On-Demand Sandbox
If you need to perform tests for production VMs, you can use an On-Demand Sandbox TM. The On-Demand
Sandbox is an isolated virtual environment where you can start one or more VMs from backups, VM replicas or
VMs from storage snapshots. You can use the On-Demand Sandbox to perform the following tasks:
The On-Demand Sandbox uses a virtual lab — an isolated environment that is fully fenced off from the
production environment. VMs started in the virtual lab remain in the read -only state. All changes made to VMs
are written to redo logs (for VM backups and storage snapshots) or saved to delta files (for VM replicas). Redo
logs and delta files are deleted after you finish working with the On-Demand Sandbox and power it off.
To create the On-Demand Sandbox, you must configure the following objects:
• Virtual lab in which VMs will be started. For more information, see Virtual Lab.
• Application group. The application group must include all VMs and/or VM replicas that y ou want to start in
the On-Demand Sandbox. This can be one VM or a group of VMs that work together. For more
information, see Application Group.
• SureBackup job. The virtual lab and application group must be linked to this job. For more information, see
SureBackup Job.
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On-Demand Sandbox for Storage
Snapshots
In On-Demand Sandbox, you can start VMs from snapshots existing on the production storage array. You can use
On-Demand Sandbox to test VMs, troubleshoot issues, perform training and so on.
On-Demand Sandbox configuration where VMs from storage snapshots are started is similar to configuration of
the regular On-Demand Sandbox. To start a VM from the storage snapshot in the isolated environment, you
must configure the following objects:
• Virtual lab. The virtual lab must mirror the networking scheme of the production environment. You can
configure a new virtual lab or use an existing virtual lab. Any type of the virtual lab configuration is
supported: basic single-host, advanced single-host or advanced multi-host. For more information, see
Virtual Lab.
• Ap p lication group. The application group must contain one or several VMs that you want to start in the
On-Demand Sandbox. You can select VMs from volumes or LUNs on the storage system. During the
SureBackup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect the latest snapshot for this volume or LUN and
start the VM from this snapshot. For more information, see Application Group.
• SureBackup job. You must link the application group with VMs and virtual lab to the SureBackup job. For
more information, see SureBackup Job.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication detects the latest storage snapshot for the VM whose disks are located on
the storage system.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication triggers the storage system to create a copy of the storage snapshot. The
snapshot copy helps protect the storage snapshot from changes.
To create a snapshot copy, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the same technology as for Data Recovery
from Storage Snapshots. For more information, see the Data Recovery from Storage Snapshots section in
the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
3. The snapshot copy is presented as a new datastore to the ESXi host on which the virtual lab is registered.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication performs regular operations required for On-Demand Sandbox: reconfigures
the VMX file, starts the VM, performs necessary tests for it and so on.
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5. After you finish working with VMs and power off On-Demand Sandbox, Veeam Backup & Replication
performs cleanup operations: powers off the VM and the proxy appliance in the virtual lab, unmounts the
datastore from the ESXi host and triggers the storage system to remove the snapshot copy.
The number of NFS datastores that can be mounted to the ESXi host is limited by VMware vSphere. If number of
snapshot copies is great, Veeam Backup & Replication may fail to present all of them as datastores to the ESXi
host. In this case, VMs in the application group will not be started and the SureBackup job will fail. For more
information about limitations, see this VMware KB article.
To overcome this situation, Veeam Backup & Replication offers the mechanism of the snapshot copy re-
mounting:
1. If Veeam Backup & Replication detects that there are not enough resources to mount a datastore, it
displays a warning and offers you to free up resources on the ESXi host.
2. During the next 20 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts to mount the datastore with the time
interval of 2 minutes.
3. If resources are freed and Veeam Backup & Replication manages to mount the datastore, VMs in the
application group are started and the SureBackup job continues to run. If resources on the ESXi hosts are
not freed within 20 minutes, the SureBackup job fails.
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Mixed Scenarios
You can start VMs from different sources in the On-Demand Sandbox:
• VM backups
• VM replicas
For example, you can add VMs from backups and VMs from storage snapshots to the same application group and
link a replication job to the SureBackup job.
You cannot link jobs that trigger snapshots on storage arrays to the SureBackup job. This option is not
supported.
Application group
Linked job
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Configuring On-Demand Sandbox
To configure the On-Demand Sandbox, perform the following steps:
1. Configure a virtual lab in which you plan to start VMs. For more information, see Creating Virtual Lab.
2. Configure an application group. The application group must contain all VMs that you plan to start in the
On-Demand Sandbox and all VMs on which these VMs are dependent. For more information, see Creating
Application Group.
b. At the Virtual Lab step of the wizard, select the configured virtual lab.
c. At the Ap p lication Group step of the wizard, select the configured application group.
d. Select the Keep the application group running a fter the job completes check box.
e. Configure other job settings as required and save the job settings.
3. In the working area, right-click the configured SureBackup job and select Sta rt or Sta rt to.
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Veeam Backup & Replication will start the virtual lab and power on VMs from the application group in the virtual
lab. You will be able to connect to VMs and perform tests for them.
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Data Recovery
Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following types of recovery:
• VM recovery — to restore entire VMs to different data protection environments: to VMware vSphere,
Hyper-V, Amazon EC2 and so on.
• Item recovery — to recover VM files, guest OS files and folders, and application items.
• Veeam Data Integration API — to get the backup content using the iSCSI or FUSE protocol and analyze
data stored in this backup.
• Secure restore — to scan data with antivirus software before restoring it to the production environment.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication provides backward compatibility: backups created with previous product
versions can be restored with later product versions. However, backups created with later product versions
cannot be restored with previous product versions.
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VM Recovery
VM recovery includes the following methods:
• Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere — to instantly recover workloads (VMs, EC2 instances, physical
servers and so on) directly from compressed and deduplicated backup files as VMware vSphere VMs. When
you perform Instant Recovery, Veeam Backup & Replication mounts recovered VM images to a host
directly from backups stored on backup repositories.
Instant Recovery helps improve recovery time objectives (RTO), minimize disruption and downtime of
production workloads. However, Instant Recovery provides for VMs “temporary spares” with limited I/O
performance. To provide the recovered VMs full I/O performance, you must finalize Instant Recovery —
migrate the recovered VMs to production environment. If you do not want to migrate the recovered VM,
you can stop publishing it. This removes the recovered VM.
Use Instant Recovery for tier 1 VMs with little tolerance for business interruption and downtime. Besides
disaster recovery matters, Instant Recovery can also be used for testing purposes.
• Instant Recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V — to instantly recover workloads directly from compressed and
deduplicated backup files as Microsoft Hyper-V VMs. In many respects, this method is similar to Instant
Recovery to VMware vSphere.
• Instant Recovery to Nutanix AHV — to instantly recover workloads directly from compressed and
deduplicated backup files as Nutanix AHV VMs. Note that to restore to Nutanix AHV, you must install
Nutanix AHV Plug-in on the backup server. For more information, see the Installation section in the Veeam
Backup for Nutanix AHV User Guide.
• Entire VM restore — to recover entire VMs. When you recover VMs, you extract VM images from backups
to the production storage. Entire VM restore takes more resources and time to complete than Instant
Recovery but recovers VMs with full I/O performance. You also do not need to perform additional steps to
finalize the recovery process.
Use entire VM restore for VMs that require full I/O performance as soon as they are recovered and that
tolerate some downtime.
• Staged restore — to run executable scripts for VMs before recovering them to the production
environment. Staged restore is a part of entire VM restore.
Use this option when you need to make sure that recovered VMs do not contain any personal or sensitive
data.
• Restore to Microsoft Azure — to restore workloads of different data protection environments as Microsoft
Azure VMs.
• Restore to Amazon EC2 — to restore workloads of different data protection environments as EC2
instances.
• Restore to Google Compute Engine (GCE) — to restore workloads of different data protection
environments as Google VM instances.
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Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere
With Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere, you can immediately recover different workloads (VMs, EC2
instances, physical servers and so on) as VMware vSphere VMs to your production environment by running them
directly from compressed and deduplicated backup files. Instant Recovery helps improve recovery time
objectives (RTO), minimize disruption and downtime of production workloads. The workloads are recovered in a
matter of minutes.
When you perform Instant Recovery, Veeam Backup & Replication mounts workload images to a host directly
from backups stored on backup repositories. This means that Veeam Backup & Replication creates fully
functioning “temporary spares” with limited I/O performance. To provide full I/O performance, you must
migrate these "temporary spares" to the production site. For more information, see Migration of Recovered VMs
to Production Site.
Besides disaster recovery matters, Instant Recovery can also be used for testing purposes. Instead of extracting
workload images to production storage to perform regular disaster recovery (DR) testing, you can run a
workload directly from a backup file, boot it and make sure the guest OS and applications are functioning
properly. For more information, see Finalizing Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere.
Instant Recovery supports bulk processing so you can immediately recover multiple workloads at once. If you
perform Instant Recovery for several workloads, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the resource scheduling
mechanism to allocate and use optimal resources required for Instant Recovery. For details, see Resource
Scheduling.
• Backups of VMware vSphere virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
You can also recover VMware vSphere VM data directly from storage snapshots.
• Backups of VMware Cloud Director virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of virtual and physical machines created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent
for Linux
• Backups of Nutanix AHV virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV
• Backups of Microsoft Azure virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure
• Backups of Google Compute Engine VM instances created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud
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The image of the workload remains in read-only state to avoid unexpected modifications. By default, all changes
to virtual disks that take place while a recovered VM is running are logged to auxiliary redo log files residing on
the NFS server (backup server or backup repository). These changes are discarded as soon as the recovered VM
is removed, or merged if you migrate the VM to the production site.
To improve I/O performance for a recovered VM, you can redirect VM changes to a specific datastore that is
closer to the host where the VM resides. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will trigger a snapshot and
will put it to the Veeam IR directory on the selected datastore, together with metadata files holding changes to
the VM image.
• Use Storage vMotion to quickly migrate the recovered VM to the production storage without any
downtime. In this case, original VM data will be pulled from the NFS datastore to the production storage
and consolidated with VM changes while the VM is still running. Storage vMotion, however, can only be
used if you select to keep VM changes on the NFS datastore without redirecting them. Note that to use
Storage vMotion, you need an appropriate VMware license.
• Use Quick Migration. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform a two-stage migration
procedure — instead of pulling data from the vPower NFS datastore, it will recover the VM from the
backup file on the production server, then move all changes and consolidate them with the VM data.
For more information on the relocation methods, see Quick Migration. For more information on how to launch
the migration for workloads recovered with Instant Recovery, see Finalizing Instant Recovery to VMware
vSphere.
To perform Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere, use the Instant Recovery to VMware wizard.
NOTE
If you want to recover workloads as Hyper-V VMs, see Performing Instant Recovery to Hyper-V.
• Prerequisites for Instant Recovery from storage snapshots are listed in the Instant Recovery from Storage
Snapshots in the Integration with Storage Systems Guide.
• You can recover a workload from a backup that has at least one successfully created restore point.
• If you recover a workload to the production network, make sure that the or iginal workload is powered off.
• Restore of CSV (Cluster Shared Volumes) is not supported. Cluster disks used as CSV are automatically
excluded from restore.
• When you restore workloads other than VMware vSphere VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication assigns to the
restored VMs the highest VM hardware version supported by the ESXi host to which you restore the
workloads. For more information on ESXi hosts and compatible virtual machine hardware versions, see this
VMware KB article.
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• Mind the following for Linux workloads:
o We strongly recommend having dracut and mkinitrd installed on workloads that will be restored.
Otherwise, they may not boot after restore.
o Open the /etc/fstab/ file and check that all filesystems are mounted using UUID. If any filesystems
are mounted using block device name, the restored VM may not boot.
• If you want to scan recovered VM data for viruses, check the secure restore requirements and limitations.
• You must provide enough free disk space in vPower NFS datastore. The minimum amount of free space
must equal the RAM capacity of the recovered VM plus 200MB. For example, if the recovered VM has 32
GB of virtual RAM, 32.2 GB of free space is required.
By default, vPower NFS datastore is located in the IRCache folder on a volume with the maximum
amount of free space, for example, C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\IRCache. The vPower NFS
datastore is not used when you select to redirect virtual disk updates to a VMware vSphere datastore
when configuring the job.
• [For Veeam Quick Migration with Smart Switch] In addition to the disk space mentioned above, you need
to provide more disk space in vPower NFS datastore. The minimum amount of free space must equal the
RAM capacity of the recovered VM.
• [For Nutanix AHV VMs] Instantly recoverd VM will have default virtual hardware settings: 2 CPU cores,
4GB RAM and one network adapter. If you want to change the default settings, turn off the VM and set
the required virtual resources. Note that you must not switch off the instant recovery session before
turning off the VM.
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Step 1. Launch Instant Recovery Wizard
To launch the Instant Recovery to VMware wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select one of the following:
o VMwa re vSphere > Restore from backup > E ntire VM restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to
VMwa re vSphere — if you want to recover VMware vSphere VMs from a VM backup created by
Veeam Backup & Replication or you want to recover VMware vSphere VMs from storage snapshots.
o VMwa re Cloud Director > Restore from backup > VM restore > E ntire VM restore > Instant recovery >
Instant recovery to VMware vSphere — if you want to recover VMware Cloud Director VMs from a VM
backup created by Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Microsoft Hyper-V > Restore from backup > E ntire VM restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to
VMwa re vSphere — if you want to recover Hyper-V VMs from a VM backup created by
Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Ag ent > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to VMware vSphere — if you
want to recover physical machines from a backup created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or
Veeam Agent for Linux.
o AW S > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to VMware vSphere — if you want
to recover EC2 instances from a backup created by Veeam Backup for AWS.
o Azure IaaS backup > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to VMware vSphere
— if you want to recover Azure VMs from a backup created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
o GCE backup > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to VMware vSphere — if
you want to recover VM instances from a backup created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud.
o Nuta nix backup > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to VMware vSphere —
if you want to recover VMs from backups created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV.
o RHV P roxy > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to VMware vSphere — if you
want to recover VMs from backups created by Veeam Backup for RHV.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, select workloads that you want to recover and click Instant Recovery > VMware vSphere on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click one of the selected workloads and select Instant recovery >
VMwa re vSphere.
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Alternatively, to recover VMware vSphere VMs from storage snapshots, you can open the Storage Infrastructure
view. In the inventory pane, expand the storage system tree and select the necessary volume snapshot. In the
working area, select the necessary VMs and click Instant Recovery on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Select Workloads
At the Ma chines step of the wizard, select one or multiple workloads that you want to recover:
1. Click Ad d .
a. [For VMware vSphere VMs and VMware Cloud Director VMs] Select where to browse for VMs:
▪ From infrastructure — browse the environment and select VMs or VM containers (hosts, clusters,
folders, resource pools, VirtualApps, datastores or tags) to recover. If you select a VM container,
Veeam Backup & Replication will expand it to a plain VM list.
When you add a VM to the list, Veeam Backup & Replication displays information about the most
recent restore point in the Restore p oint column. If no restore point is available for the added
VM, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning next to this VM.
▪ From backup — browse existing backups or storage snapshots and select virtual machines.
b. [For other workloads] In the list of backup jobs, expand a job and select workloads.
c. Click Ad d .
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest valid restore point to recover workloads. You can
recover a workload to an earlier state, if necessary:
3. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point from which you want to recover the workload.
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Step 4. Select Restore Mode
This step is available only if you recover VMware vSphere VMs or VMware Cloud Director VMs.
At the Restore Mode step of the wizard, specify a destination for VM recovery and whether you want to recover
VM tags:
o Restore to the original location — select this option if you want to recover VMs with their initial
settings and to their original location. If this option is selected, you will pass directly to the Reason
step of the wizard.
IMP ORTANT
If you recover a VM with the original settings, and the original VM still exists in the virtual
infrastructure, the original VM will be removed.
o Restore to a new location, or with different settings — select this option if you want to recover VMs to
a new location, or to any location but with different settings (such as VM location, networ k settings,
format of recovered virtual disks and so on). If this option is selected, the Instant Recovery to VMware
wizard will include additional steps for customizing VM settings.
2. If you want to recover tags that were assigned to the original VMs and assign them to the recovered VMs,
select the Restore VM tags check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will recover the VMs with original tags
if the following conditions are met:
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Step 5. Specify Destination for Restored VMs
Specify a destination where the recovered VMs will reside. The destination settings differ depending on the
number of workloads that you recover:
The Destination step of the wizard is available if you recover one workload and recover it to a new location or
with different settings.
At this step of the wizard, you configure destination settings such as the recovered VM name, target host, VM
folder and so on. For workloads other than VMware vSphere VMs and VMware Cloud Director VMs, you must
also configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the original site to networks in the target
site. When the job starts, Veeam Backup & Replication will check the network mapping table. Then
Veeam Backup & Replication will update VM configuration files to replace the original networks with the
specified networks in the target site. As a result, you will not have to re-configure network settings manually.
To specify the destination and network mapping settings for a recovered VM:
1. In the Restored VM name field, specify a name under which the workload will be recovered.
[For VMware vSphere VM recovery from storage snapshots] Veeam Backup & Replication will create a
clone/virtual copy of the storage snapshot, mount it to the selected ESXi host and start the VM on this
ESXi host.
3. In the VM folder field, specify a folder to which the recovered VM files will be placed.
4. In the Resource p ool list, select a resource pool to which the VM will be placed.
5. [For workloads other than VMware vSphere VMs and VMware Cloud Director VMs] In the Networks
section, configure the network mapping table. To configure one row of the table, select a network in the
list and click Choose. The Select Network window displays all networks to which the target host or cluster
is connected. In the list of networks, select a network to which the recovered VM will be connected
instead of the original network.
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6. Click the Ad vanced button and choose whether to preserve the BIOS UUID or generate a new BIOS UUID.
We recommend that you select to generate a new BIOS UUID for the recovered VM to prevent conflicts if
the original workload still resides in the production environment. The BIOS UUID change is not required if
the original VM no longer exists, for example, it was deleted.
If you recover multiple workloads, specify the following settings for the destination:
3. [For workloads other than VMware vSphere VMs and VMware Cloud Director VMs] At the Network step of
the wizard, specify network settings.
1. In the list, select the necessary VMs and click the Host button.
2. From the virtual environment, select a standalone or clustered host where the selected VMs will be
registered.
[For VMware vSphere VM recovery from storage snapshots] Veeam Backup & Replication will create a
clone/virtual copy of the storage snapshot, mount it to the selected ESXi host and start the VM on this
ESXi host.
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3. Select one or multiple VMs and click the P ool button.
4. In the list, select a resource pool where the selected VMs will be stored.
Specifying VM Settings
For each recovered VM, you can change a VM name, BIOS UUID and folder where VM files must be stored. It is
recommended that you specify a new name and generate a new BIOS UUID to prevent conflicts if the original
workload still resides in the production environment. The name and BIOS UUID change is not required if the
original workload no longer exists, for example, it was permanently deleted.
To specify a folder:
1. In the VM settings list, select the necessary VM. If you want to specify a folder for multiple VMs, select
VMs that will be recovered to the same host.
o To add a prefix and suffix to the name specified in the Set name to field, select Ad d prefix and Ad d
suffix check boxes.
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o In the BIOS UUID section, specify whether to preserve or generate a new BIOS UUID.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the original
site to networks in the target site (site where VMs will be recovered). When the job starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will check the network mapping table. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will
update VM configuration files to replace the original networks with the specified networks in the target site. As
a result, you will not have to re-configure network settings manually.
1. In the list, select one or multiple workloads and click the Network button.
If a workload is connected to multiple networks, you can select a network to map and click Network.
2. The Select Network window displays all networks to which the target host or cluster is connected. In the
list, select a network to which the recovered VM will be connected after recover.
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If you do not want to connect a recovered VM to any virtual network, select the original workload and click
Disconnected.
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Step 6. Select Destination for Virtual Disk Updates
This step is available if you recover workloads to a new location or with differ ent settings. However, this step is
not available if you recover VMware vSphere VMs from storage snapshots.
At the Da tastore step of the wizard, you can select where to store redo logs when a VM is running from a
backup. Redo logs are auxiliary files used to keep changes that take place while the recovered VM runs.
By default, redo logs are stored on the vPower NFS server. You can store redo logs on any datastore in the
virtual environment if necessary. Redirecting redo logs improves recovery performance but makes Storage
vMotion not possible for ESXi 5.5. As soon as a recovery verification job completes, Veeam Backup & Replication
deletes redo logs.
IMP ORTANT
If the size of recovered VM disks is greater than 2 TB, you must not place redo logs on a VSAN datastore.
Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will fail to create a snapshot for the recovered VMs. For more
information, see VMware Docs.
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Step 7. Configure Helper Appliance
This step is available if you recover workloads with Linux OS, recover them to a new location or with different
settings, and VIX API is not available. However, this step is not available if you recover VMware vSphere VMs
from storage snapshots.
Veeam Backup & Replication recovers Linux machines to a standalone host using a helper appliance. The helper
appliance is an auxiliary Linux-based VM registered by Veeam Backup & Replication. The appliance is quite small
— around 50 MB. It requires 1024 MB RAM and takes around 10 seconds to boot.
1. [For multiple machines] In the Network list, expand a host and select one machine.
3. In the Network Settings window, select a network for the helper appliance.
b. In the Select Network window, Veeam Backup & Replication shows a list of networks to which the
target host is connected. In this list, select a network to which the helper appliance must be
connected.
Mind that the backup server and the mount server must have access to the helper appliance over the
network.
4. Specify IP addressing settings for the helper appliance and DNS server:
a. Click Configure.
b. Switch to the IP v4 or IP v6 tab depending on which addresses you want to configure. Note that you
can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
▪ If you use a DHCP server in the network and want to obtain the IP address automatically, leave
the Ob tain an IP address automatically option selected.
▪ To manually assign a specific IP address to the helper appliance, click Use the following IP
a d dress and specify the IP address settings.
▪ If you use a DHCP server in the network and want to obtain the IP address automatically, leave
the Ob tain DNS server address automatically option selected.
▪ To manually assign a specific IP address to the DNS server, click Use the following DNS server
a d dress and specify preferred and alternate addresses.
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f. Click OK.
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Step 8. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you recover workloads with Microsoft Windows OS and recover them to a new location or
with different settings. However, this step is not available if you recover VMware vSphere VMs from storage
snapshots.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan restored VM data with antivirus
software before restoring VMs to the production environment. For more information on secure restore, see
Secure Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n machine for virus threats prior performing
recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if an antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o P roceed to recovery but d isable VM network adapters — if you want to restore VMs with disabled
network adapters (NICs).
3. Select the Sca n entire VM for virus threats check box if you want the antivirus software to continue
scanning VM data after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware
scan, see Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 9. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for performing Instant Recovery. The information you provide
will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 10. Verify Instant Recovery Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, specify additional settings for Instant Recovery:
1. If you recover production workloads that have failed and want to recover them with initial network
settings, select the Connect VMs to network check box.
If you recover workloads for testing disaster recovery while the original workloads are still running, leave
this check box unselected. Before you power on the recovered VMs, you must disconnect them from the
production network and connect to a non-production network to avoid conflicts.
2. To start the VMs right after recovery, select the P ower on target VMs after restoring check box. If you
recover the workloads to the production network, make sure that the original workloads are powered off.
3. Check settings that you have specified for Instant Recovery and click Finish.
4. Check that the publishing process has started and click Close.
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• Stop publishing recovered VMs
IMP ORTANT
Before you launch VMware Remote Console, make sure that this software is installed on the machine
where the Veeam Backup & Replication console runs.
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3. In the working area, right-click a VM and select Mig rate to production. Veeam Backup & Replication will
launch the Quick Migration wizard.
During migration, Veeam Backup & Replication will recover the VM from the backup file and additionally
move all changes that were made while the VM was running from the backup in the Instant Recovery
mode.
If you have launched Instant Recovery to a different location and you want to protect the recovered VM after
migration finishes, you need to add the recovered VM to a backup job manually. If you have launched Instant
Recovery to the original location, your actions depend on the method used for migration and w hether the
Delete source VM files upon successful migration check box is enabled in the migration wizard. For more
information, see Finish Working with the Quick Migration Wizard.
IMP ORTANT
[For restore to original location] Both the recovered and original VMs are removed if you stop publishing
the recovered VM. This is because during restore to the original location, Veeam Backup & Replication
removes the original VM.
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3. In the working area, right-click a VM and select Stop publishing.
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Instant Recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V
With Instant Recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V, you can immediately recover different workloads (VMs, EC2
instances, physical servers and so on) as Microsoft Hyper-V VMs to your production environment by running
them directly from compressed and deduplicated backup files. Instant Recovery helps improve recovery time
objectives (RTO), minimize disruption and downtime of production workloads.
When you perform Instant Recovery, Veeam Backup & Replication creates dummy VMs and mounts to VMs
workload disks directly from backups stored on backup repositories. These dummy VMs have limited I/O
performance. To provide full I/O performance, you must migrate the VMs to the production site. For more
information, see Migration of Recovered VMs to Production Site.
Besides disaster recovery matters, Instant Recovery can also be used for testing purposes. Instead of extracting
workloads to production storage to perform regular disaster recovery (DR) testing, you can run a workload
directly from a backup file, boot it and make sure the guest OS and applications are functioning properly. For
more information, see Finalizing Instant Recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V.
Instant Recovery supports bulk processing so you can immediately recover multiple workloads at once. If you
perform Instant Recovery for several workloads, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the resource scheduling
mechanism to allocate and use optimal resources required for Instant Recovery. For details, see Resource
Scheduling.
• Backups of Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of VMware vSphere virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of virtual and physical machines created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent
for Linux
• Backups of Nutanix AHV virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV
• Backups of Microsoft Azure virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure
• Backups of Google Compute Engine VM instances created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud
1. Veeam Backup & Replication reads the workload configuration from the backup file in the backup
repository and creates a dummy VM with empty disks on the target host. The created VM has the same
settings as the workload in the backup file. If you select to preallocate disk space for the recovered VMs,
Veeam Backup & Replication preallocates disk space at the beginning of the Instant Recovery process.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication initiates creation of a protective snapshot for the dummy VM and the VM is
started. If the Instant Recovery process fails for some reason, the protective snapshot guarantees that no
data is lost.
3. On the backup repository and on the target host, Veeam Backup & Replication starts a pair of Veeam Data
Movers that are used to mount the VM disks from the backup file to the dummy VM.
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4. On the target host, Veeam Backup & Replication starts a proprietary Veeam driver. The driver redirects
requests to the file system of the recovered VM (for example, when a user accesses some application) and
reads necessary data from the backup file in the backup repository using the pair of Veeam Data Movers
that maintain the disk mount.
The driver on the target host knows which data has already been recovered permanently and does not redirect
requests to such data, reading it directly from the disks of the recovered VM. Thus, performance of the instantly
recovered VM will increase as more of the data is copied. When the VM is recovered completely, all Veeam Data
Movers are stopped.
NOTE
If you want to recover workloads as VMware vSphere VMs, see Performing Instant Recovery to VMware
vSphere.
• You must add the Hyper-V target host to which you want to recover machines to your backup
infrastructure.
o The storage I/O balancing is enabled on a Hyper-V host. Starting from Microsoft Windows Server
2012, I/O balancing is enabled by default.
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o The backup repository role is assigned to a VM on this Hyper-V host. The backup from which you
recover is stored on this repository.
o You plan to recover a VM to this Hyper-V host or SureBackup is targeted to this host.
For information on how to recover with such configuration, see this Veeam KB article.
• Make sure that the Disable changed block tracking for this host option is not selected for a host to which
you plan to recover a workload. If this option is selected for the host, the driver requir ed for work of
Instant Recovery will be disabled. For more information, see the Configuring Connected Volumes section
in the User Guide for Microsoft Hyper-V.
• You can recover a workload from a backup that has at least one successfully created restore point.
• If you recover a workload to the production network, make sure that the original workload is powered off
to avoid conflicts.
o We strongly recommend having dracut and mkinitrd installed on workloads that will be restored.
Otherwise, they may not boot after restore.
o Open the /etc/fstab/ file and check that all file systems are mounted using UUID. If any
filesystems are mounted using block device name, the restored VM may not boot.
• [If you recover Hyper-V VMs] The version of the target host on which a VM is recovered must be the same
or later than the version of the source host where the original VM was reg istered.
For example, you can restore a VM from the host that runs Microsoft Windows Server 2016 to the target
host that runs Microsoft Windows Server 2016 (including version 1809), Microsoft Windows Server 2019
or later.
The Hyper-V role must be enabled on both source and target hosts.
• If you want to scan recovered VM data for viruses, check the secure restore requirements and limitations.
• On non-Microsoft Windows SMB3 storage, for example, Tintri, Veeam Backup & Replication may display
the " Failed to disable integrity bit on disk N " warning during the restore process. You can ignore this
warning for non-Microsoft Windows SMB3 storage.
• The recovered VM will have the same MAC address as the original workload . Therefore, if you recover the
workload to the same Hyper-V host where the original workload is running, a MAC address conflict may
occur. To overcome this situation, power off the original workload before you start the recovery process.
• [For Nutanix AHV VMs] The recovered VM will not be connected to a network. You must connect to the
network manually.
• [For Nutanix AHV VMs, Amazon EC2 instances and Microsoft Azure virtual machines] Instantly recovered
VM will have default virtual hardware settings: 2 CPU cores, 4GB RAM and one network adapter. If you
want to change the default settings, turn off the VM and set the required virtual resources. Note that you
must not switch off the instant recovery session before turning off the VM.
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Step 1. Launch Instant Recovery Wizard
To launch the Instant Recovery to Hyper-V wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select one of the following:
o Microsoft Hyper-V > Restore from backup > E ntire VM restore > Instant recovery > Instant Recovery
to Microsoft Hyper-V — if you want to recover Hyper-V VMs from a VM backup created by
Veeam Backup & Replication.
o VMwa re vSphere > Restore from backup > E ntire VM restore > Instant recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V
— if you want to recover VMware vSphere VMs from a VM backup created by
Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Ag ent > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V — if you
want to recover physical machines from a backup created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or
Veeam Agent for Linux.
o AW S E C2 backup > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V
— if you want to recover EC2 instances from a backup created by Veeam Backup for AWS.
o Azure IaaS > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V — if
you want to recover Azure VMs from a backup created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
o GCE backup > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V — if
you want to recover VM instances from a backup created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud.
o Nuta nix backup > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V —
if you want to recover VMs from backups created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV.
o RHV P roxy > E ntire machine restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to Microsoft Hyper-V — if
you want to recover VMs from backups created by Veeam Backup for RHV.
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• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, select workloads that you want to recover and click Instant Recovery > Microsoft Hyper-V on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click one of the selected workloads and select Instant recovery >
Microsoft Hyper-V.
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Step 2. Select Workloads
At the Ma chines step of the wizard, select workloads that you want to recover:
1. Click Ad d .
a. [For Hyper-V, VMware vSphere VMs and VMware Cloud Director VMs] You can browse for nece ssary
VMs using one of the following way:
▪ From infrastructure — use this option to browse the virtual environment and select VMs or VM
containers to recover. If you choose a VM container, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand it
to a plain VM list.
▪ From backup — browse existing backups and select VMs under backup jobs.
b. [For other workloads] In the list of backup jobs, expand a job and select workloads.
c. Click Ad d .
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest valid restore points to recover the workloads. You can
recover a workload to an earlier state, if necessary. If you have chosen to recover multiple workloads, you can
select a restore point for each workload in the list.
3. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point from which you want to recover the workload.
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Step 4. Select Recovery Mode
This step is available only if you recover Hyper-V VMs.
At the Recovery Mode step of the wizard, choose the necessary restore mode:
• Select Restore to the original location if you want to recover VMs with initial settings and to original
location. If this option is selected, you will pass directly to the Reason step of the wizard.
• Select Restore to a new location, or with different settings if you want to recover VMs to a different
location and/or with different settings (such as location, network settings and so on). If this option is
selected, the Instant Recovery to Hyper-V wizard will include additional steps for customizing VM
settings.
IMP ORTANT
• If the original VM still exists in the virtual infrastructure, the VM and its disks will be removed. Make
sure that other VMs in the virtual environment do not use these disks.
• The VM settings contain the ID of the VM group to which the machine belongs. To recover the VM to
the original VM group, you must not delete the original VM group or change the hierarchy of its
parent VM groups.
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Step 5. Select Target Host
This step is available if you recover workloads to a new location or with different settings.
At the Host step of the wizard, specify a target Hyper-V host or a Hyper-V cluster where you want to locate the
recovered VMs:
1. In the VM location list, select the necessary VMs and click Host.
2. In the Select Server window, select a standalone host or cluster where the selected VM will be registered.
3. If you have selected a Hyper-V cluster, you can specify the cluster resource settings. Click Resource and
select one of the following options in the Cluster Resource Settings window:
o Reg ister VM as a cluster resource — if you want to assign a cluster role to the recovered VM.
o Do not register VM as a cluster resource — if you do not want to assign a cluster role to the recovered
VM.
IMP ORTANT
You cannot recover workloads to a Microsoft Hyper-V 2008 R2 Cluster due to Microsoft limitations. You
can recover workloads to Microsoft Hyper-V 2012 Failover Cluster or Microsoft Hyper-V 2012 R2 Failover
Cluster.
If you need to recover a workload to a Microsoft Hyper-V 2008 R2 Cluster, you can use the following
workaround:
2. Configure the recovered VM as highly available. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
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Step 6. Select Target Datastore
This step is available if you recover workloads to a new location or with different settings.
At the Da tastore step of the wizard, specify a path to the folder where VM configuration files and disks will b e
stored:
1. In the Files location list, select the workloads that will be recovered to the same host and click P a th.
Alternatively, you can expand a workload in the list and select individual files. Use this method if you want
to place configuration and disk files to different locations.
o Create a new folder by clicking New Folder at the bottom of the window.
o Type a path to an SMB3 shared folder in the search field at the bottom of the Select Folder window.
The path must be specified in the UNC format, for example: \\172.16.11.38\Share01.
IMP ORTANT
The host or cluster on which you register VMs must have access to the specified SMB3 shared
folder. If you are using SCVMM 2012 or later, the server hosting the Microsoft SMB3 shared
folder must be registered in SCVMM as a storage device. For more information, see Microsoft
Docs.
3. Check that the Allocate required disk space before migration check box is selected if you want to
preallocate disk space required for the recovered VM. Otherwise, clear the check box.
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Step 7. Specify Network Mapping
This step is available if you recover workloads to a new location or with different settings.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the original
site to networks in the target site (site where VMs will be recovered). When the job starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will check the network mapping table. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will
update VM configuration files to replace the original networks with the specified networks in the target site. As
a result, you will not have to re-configure network settings manually.
1. In the Network connections list, select the necessary workloads and click Network.
If a workload is connected to multiple networks, expand the workload, select a network to map and click
Network.
2. In the Select Network window, select a network to which the selected workload must be connected after
recovery.
If you do not want to connect the recovered VM to any virtual network, select the original workload in the list
and click Disconnect.
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Step 8. Change VM Name and UUID
This step is available if you recover workloads to a new location or with different settings.
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify names under which VMs will be recovered and select whether you want
to preserve VM UUIDs or change them. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves the original names
and UUIDs.
NOTE
We recommend that you specify a new name and generate a new UUID for a VM to prevent conflicts if the
original workload still resides in the production environment. The name and UUID change is not required if
the original workload no longer exists, for example, it was permanently deleted.
Changing Names
To change a VM name:
1. In the Virtual machines list, select the necessary workloads and click Na me.
2. In the Cha nge Name section, enter a new name explicitly or specify a change name rule by adding a pre fix
or suffix to the original workload name.
Alternatively, you can change a VM name directly in the Virtual machines list. To do this, click the New Name
field and enter the name to be assigned to the recovered VM.
Changing UUIDs
To change VM identification settings:
1. Select the necessary workloads in the list and click Sy stem UUID.
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2. In the BIOS UUID Settings window, select to generate a new UUID.
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Step 9. Configure Helper Appliance
This step is available if you recover workloads with Linux OS and recover them to a new location or with
different settings.
Veeam Backup & Replication recovers Linux machines using a helper appliance. The helper appliance is an
auxiliary Linux-based VM registered by Veeam Backup & Replication. The appliance is quite small — around 50
MB. It requires 1024 MB RAM and takes around 10 seconds to boot.
At the Help er Appliance step of the wizard, configure the helper appliance network settings:
1. [For multiple machines] In the Network list, expand a host and select one machine for which you want to
configure the helper appliance.
3. In the Network Settings window, select a network for the helper appliance.
a. Click the Browse button to the right of the P roduction network field.
b. In the Select Network window, Veeam Backup & Replication shows a list of networks to which the
target host is connected. In this list, select a network to which the helper appliance must be
connected. Click OK.
Mind that the backup server and the mount server must have a ccess to the helper appliance over the
network.
c. In the VLAN ID field, specify an ID of a VLAN where the helper appliance will reside.
4. Specify IP addressing settings for the helper appliance and DNS server:
a. Click Configure.
b. Switch to the IP v4 or IP v6 tab depending on which addresses you want to configure. Note that you
can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
▪ If you use a DHCP server in the network and want to obtain the IP address automatically, leave
the Ob tain an IP address automatically option selected.
▪ To manually assign a specific IP address to the helper appliance, click Use the following IP
a d dress and specify the IP address settings.
▪ If you use a DHCP server in the network and want to obtain the IP address automatically, leave
the Ob tain DNS server address automatically option selected.
▪ To manually assign a specific IP address to the DNS server, click Use the following DNS server
a d dress and specify preferred and alternate addresses.
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f. Click OK.
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Step 10. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you recover workloads with Microsoft Windows OS and recover them to a new location or
with different settings.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan VM data with antivirus software
before restoring the VM to the production environment. For more information on secure restore, see Secure
Restore.
1. Select the Sca n the restored machine for malware p rior to p erforming the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if an antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o P roceed with recovery but disable network adapters — if you want to restore the VM with disabled
network adapters (NICs).
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue the VM data
scan after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see
Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 11. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for performing Instant Recovery of the workloads. The
information you provide will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 12. Verify Instant VM Recovery Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, check settings of Instant Recovery and click Finish. If you want to start the
recovered VMs on the target host, select the P ower on target VM after restoring check box.
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3. In the working area, right-click a VM and select Op en VM console.
If the test fails, you can stop publishing the recovered VMs. For details, see Stop Publishing Recovered VMs.
NOTE
[If you recover Hyper-V VMs] After the migration is finished, and if the selected destination differs from
the original location, the original VMs still exist. If you do not need them, you must manually remove them
in the Hyper-V client.
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3. In the working area, right-click a VM and select Mig rate to production.
IMP ORTANT
[For Hyper-V VM restore to original location] Both the recovered and original VMs are removed if you stop
publishing the recovered VM. This is because during restore to the original location,
Veeam Backup & Replication removes the original VM.
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3. In the working area, right-click a VM and select Stop publishing.
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Instant Recovery to Nutanix AHV
With Instant Recovery to Nutanix AHV, you can immediately recover different workloads as Nutanix AHV VMs.
You can use Instant Recovery to Nutanix AHV to migrate the entire infrastructure or individual VMs to a Nutanix
AHV cluster.
IMP ORTANT
To restore to Nutanix AHV, you must install Nutanix AHV Plug-in on the backup server. To learn more, see
the Installation section in the Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV User Guide.
The procedure of restore to Nutanix AHV practically does not differ from the procedure described in the
Performing Instant Recovery of Workloads to Nutanix AHV section in the Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV User
Guide.
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Entire VM Restore
With Veeam Backup & Replication, you can restore an entire VM from a backup file to the latest state or to a
previous point in time if the original VM fails.
When you restore an entire VM, Veeam Backup & Replication extracts the VM image from a backup to the
production storage.Then Veeam Backup & Replication pulls the VM data from the backup repository to the
selected storage, registers the VM on the chosen ESXi host and, if necessary, power s it on.
Entire VM restore enables full disk I/O performance while Instant Recovery provides a “temporary spare” for a
VM as the vPower NFS throughput is limited.
When you restore a VM to a new location, you can specify new VM settings such as the new VM name, the host
and datastore where the VM will reside, disk format (thin or thick provisioned) and network properties.
Veeam Backup & Replication will change the VM configuration file and store the VM data to the location of your
choice.
To perform entire VM restore, Veeam Backup & Replication uses one of the following transport modes:
• If the backup proxy is connected directly to the SAN fabric or has access to NFS datastores,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Direct storage access transport mode. Veeam Data Movers, which
are deployed on the backup repository and backup proxy, retrieve VM data from the backup file and put it
directly to the necessary datastore.
IMP ORTANT
Veeam Backup & Replication can restore only thick VM disks using the Direct SAN access transport
mode. For thin VM disks restore, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the Direct NFS access, Virtual
appliance or Network transport modes. Alternatively, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication
to restore VM disks as thick.
• If the backup proxy is virtualized and resides on the ESXi host to which the VM must be restored,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Virtual appliance transport mode. The Virtual appliance mode
utilizes VMware ESXi capabilities of HotAdding disks to the VM and thus eliminates the need to transfer
the backup data across the network. Veeam Data Movers d eployed on the backup repository and backup
proxy retrieve VM data from the backup file and put it directly to the necessary datastore via the ESXi I/O
stack.
• If the Direct storage access and Virtual appliance transport modes cannot be used,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Network transport mode.
NOTE
If a VM has several VM disks, Veeam Backup & Replication restores VM disks in parallel.
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Quick Rollback
When you restore a full VM or VM hard disk to the original location, you can instruct
Veeam Backup & Replication to perform quick rollback — incremental data restore. Instead of restoring an entire
VM or VM disk from a backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication will recover only those data blocks that are
necessary to revert the VM or VM disk to an earlier point in time. Quick rollback significantly reduces the
recovery time and has little impact on the production environment.
For quick rollback, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Changed Block Tracking technology.
Veeam Backup & Replication gets information about the current VM state and compares it with the CBT
information in the backup file. This way, Veeam Backup & Replication detects what data blocks must be
transported back to the production datastore to rebuild the VM or VM disk to the necessary point in time.
It is recommended that you use quick rollback if you restore a VM or VM disk after a problem that has occurred
at the level of the VM guest OS — for example, there has been an application error or a user has accidentally
deleted a file on the VM guest OS. Do not use quick rollback if the problem has occurred at the VM hardware
level, storage level or due to a power loss.
• CBT must be enabled for the VM disk or all disks of a VM that you plan to restore.
• The backup file from which you plan to restore a VM or a VM disk must be created with the Use changed
b lock tracking data option enabled.
• Quick rollback can be performed in the Direct NFS access, Virtual appliance, Network transport mode. The
Direct SAN access transport mode cannot be used for quick rollback due to VMware limitations.
• Use quick rollback and VM guest OS file exclusion wisely. If you exclude specific files and folders from the
VM guest OS during backup and use quick rollback to restore the VM or VM disk from such backup,
Veeam Backup & Replication will restore only the content of the backup file. The excluded data will not be
restored. For example, if you exclude C:\Folder from the backup, data in this folder will not be backed up
and will not be available in the resulting backup file. After some time, data in C:\Folder may change but
the folder will still not be backed up (since the job excludes this folder). For this reason, when you
perform quick rollback, Veeam Backup & Replication will restore all data that have changed except the
excluded C:\Folder.
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Before You Begin
Before you restore a VM from a backup, consider the following:
• You can restore a VM from a backup that has at least one successfully created restore point.
• If you back up a VM with vRDM disks, Veeam Backup & Replication converts the disks into VMDK files.
Thus, when you restore a VM with a vRDM disk, Veeam Backup & Replication restores this disk as a VMDK
file. If you want to preserve the vRDM format for restored disks, use Quick Rollback. For more
information, see Quick Rollback.
• If you want to scan VM data for viruses, check the secure restore requirements and limitations.
• If you want to run an executable script for a VM, check the staged restore requirements and limitations.
• When you restore a VM, mind the Virtual Hardware version compatibility. For more information, see this
VMware KB article.
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Step 1. Launch Full VM Restore Wizard
To launch the Full VM Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from backup > E ntire VM restore > E ntire VM
restore.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup and select the machine that you want to restore and click E ntire VM on the ribbon. Alternatively,
right-click the machine that you want to restore and select Restore entire VM.
• Double-click the VBK or VBM file (for example, in Microsoft Windows Explorer). In the displayed window,
select the VM and click Restore > E ntire VM.
You can use this option if you perform restore on the backup server. You cannot use this option if you
perform restore remotely over the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
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Step 2. Select VMs
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, select VMs that you want to restore:
1. Click Ad d VM.
o From infrastructure — browse the virtual environment and select VMs or VM containers (hosts,
clusters, folders, resource pools, VirtualApps, datastores or tags) to restore. If you choose a VM
container, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand it to a plain VM list.
o From backup — browse existing backups and select VMs under backup jobs.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest valid restore point. However, you can restore the VM to
an earlier state. If you have chosen to restore several VMs, you can select the necessary restore point for each
VM in the list.
3. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point from which you want to restore the VM.
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Step 4. Select Restore Mode
At the Restore Mode step of the wizard, choose the necessary restore mode and backup proxy to transfer VM
data:
o Select Restore to original location to restore VMs with their initial settings and to their original
location. If this option is selected, you will immediately pass to the Reason step of the wizard.
During restore to the original location, Veeam Backup & Replication restores only those disks that are
included in the backup file. This means that after the restore finishes, you do not have to update
existing jobs which process the original VMs.
o Select Restore to a new location, or with different settings to restore VMs to a different location or
with different settings (such as VM location, network settings, format of restored virtual disks and so
on). If this option is selected, the Full VM Restore wizard will include additional steps for customizing
VMs settings.
During restore to a new location, Veeam Backup & Replication creates new VMs. If you want to
process the restored VMs, you must edit existing jobs or create new jobs to process the restored VMs.
If you restore VMs with the same name and to the same folder as the original VMs,
Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the original VMs. In this case, you must edit existing jobs to
exclude original VMs from them.
o Select Sta ged restore to run an executable script for VMs before restoring them to the production
environment. If this option is selected, the Full VM Restore wizard will include an additional step for
customizing staged restore settings.
During staged restore to the original location, that is, when you leave the original settings on the next
steps of the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the original VMs. However,
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically updates the existing jobs to process the restored VMs and
to exclude the original VMs.
During staged restore to a new location, Veeam Backup & Replication creates new VMs. If you want to
process the restored VMs, you need to edit existing jobs or create new jobs.
2. [For VM restore to the original location] Select the Quick rollback check box to perform incremental
restore for the VM. Veeam Backup & Replication will query CBT to get data blocks that are necessary to
revert the VM to an earlier point in time, and will restore only these data blocks from the backup. Quick
restore significantly reduces the restore time and has little impact on the production environment.
It is recommended that you enable this option if you restore a VM after a problem that occurred at the
level of the VM guest OS: for example, there has been an application error or a user has accidentally
deleted a file on the VM guest OS. Do not enable this option if the problem has occurred at the VM
hardware level, storage level or due to a power loss.
For more information on quick rollback, its requirements and limita tions, see Quick Rollback.
3. Click the P ick proxy to use link to select backup proxies over which VM data must be transported to the
source datastore. You can assign backup proxies explicitly or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to
automatically select backup proxies.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that are
connected to the source datastore and will automatically assign optimal proxy resources for
processing VM data.
During the restore process, VMs are processed simultaneously. Veeam Backup & Replication checks
available backup proxies. If more than one backup proxy is available, Veeam Backup & Replication
analyzes transport modes that the backup proxies can use for writing data to target, current workload
on these backup proxies, and selects the most appropriate resources for VMs processing.
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o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy servers only, you can explicitly select backup proxies
that will be used for restore. It is recommended that you select at least two proxies to ensure that
VMs are recovered should one of backup proxies fail or lose its connectivity to the source datastore
during restore.
When you click Nex t, Veeam Backup & Replication will check storage policies in the virtual environment and
compare this information with the information about the storage policy in the backup file. If the original storage
policy has been changed or deleted, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning. You can select one of
the following options:
• Current — the restored VM will be associated with the profile with which the original VM in the production
environment is currently associated.
• Default — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that is set as default for the target datastore.
• Stored — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that was assigned to the original VM at the
moment of backup, and whose information is stored in the backup file.
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For more information, see Storage Policies.
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Step 5. Select Target Host
The Host step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings for the restored
VM.
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Step 6. Select Target Resource Pool
The Resource Pool step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings for the
restored VM.
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Step 7. Select Target Datastore and Disk Type
The Da tastore step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings for the
restored VM.
You can place an entire VM to a particular datastore or choose to store configuration files and disk files of the
restored VM in different locations.
1. To place VMs to a datastore, select the necessary VMs in the Files location list and click Da tastore. In the
Disk Type Settings window, select a datastore and click OK.
If you want to place configuration and disk files to different datastores, expand a VM in the File location
list and select individual files. Then specify the necessary datastore.
2. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves the format of restored VM disks. To change the disk
format, expand a VM in the Files location list, select the necessary disks and click Disk Type. In the Disk
Ty p e Settings section, choose the format that will be used to restore virtual disks of the VM: same as
source, thin, thick lazy zeroed or thick eager zeroed. For more information about disk types, see VMware
Docs. Click OK.
NOTE
Disk format change is supported only for VMs with Virtual Hardware version 7 or later.
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Step 8. Select Target Folder and Change VM Settings
The Folder step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings for restored
VMs.
At the Fold er step of the wizard, specify a destination VM folder, choose whether you want to restore VM tags
and change VM names. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves the original names.
NOTE
• If you restore a VM to a standalone ESXi host that is not managed by the vCenter Server, you cannot
select a destination folder: this option will be disabled.
• During entire VM restore, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves the UUID of the original VM.
Changing Names
To change a VM name:
2. In the Cha nge Name section, enter a new name explicitly or specify a change name rule by adding a prefix
or suffix to the original VM name.
Alternatively, you can change a VM name directly in the VM folder list. To do this, click the New Name field and
enter the name to be assigned to the recovered VM.
Restoring VM Tags
Select the Restore VM tags check box if you want to restore tags that were assigned to the original VM and to
assign them to the restored VM. Veeam Backup & Replication will restore the VM with original tags if the
following conditions are met:
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• The original VM tag is still available on the source vCenter Server.
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Step 9. Specify Network Mapping
The Network step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings for the
restored VM.
If you plan to restore a VM to a new location, for example, another site with a different set of networks, you can
map source site networks to target site networks. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the network mapping
table to update configuration files of the VM on the fly, during the restore process.
1. Select a VM in the list and click Network. To apply changes in bulk, select several VMs in the list and click
Network.
If a VM is connected to multiple networks, expand the VM, select the network to map and click Network.
The Select Network section displays all networks to which the target host or cluster is connected.
2. From the list of available networks, choose a network to which the VM must have access upon restore.
If you do not want to connect a restored VM to your virtual networks, select the VM in the list and click
Disconnected.
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Step 10. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you restore Microsoft Windows VMs.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan machine data with antivirus
software before restoring the machine to the production environment. For more information on secure restore,
see Secure Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n the restored machine for malware prior to
p erforming the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o P roceed with recovery but disable network adapters. Select this action if you want to restore the
machine with disabled network adapters (NICs).
o Ab ort VM recovery. Select this action if you want to cancel the restore session.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus to continue machine scan after the
first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see Viewing Malware
Scan Results.
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Step 11. Specify Staged Restore Settings
The Staged Restore step of the wizard is available if you have chosen the Staged restore option at the Restore
Mode step of the wizard.
Staged restore to run an executable script for VMs before restoring them to the production environment. For
more information, see Staged Restore.
1. From the Virtual lab list, select a virtual lab that will be used to start VMs. The list contains all virtual labs
that are created or connected to the backup server.
2. From the Ap p lication group list, select an application group if script execution requires other VMs to be
powered on. In the virtual lab during staged restore, Veeam Backup & Replication will start VMs from the
selected application group in the required order. The Ap p lication group list contains all application groups
that are created on the backup server. For more information, see Application Group.
3. On the right of the Script field, click Browse to choose the script from a local folder on the backup server.
4. From the Credentials list, select credentials for the account that has administrator privileges on VMs for
which you want to run the script. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts
link or click Ad d on the right of the Credentials field to add the credentials. For more information, see
Managing Credentials.
VM Startup Settings
If you want to start VMs after recovery, perform the following steps:
1. Click Ad vanced.
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2. In the Memory section, specify the amount of memory that you want to pre-allocate to a VM when it
starts. The amount of pre-allocated memory is defined in percent. The percentage rate is calculated based
on the system memory level available for the production VM. For example, if 4096 MB of RAM is
allocated to the VM in the production environment and you specify 50% as a memory rate, 2048 MB of
RAM will be allocated to the VM on startup.
3. In the Sta rtup time section, specify the allowed boot time for the VM and timeout to initialize applications
on the VM.
Be careful when specifying the Ma x imum allowed boot time value. Typically, a VM started in a virtual lab
requires more time to boot than a VM started in the production environment. If an application fails to be
initialized within the specified interval of time, the recovery process fails with the timeout error. If such
error occurs, you need to increase the Ma ximum allowed boot time value and perform VM restore again.
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Step 12. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring the selected VMs. The information you provide
will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 13. Verify Restore Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, check restore settings and click Finish. If you want to start the recovered
VMs on the target host, select the P ower on target VM after restoring check box.
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Staged Restore
Staged restore allows you to run an executable script for VMs before recovering them to the production
environment. Staged restore is a part of the entire VM restore operations. To perform staged restore, you must
select the Sta ged Restore mode in the Full VM Restore wizard and specify staged restore settings.
Staged restore can help you ensure that recovered VMs do not contain any personal or sensitive data. For
example, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to run a Windows PowerShell script that removes Active
Directory users:
$UserName = "John.Smith"
$ADUser = Get-ADUser -Filter 'Name -like $UserName'
if (!$ADUser)
{
[Environment]::Exit(1)
}
Remove-ADUser -Identity $UserName -Confirm:$false
NOTE
The staged restore functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License. When using a legacy socket -
based license, Enterprise or higher edition is required.
• You must have a preconfigured virtual lab in your backup infrastructure. For more information, see Virtual
Lab.
• Scripts that you plan to run must reside in a local folder on a backup server.
• If you plan to perform staged restore for several VMs within one restore session, make sure these VMs run
OS of the same type: either Microsoft Windows or Linux. In the current version of
Veeam Backup & Replication, you cannot specify credentials and scripts for each VM individually.
• When restoring VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Veeam Quick Migration method. vMotion and
Storage vMotion methods cannot be used. For more information on the Quick Migration me thod, see
Quick Migration.
1. In the virtual lab, Veeam Backup & Replication starts VMs directly from compressed and deduplicated
backup files that reside in the backup repository. To achieve this, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the
Veeam vPower NFS Service.
If you selected to use an application group to run a script, Veeam Backup & Replication first starts VMs
from the application group in the required order.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication copies the script from the backup server to VMs that you plan to restore.
To connect to VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication uses credentials specified in staged restore settings.
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3. Veeam Backup & Replication runs the copied script on every VM.
To run the script, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the same technology as for pre-freeze and post-thaw
scripts. For more information, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
4. All VM changes that take place during script execution are written to VM delta files.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication stores delta files on the vPower NFS server. You can change the
destination for VM delta files in virtual lab settings.
5. After the script execution is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication makes a safe shutdown of VMs in the
virtual lab.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication restores VMs in a changed state to the production environment.
To achieve that, Veeam Backup & Replication copies VM data from the backup repository and delta files to
the target host using Veeam Quick Migration.
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Restore to Microsoft Azure
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to restore different workloads (VMs, Google VM instances, physical
servers and so on) from backups to Microsoft Azure.
You can use Veeam Backup & Replication to complete the following tasks:
• Create a test environment in the cloud for troubleshooting, testing patches and updates and so on.
• Backups of Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs created by Veeam Backup & Replication. You can use
backups of VMware vSphere VMs or VMware Cloud Director VMs.
• Backups of Microsoft Windows machines created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows. Backups must
be created at the entire machine level or volume level.
• Backups of Linux machines created by Veeam Agent for Linux. Backups must be created at the entire
machine level or volume level.
• Backups of Microsoft Azure virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
• Backups of Google Compute Engine VM instances created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud.
• Backups of Nutanix AHV VMs created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV.
You can restore a workload to the latest restore point or any previous restore point in the backup chain.
Veeam Backup & Replication employs the Microsoft Azure Resource Manager deployment model.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports batch restore — you can launch the restore process for several VMs at a
time.
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IMP ORTANT
The Classic deployment model is deprecated. Thus, you cannot add Classic Azure accounts. You can restore
VMs in the Classic model only if you have added the Classic Azure account before upgrading to
Veeam Backup & Replication 9.5 Update 4.
Generation 2 VM Support
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores workloads as Generation 1 VMs. Veeam Backup & Replication
also offers experimental support for Generation 2 VMs within restore to Microsoft Azure feature.
Generation 2 VMs are virtual machines with advanced functionality. For more information about Generation 2
VMs, see Microsoft Docs. For more information about Microsoft Azure support for Generation 2 VMs, see
Microsoft Docs.
To learn how to enable Generation 2 VM support, see this Veeam KB article. To learn Generation 2 VM support
limitations, see Limitations for Restore to Microsoft Azure.
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports restore to Microsoft Azure for the following workloads:
o Microsoft Windows workloads that run Windows Server 2008/Windows Vista and later.
o Linux workloads (see the Supported Distributions & Versions section in Microsoft Docs).
IMP ORTANT
We strongly recommend having dracut and mkinitrd installed on Linux machines that will be
restored to Azure. Otherwise, they may not boot after restore.
• If you use a cloud-init-based Linux distribution, we recommend that you use SSH keys on these
distributions. If you use a password, it is blocked after restore for security reasons. To reset the password
on the restored VM, you need to use the VMAccess extension. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
• When you select a storage account whose resources you want to use to store disks of the restored
workload, mind the following:
o Storage accounts with the zone-redundant storage (ZRS), geo-zone-redundant storage (GZRS) and
geo-redundant storage (GRS) replication options are not supported. However, read -access geo-
redundant storage (RA-GRS) option is supported. For details on replication options, see Microsoft
Docs.
o If you plan to use a premium storage account and want to store unmanaged disks there, the restore
speed for such disks will be limited to 30 MB/s (approximately).
• When you select a geographic region to which you want to restore workloads, mind that some regions are
access restricted to support specific customer scenarios. For example, VMs cannot be created there. To b e
able to perform different actions in those regions, create a support request in the Azure portal.
For the full list of access-restricted regions, see Microsoft Docs. The regions are marked with an asterisk *.
• [Azure VMs] Microsoft has strict rules for naming Azure resources. For naming rules that your VM names
must correspond to, see Microsoft Docs: the Resource name rules and Resolve errors for reserved resource
names articles.
1696 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
• [Azure VMs] Veeam Backup & Replication does not support restore of Azure Ultra Disks.
o [Unmanaged VM disks] Veeam Backup & Replication supports restoring of disks equal to or less than
4093 GB. This is due to the following reasons: VM disks can increa se in size up to 2 GB because of
conversion during the restore process; Azure supports disk up to 4095 GB. For more information on
all disk sizes that Azure supports, see Microsoft Docs.
o [Managed VM disks] Veeam Backup & Replication supports restoring disks equal or less than 4093 GB
for OS disks and equal to or less than 32765 GB for other disks. During the restore process, VM disks
can increase in size up to 2 GB because of conversion. For more information on all managed disk sizes
that Azure supports, see Microsoft Docs. For more information on OS disk size that Azure supports,
see Microsoft Docs. Note that supported disk sizes for Azure and Veeam Backup & Replication differ.
IMP ORTANT
The price of a restored VM disk can become higher because of the increase in disk size during the
restore process. For more information on pricing, see Managed Disks pricing and Unmanaged Disk
and Page Blob pricing.
• [Azure Stack VMs] Veeam Backup & Replication supports restoring of managed and unmanaged disks
equal to or less than 1021 GB. This is due to the following reasons: VM disks can increase in size up to 2 GB
because of conversion during the restore process; Azure Stack supports dis k up to 1023 GB. For more
information on all disk sizes that Azure supports, see Microsoft Docs.
You can change the maximum supported size for unmanaged VM disks with a registry key. For more
information, contact Veeam Customer Support.
IMP ORTANT
The price of a restored VM disk can become higher because of the increase in disk size during the
restore process. For more information on pricing, see Azure Stack Hub Pricing.
• If the system disk of an initial workload uses the GPT partitioning scheme, the number of partitions on the
disk cannot exceed 4. During restore such disk will be converted to a disk with the MBR partitioning
scheme.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not support restoring of disks whose logical sector size is 4096 bytes.
Contents of such disks will be unreadable in Microsoft Azure.
• The restore to Microsoft Azure functionality does not support the Azure Hybrid Use Benefit program.
• [For restore from backups created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows] Workloads from a backup
that contains a failover cluster are restored as separate VMs, not as a cluster. Shared cluster disks of these
VMs are restored as regular disks.
• When you select VM sizes at the Specify VM Size step of the Restore to Azure wizard, make sure that the
selected size is compatible with Generation 2 VMs.
• Generation 2 VMs support only managed disks. Thus, you will need to select the managed storage type
from the Storage type list at the Specify VM Size step of the Restore to Azure wizard.
1697 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
• Make sure that OSes of backed-up workloads that you plan to restore have UEFI boot. Otherwise, the
restored VMs may be unbootable.
NOTE
• If you added the Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication
infrastructure and you plan to restore Microsoft Azure VMs from restore points that were created
using the appliance, the restore works as described in the Performing VM Restore section in Veeam
Backup for Microsoft Azure User Guide.
• [If you restore from backups created by products other than Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure] By
default, during restore, Veeam Backup & Replication creates Generation 1 VMs. Such VMs support
only Basic Input/Output System (BIOS) firmware interface. If you restore workloads with Unified
Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI), Veeam Backup & Replication converts UEFI into the BIOS
firmware interface.
For information on Generation 2 VM support, see Generation 2 VM Support.
1. If you use an Azure restore proxy appliance (former Azure proxy) for restore, Veeam Backup & Replication
powers on the Azure restore proxy appliance. For more information about the Azure restore proxy
appliance, see Managing Azure Restore Proxy Appliances.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication converts disks of a backed-up workload to the VHD format and uploads
converted disks to Blob storage in Microsoft Azure.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication mounts uploaded disks to the backup server.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication prepares disks for restore. As part of this process, it enables Remote Desktop
rules, configures firewall rules, prepares disks for Microsoft Azure agent installation and so on.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication unmounts prepared disks from the backup server.
6. If you use an Azure restore proxy appliance for restore, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the Azure
restore proxy appliance after a timeout.
1698 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
7. Veeam Backup & Replication registers a Microsoft Azure VM with the prepared workload disks. After the
registration process is complete, the Microsoft Azure VM is powered on immediately. Then the Microsoft
Azure agent is installed on the VM.
To restore a Linux workload, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following steps:
1. If you use an Azure restore proxy appliance (former Azure proxy) for restore, Veeam Backup & Replication
powers on the Azure restore proxy appliance. For more information about the Azure restore proxy
appliance, see Managing Azure Restore Proxy Appliances.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication converts disks of a backed-up workload to the VHD format and uploads
converted disks to Blob storage in Microsoft Azure.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication mounts uploaded disks to the helper appliance that resides in the location to
which you restore the Linux workload.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication starts the helper appliance with mounted disks.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication prepares disks for restore. As part of this process, it enables remote
connection rules, configures firewall rules and so on.
6. Veeam Backup & Replication unmounts prepared disks from the helper appliance and powers off the
helper appliance.
7. If you use an Azure restore proxy appliance for restore, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the Azure
restore proxy appliance after a timeout.
1699 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
8. Veeam Backup & Replication registers a Microsoft Azure VM with the prepared workload disks. After the
registration process is complete, the VM is powered on immediately.
o Add a Microsoft Azure Compute account if you want to restore workloads to Microsoft Azure.
o Add a Microsoft Azure Stack Hub Compute account if you want to restore workloads to Azure Stack
Hub.
These accounts must have specific built-in Azure roles (the roles are listed in the sections about adding
the accounts). If you do not want to use built-in roles, you can create a custom role with granular
permissions. For more information, see Creating Custom Role for Azure Account.
NOTE
[If you have not changed default credentials for helper appliance] Before you configure the helper
appliances, we recommend you to change the default credentials used during the helper appliance
deployment. For more information on how to do this, see Changing Credentials for Helper
Appliances.
NOTE
If you added the Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication
infrastructure and you plan to restore VMs from restore points that were created using the appliance, you
do not need to configure the helper appliance and Azure restore proxy appliance (former Azure proxy).
Also, restore to Microsoft Azure works as described in the Performing VM Restore section in Veeam Backup
for Microsoft Azure User Guide.
1700 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Creating Custom Role for Azure and Azure Stack Hub Accounts
Granular permissions differ depending on whether you create an Azure Stack Hub account, or Azure Compute
account using a new AD application, or Azure Compute account using an existing AD application.
1701 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Import-Module Az.Resources
$role = [Microsoft.Azure.Commands.Resources.Models.Authorization.PSRoleDefiniti
on]::new()
$role.Name = 'Veeam Restore Operator'
$role.Description = 'Permissions needed for an application for an Azure Compute
Account'
$role.IsCustom = $true
$permissions = @(
'Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/listkeys/action',
'Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/read',
'Microsoft.Network/locations/checkDnsNameAvailability/read',
'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/read',
'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/subnets/join/action',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/read',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/write',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/delete',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/join/action',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/read',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/write',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/delete',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/join/action',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/read',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/write',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/delete',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/join/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/locations/vmSizes/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/locations/usages/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/write',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/delete',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/start/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/deallocate/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/instanceView/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/extensions/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/extensions/write',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/convertToManagedDisks/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/write',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/beginGetAccess/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/delete',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/endGetAccess/action'
'Microsoft.Resources/checkResourceName/action',
'Microsoft.Resources/subscriptions/resourceGroups/read',
'Microsoft.Resources/subscriptions/resourceGroups/write',
'Microsoft.Resources/subscriptions/locations/read')
$role.Actions = $permissions
$role.NotActions = (Get-AzRoleDefinition -Name 'Virtual Machine Contributor').N
otActions
$subs = '/subscriptions/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000' #use your subscr
iption ID
$role.AssignableScopes = $subs
New-AzRoleDefinition -Role $role
1702 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
NOTE
• You must use Connect-AzAccount and Get-AzSubscription to input the subscription ID within
the script.
• The script is provided for Az PowerShell module 6.0.0. The naming of commands may vary for other
versions of Az PowerShell module.
Script for Legacy AzureRM PowerShell
1703 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Import-Module AzureRm.Resources
$role = [Microsoft.Azure.Commands.Resources.Models.Authorization.PSRoleDefiniti
on]::new()
$role.Name = 'Veeam Restore Operator'
$role.Description = 'Permissions needed for an application for an Azure Compute
Account'
$role.IsCustom = $true
$permissions = @(
'Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/listkeys/action',
'Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/read',
'Microsoft.Network/locations/checkDnsNameAvailability/read',
'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/read',
'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/subnets/join/action',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/read',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/write',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/delete',
'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/join/action',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/read',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/write',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/delete',
'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/join/action',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/read',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/write',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/delete',
'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/join/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/locations/vmSizes/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/locations/usages/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/write',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/delete',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/start/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/deallocate/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/instanceView/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/extensions/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/extensions/write',
'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/convertToManagedDisks/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/read',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/write',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/beginGetAccess/action',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/delete',
'Microsoft.Compute/disks/endGetAccess/action'
'Microsoft.Resources/checkResourceName/action',
'Microsoft.Resources/subscriptions/resourceGroups/read',
'Microsoft.Resources/subscriptions/resourceGroups/write',
'Microsoft.Resources/subscriptions/locations/read')
$role.Actions = $permissions
$role.NotActions = (Get-AzureRmRoleDefinition -Name 'Virtual Machine Contributo
r').NotActions
$subs = '/subscriptions/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000' #use your subscr
iption ID
$role.AssignableScopes = $subs
New-AzureRmRoleDefinition -Role $role
1704 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
NOTE
2. Assign the created role to the required application. For details, see the Manage access to Azure resources
using RBAC and the Azure portal section in the RBAC for Azure resources documentation.
3. At the Access Type step of the Microsoft Azure Compute Account wizard, select Use existing account.
4. At the Sub scription step, specify Azure AD application with the assigned role.
Import-Module Az.Resources
$role = [Microsoft.Azure.Commands.Resources.Models.Authorization.PSRoleDefiniti
on]::new()
$role.Name = 'Veeam Register Azure Compute Account using new Azure AD applicati
on'
$role.Description = 'Permissions needed to add an Azure Compute Account based o
n new Azure AD application'
$role.IsCustom = $true
$permissions = @(
'Microsoft.Authorization/roleAssignments/read'
'Microsoft.Authorization/roleAssignments/write')
$role.Actions = $permissions
$role.NotActions = (Get-AzRoleDefinition -Name 'Virtual Machine Contributor').N
otActions
$subs = '/subscriptions/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000' #use your subscr
iption ID
$role.AssignableScopes = $subs
New-AzRoleDefinition -Role $role
NOTE
• You must use Connect-AzAccount and Get-AzSubscription to input the subscription ID within
the script.
• The script is provided for Az PowerShell module 6.0.0. The naming of commands may vary for other
versions of Az PowerShell module.
Script for Legacy AzureRM PowerShell
1705 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Import-Module AzureRm.Resources
$role = [Microsoft.Azure.Commands.Resources.Models.Authorization.PSRoleDefiniti
on]::new()
$role.Name = 'Veeam Register Azure Compute Account using new Azure AD applicati
on'
$role.Description = 'Permissions needed to add an Azure Compute Account based o
n new Azure AD application'
$role.IsCustom = $true
$permissions = @(
'Microsoft.Authorization/roleAssignments/read'
'Microsoft.Authorization/roleAssignments/write')
$role.Actions = $permissions
$role.NotActions = (Get-AzureRmRoleDefinition -Name 'Virtual Machine Contributo
r').NotActions
$subs = '/subscriptions/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000' #use your subscr
iption ID
$role.AssignableScopes = $subs
New-AzureRmRoleDefinition -Role $role
NOTE
2. Assign the created role to the required Azure user. For details, see the Manage access to Azure resources
using RBAC and the Azure portal section in the RBAC for Azure resources documentation.
3. At the Access Type step of the Microsoft Azure Compute Account wizard, select Create a new a ccount.
4. At the Sub scription step, configure the account as described in Creating New Azure AD Application. On the
Microsoft Azure device authentication page, specify an Azure AD user account with the assigned role.
1. In the Azure Stack Hub management portal, go to subscription properties a nd open Access control (IAM).
2. Create a custom role from a JSON file as described in Microsoft Docs. Use the following JSON. In the
a ssignableScopes field, specify your subscription ID.
1706 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
{
"properties": {
"roleName": "
Veeam Restore Operat
or",
"description"
: "Permissions neede
d for an application
for an Azure Compute
Account",
"assignableSc
opes": [
"/subscri
ptions/your_subscrip
tion_ID_here"
],
"permissions"
: [
{
"acti
ons": [
"
Microsoft.Storage/st
orageAccounts/listke
ys/action",
"
Microsoft.Storage/st
orageAccounts/read",
"
Microsoft.Network/lo
cations/checkDnsName
Availability/read",
"
Microsoft.Network/vi
rtualNetworks/read",
"
Microsoft.Network/vi
rtualNetworks/subnet
s/join/action",
"
Microsoft.Network/pu
blicIPAddresses/read
",
"
Microsoft.Network/pu
blicIPAddresses/writ
e",
"
Microsoft.Network/pu
blicIPAddresses/dele
te",
"
Microsoft.Network/pu
blicIPAddresses/join
/action",
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkInterfaces/read
",
1707 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkInterfaces/writ
e",
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkInterfaces/dele
te",
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkInterfaces/join
/action",
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkSecurityGroups/
read",
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkSecurityGroups/
write",
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkSecurityGroups/
delete",
"
Microsoft.Network/ne
tworkSecurityGroups/
join/action",
"
Microsoft.Compute/lo
cations/vmSizes/read
",
"
Microsoft.Compute/lo
cations/usages/read"
,
"
Microsoft.Compute/vi
rtualMachines/read",
"
Microsoft.Compute/vi
rtualMachines/write"
,
"
Microsoft.Compute/vi
rtualMachines/delete
",
"
Microsoft.Compute/vi
rtualMachines/start/
action",
"
Microsoft.Compute/vi
rtualMachines/deallo
cate/action",
"
Microsoft.Compute/vi
rtualMachines/extens
ions/read",
1708 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
"
Microsoft.Compute/vi
rtualMachines/extens
ions/write",
"
Microsoft.Resources/
checkResourceName/ac
tion",
"
Microsoft.Resources/
subscriptions/resour
ceGroups/read",
"
Microsoft.Resources/
subscriptions/resour
ceGroups/write",
"
Microsoft.Resources/
subscriptions/locati
ons/read"
],
"notA
ctions": [],
"data
Actions": [],
"notD
ataActions": []
}
]
}
}
3. Assign the created role to the required Azure AD application. For details, see the Manage access to Azure
resources using RBAC and the Azure portal section in the RBAC for Azure resources documentation.
4. At the Account Type step of the Microsoft Azure Compute Account wizard, select Use existing account.
5. At the Subscription step of the wizard, specify the Azure AD application with the assigned role.
1. In the Azure Stack Hub management portal, go to subscription properties and open Access control (IAM).
2. Create a custom role from a JSON file as described in Microsoft Docs. Use the following JSON. In the
a ssignableScopes field, specify your subscription ID.
1709 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
{
"properties": {
"roleName": "
Veeam Register Azure
Compute Account usin
g new Azure AD appli
cation",
"description"
: "Permissions neede
d for a user to add
an Azure Compute Acc
ount based on new Az
ure AD application",
"assignableSc
opes": [
"/subscri
ptions/00000000-0000
-0000-0000-000000000
000"
],
"permissions"
: [
{
"acti
ons": [
"
Microsoft.Authorizat
ion/roleAssignments/
read",
"
Microsoft.Authorizat
ion/roleAssignments/
write"
],
"notA
ctions": [],
"data
Actions": [],
"notD
ataActions": []
}
]
}
}
3. Assign the created role to the required Azure AD user. For details, see the Manage access to Azure
resources using RBAC and the Azure portal section in the RBAC for Azure resources documentation.
4. At the Account Type step of the Microsoft Azure Compute Account wizard, select Create a new account.
5. At the Sub scription step, configure the account as described in Creating New Azure AD Application. On the
Microsoft Azure device authentication page, specify an Azure AD user account with the assigned role.
1710 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
A helper appliance is a small auxiliary virtual machine that Veeam Backup & Replication automatically deploys in
Microsoft Azure. When deploying the helper appliance, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes the VM sizes
available in the restore region and selects the cheapest and smallest size suitable for using the helper a ppliance.
Helper appliances are persistent. After the restore process finishes, helper appliances get powered off and
remain in Microsoft Azure. The appliances remain in the powered off state until you start a new restore process.
Note that Microsoft Azure will bill you for storing helper appliances disks in the storage account. To remove a
helper appliance, follow the instruction provided in Removing Helper Appliances.
• Veeam Backup & Replication uses its built-in credentials record to work with all helper appliances. For
security reasons, we recommended that you change a password for this account before you set up the
helper appliances. Changing credentials is required only once. For more information, see Changing
Credentials for Helper Appliances.
• If you plan to restore Linux workloads to different locations, you must configure a helper appliance in each
location to which workloads will be restored.
Helper appliances are configured when you add a Microsoft Azure compute or Microsoft Azure Stack account.
For more information, see the Helper Appliance step description in the Microsoft Azure Compute Accounts or
Microsoft Azure Stack Hub Compute Accounts section.
For security reasons, we recommend you to change the password for this credentials record before you set up
helper appliances.
IMP ORTANT
When you change the password in the built-in credentials record, you must re-deploy all existing helper
appliances in Microsoft Azure and Azure Stack Hub. To redeploy appliances, you must remove all
configured appliances and then configure them once again.
To change the password in the credentials record for the helper appliances:
2. In the Ma nage Credentials window, click the built-in credentials record for the helper appliances.
3. Click E d it.
1711 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
5. Click OK to save changes.
2. In the accounts list, select the Azure account and click E d it.
3. Pass to the Helper Appliance step of the Microsoft Azure Compute Account wizard.
4. In the Helper appliances list, select the helper appliance and click Remove.
IMP ORTANT
Do not clear the E na ble restore of Linux-based computers check box at the Sub scription step of the wizard
to remove helper appliances. In this case, the Microsoft Azure C ompute Account wizard will not display the
Helper Appliance step. Helper appliances themselves will remain in Microsoft Azure.
1712 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Managing Azure Restore Proxy Appliances
Azure restore proxy appliances (former Azure proxies) help speed up the restore process especially if you
restore workloads to a distant location or the network connection is slow. The Azure restore proxy appliance is a
small auxiliary machine in Microsoft Azure over which Veeam Backup & Replication transports VM disk data to
Blob storage. Veeam components installed on the Azure restore proxy appliance compress and deduplicate disk
data, which helps reduce network traffic.
Although Azure restore proxy appliances are optional, we recommend you to configure them as Azure restore
proxy appliances do not require a lot of resources but can significantly improve restore performance. Configure
an Azure restore proxy appliance in a location to which you plan to restore workloads or close to this location. If
you plan to restore workloads to different locations, configure at least one Azure restore proxy appliance in
each location.
The process of Azure restore proxy appliance deployment takes some time. We recommend you to configure the
Azure restore proxy appliance in advance, before you start the restore process. To configure an Azure restore
proxy appliance, use the New Azure Restore Proxy Appliance wizard as described in Configuring Azure Restore
Proxy Appliances. Veeam Backup & Replication will deploy a Microsoft Windows Server machine in Microsoft
Azure and will assign the role of the Azure restore proxy appliance to this machine. You can then instruct
Veeam Backup & Replication to use the Azure restore proxy appliance for restore tasks.
The Azure restore proxy appliance is persistent. After the restore process finishes, the Azure restore proxy
appliance gets powered off and remains in Microsoft Azure. The Azure restore proxy appliance remains in the
powered off state until a new restore process is started. Note that Microsoft Azure will bill you for storing Azure
restore proxy appliance disks in the storage account. To remove an Azure restore proxy appliance, follow the
instruction provided in Removing Azure Restore Proxy Appliances.
1713 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Before You Begin
Before you configure an Azure restore proxy appliance, check the following prerequisites:
• You must add information about your Microsoft Azure Compute account or Microsoft Azure Stack Hub
Compute account to Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Azure
Compute Accounts or Adding Azure Stack Hub Compute Accounts.
o Storage account whose resources will be used to deploy the Azure restore proxy appliance.
o Networks to which you plan to connect the Azure restore proxy appliance.
For storage accounts and network configuration, you must use the same deployment model that you plan
to use for Azure restore proxy appliance creation.
IMP ORTANT
When you deploy Azure restore proxy appliance for Azure Stack Hub, make sure that Windows Server 2019
is available in Azure marketplace.
1714 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Step 1. Launch New Azure Restore Proxy Appliance Wizard
To launch the New Azure Restore Proxy Appliance wizard, do one of the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ba ckup Proxies node and select Ad d Proxy. Alternatively, you can
click Ad d Proxy on the ribbon.
1715 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Step 2. Specify Azure Restore Proxy Appliance Name
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the Azure restore proxy appliance:
1. In the Na me field, specify a name for the Azure restore proxy appliance. The name must meet the
following requirements:
o The name must start with a letter and end with a letter or number.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for the Azure restore proxy appliance.
3. At the Ma x concurrent tasks field, specify the number of tasks that the Azure restore proxy appliance must
handle in parallel. If the Ma x concurrent tasks value is exceeded, the Azure restore proxy appliance will
not start a new task until one of current tasks finishes.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates one task per one workload disk. By default, Azure restore proxy
appliance handles 4 concurrent tasks.
1716 | Veeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Step 3. Specify Credentials and Transport Port
At the Credentials step of the wizard, specify credentials of the local administrator account on the Azure restore
proxy appliance and define the transport port:
1. From the Credentials list, select credentials of a user that will be assigned the Local Administrator
permissions on the Azure restore proxy appliance.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click Ad d on the right to
add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
IMP ORTANT
• You cannot use reserved names such as 'administrator', 'admin', 'user', 'abc@123', 'P@$$w0rd'
and so on as a user name and password of the local administrator account.
• You must specify the user name without a domain or Microsoft Azure machine name.
• The password must be at least 8 characters long, and must contain at least 1 uppercase
character, 1 lowercase character, 1 numeric character and 1 special character.
2. In the Tra ffic port field, specify a port over which Veeam Backup & Replication will control components
installed on the Azure restore proxy appliance and transport workload disks data to Blob storage. The port
must be accessible from the backup server and backup repository that stores backups.
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Step 4. Select Subscription and Location
At the Sub scription step of the wizard, select a subscription and location for the Azure restore proxy appliance:
1. From the Sub scription list, select a subscription whose resources you want to use to deploy the Azure
restore proxy appliance. The subscription list contains all subscriptions associated with Azure or Azure
Stack Hub Compute accounts that you added to Veeam Backup & Replication.
2. From the Locations list, select a geographic region to which you want to place the Azure restore proxy
appliance. Make sure that you select a geographic region with which at least one storage account of the
subscription is associated.
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Step 5. Select VM Size
At the VM size step of the wizard, you can select the size for the Azure restore proxy appliance VM and specify
which storage account you want to use to deploy the Azure restore proxy appliance VM:
1. From the Size list, select the size for the Azure restore proxy appliance.
The default size is Standard_F4s_v2. If Standard_F4s_v2 is not available, we recommend that you select a
similar compute optimized VM size of the previous generation — F-series. For example, Standard_F4,
Standard_F4s. These sizes are sufficient to transport VM disks data to Blob storage. If necessary, you can
select a greater size for the Azure restore proxy appliance.
NOTE
Azure restore proxy appliance VMs created in Veeam Backup & Replication version prior 10a have
smaller sizes — Basic_A2. We recommend you to change sizes of such proxies to the sizes listed
above. This will enhance the performance of restore to Azure.
You can change VM sizes in Microsoft Azure Portal or deploy new proxies with the required sizes in
the Veeam Backup & Replication.
2. From the Storage account list, select a storage account where Veeam Backup & Replication will store
components required for Azure restore proxy appliance deployment. After restore, the components will
be removed from the storage account.
[For Azure Stack Hub] Veeam Backup & Replication will store disks of the Azure restore proxy appliance in
the selected storage account. The storage account must be compatible with the VM size you select.
The list of storage accounts will contain only general purpose storage accounts. Blob storage accounts will
not be displayed in the list of subscriptions. For more information about account types, see Microsoft
Docs.
NOTE
You cannot use a storage account with the ZRS or GZRS replication option for the Azure restore
proxy appliance. For details, see Microsoft Docs.
TIP
Microsoft Azure subscriptions have default limits on the number of CPU cores. Make sure that the
VM size you select does not exceed limits of the subscription.
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Step 6. Select Resource Group
At the Resource Group step of the wizard, you specify the resource group to which the Azure restor e proxy
appliance must be placed and configure DNS name label:
1. You can place the Azure restore proxy appliance to an existing or new resource group:
o Select P la ce VM into the existing resource group to place the Azure restore proxy appliance to an
existing resource group. From the drop-down list, select the necessary resource group.
o Select Create a new resource group to create a dedicated resource group for the Azure restore proxy
appliance. In the Na me field, enter a name for the new resource group. The resource group name can
be up to 64 characters long and can contain only alphanumeric, underscore and hyphen characters.
For the new resource group, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically creates a network security
group, dynamic public IP and network interface.
2. In the DNS name label field, enter a name of the dynamic public IP. The DNS name label can be up to 80
characters long, and can contain only alphanumeric, dash and underscore characters. For more
information, see Microsoft Docs.
TIP
Microsoft Azure subscriptions have default limits on the number of resource groups. If you decide to create
a new resource group, make sure that you do not exceed limits of the subscription.
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Step 7. Select Virtual Network
At the Network step of the wizard, you select to which network and subnet the Azure restore proxy appliance
will be connected.
IMP ORTANT
If you want to restore from backups in an on-premises object storage repository, the selected virtual
network must have access to the source object storage repository. To provide access to object storage
repositories, you can use VPN or Azure ExpressRoute. For more information, see this Veeam KB article.
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Step 8. Start Deployment
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys the Azure restore proxy appliance with
the specified settings. You can view the deployment progress in the real-time mode. When the configuration
process is over, click Nex t. At the Summary step of the wizard, click Finish to close the wizard.
TIP
The Azure restore proxy appliance deployment may take several minutes. You can close the New Azure
Restore Proxy Appliance wizard and continue working with Veeam Backup & Replication while the helper
appliance is being deployed. To view the deployment progress, open the History view, in the inventory
pane select Sy stem, and double-click the task of the helper appliance deployment in the working area.
3. In the working area, right-click the Azure restore proxy appliance and select Remove.
IMP ORTANT
If you want to remove an Azure or an Azure Stack Hub Compute account from Veeam Backup & Replication,
you must remove all Azure restore proxy appliances first.
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Restoring to Microsoft Azure
Before you restore workloads to Microsoft Azure, you must configure an account to be used for restore and
required components. For more information, see Configuring Components and Accounts for Restore. Then use
the Restore to Azure wizard to restore the workloads.
NOTE
If you added the Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication
infrastructure and you plan to restore Microsoft Azure VMs from restore points that were created using the
appliance, the steps of the restore wizard differ from the steps described in this guide. For more
information, see the Restoring to Microsoft Azure section in the Integration with Veeam Backup for
Microsoft Azure Guide.
• You must create a backup of the workload that you want to restore in Microsoft Azure. For the list of
supported backups, see Restore to Microsoft Azure.
• A backup chain from which you plan to restore a workload must reside in a backup repository added to the
backup infrastructure. You can also import a backup to the Veeam Backup & Replication console. For more
information, see Importing Backups.
o Storage account whose resources you plan to use to store disks of the restored workload.
• Make sure that you configured all the required components and accounts in Veeam Backup & Replication
as described in Configuring Components and Accounts for Restore.
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• [For speeding up restore from Capacity Tier] It is strongly recommended to use Azure restore proxy
appliance when you restore from backups residing on a Capacity Tier. For more information on Azure
restore proxy appliances, see Managing Microsoft Azure Restore Proxy Appliances.
• You must set up correct time on the backup server. Otherwise you may not be able to add a Microsoft
Azure Compute account or Microsoft Azure Stack Hub Compute account to Veeam Backup & Replication,
or the restore process may fail.
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Step 1. Launch Restore to Azure Wizard
To launch the Restore to Azure wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select the type of backups from which you want to restore:
o VMware vSphere
o Microsoft Hyper-V
o Agent
o AWS
o GCE backup
o Nutanix backup
o RHV Proxy
In the displayed window, click E ntire VM restore > Restore to public cloud > Restore to Microsoft Azure.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, select workloads that you want to restore and click Restore to Microsoft Azure on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click one of the workloads that you want to restore and select Restore to
Microsoft Azure.
• Double-click a full backup file (VBK) or backup metadata file (VBM) in a file browser.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start its console. In the Ba ckup P roperties window, select the necessary
workload and click Restore > Restore to Microsoft Azure.
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Step 2. Select Workloads and Restore Points
At the Ma chine step of the wizard, specify workloads that you want to restore and specify restore points to
which you want to restore the workloads. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores workloads to the
latest valid restore point in the backup chain.
Selecting Workloads
To select workloads to restore:
2. In the Ba ckup Browser window, expand the necessary backup, select workloads and click Ad d .
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3. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point to which you want to restore the workload.
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Step 3. Select Subscription and Location
At the Sub scription step of the wizard, select a subscription, location for the restored workloads and define how
workload data must be transported to Microsoft Azure or Azure Stack Hub:
1. From the Sub scription list, select a subscription whose resources you want to use. The subscription list
contains all subscriptions associated with the Azure compute or Azure Stack Hub Compute accounts that
you have added to Veeam Backup & Replication.
2. From the Locations list, select a geographic region to which you want to place the restored workloads.
Make sure that you select a geographic region with which at least one storage account of the subscriptions
is associated.
3. If you are restoring the workloads to a distant location and want to speed up the restore process, select
the Use a p roxy appliance check box. From the drop-down list, select an Azure restore proxy appliance.
It is recommended that you configure the Azure restore proxy appliance in the same location to which you
plan to restore the workload. For more information, see Managing Azure Restore Proxy Appliances.
IMP ORTANT
[For restore of Linux workloads] You must have a preconfigured helper appliance in the location to which
you restore Linux workloads. If the appliance is not configured, Veeam Backup & Replication will display
the Microsoft Azure Compute Account wizard so that you can configure the appliance in the selected
location.
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Step 3. Specify Names and Tags
At the Na me step of the wizard, you can specify new names for the restored workloads and assign tags to them.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores workloads with their original names.
2. In the Cha nge Name window, enter a new name explicitly or specify a change name rule — add a prefix
and/or suffix to the original workload name.
Adding Tags
To add a tag for the restored workloads:
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3. In the Microsoft Azure VM Tag window, specify the tag name and its value.
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Step 4. Specify VM Size and Disks
At the VM Size step of the wizard, you can select VM sizes, storage accounts where to store disks of the restored
workloads, select disks to restore and change their type. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication selects the
smallest size that can support the number of disks for the restored workload and restores all workload disks.
2. From the Size list, select a size for the restored workload.
Make sure that you select the right workload size that corresponds to the initial workload configuration.
The size affects the number of CPU cores, memory and disk resources that will be allocated to the
restored workload. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
3. From the Storage type list, select the disk type. Note the limitations for disk sizes in Limitations for
Restore to Microsoft Azure.
4. From the Storage account list, select a storage account whose resources you want to use to store disks of
the restored workload. The storage account must be compatible with the workload size you select. Note
the limitations for storage accounts in Limitations for Restore to Microsoft Azure.
The list of storage accounts contains only general purpose storage accounts. Blob storage accounts are
not be displayed in the list of subscriptions. For more information about account types, see Microsoft
Docs.
If you select a premium storage account, make sure that the restored workload size is compatible with the
selected account.
NOTE
Microsoft Azure subscriptions have default limits on the number of CPU cores. Make sure that the restored
workload size that you select does not exceed limits of the subscription.
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Selecting Disks to Restore and Changing Their Types
You can restore all disks or specific disks of a workload. You can also change disk types of the restored disks if
you have selected the managed storage type.
2. In the Disks to restore window, check that check boxes next to disks that you want to restore are selected.
Clear check boxes next to disks that you do not want to restore.
3. [For managed storage type] Select a disk and click Disk Type. In the Select Azure VM Disk Type window,
select the necessary type. For more information on disk types, see Microsoft Docs.
IMP ORTANT
The selected disk type must be compatible with the selected workload size.
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Step 5. Specify VM Name and Resource Group
At the Resource Group step of the wizard, you can select resource groups for the restored workloads for them.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new resource group for the restored workloads and places
them to it.
2. In the VM Resource Group window, select the necessary option for the workload:
o Select P la ce VM into the existing resource group if you want to place the workload to an existing
resource group. Then from the drop-down list, select the necessary resource group.
o Select Create a new resource group if you want to create a dedicated resource group for the restored
workload. In the Na me field, enter a name for the new resource group.
In the new resource group, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically creates a network security
group, a dynamic public IP and network interface.
NOTE
Microsoft Azure subscriptions have default limits on the number of resource groups. If you decide to create
a new resource group, make sure that you do not exceed limits of the subscription.
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Step 6. Configure Network Settings
At the Network step of the wizard, select to which networks and subnets the restored workloads will be
connected. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new security group for the restored workloads.
Configuring Network
To define network settings for a workload, do the following:
2. From the Virtual network drop-down list, select a network to which the workload must be connected.
3. From the Sub net drop-down list, select a subnet for the workload.
4. In the P ub lic IP field, specify whether to assign a public IP to the workload. You have two options:
o Assign (restored VM will be accessible from the Internet). The public IP will be assigned to the
restored workload. For security reasons, make sure traffic filtration rules are properly configured in
the security group.
o Do not assign (more secure). The public IP will not be assigned. You can assign a public IP later in the
settings of the restored workload.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication can connect a workload only to one virtual network. If necessary, you can
manually configure additional network connections in Microsoft Azure after the workload is restored.
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Configuring Security Group
To change a security group to which a workload will be restored:
1. From the Virtual network list, select a workload and click Group.
2. Select the network security group from the Network security group list.
If you leave the Empty value, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a new network security group.
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Step 7. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you restore Microsoft Windows workloads.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan workload data with antivirus
software before restoring the workload to Microsoft Azure or Azure Stack Hub. For more information on secure
restore, see Secure Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n VM for virus threats prior performing recovery
check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o Ab ort VM recovery. Select this action if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to cancel the restore
session.
o P roceed recovery b ut connect VM to a different network. Select this action if you want to restore the
workload to a different Microsoft Azure virtual network.
3. Select the Sca n entire VM for virus threats check box if you want the antivirus software to continue
workload scan after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware
scan, see Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 8. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring the workload. The information you provide will be
saved in the session history in Veeam Backup & Replication, and you can view it later.
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Step 9. Verify Restore Settings
At the Rea dy to Restore step of the wizard, check the specified settings and click Finish. If you want to start the
Azure VM right after restore, select the P ower on VM after restoring check box.
You can trace the restore process in the Restore Session window. If you need to cancel the workload restore,
click the Ca ncel restore task link.
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Restore to Amazon EC2
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to restore different workloads (VMs, Google VM instances, physical
servers and so on) to Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) as EC2 instances. An EC2 instance is a virtual
machine in Amazon EC2 with a preconfigured combination of computing resources.
You can use Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the following operations:
• Create a test environment in the cloud for troubleshooting, testing patches and updates, and so on.
• Backups of Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Backups of virtual and physical machines created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent
for Linux.
• Backups of Microsoft Azure virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
• Backups of Google Compute Engine VM instances created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud.
• Backups of Nutanix AHV virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV.
Helper Appliances
Helper appliance is an auxiliary Linux-based EC2 instance. It is used to upload backed-up data to Amazon EC2.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically deploys the helper appliance in Amazon EC2 only for the duration of
the restore process and removes it immediately after that.
Depending on the type of backups you are restoring from and their location, the helper appliance may be
required or optional. The helper appliance is required when you restore from:
• Backups of virtual and physical machines that are stored in object storage repositories.
The helper appliance is optional when you restore from backups of virtual and physical machines stored in
backup repositories, or backups of EC2 instances copied to backup repositories with backup copy jobs. It is
recommended, however, to use the helper appliance in scenarios where it is optional, as the helper appliance
can significantly improve restore performance. You can specify the helper appliance settings at the Helper
Appliance step of the Restore to Amazon EC2 wizard.
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Requirements for Helper Appliance
When configuring a helper appliance, mind the following:
• If you want to restore from backups in an on-premises object storage repository, the helper appliance
machine must have access to the source object storage repository. To provide access to object storage
repositories, you can use VPN or AWS Direct Connect.
• To upload one machine disk to Amazon EC2, the helper appliance requires 1 GB RAM. Make sure that the
type of EC2 instance selected for the helper appliance offers enough memory resources to upload all
machine disks. Otherwise, the restore process may fail.
• A subnet and security group that you select for the helper appliance must meet the following
requirements:
o Auto-assignment of public IPv4 addresses must be enabled in the subnet. For more information on
how to enable this option, see the AWS Documentation.
o The subnet route table must contain a default route to an active AWS internet gateway. For more
information on internet gateways and how to create route tables, see the AWS Documentation.
o The subnet must have no network access control lists (ACLs) or a network ACL that allows inbound
and outbound traffic on the ports listed in the Ports section.
o The security group must allow inbound and outbound traffic on the ports listed in the Ports section.
NOTE
If you added the Veeam Backup for AWS appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and
you plan to restore Amazon EC2 instances from restore points that were created using the appliance, you
do not need to configure the helper appliance. Also, restore to Amazon EC2 works as described in the
Entire EC2 Instance Restore section in the Veeam Backup for AWS User Guide.
During the restore process, the helper appliance communicates with backup infrastructure components
over the SSH protocol and the network redirector that is deployed on the helper appliance.
2. For every disk of a backed-up workload, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an empty EBS volume in
Amazon EC2.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication hot-adds empty disks to the helper appliance and restores backed -up data to
the EBS volumes.
4. [For backups of EC2 instances] Veeam Backup & Replication creates a target instance in Amazon EC2.
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5. [For backups of EC2 instances] Veeam Backup & Replication detaches the EBS volumes from the helper
appliance and attaches them to the target instance.
6. [For backups of other workloads] Veeam Backup & Replication requests Amazon to create snapshots of
the attached EBS volumes. The snapshots are created in Amazon S3.
7. [For backups of other workloads] Veeam Backup & Replication requests Amazon to use the VM Import
functionality to import a VM from EBS volume snapshots to Amazon EC2.
8. [For backups of other workloads] After the restore process is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication
removes the snapshots created in Amazon S3.
9. Veeam Backup & Replication removes helper appliance from Amazon EC2.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication uploads disks of a backed-up workload to Amazon S3.
In Amazon S3, the uploaded disks are stored to the temporary bucket in the RAW format.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication imports the backed-up data from the temporary bucket in Amazon S3 to EBS
volumes in Amazon EC2.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a target instance in Amazon EC2 and attaches the EBS volumes to it.
4. After the import process is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the temporary bucket from
Amazon S3.
If you do not want to provide full access to AWS, you can grant to the IAM user a minimal set of permissions that
will be sufficient for restore. To do that, create the following policy in the JSON format and attach it to the IAM
user:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [{
"Action": [
"ec2:DescribeInstances",
"ec2:DescribeInstanceTypes",
"ec2:RunInstances",
"ec2:TerminateInstances",
"ec2:StartInstances",
"ec2:StopInstances",
"ec2:ModifyInstanceAttribute",
"ec2:DescribeImages",
"ec2:ImportImage",
"ec2:DeregisterImage",
"ec2:DescribeVolumes",
"ec2:CreateVolume",
"ec2:ModifyVolume",
"ec2:ImportVolume",
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"ec2:DeleteVolume",
"ec2:AttachVolume",
"ec2:DetachVolume",
"ec2:GetEbsEncryptionByDefault",
"ec2:CreateSnapshot",
"ec2:DescribeSnapshots",
"ec2:DeleteSnapshot",
"ec2:DescribeSubnets",
"ec2:DescribeNetworkInterfaces",
"ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups",
"ec2:DescribeKeyPairs",
"ec2:CreateKeyPair",
"ec2:DeleteKeyPair",
"ec2:DescribeAvailabilityZones",
"ec2:DescribeVpcs",
"ec2:DescribeConversionTasks",
"ec2:DescribeImportImageTasks",
"ec2:DescribeVolumesModifications",
"ec2:CancelImportTask",
"ec2:CancelConversionTask",
"ec2:CreateTags",
"ec2:DescribeAccountAttributes",
"ec2:DescribeDhcpOptions",
"ec2:DescribeVpcAttribute",
"iam:GetRole",
"iam:CreateRole",
"iam:PutRolePolicy",
"iam:DeleteRolePolicy",
"s3:CreateBucket",
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:ListAllMyBuckets",
"s3:DeleteBucket",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:GetBucketLocation",
"s3:PutLifeCycleConfiguration",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:RestoreObject",
"s3:AbortMultiPartUpload",
"s3:ListBucketMultiPartUploads",
"s3:ListMultipartUploadParts"
],
"Effect": "Allow",
"Resource": "*"
}]
}
Alternatively, you can attach the created policy to the IAM group or role to which the IAM user is assigned.
For information on how to create and attach a policy to an IAM user, see the Creating IAM Policies and Adding
and Removing IAM Identity Permissions sections in the AWS IAM User Guide.
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NOTE
If you added the Veeam Backup for AWS appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and
you plan to restore Amazon EC2 instances from restore points that were created using the appliance, the
steps of the restore wizard differ from the steps described in this guide. For more information, s ee the
Restoring to Amazon section in the Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS Guide.
• Check whether a helper appliance must be configured for restore. For more information, see Helper
Appliances.
• The backup server and repositories with workload backup files must have access to the internet.
If backup files are located on deduplicating storage appliances or shared folder repositories, the internet
connection is required for gateway servers that communicate with these repositories.
• If you use a cloud-init-based Linux distribution, we recommend that you use SSH keys on these
distributions. If you use a password, it is blocked after restore for security reasons. To reset the password
on the restored instance, use the technologies described in AWS Documentation.
• You must have a backup of the workload that you plan to restore to Amazon EC2.
• Make sure that a user whose credentials you plan to use to connect to AWS has permissions to restore to
Amazon EC2. For more information, see AWS IAM User Permissions.
• If you restore workloads other than EC2 instances, check the supported OS, EC2 instance and file sys tem
types in the AWS Documentation.
• Check that the logical sector size of disks that you plan to restore is less than 4096 bytes. Contents of
disks whose logical sector size is 4096 bytes will be unreadable in Amazon EC2.
• If you plan to assign AWS tags to the restored EC2 instance, check limitations for tags in the AWS
Documentation.
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Step 1. Launch Restore to Amazon EC2 Wizard
To begin the restore process, do one of the following.
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select the type of backups from which you want to restore:
o VMware vSphere
o Microsoft Hyper-V
o Agent
o AWS
o GCE backup
o Nutanix AHV
o RHV Proxy
In the displayed window, click E ntire VM restore > Restore to public cloud > Restore to Amazon EC2.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, select workloads that you want to restore and click Restore to Amazon EC2 on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click one of the workload that you want to restore and select Restore to
Ama zon EC2.
• Double-click a full backup file (VBK) or backup metadata file (VBM) in a file browser.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start its console. In the Ba ckup P roperties window, select the necessary
workload and click Restore > Restore to Amazon EC2.
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Step 2. Select Workloads and Restore Points
At the Ma chine step of the wizard, specify workloads that you plan to restore and restore points to which you
want to restore the workloads. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores workloads to the latest valid
restore point in the backup chain.
Selecting Workloads
To select workloads to restore:
2. In the Ba ckup Browser window, expand the necessary backup, select the workloads and click Ad d .
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3. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point to which you want to restore the workload.
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Step 3. Specify Credentials and Region Settings
At the Account step of the wizard, specify AWS user credentials and region:
1. From the AW S account list, select credentials of a user account that will be used to connect to AWS. This
user account must have permissions listed in AWS IAM User Permissions.
When you add AWS user credentials, Veeam Backup & Replication imports information about resources
associated with this user. During the restore process, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses these
resources and uses them to create a target instance in Amazon EC2.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand in the Cloud Credentials Manager, click the Ma nage
a ccounts link or click Ad d on the right to add the necessary credentials.
2. From the AW S region list, select the AWS region in which Veeam Backup & Replication will restore
workloads as Amazon EC2 instances.
3. From the Da ta center region list, select the geographic region where Veeam Backup & Replication will
restore the workloads.
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Step 4. Specify Name and Tags
At the Na me step of the wizard, you can specify names and manage AWS tags for the restored workloads. By
default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the original workload names and adds the Orig inal name and Restore
sta rt time tags.
2. In the Cha nge Name window, enter a new name explicitly or specify a change name rule — add a prefix
and/or suffix to the original workload name.
NOTE
If you restore a workload from backups of an Amazon EC2 instance, Veeam Backup & Replication displays
tags that were assigned to this instance. You can modify or delete these tags as well.
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Adding Tag
To add a new tag:
Note that you cannot add the tag with the Name key. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Name tag to
set the name for the restored EC2 instance in Amazon EC2.
Modifying Tag
To modify a tag:
Deleting Tag
To delete a tag:
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Step 5. Specify Instance Type and Disks
At the Instance Type step of the wizard, you can configure the instance type for the restored workload, select
which disks to restore and change their type. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores all disks as
Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) volumes of the General Purpose SSD type. For information on types of EBS
volumes, see the AWS Documentation.
2. From the E C2 instance type list, select the instance type for the restored workload.
Make sure that you select the right instance type that corresponds to the initial workload configuration.
For information on instance types, see Amazon EC2 Instance Types.
If you restore an EC2 instance from backups created with Veeam Backup for AWS,
Veeam Backup & Replication will identify the type of a backed-up instance and select it by default.
3. From the OS license list, select the license policy that AWS will apply for software on the restored
workload:
o [For Linux workloads] The Bring Your Own License (BYOL) policy is used.
o [For Microsoft Windows workloads] Select one of the following license policies:
▪ P rovided by Amazon AWS . Select this option if you want to obtain licenses for Microsoft
software from AWS.
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▪ Bring Your Own License ( BYOL). Select this option if you want to use your existing licenses for
Microsoft software.
For more information on Microsoft software licensing in AWS, see Microsoft Licensing on AWS.
2. In the Disks To Restore window, make sure that check boxes next to disks that you want to restore are
selected. Clear check boxes next to disks that you do not want to restore.
3. Select a disk whose type you want to change and click Disk type.
4. In the Select EC2 Disk Type window, choose the disk type.
If you selected the P rovisioned IOPS SSD (IO1) type, you can also specify the maximum number of
input/output operations per second (IOPS) for the volume. For more information on IOPS, see the AWS
Documentation.
TIP
For your convenience, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the AWS Simple Monthly Calculator tools to
estimate an approximate price per month for using a selected instance. The estimated price is calculated
based on the instance type, license policy and disk configuration.
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Step 6. Configure Network Settings
At the Network step of the wizard, you can select to which Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) the
restored workload must be connected. You can also specify a subnet, and a security group — a virtual firewall for
the restored EC2 instance. For more information on Amazon VPC, see the AWS Documentation.
1. From the Ama zon VPC list, select the Amazon VPC where the restored workload will be launched.
2. From the Sub net list, select the subnet for the restored workload.
3. From the Security group list, select a security group that will be associated with your restored workload.
o Assign (restored VM will be accessible from the Internet) — if you want to assign a public IP to the
restored workload. For security reasons, make sure traffic filtration rules are properly configured in
the security group.
o Do not assign (more secure) — if you do not want to assign a public IP.
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Step 7. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you restore Microsoft Windows-based workloads.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan workload data with antivirus
software before restoring the workload to Amazon EC2. For more information on secure restore, see Secure
Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n the restored VM for malware prior to performing
the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o Ab ort VM recovery. Select this action if you want to cancel the restore session.
o P roceed with recovery but connect the VM to a different network. Select this action if you want to
restore the workload to a different AWS security group.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue workload scan
after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see Viewing
Malware Scan Results.
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Step 8. Configure Helper Appliance
At the Help er Appliance step of the wizard, you can specify helper appliance settings. A helper appliance is an
auxiliary Linux-based instance used to upload disks of a backed-up workload to Amazon EC2. For more
information on the helper appliance and requirements for it, see Helper Appliance.
2. Click Customize.
3. From the E C2 instance type list, select the instance type for the helper appliance.
4. From the Sub net list, select the subnet for the helper appliance.
5. From the Security group list, select a security group that will be associated with the helper appliance.
6. In the Red irector port field, specify the port that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to route requests
between the helper appliance and backup infrastructure components.
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Step 9. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring the workload. The information you provide will be
saved in the session history in Veeam Backup & Replication, and you can view it later.
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Step 10. Verify Restore Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, check the specified settings and click Finish. If you want to start the EC2
instance right after restore, select the P ower on VM after restoring check box.
After the wizard closes, you can track the restore process in the Restore Session window. If you need to cancel
the workload restore, click the Ca ncel restore task link.
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Restore to Google Compute Engine
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to restore different workloads (VMs, Google VM instances, physical
servers and so on) to Google Compute Engine as VM instances. A VM instance is a virtual machine in G oogle
Compute Engine with a preconfigured combination of computing resources.
You can use Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the following operations:
• Create a test environment in the cloud for troubleshooting, testing patches and updates, and so on.
• Backups of VMware vSphere or VMware Cloud Director VMs created by Veeam Backup & Replication.
• Backups of virtual and physical machines created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or Veeam Agent
for Linux.
• Backups of Google Compute Engine VM instances created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud.
• Backups of Microsoft Azure VMs created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
• Backups of Nutanix AHV VMs created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV.
Helper Appliances
Helper appliance is an auxiliary Linux-based VM instance. It is used to upload backed-up data to Google
Compute Engine. Veeam Backup & Replication automatically deploys the helper appliance in Google Compute
Engine only for the duration of the restore process and removes it immediately after that.
Depending on the type of backups you are restoring from and their location, the helper appliance may be
required or optional. The helper appliance is required when you restore from:
• Backups of Google Compute Engine VM instances that are stored in external repositories.
• Backups of virtual and physical machines that are stored in object storage repositories.
The helper appliance is optional when you restore from backups of virtual and physical machines stored in
backup repositories, or backups of Google Compute Engine virtual machines copied to backup repositories with
backup copy jobs. It is recommended, however, to use the helper appliance in scenarios wher e it is optional, as
the helper appliance may significantly improve restore performance. You can specify the helper appliance
settings at the Helper Appliance step of the Restore to Google Compute Engine wizard.
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Requirements for Helper Appliance
When configuring a helper appliance, mind the following:
• If you want to restore from backups in an on-premise object storage repository, the helper appliance
machine must have access to the source object storage repository. To provide access to object storage
repositories, you can use VPN or Google Dedicated Interconnect. For more information, see the Google
Cloud documentation.
• To upload one machine disk to Google Compute Engine, the helper appliance requires 1 GB RAM. Make
sure that the type of Google Compute Engine instance selected for the helper appliance offers enough
memory resources to upload all machine disks. Otherwise, the restore process may fail.
• The VPC route table must contain a route from the IP address of the Veeam Backup & Replication server to
an active Google Cloud internet gateway. For more information on internet gateways and how to create
route tables, see the Google Cloud documentation.
NOTE
If you add the Google Compute Engine appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and
plan to restore Google Compute Engine virtual machines from restore points that were created using the
appliance, you do not need to configure the helper appliance. Also, restore to Google Compute Engine
works as described in the Performing Instance Restore section in the Veeam Backup for Google Cloud User
Guide.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a helper appliance in Google Compute Engine.
During the restore process, the helper appliance communicates with backup infrastructure components
over the SSH protocol and the network redirector that is deployed on the helper appliance.
2. For every disk of a backed-up workload, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a disk in Google Compute
Engine.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication hot-adds empty disks to the helper appliance and restores backed -up data to
the disks.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a target instance in Google Compute Engine.
5. Veeam Backup & Replication detaches the disks from the helper appliance and attaches them to the target
instance.
6. After the restore process is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the helper appliance from
Google Compute Engine.
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Restoring to Google Compute Engine without Helper
Appliance
If the helper appliance is not used for restore to Google Compute Engine, Veeam Backup & Replication performs
the following operations:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication uploads disks of a backed-up workload to Google Cloud Storage bucket.
In Google Cloud Storage bucket, the uploaded disks are stored to the temporary bucket in the RAW
format.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication imports the backed-up data from the temporary bucket in Google Cloud
Storage to disks in Google Compute Engine.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a target instance in Google Compute Engine and attaches disks to the
target instance.
4. After the import process is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the temporary bucket from
Google Cloud Storage.
1. Grant the following roles to the IAM user whose credentials you plan to use to connect to Google
Compute Engine:
To avoid granting the Compute Admin role to the IAM user Compute Engine service account for
security reasons, you can create a custom role with the following Compute Engine IAM permissions
and grant it instead:
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compute.addresses.list
compute.disks.create
compute.disks.delete
compute.disks.get
compute.disks.use
compute.disks.useReadOnly
compute.firewalls.create
compute.firewalls.delete
compute.firewalls.list
compute.globalOperations.get
compute.images.create
compute.images.delete
compute.images.get
compute.images.useReadOnly
compute.instances.attachDisk
compute.instances.create
compute.instances.delete
compute.instances.detachDisk
compute.instances.get
compute.instances.getGuestAttributes
compute.instances.list
compute.instances.setLabels
compute.instances.setMetadata
compute.instances.setTags
compute.instances.stop
compute.machineTypes.list
compute.networks.get
compute.networks.list
compute.networks.updatePolicy
compute.projects.get
compute.regions.list
compute.subnetworks.get
compute.subnetworks.list
compute.subnetworks.use
compute.subnetworks.useExternalIp
compute.zoneOperations.get
compute.zones.get
compute.zones.list
For more information, see the Prerequisites for importing and exporting VM images section in the Google
Cloud documentation.
2. Make sure that the Cloud Build API is enabled. Then grant the following roles to the Cloud Build service
account in Google Compute Engine:
To avoid granting the Compute Admin role to the Cloud Build service account for security reasons,
you can use the custom role that you created for the IAM user Compute Engine service account and
grant it instead.
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o Service Account Token Creator role (roles/iam.serviceAccountTok enCreator)
o [Optional: to export or import images that use shared VPCs] Compute Network User role
(roles/compute.networkUser)
For more information, see the Prerequisites for importing and exporting VM images section in the Google
Cloud documentation.
NOTE
If you add the Google Compute Engine appliance to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure and
plan to restore Google Compute Engine virtual machines from restore points that were created using the
appliance, you do not need to configure the helper appliance. Also, restore to Google Compute Engine
works as described in the Performing Instance Restore section in the Veeam Backup for Google Cloud User
Guide.
• Check whether a helper appliance must be configured for restore. For more information, see Helper
Appliances.
• The backup server and repositories with workload backup files must have access to the internet.
If backup files are located on deduplicating storage appliances or shared folder repositories, the internet
connection is required for gateway servers that communicate with these repositories.
• If you use a cloud-init-based Linux distribution, we recommend that you use SSH keys on these
distributions. If you use a password, it is blocked after restore for security reasons. To reset the password
on the restored VM, use the technologies described in Google Cloud Documentation.
• You must have a backup of the workload that you plan to restore to Google Compute Engine.
• Make sure that the Cloud Build API is enabled. For more information on enabling the Cloud Build API and
other requirements for importing virtual disks into Google Compute Engine, see the Google Cloud
Documentation.
• Make sure the IAM service account that you plan to use to restore workloads to Google Compute Engine
has permissions to restore to Google Compute Engine. For more information, see Google Compute Engine
IAM User Permissions.
• If you restore workloads from backups of virtual and physical machines (non-Google Compute Engine
virtual machines), check the supported operating systems and their differences from standard images in
the Google Cloud documentation.
• Check that the logical sector size of disks that you plan to restore is less than 4096 bytes . Contents of
disks whose logical sector size is 4096 bytes will be unreadable in Google Compute Engine.
• If you plan to assign Google labels to the restored workload, check limitations for labels in the Google
Cloud documentation.
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Step 1. Launch Restore to Google Compute Engine Wizard
To begin the restore process, do one of the following.
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select the type of backups from which you want to restore:
o VMware vSphere
o Microsoft Hyper-V
o Agent
o AWS
o GCE backup
o Nutanix AHV
o RHV Proxy
In the displayed window, click E ntire VM restore > Restore to public cloud > Restore to Google Compute
E ng ine.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, select workloads that you want to restore and click Restore to Google CE on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click one of the workloads that you want to restore and select Restore to
Goog le CE.
• Double-click a full backup file (VBK) or backup metadata file (VBM) in a file browser.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start its console. In the Ba ckup P roperties window, select the necessary
workload and click Restore > Restore to Google CE.
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Step 2. Select Workloads and Restore Points
At the Virtual Machines step of the wizard, specify the workload that you plan to restore and specify a restore
point to which you want to restore the workload. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores workloads to
the latest valid restore point in the backup chain.
Selecting Workloads
To select workloads to restore:
2. In the Ba ckup Browser window, expand the necessary backup, select workloads and click Ad d .
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3. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point to which you want to restore the workload.
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Step 3. Specify Credentials and Datacenter Settings
At the Account step of the wizard, specify a Google Cloud Platform service account, data center and availability
zone to use for restore:
1. From the Google Cloud Platform service account list, select user credentials to connect to Google
Compute Engine.
When you add credentials of the Google Cloud Platform service account, Veeam Backup & Replication
imports information about resources associated with this service account. During the restore process,
Veeam Backup & Replication accesses these resources and uses them to create a target VM instance in
Google Compute Engine.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand in the Cloud Credentials Manager, click the Ma nage
a ccounts link or click Ad d on the right to add the necessary credentials, as described in Google Cloud
Platform Service Accounts.
2. From the Da ta center list, select the Google Cloud datacenter where Veeam Backup & Replication will
restore your workload as a VM instance.
3. From the Zone list, select the availability zone inside the Google Cloud datacenter where the restored
workload will reside.
If you restore a Google Compute Engine VM instance from a backup created with Veeam Backup for Google
Cloud to the same Google Cloud region where the instance is placed, after you click Nex t, the wizard will offer
you to use region settings associated with this instance.
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Step 4. Specify Name and Labels
At the Na me step of the wizard, you can specify names and manage Google labels for the restored workloads.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses original workload names.
2. In the Set name to field of the Cha nge Name window, enter a new name for the restored workload.
Adding Label
To add a new label:
3. In the GCE Instance Label window, specify the Key and Va lue properties.
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Modifying Label
To modify a label:
2. In the La b els window, select the required label and click E d it.
3. In the GCE Instance Label window, edit the Key or Va lue properties.
Deleting Label
To delete a label:
2. In the La b els window, select the required label and click Remove.
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Step 5. Specify Instance Type and Disks
At the Instance Type step of the wizard, select instance types and disk types for the restored workloa ds. By
default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores all disks as Google Compute Engine disks of the Balanced
persistent disk type. For information on types of Google Compute Engine disks, see the Google Cloud
documentation.
2. From the Ma chine type list, select the instance type for the restored workload.
Make sure that you select the right instance type that corresponds to the initial workload configuration.
For the information on instance types, see Google Cloud Documentation.
Note that if you restore a Google Compute Engine instance from the backup created with Veeam Backup
for Google Cloud, Veeam Backup & Replication will identify the type of a backed-up instance and select it
by default.
3. From the OS license list, select an option that will define what license Google Comp ute Engine will use for
the OS on the restored workload:
o Bring Your Own License ( BYOL) — the OS license will be restored from the backup. For more
information, see Google Cloud documentation.
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Selecting Disk Type
You can restore all disks or specific disks of a workload. You can also change disk types of the restored disks.
2. In the Disks To Restore window, make sure that check boxes next to disks that you want to restore are
selected. Clear check boxes next to disks that you do not want to restore.
3. Select a disk whose type you want to change and click Disk type.
4. In the Select EC2 Disk Type window, choose the disk type.
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Step 6. Select Google VPC
At the Network step of the wizard, you can select to which Google Virtual Private Cloud (Google VPC) network
the workload must be connected after restore. You can also specify a subnet. For the information on Google
VPC, see the Google Cloud documentation.
1. From the VP C list, select the VPC where the restored workload will be launched.
2. From the Sub net list, select an IP address range for the selected VPC.
o Assign (restored VM will be accessible from the Internet) — if you want to assign a public IP to the
restored workload. For security reasons, make sure firewall rules are properly configured in the target
VPC.
o Do not assign (more secure) — if you do not want to assign a public IP.
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Step 7. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you restore Microsoft Windows workloads.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan workload data with antivirus
software before restoring the workload to Google Compute Engine. For more information on secure restore, see
Secure Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n the restored VM for malware prior to performing
the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o Ab ort VM recovery. Select this action if you want to cancel the restore session.
o P roceed with recovery but connect the VM to a different network . Select this action if you want to
restore the workload to a different Google Cloud network.
Click the Click to change link to specify the VPC and subnet for this network.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue workload scan
after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see Viewing
Malware Scan Results.
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Step 8. Configure Helper Appliance
At the Help er Appliance Settings step of the wizard, you can specify helper appliance settings. A helper
appliance is an auxiliary Linux-based instance used to upload disks of a backed-up workload to Google Compute
Engine. For more information on the helper appliance and requirements for it, see Helper Appliances.
2. Click Customize.
3. From the Ma chine type list, select the instance type for the helper appliance.
4. From the VP C list, select the VPC network for the helper appliance.
5. From the Sub net list, select the subnet for the helper appliance.
6. In the Red irector port field, specify the port that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to route requests
between the helper appliance and backup infrastructure components.
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Step 9. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring the workload. The information y ou provide will be
saved in the session history in Veeam Backup & Replication, and you can view it later.
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Step 10. Verify Restore Settings
At the Rea dy to Restore step of the wizard, check the specified settings and click Finish. If you want to start the
VM instance right after restore, select the P ower on VM after restoring check box.
You can track the restore process in the Restore Session window. If you need to cancel the workload restore,
click the Ca ncel restore task link.
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Disk Recovery
Disk recovery includes the following methods:
• Instant Disk Recovery — to instantly recover VM disks from backup files. The disks are recovered in their
initial format.
Instant Disk Recovery helps improve recovery time objectives (RTO) but publishes disks with the reduced
I/O performance, that is, provides “temporary spares”. To provide the full I/O performance, you must
finalize Instant Disk Recovery — migrate the recovered disks to the production environment. If you do not
want to migrate the recovered disks, you can stop publishing them. This removes the recovered disks.
Use Instant Disk Recovery if you want to keep the target VM (VM to which you want to attach recovered
disks) turned on. If the VM can be turned off, you can use virtual disk restore.
• Instant First Class Disk Recovery — to instantly recover VM disks from backup files and register them as
First Class Disks (FCDs). FCDs are a type of improved VMDK that allow y ou to perform different tasks:
create snapshots, delete and restore data stored on VMDK without attaching these disks to a VM.
This method is similar to Instant Disk Recovery except for the format in which disks are recovered.
Use Instant FCD Recovery if you want to recover recovered disks as FCDs.
• Virtual disk restore — to restore VM disks. When you restore disks, you extract them from backups to the
production storage. Virtual disk restore takes more resources to complete than Instant Disk Recovery but
restores disks with full I/O performance. You also do not need to perform additional steps to finalize the
restore process.
Use virtual disk restore if the target VM can be turned off. If the VM must stay turned on, perform Instant
Disk Recovery.
• Disk export — to convert disks of different workloads (EC2 instances, Microsoft Azure VMs and so on) in
the VMDK, VHD or VHDX formats. Then you can export these disks to the backup infrastructure or plac e
them on a datastore connected to an ESXi host (for VMDK disk format only).
Use disk export to convert disks to the VMDK, VHD or VHDX formats.
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Instant Disk Recovery
With Instant Disk Recovery, you can immediately restore VM disks from a backup file and publish them in the
initial format. If you want to register disks as First Class Disks (FCD), see Instant First Class Disk (FCD) Recovery.
For the list of all disk recovery methods and their brief descriptions, see Disk Recovery.
NOTE
You can also recover VMware vSphere VM disks directly from storage snapshots.
• Recover VM disks, not an entire VM. Otherwise, use Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere.
• Recover VM disks and keep the target VM (to which you want to attach recovered disks) turned on. If the
VM can be turned off, use Virtual Disks Restore.
The Instant Disk Recovery is a process that must be finalized. First, test the recovered disks and then decide
whether to migrate them to the production environment or stop publishing the disks. To migrate the disks,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Quick Migration mechanism. For more information on how to finalize
Instant Disk Recovery, see Finalizing Instant Disk Recovery.
1. Checks whether the vPower NFS datastore is mounted to the ESXi host and contains VMDK files of the
recovered disks.
2. [If you replace an existing disk] Unmounts and deletes the existing disk.
4. Initiates a creation of a protective snapshot for the target VM. If Instant Disk Recovery process fails, the
protective snapshot guarantees no data loss.
5. Writes changes made to the recovered disks to redo logs on the vPower NFS server.
• Prerequisites for Instant Disk Recovery from storage snapshots are listed in the Instant Disk Recovery from
Storage Snapshots in the Integration with Storage Systems Guide.
• You can restore a virtual disk from a backup that has at least one successfully created restore point.
• If you want to scan disk data for viruses, check the secure restore requirements and limitations.
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• You must have at least 10 GB of free disk space on the datastore where write cache folder is located. This
disk space is required to store virtual disk updates for the restored VM.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication writes virtual disk updates to the IRCache folder on a volume
with the maximum amount of free space, for example, C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\IRCache.
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Step 1. Launch Disk Recovery Wizard
To launch the Instant Disk Recovery wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from backup > Disk restore > Instant disk
recovery.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand a backup or
storage snapshot, select a VM whose disks you want to restore and click Instant Disk Recovery on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click a VM whose disks you want to restore and select Instant disk
recovery.
Alternatively, to recover VMware vSphere VMs from storage snapshots, you can open the Storage Infrastructure
view. In the inventory pane, expand the storage system tree and select the necessary volume snapshot. In the
working area, select a VM whose disks you want to restore and click Instant Disk Recovery on the ribbon. You
can also right-click a VM and select Instant disk recovery.
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Step 2. Select Source VM
At the Virtual Machine step of the wizard, select a VM whose disks you want to recover.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select a restore point from which you want to recover VM disks.
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Step 4. Select Mount Mode
This step is not available if you restore VMware vSphere VM disks from a storage snapshot.
At the Mount Mode step of the wizard, select the VM d isk option to register virtual disks on a VM added to an
ESXi host.
If you want to register virtual disks on a cluster as FCDs, select the First class disk (FCD) option. In this case,
steps of the wizard differ and Veeam Backup & Replication performs Instant FCD Recovery as described in
Performing Instant First Class Disk (FCD) Recovery.
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Step 5. Select Virtual Disks to Restore
At the Disk Mapping step, select virtual disks that you want to restore and choose a VM to which the disks must
be attached:
1. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication maps the recovered disks to the original VM. If the original VM
was relocated or if you want to attach disks to another VM, select a target VM. For this , click Choose and
select a VM from the virtual environment.
IMP ORTANT
Do not use the backup server or a VM where the vPower NFS Service is installed as a target VM.
2. In the Disk mapping section, select virtual disks that you want to restore.
3. To change a virtual device node where a virtual disk will be restored, select a disk in the Disk mapping list
and click Cha nge. In the Virtual Disk Properties window, select the node:
o If you want to replace an existing virtual disk, select an occupied virtual node. The original disk will be
deleted.
o If you want to attach the restored disk to the VM as a new drive, select a node that is not occupied
yet.
NOTE
If you restore a virtual disk to an unoccupied node, Veeam Backup & Replication restores the
disk in the offline state. To work with it, you need to bring the disk online.
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Step 6. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you restore disks of Microsoft Windows VMs. However, this step is not available if you
restore disks from storage snapshots.
At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure
restore — scan virtual disk data with antivirus software before restoring the disk. For more information on secure
restore, see Secure Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n the restored disk for malware prior to
p erforming the recovery check box.
If malware is found, Veeam Backup & Replication will cancel the disk restore process.
2. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue the virtual disk
scan after a virus threat is detected. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see
Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 7. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring VM disks. This information will be saved in the
session history so that you can reference it later.
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Step 8. Verify Recovery Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, check settings of Instant Disk Recovery and click Finish.
IMP ORTANT
Before you launch VMware Remote Console, make sure that this software is installed on the machine
where the Veeam Backup & Replication console runs.
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3. In the working area, right-click a VM and select Op en VM console.
3. In the working area, right-click the VM to which disks were recovered and select Mig rate to production.
Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the Quick Migration wizard.
The wizard will be opened on the Destination step. At this step, you can change the datastore where the
virtual disks will be placed. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication places the disks in the datastore
where the VM configuration file is stored.
Other fields (host, resource pool and VM folder) are populated with data of the VM where you restore the
disks. You cannot change this data.
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After you finish working with the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication migrates the disks with all changes made
after the disk recovery and before its migration.
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3. In the working area, right-click the VM to which the disks were recovered and select Stop p ublishing.
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Instant First Class Disk (FCD) Recovery
With Instant First Class Disk (FCD) Recovery, you can immediately restore VM disks from a backup file and
register them as FCDs. If you want to recover disks in their initial format, see Instant Disk Recovery. For the list
of all disk recovery methods and their brief descriptions, see Disk Recovery.
The Instant FCD Recovery is a process that must be finalized. You must migrate FCDs to the production
environment or stop publishing them. To migrate the disks, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Quick
Migration mechanism. For more information on how to finalize Instant FCD Recovery, see Finalizing Instant FCD
Recovery.
2. Connects to a target VMware cluster and mounts vPower NFS datastore to all ESXi hosts added to the
target VMware cluster.
3. Mounts recovered disks and publishes them to the target vPower NFS datastore.
4. Registers the published disks as FCDs to the target vPower NFS datastore.
Veeam Backup & Replication performs Instant FCD Recovery using vPower technology.
NOTE
• If you specify the custom datastore to keep the redo logs, information on the FCD snapshots will be
stored in the instant recovery session logs.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not remove the mounted vPower NFS datastore from a VMware
cluster.
• The vCenter Server where the target cluster (cluster to which you plan to recover disks) is located must be
version 6.7.U3 or higher.
• The target cluster must be configured beforehand and added to the backup infrastructure. The hosts
located in this cluster must meet the following requirements:
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• Veeam Backup & Replication does not support restore to a single ESXi host.
• You can restore a virtual disk from a backup that has at least one successfully created restore point.
• If you attach a FCD to a VM after restore and attach the FCD to an unoccupied node,
Veeam Backup & Replication restores the disk in the offline state. To work with it, you need to bring the
disk online.
• The datastore which you specify to store redirect logs must meet the following requirements:
o The datastore must be added to the vCenter infrastructure and must be available for
Veeam Backup & Replication to set up a connection to it.
o The datastore must be located in the same vCenter, where a cluster to which
Veeam Backup & Replication will register FCDs, is located.
o The datastore must be mounted to all ESXi hosts of a cluster to which Veeam Backup & Replication
will register FCDs.
o You must have at least one more additional datastore in your vCenter infrastructure, otherwise
restore will fail.
• You can assign storage policies to FCDs only if you redirect redo logs to another datastore.
• The encryption storage policies are not supported. If you select this type of policy,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to apply this policy to registered FCDs.
• You must have at least 10 GB of free disk space on the datastore where write cache folder is located. This
disk space is required to store virtual disk updates for the restored VM.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication writes virtual disk updates to the IRCache folder on a volume
with the maximum amount of free space, for example, C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\IRCache.
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Step 1. Launch Instant Disk Recovery Wizard
To launch the Instant Disk Recovery wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from backup > Disk restore > Instant disk
recovery.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand a backup, select
a VM whose disks you want to restore and click Instant Disk Recovery on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can
right-click a VM whose disks you want to restore and select Instant disk recovery.
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Step 2. Select Source VM
At the Virtual Machine step of the wizard, select a VM whose disks you want to register as FCDs.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select a restore point for the VM whose virtual disks you want to
register as FCDs.
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Step 4. Select Mount Mode
At the Mount Mode step of the wizard, select the First class d isk (FCD) option to register virtual disks on a
cluster as FCDs.
If you want to register virtual disks on a VM added to an ESXi host, select the VM d isk option. In this case, steps
of the wizard differ and Veeam Backup & Replication performs the instant disks recovery as described in
Performing Instant Disk Recovery.
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Step 5. Select Virtual Disks to Restore
At the Disks step of the wizard, select virtual disks that you register as FCDs and define names for the recovered
disks and FCDs.
1. Select check boxes next to virtual disks that you want to register as FCDs.
2. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication recovers disks and registers FCDs under the original disk names.
To specify new names, select a disk and click Cha nge. In the Ta rget Disk Name window, do the following:
a. In the Disk name field, specify a name under which the disk will be recovered.
b. In the Display name field, specify a name under which FCD will be registered on the cluster.
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Step 6. Specify Target Cluster
At the Destination step of the wizard, specify a cluster where Veeam Backup & Replication will register FCDs.
IMP ORTANT
To register FCDs on a cluster, Veeam Backup & Replication mounts to a cluster the vPower NFS datastore
that contains virtual disks. Veeam Backup & Replication checks the cluster hosts to verify that they are
powered on and Veeam Backup & Replication is able to connect to these hosts. If one of these hosts is not
available, Veeam Backup & Replication will not include them to the FCD restore scenario.
Veeam Backup & Replication will not start the Instant FCD Recovery process if there are no p owered on
hosts or Veeam Backup & Replication is not able to connect to them.
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Step 7. Select Destination for FCD Updates
At the W rite Cache step of the wizard, specify where to store the redo logs. Veeam Backup & Replication uses
redo logs to write all changes of the virtual disks that take place while performing Instant FCD Recovery.
By default, redo logs are stored on the vPower NFS server. You can store redo logs on any datastore in the
virtual environment. As soon as a recovery verification job completes, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes redo
logs.
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Step 8. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring VM disks. This information will be saved in the
session history so that you can reference it later.
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Step 9. Verify Instant FCD Recovery Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, check settings of Instant FCD Recovery and click Finish.
Migrating FCDs
To migrate FCDs to the production environment:
3. In the working area, right-click the VM whose disks you recovered and select Mig rate to production.
Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the FCD Quick Migration wizard.
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After you finish working with the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication migrates the disks with all changes made
after the disk recovery and before its migration.
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3. In the working area, right-click a VM whose disks you recovered and select Stop publishing.
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Virtual Disk Restore
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to recover individual virtual disks of a VM from a backup. Recovered
virtual disks can be attached to the original VM (for example, if you want to replace a corrupted disk) or mapped
to any other VM in the virtual infrastructure. This recovery option can be helpful if a VM disk becomes
corrupted.
You can restore VM virtual disk to the latest state or any valid restore point. You can preserve the format of a
recovered virtual disk or convert it to the thin or thick provisioned disk format.
NOTE
If a VM has several VM disks, Veeam Backup & Replication restores VM disks in parallel.
• You can restore virtual disks from a backup that has at least one successfully created restore point.
• During the virtual disk restore, Veeam Backup & Replication turns off the target VM to reconfigure its
settings and attach restored disks. It is recommended that you stop all activities on the target VM for the
restore period.
• If you want to scan virtual disk data for viruses, check the secure restore requirements and limitations.
NOTE
If you back up a VM with vRDM disks, Veeam Backup & Replication converts them into VMDK files. Thus,
when you restore a vRDM disk, Veeam Backup & Replication will restore it as a VMDK file. If you want to
preserve the vRDM format for restored disks, use Quick Rollback. For more information, see Quick
Rollback.
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Step 1. Launch Virtual Disk Restore Wizard
To launch the Virtual Disk Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from backup > Disk restore > Virtual disks
restore.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, click the VM whose files you want to restore and click Virtual Disks on the ribbon. Alternatively,
you can right-click the VM whose files you want to restore and select Restore virtual disks.
• Double-click the VBK or VBM file (for example, in Microsoft Windows Explorer). In the displayed window,
select the VM and click Restore > Virtual disks.
You can use this option if you perform restore on the backup server. You cannot use this option if you
perform restore remotely over the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
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Step 2. Select VM
At the Virtual Machine step of the wizard, expand a backup and select a VM whose disks you want to restore.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select a restore point from which you want to restore VM disks.
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Step 4. Select Virtual Hard Disks to Restore
At the Disk Mapping step, select virtual hard disks to restore, choose a VM to which the disks must be attached
and define additional restore settings.
1. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication maps restored disks to the original VM. If the original VM was
relocated or if you want to attach disks to another VM, you need to select the target VM manually. Click
Choose and select the necessary VM from the virtual environment.
IMP ORTANT
You cannot attach restored disks to a VM that has one or more snapshots.
2. In the Disk mapping list, select virtual disks that you want to restore.
3. To configure virtual disk properties, select a disk in the Disk mapping list and click Cha nge. In the Virtual
Disk Properties window, do the following:
a. Click Choose to pick a datastore where the restored hard disk must be placed.
If you use storage policies in the virtual environment, Veeam Backup & Replication displays
information about storage policies in the Select Datastore window. You can select a datastore
associated with the necessary storage policy.
b. From the Virtual device node drop-down list, select a virtual device node. If you want to replace an
existing virtual disk, select an occupied virtual node. If you want to attach the restored disk to the VM
as a new disk, select a node that is not occupied yet.
c. Click OK.
4. Veeam Backup & Replication preserves the format of the restored virtual hard disks. To change disk
format, select the required option from the Restore disk type drop-down list. For more information about
disk types, see VMware Docs.
NOTE
Disk format change is supported only for VMs with Virtual Hardware version 7 or later.
5. [For disk restore to the original location and with original format] Select the Quick rollback check box if
you want to use incremental restore for the VM disk. For more information on quick rollback, its
requirements and limitations, see Quick Rollback.
It is recommended that you enable this option if you restore a VM disk after a problem that occurred at
the level of the VM guest OS: for example, there has b een an application error or a user has accidentally
deleted a file on the VM guest OS. Do not enable this option if the problem has occurred at the VM
hardware level, storage level or due to a power loss.
6. Click the P ick proxy to use link to select backup proxies over which VM data must be transported to the
target datastore. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication assigns proxies automatically.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that have
access to the source datastore and will automatically assign optimal proxy resources for processing
VM data.
During the restore process, VM hard disks are processed simultaneously. Veeam Backup & Replication
checks available backup proxies. If more than one backup p roxy is available,
Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport modes that the backup proxies can use for writing
data to target, current workload on these backup proxies, and selects the most appropriate resources
for VM hard disk processing.
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o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy servers only, you can explicitly select backup proxies
that must be used for restore. It is recommended that you select at least two backup proxies to
ensure that VM hard disks are recovered if one of backup proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the
target datastore during restore.
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Step 5. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you restore disks of Microsoft Windows VMs.
At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure
restore — scan virtual disk data with antivirus software before restoring the disk. For more information on secure
restore, see Secure Restore.
1. Select the Sca n the restored disk for malware prior to performing the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software detects a virus threat:
o P roceed with recovery but do not a ttach infected disks to the target VM. Select this action if you want
to continue the virtual disk restore. In this case, the restored disk will not be attached to the target
VM.
o Ab ort disk recovery. Select this action if you want to cancel the restore session.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue the virtual disk
scan after the first virus threat is detected. For information on how to view results of the malware scan,
see Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 6. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring VM disks. The information you provide will be
saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 7. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured settings and click Finish.
If you want to start the VM to which the disk will be attached right after restore, select the P ower on target VM
a fter restoring check box.
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Disk Export
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to export disks, that is, restore disks from backups of physical or virtual
machines and convert them to the VMDK, VHD or VHDX formats.
During disk export, Veeam Backup & Replication creates the following files that can be used by VMware vSphere
and Microsoft Hyper-V VMs:
• When you export a disk in the VMDK format, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a pair of files that make
up the VM virtual disk: a descriptor file and file with the virtual disk content.
• When you export a disk in the VHD/VHDX format, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a file of the VHD or
VHDX format.
You can save the exported disks to any server added to the backup infrastructure or place disks on a datastore
connected to a host.
Veeam Backup & Replication supports batch disk export. For example, if you choose to export 2 disks,
Veeam Backup & Replication will convert them to 2 virtual disks and store these disks in the specified location.
• Backups of VMware vSphere virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of VMware Cloud Director virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of virtual and physical machines created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, Veeam Agent
for Linux or Veeam Agent for Mac
• Backups of Nutanix AHV virtual machines created by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV
Exporting Disks
You can export disks of different workloads from backups and convert disks to the VMDK, VHD or VHDX format.
For the list of backups that you can use for export, see Supported Backup Types.
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Step 1. Launch Export Disk Wizard
To launch the E x port Disk wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select one of the following:
o VMwa re vSphere > Restore from backup > Disk Restore > E xport disk — to export disks of VMware
vSphere VMs from a VM backup created by Veeam Backup & Replication.
o VMwa re Cloud Director > Restore from backup > VM restore > Disk Restore > E xport disk — to export
disks of VMware Cloud Director VMs from a VM backup created by Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Microsoft Hyper-V > Restore from backup > E ntire VM restore > E xport disk — to export disks of
Hyper-V VMs from a VM backup created by Veeam Backup & Replication.
o Ag ent > Disk Restore > E x port disk — to export disks of physical machines and virtual machines from
backups created by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, Veeam Agent for Linux or Veeam Agent for
Mac.
o AW S > Ama zon EC2 > E ntire machine restore > E x port disk — to export disks of EC2 instances from
backups created by Veeam Backup for AWS.
o Azure IaaS backup> E ntire machine restore > E xport disk — to export disks of Azure VMs from backups
created by Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure.
o GCE backup > E ntire machine restore > E xport disk — to export disks of VM instances from backups
created by Veeam Backup for Google Cloud.
o Nuta nix backup > E ntire machine restore > E x port disk — to export disks of VMs from backups created
by Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV.
o RHV P roxy > E ntire machine restore > E x port d isk — to export disks of VMs from backups created by
Veeam Backup for RHV.
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• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, select a workload whose disks you want to export and click E x p ort Disks on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click the workload and select E x port content as virtual disks.
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Step 2. Select Backup
At the Ba ckup step of the wizard, expand a backup and select the workload whose disks you want to export.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select the restore point from which you want to restore disks. By
default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores disks to the latest state. However, you can restore disks to an
earlier state.
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Step 4. Select Disks
At the Disks step of the wizard, select check boxes next to the disks that you want to export.
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Step 5. Select Destination and Disk Format
At the Ta rget step of the wizard, select the destination for disk export and format in which you want to save the
resulting virtual disks:
1. From the Server list, select a server on which the resulting virtual disks must be saved. If you plan to save
the disks to a datastore, select a host to which this datastore is connected.
NOTE
• If you select to export the resulting virtual disk to an ESXi datastore, you can save the virtual
disk in the VMDK format only. Other options are disabled.
• If you export disks as VMDK to a vSAN datastore, disk are exported according to the storage
policy set on the datastore.
• If you export disks as VMDK to a place other than an ESXi datastore, disks are exported as
thick provision lazy zeroed.
2. In the P a th to folder field, specify a datastore or folder on the server where the virtual disks must be
placed.
o VMDK — select this option if you want to save the resulting virtual disk in the VMware VMDK format.
This is the only available option if you export disks to an ESXi datastore.
o VHD — select this option if you want to save the resulting virtual disk in the Microsoft Hyper-V VHD
format.
o VHDX — select this option if you want to save the resulting virtual disk in the Microsoft Hyper -V
VHDX format (supported by Microsoft Windows Server 2012 or later).
4. [For disks exported as VMDK to an ESXi datastore] Click the P ick proxy to use link to select backup proxies
over which disk data must be transported to the target datastore. You can assign backup proxies explicitly
or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically select backup proxies.
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5. From the Disk Type drop-down list, select a disk type for the exported disks.
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Step 6. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you export disks of Microsoft Windows workloads.
At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure
restore — scan exported disk data with antivirus software before restoring the disk. For more information on
secure restore, see Secure Restore.
1. Select the Sca n the restored disk for malware prior performing the recovery check box.
2. Specify how the antivirus software must behave after the first malware threat is found: continue or abort
disk recovery.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue disk scan after
the first malware threat is found. For information on how to view results of the scan, see Viewing Malware
Scan Results.
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Step 7. Specify Export Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for disk export.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured settings and click Finish.
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Item Recovery
Item recovery includes the following methods:
• VM files restore — to restore VM files (.VMX, .VMXF and so on) without restoring the entire VM.
• Guest OS file recovery — to recover individual guest OS files from Windows, Linux, Mac and other guest OS
file systems. You can restore files and folders directly from a regular image-level backup, storage
snapshot or replica.
• Application items restore — to restore items from different applications such as Microsoft Active Directory,
Microsoft SQL Server and so on. Application items are recovered directly from VM backups and replicas. To
recover application items, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the capabilities of Veeam Backup Explorers.
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VM Files Restore
You can restore specific VM files (.VMX, .VMXF, .NVRAM, .VMDK including flat files) if any of these files are
deleted or the datastore is corrupted. This option provides a great alternative to entire VM restore, for example,
when your VM configuration file is missing and you need to restore it. Instead of restoring the whole VM image
to the production storage, you can restore a specific VM file only.
When you perform VM file restore, VM files are restored directly from regular image -level backups, without
prior de-staging of VM images from backups. VM files can be restored to the original VM location or to a new
location.
Restoring VM Files
To restore VM files from a backup, use the Virtual Machine Files Restore wizard.
• You can restore VM files from a backup that has at least one successfully created restore point.
• The server on which you plan to save restored VM files must be added to the backup infrastructure.
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Step 1. Launch Restore Wizard
To launch the Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from backup > Disk restore > VM files restore
( VMX, NVRAM).
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, click the VM whose files you want to restore and click VM Files on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the VM whose files you want to restore and select Restore VM files.
In this case, you will pass to the Restore Point step of the wizard.
• Double-click the VBK or VBM file (for example, in Microsoft Windows Explorer). In the displayed window,
select the VM and click Restore > VM files. In this case, you will pass to the Restore Point step of the
wizard.
You can use this option if you perform restore on the backup server. You cannot use this option if you
perform restore remotely over the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
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Step 2. Select VM
At the Virtual Machine step of the wizard, select the VM whose files you want to restore:
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select a restore point from which you want to restore VM files.
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Step 4. Select VM Files and Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select VM files that you want to restore and destination where the
restored files must be stored:
1. From the Server list, select where to store VM files: on an ESXi host, on the backup server or on a
Microsoft Windows or Linux server added to the backup infrastructure. Use the Details button to view or
change connection settings of the target host or server.
2. In the P a th to folder section, specify a path to the folder on the selected host where files must be
restored.
To create a new folder for restored files, click Browse. In the Select Folder window, select the target
location for VM files and click New Folder at the bottom of the window.
3. In the VM files to restore section, select check boxes next to files that you want to restore.
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Step 5. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring VM files. The information you provide will be
saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, check details for the restore task and click Finish to start VM files restore.
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Guest OS File Recovery
With guest OS file recovery, you can recover individual guest OS files and folders from backups, replicas, storage
snapshots, Nutanix AHV snapshots and so on. When restoring files or folders, you do not need to extract the VM
image to a staging location or start the VM prior to restore. You can restore files and folders directly from a
regular image-level backup or replica to the necessary point in time.
Using the following methods, you can restore files from different guest OS file systems :
This method helps you restore files from Microsoft Windows VMs with NTFS, FAT and ReFS file systems.
• Restore from Linux, Unix and Other File Systems (multi-OS file-level restore)
This method helps you restore files from Linux, Solaris, BSD, Novell Storage Services, Unix and Mac
machines.
Note that this method supports recovery of files and folders only. Recovery of other file sy stem objects
such as pipes is not supported.
This method helps you restore files from file systems that other methods from the list do not support.
You can restore files to the original or new location, restore changes and permissions, work with the restored
files using Microsoft Windows File Explorer or launch application item restore for the files. For more
information, see Finalize Restore.
NOTE
You can also recover guest OS files of VMware vSphere VM disks directly from storage snapshots.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication creates a mount point under the C:\VeeamFLR\<vmname> folder and
mounts workload disks from the backup or replica to it. For more information on which machines
Veeam Backup & Replication creates mount points, see File-Level Restore Scenarios and Mount Points.
If a workload has ReFS disks, Veeam Backup & Replication uses virtual hard disk (VHD) mount to access
the content of all disks. If a workloads does not have ReFS disks, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a
separate program — Virtual Disk Driver (VDK) that is provided with the product. Workload disks are not
physically extracted from the backup file or workload replica. Veeam Backup & Replication emulates their
presence on the backup server or Veeam Backup & Replication console. The backup file or workload
replica itself remains in the read-only state.
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2. Veeam Backup & Replication launches the Veeam Backup browser on the Veeam Backup & Replication
console. The Veeam Backup browser shows the content of disks mounted to the machine where the
mount point is created.
You can browse the workload guest file system in the Veeam Backup browser and restore files or folders
to the original or new location.
o If you restore to the original location, select the Restore > Keep or Restore > Overwrite command.
The machine where the mount point is created connects to the workload over network or VIX
API/vSphere Web Services if a connection over the network cannot be established.
o If you restore permissions, select the Restore > P ermissions only command.
The machine where the mount point is created connects to the workload over network.
o If you restore files to a new workload, select the Restore to > Keep or Restore to > Overwrite
command.
The machine where the mount point is created connects to the workload over network or VIX
API/vSphere Web Services if a connection over the network cannot be established.
o If you restore files to the Veeam Backup & Replication console or a shared folder, select the Cop y to
command.
The machine where the mount point is created connects to the Veeam Backup & Replication console
over network. If you recover files to a shared folder, the Veeam Backup & Replication console also
connects to this folder over network.
During the comparison, Veeam Backup & Replication connects to the original workload over network
and installs Veeam Installer Service. If the service is already installed on the workload,
Veeam Backup & Replication upgrades it to the required version. Note that after the comparison or
restore is finished, the service is still installed on the workload.
When restore is launched, the machine where the mount point is created connects to the workload
over network.
4. When the restore process is finished or the Veeam Backup browser is closed by timeout,
Veeam Backup & Replication removes all the created mount points.
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When you perform file-level restore, you can also open files in Microsoft Windows explorer to view file content.
In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an additional mount point on the Veeam Backup & Replication
console. For more information on how to view file content, see Open Files in Microsoft Windows Explorer.
• Mount server associated with the backup repository on which the backup file resides.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this mount point when the restore process starts and allows you to
browse the VM file system and restore files.
• Veeam Backup & Replication console. Veeam Backup & Replication uses this mount point only for the
mount to console functionality, that is, while you use Microsoft Windows File Explorer to view files and
folders of the backed-up VM. For more information, see Open Files in Microsoft Windows Explorer.
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NOTE
Backup files on HPE StoreOnce are locked exclusively by a restore task. For this reason,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses only one mount point on the backup server or
Veeam Backup & Replication console machine for backups on HPE StoreOnce.
• Backup server. Veeam Backup & Replication uses this mount point while the restore process and allows
you to browse the VM file system and restore files.
• Veeam Backup & Replication console. Veeam Backup & Replication uses this mount point only for the
mount to console functionality, that is, while you use Microsoft Windows File Explorer to view files and
folders of the VM replica. For more information, see Open Files in Microsoft Windows Explorer. If you also
restore files to the console or a shared folder (use the Cop y to command) while the mount to console
functionality is enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the same mount point for restore. If you launch
other restores, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the backup server as a mount point.
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Restoring Files for Veeam Explorers
If you have launched file-level restore and then launch application items restore from the Veeam Backup
browser, Veeam Backup & Replication uses additional restore points apart from the the mount points described
in the subsections above:
• If you restore Microsoft Active Directory or Microsoft Exchange items, Veeam Backup & Replication
creates an additional mount point on the Veeam Backup & Replication console. However, if during file-
level restore the mount point was already created on a machine where the Veeam Backup & Replication
console is installed, an additional point is not created.
• If you restore Microsoft SharePoint, Veeam Backup & Replication creates an additional mount point on a
staging Microsoft SQL Server.
• If you restore Microsoft SQL Server items, Veeam Backup & Replication creates two additional mount
points: one on a staging Microsoft SQL Server and the other one on the target VM to which you restore the
application items.
• If you restore Oracle server items, Veeam Backup & Replication creates two additional mount points: one
on a staging Oracle server and the other one on the target VM to which you restore the application items.
To create mount points on Linux and Windows machines, Veeam Backup & Replication uses different methods:
• To create a mount point on Microsoft Windows machines, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the iSCSI
protocol. The remote machine or staging server acts as an iSCSI initiator. The machine on which the Veeam
Explorer runs acts as an iSCSI target. The iSCSI mount point is non-persistent — it is created only for
duration of the restore process.
• To create a mount point on Linux VMs (for Oracle running on Linux), Veeam Backup & Replication uses
FUSE.
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Restoring Files from Nutanix AHV Snapshots
To learn how Veeam Backup & Replication performs guest OS file restore from backup snapshots, user
snapshots and persistent disk snapshots created by AHV Backup Proxy and which mount points are used, see the
Restoring Guest OS Files section of the Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV User Guide.
Requirements
Consider the following general requirements:
• You can restore files from the file systems listed in the Platform Support section.
• The account that you use to start the Veeam Backup & Replication console and to connect to the backup
server must have permissions and privileges described in Veeam Backup & Replication Console
Permissions.
• You can restore VM guest OS files from a backup or replica that has at least one successfully created
restore point.
• [For restore to original location] The mount server must have access to the VM guest OS (if file -level
restore is performed over the network) or vCenter Server and ESXi host where the target VM runs (if file -
level restore is performed over VIX API/vSphere Web Services).
• [For restore to original location] VMware Tools must be installed on the target VM. Application-aware
processing must be supported for the Microsoft Windows OS of the original machine. If this is not
possible, you can use 1-click file-level restore or copy files to the selected folder and then move them to
their original location.
• [For comparison functionality and restore of permissions only] Check that VMware Tools are installed on
the original machine and the machine is accessible over the network.
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• [For restore changes functionality] This functionality is included in the Veeam Universal License. When
using a legacy socket-based license, the Enterprise or Enterprise Plus editions of
Veeam Backup & Replication are required.
• You cannot use the comparison functionality if the Group Managed Service Account (gMSA) account is
used for the VM whose files you plan to restore.
• [For restore to another VM, to original location, or permissions only] If the target VM uses the gMSA
account and you restore files from a backup, you must also install this account on the mount server
associated with the backup repository on which the backup resides. If you restore from a replica, you must
install the gMSA account on the backup server.
• The machine on which a mount point is created (for example, the mount server) must run Microsoft
Windows Server 2012 or later.
• [ReFS 3.x] If you plan to restore files from a VM running Microsoft Windows ReFS 3.x, the machine on
which mount point is created must run Microsoft Windows Server 2016 or later and the ReFS version must
be supported on it.
• The machine on which a mount point is created must run Microsoft Windows Server of the same version or
newer than the guest OS of a VM from which you plan to restore files.
To learn in which scenarios on which machines mount points are created, see Mount Points and Restore
Scenarios.
• The machine on which a mount point is created (for example, the mount server) must run Microsoft
Windows Server 2012 or later.
• The machine on which a mount point is created must run Microsoft Windows Server of the same version or
newer than the guest OS of a VM from which you plan to restore files.
• Data deduplication must be enabled on the machine on which a mount point is created.
To learn in which scenarios on which machines mount points can be created, see Mount Points and Restore
Scenarios.
Limitations
Consider the following limitations:
• You cannot restore pipes and other file system objects. File-level restore supports recovery of files and
folders only.
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• You can restore files from basic disks and dynamic disks (including simple, mirrored and striped volumes).
• Processing of reparse points is supported only for NTFS. Note that reparse points with reparse ta g values
other than IO_REPARSE_TAG_MOUNT_P OINT, IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMLINK and IO_REPARSE_TAG_DEDUP
may be processed and restored incorrectly.
• You cannot restore files from a backup created in the reverse incremental mode if the backup job is being
performed. If the backup is created in the incremental backup mode and the backup job is being
performed, you can restore files from any available restore point.
• The comparison functionality is not available for backups created by Veeam Backup for RHV, for backups
exported with K10 policies and for backups stored in external repositories (for example, backups created
by Veeam Backup for AWS, Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure and so on) .
• The comparison functionality uses Veeam Deployer Service. This service is a 32-bit service. During the
comparison, the service converts some 64-bit objects in 32-bit objects. That is why, such objects are
shown as deleted in the Veeam Backup browser, for example, some objects in the Windows folder.
• You cannot restore VM guest OS files to the original location if you have excluded the system disk from
the VM backup used for restore and the volume GUID of the system disk was changed after the VM backup
creation.
• [For restore to another VM] You can restore items only to Microsoft Windows-based VMs. You can select a
VM only within the same virtual infrastructure where the original VM resides. For example, if the original
VM resides in VMware vSphere, you can select a VM that resides in VMware vSphere only.
• [For permission restore] Veeam Backup & Replication restores only permissions. Attributes such as Read-
only, Encrypted and so on are not restored.
• [For permission restore] Permissions can be restored only for files and folders that are still present on the
original VMs. If files and folders are missing, restore fails.
• You cannot restore VM guest OS files from a running replica or if the replication job with the necessary VM
is being performed.
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Step 1. Launch File Level Restore Wizard
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from backup > Guest files restore > Microsoft
W ind ows or Restore from replica > Guest files restore > Microsoft Windows.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups or Replicas. In the working area, expand the
necessary backup, click the VM whose files you want to restore and click Guest files > Microsoft W indows
on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the VM whose files you want to restore and select Restore g uest
files > Microsoft Windows.
Alternatively for restore from regular backups, you can double-click the VBK or VBM file (for example, in
Microsoft Windows Explorer). In the displayed window, select the VM and click Restore > Guest files (Microsoft
W ind ows). You can use this option if you perform restore on the backup server. You cannot use this option if you
perform restore remotely over the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
Alternatively for restore from storage snapshots, you can open the Storage Infrastructure view. In the inventory
pane, expand the storage system tree and select the necessary volume snapshot. In the working area, select a
VM whose files you want to restore and click Guest Files > Microsoft Windows on the ribbon. You can also right-
click a VM and select Restore guest files > Microsoft Windows.
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Step 2. Select VM
At the Ma chine step of the wizard, select the VM whose guest OS files you want to restore:
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select a restore point from which you want to restore VM guest OS files.
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Step 4. Select Host for Snapshot Mounting
At the Loca tion step of the wizard, select an ESXi host to which the clone/virtual copy of the storage snapshot
will be mounted. On the selected ESXi host, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a temporary VM and mount
disks of the restored VM to this temporary VM.
2. Next to the Host field, click Choose and select an ESXi host to which the snapshot clone/virtual copy must
be mounted and on which the temporary VM must be created.
3. Next to the Resource pool field, click Choose and select a resource pool to which you want to place the
temporary VM.
4. Next to the VM folder field, click Choose and select a folder to which you want to place the temporary VM.
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Step 5. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring VM guest OS files. The information you provide
will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 6. Verify Restore Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, check details of the restore task and click Browse to close the wizard and
open the Veeam Backup browser.
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Step 7. Finalize Restore
After you close the wizard, Veeam Backup & Replication opens the Veeam Backup browser with the file system
tree of the restored VM.
You can perform the following operations in the Veeam Backup browser:
• Compare files and folders from a backup with the original files and folders.
• Copy files and folders to the Veeam Backup & Replication console or network shared folder.
After you finish restoring files, close the Veeam Backup browser.
NOTE
• To use the restore and comparison functionality, check Requirements and Limitations.
• In the Veeam Backup browser, names of the restored VM hard disks may differ from the original
ones.
• Folder symbolic links are displayed under the icon.
• When restoring symbolic links to the original location or to another machine,
Veeam Backup & Replication restores only links, not the content they point to.
• Hard links are displayed and restored as files.
To compare files and folders from a backup with the files and folders stored in the original location:
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right. You can
also select disks. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will compare files and folders stored on the
disks.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select Compare > Compare. Alternatively, click Compare with
P roduction on the ribbon.
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3. If prompted, in the Credentials window, specify user credentials to access the original location.
After the comparison, files and folders will have the following comparison states in the Item State column:
changed , unchanged , deleted , pending , or failed to compare. The states are updated when you turn off and then
turn on the comparison mode, and when you start restoring changes of files and folders. Note that when
comparing symbolic links, Veeam Backup & Replication compares attributes of the links, not the attributes of
files and folders which the symbolic link points to.
For files and folders in the comparison states, Veeam Backup & Replication provides other restore operations
than for files and folders in the non-comparison state. For example, you can restore only changed files and
folders. For more information, see Restoring Changed Files and Folders.
TIP
To show only changed files and folders (in the changed and deleted states), right-click any area in the
Veeam Backup browser and select Comp are > Show changes only visibility. Alternatively, click Show
Cha nges Only on the ribbon. Note that in this case the search field becomes unavailable. To show all files
and folders, click the Show changes only visibility or Show Changes Only option once again.
To switch off the comparison states, select an item in the comparison state, click Compare > Compare.
Alternatively, click Compare with Production on the ribbon. Note that if you switch off comparison for child
files and folders, comparison for parent folders will also be switched off.
You can view which attributes were changed for files and folders:
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select Compare > Compare attributes. Alternatively, click
Compare Attributes on the ribbon.
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In the Compare Attributes window, Veeam Backup & Replication shows changed attributes. If you want to show
all attributes, click the Show unchanged attributes check box at the top right corner. Note that
Veeam Backup & Replication shows attributes maximum for 500 files and folders and shows attributes for the
selected files and folders, not for the nested files.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right. Note that
at least one file or folder must be in a comparison state. Files and folders in the non-comparison state,
Veeam Backup & Replication will compare automatically.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select one of the following:
o To overwrite the original files and folders with the ones restored from the backup, select Restore
cha nged only > Overwrite.
o To save the files and folders restored from the backup next to the original ones, select Restore
cha nged only > Keep.
Veeam Backup & Replication will add the RESTORED_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS postfix to the original
names and store the restored items in the same folder where the original items reside.
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If you want to restore entire files and folders to the original location, see Restoring to Original Location.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and click Cop y to. Alternatively, click Cop y to on the ribbon.
o To recover files and folders to a folder on the VM where the Veeam Backup & Replication console is
installed, click Browse to find the necessary folder.
o To recover files and folders to a network shared folder, enter a path to the destination folder in the
Choose folder field.
4. In the Choose Folder window, choose whether to preserve original NTFS permissions or not:
o To keep the original ownership and security permissions for the restored items, select the P reserve
p ermissions a nd ownership check box.
Veeam Backup & Replication will copy selected files and folders along with associated Access Control
Lists, preserving granular access settings.
o If you do not want to preserve the original ownership and access settings for the restored items, leave
the P reserve permissions and ownership check box not selected.
Veeam Backup & Replication will change security settings: the user who launched the
Veeam Backup & Replication console will be set as the owner of the restored item, while access
permissions will be inherited from the folder to which the restored item is copied.
5. If prompted, in the Credentials window, specify user credentials to access the destination location.
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NOTE
• The copy to operation does not use the comparison states and copies all selected files and folders.
• When copying symbolic links, Veeam Backup & Replication copies the content which the links point
to.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select one of the following:
o If you want to overwrite files and folders with identical names in the target location, select Restore to
> Overwrite.
o If you want to keep files and folders with identical names in the target location, select Restore to >
Keep.
If there are items with identical names, Veeam Backup & Replication will add the
RESTORED_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS postfix to the original names and store the restored items in the
target location.
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5. In the Choose Target Folder window, click Browse and select a folder where items will be restored.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select one of the following:
o To overwrite the original files and folders with the ones restored from the backup, select Restore >
Overwrite.
o To save the restored files and folders next to the original ones, select Restore > Keep.
Veeam Backup & Replication will add the RESTORED_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS postfix to the original
names and store the restored items in the same folder where the original items reside.
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Veeam Backup & Replication will restore all files and folders. If you want to restore changed files and folders
only, see Restoring Changed Files and Folders.
Restoring Permissions
This functionality is available for files and folders in the non-comparison state.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select Restore > P ermissions only. Alternatively, you can select
Restore > P ermissions only on the ribbon.
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Launching Application Item Restore
If you are restoring guest OS files from VMs where the supported applications (Microsoft Active Directory,
Oracle and so on) are installed, you can also launch application item restore directly from the Veeam Backup
browser. To restore application items, Veeam Backup & Replication uses special tools called Veeam Explorers.
3. In the opened Veeam Explorer, perform the necessary operations. For more information on Veeam
Explorers, see the Veeam Explorers User Guide.
1. On the ribbon of the Veeam Backup browser, switch to the Home tab and click Mount to Console to mount
the VM disks to the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
o Click Op en in Explorer on the Veeam Backup browser ribbon or right-click the necessary folder and
select E x plorer.
o Click File Explorer in the Sta rt menu of the VM where Veeam Backup & Replication console is
installed. Browse to the C:\VeeamFLR\<vmname>\<volume n> folder where the VM disks are
mounted and find the necessary files.
NOTE
The Mount to Console button is not available if the mount point is already created on the
Veeam Backup & Replication console.
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It is recommended that you use Microsoft Windows File Explorer only to view file content, not to restore files.
For guest OS file restore, use Veeam Backup browser. This browser has the following advantages:
1. You can browse the VM guest OS file system ignoring the file system ACL settings.
If you open the VM file system in Microsoft Windows Explorer, these capabilities are not available. For more
information, see Microsoft Docs.
It is recommended that you close the Veeam Backup browser after you have finished restoring VM guest OS
files. When the Veeam Backup browser is open, the backup file whose VM guest OS file system is displayed in
the browser is locked in the backup repository. As a result, some scheduled operations that use this backup file
may fail.
Veeam Backup & Replication checks if there is any activity in the Veeam Backup browser with an interval of 5
minutes. If the user or Veeam Backup & Replication components and services do not perform any actions for 30
minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning that the Veeam Backup browser is to be closed in 5
minutes.
After the warning is displayed, you can perform one of the following actions:
• You can click Ca ncel to postpone the close operation. In this case, the Veeam Backup browser will remain
open for 5 minutes. After this period expires, Veeam Backup & Replication will display the warning again.
• You can perform no action at all. In this case, the Veeam Backup browser will close automatically in 5
minutes.
You can restore files to the original or new location, access restored files using FTP or launch application item
restore for the files. For more information, see Finalize Restore.
NOTE
You can also recover guest OS files of VMware vSphere VMs directly from storage snapshots. For more
information on how restore from storage snapshots works, see the Linux, Unix and Other File System
Restore from Storage Snapshots in the Integration with Storage Systems Guide.
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How Restore Works
When you perform guest OS file restore, Veeam Backup & Replication provides the following options for
mounting VM disks from the backup or replica:
• Mounting disks to a helper host. As a helper host, you can select the target host where you want to
restore files from the backup or any other Linux server. We recommend you to specify the same server to
which you want to restore the files. This will improve the performance.
• Mounting disks to a helper appliance. The helper appliance is a helper VM running a stripped down Linux
kernel that has minimal set of components. The appliance is quite small — around 50 MB. It requires 2048
MB RAM and 2 CPU.
When you perform guest OS file restore, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations:
1. [If you have selected to mount disks to a helper appliance] Veeam Backup & Replication deploys the
helper appliance on the ESXi host in the virtual infrastructure.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication mounts disks of a VM from the backup or replica to the host selected as a
helper host or helper appliance. The backup file or VM replica itself remains in the read -only state in the
backup repository or datastore.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication launches the Veeam Backup browser where mounted VM disks are displayed.
You can browse the VM guest file system in the Veeam Backup browser and restore files or folders to the
original VM or to another location. Also, you can enable an FTP server on the virtual appliance and allow
VM owners to restore files themselves.
o You select the Restore or Restore to command to restore files to the original location or to another
VMware vSphere VM.
If you have installed the Linux Management Agent, the helper host or helper appliance connects to
the VM to which you restore files (target VM) using this agent and restores files. This is the preferred
way of connection.
The helper host or helper appliance connects to the VM to which you restore files (target VM) over
SSH or VIX API/vSphere Web Services if a connection over SSH cannot be established. Then
Veeam Backup & Replication deploys on the VM the agent which performs restore.
The helper host or helper appliance connects to the VM to which you restore files (target VM) over
the network. Then Veeam Backup & Replication deploys on the VM the agent which performs restore.
5. When you close the Veeam Backup browser or it is closed by timeout, Veeam Backup & Replication
unmounts the content of the backup file or replica from the helper appliance or helper host.
6. [If you have selected to mount disks to a helper appliance] Veeam Backup & Replication unregisters the
helper appliance on the ESXi host.
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General Limitations
Mind the following general limitations:
• Check the supported file systems. For details, see the File-Level Restore section.
• If you plan to restore VM guest OS files to their original location or to another VMware vSphere VM,
VMware Tools or OpenVM Tools must be installed and running on the target VM.
• You cannot restore VM guest OS files from a backup or replica that does not have any successfully created
restore points.
• You can restore files whose names are written in all locales in the UTF-8 encoding. If the encoding is other
than UTF-8, you can restore only files whose names are written in the English locale.
• [If you restore from backups with guest file system indexing disabled] To properly show the file system
tree in the Veeam Backup browser, check that the /etc/fstab file lists disk UUIDs or labels. Disks listed
using device names are shown outside the file system tree as separate disks.
• [For backups of BSD, Mac and Solaris VMs] You cannot restore files directly to the original location. Use
the Cop y to option instead.
• [For Linux workloads] You can restore files from basic disks, Linux LVM (Logical Volume Manager) and ZFS
pools. Encrypted, RAID1 and mirrored LVM volumes are not supported.
• [For Linux workloads] RAID mounts and restores are not supported.
• [For restore to another VM] You can restore items only to Linux-based VMs. BSD, Mac and Solaris VMs are
not supported.
• You cannot restore files from a backup created in the reverse incremental mode if the backup job is being
performed. If the backup is created in the incremental backup mode and the backup job is being
performed, you can restore files from any available restore point.
• You cannot restore VM guest OS files from a running replica or if the replication job with the necessary VM
is being performed.
• Veeam Backup & Replication must have access over the network to the guest OS of the target VM or direct
access to the vCenter or ESXi host where the target VM resides to deploy a coordination process. The
coordination process performs a number of administrative actions on the target VM guest OS, for example,
collects information about mount points.
• The mount server, helper host and helper appliance, must have access over the network to a VM whose
files you restore or direct access to vCenter or ESXi host where the VM resides. If a connection over the
network cannot be established, the mount server connects to the VM over VI X API/vSphere Web Services.
In this case, you must use a root account for a target VM, otherwise the restore process will fail.
If you use the FQDN of the ESXi host in the helper appliance configuration window, the helper appliance
must be able to resolve the FQDN of the ESXi host.
If your DHCP does not provide the DNS configuration, assign the DNS server address manually using the
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Veeam\Veeam Backup and
Replication\DnsServersList]registry value. This value accepts data of the REG_SZ type, for
example, 10.11.12.13. If you want to specify multiple addresses, separate them using a semicolon. After
you specify the registry value, restart the restore process.
• Veeam Backup & Replication uses the ICMP ping command to define whether a VM is available over
network. If the VM must be available over the network, check that ICMP protocol is enabled on the VM.
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• The multi-OS file-level restore wizard does not support restore of deduplicated volumes (for example,
Microsoft Windows volumes with data deduplication enabled).
• You can restore from Novel Storage Services (NSS) file system if you use FUSE or a helper appliance. When
using FUSE, the helper host must differ from the backed -up VM. When using the helper appliance, you can
perform restore only in the IPv4 environment.
• You can restore from ZFS using the helper host option if the zfsutils-linux package is installed on the
specified helper host. The package zfs-fuse is not supported.
• The helper host OS kernel must support the file system that you plan to mount on this host. Otherwise,
the mount will be refused and in rare cases it may cause kernel panic.
• For the helper host option, mounting of LVM snapshots is not supported. Thus, LVM snapshots are
skipped from processing.
• If you want to restore files from a Btrfs disk and select the original host as a helper host, the mount of the
Btrfs disk will fail. The issue occurs due to restriction of mounting 2 Btrfs disks with identical IDs to the
same machine. To avoid this issue, use the helper appliance option.
• If you want to restore files over network, make sure that the SSH daemon is configured and SCP utility is
available on the target VM.
• Veeam Backup & Replication can restore ACL for recovered VM guest OS files. To let
Veeam Backup & Replication detect the target Linux system architecture and kernel version, the following
utilities must be present in the minimal configuration of the system: arch and uname.
Veeam Backup & Replication automatically opens ports used for the restore process on the helper host and on
the target Linux VM. Generally, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically opens ports for most popular
firewalls (iptables, ufw, firewall-cmd). However, if for some reason the ports are not opened, you can open the
ports manually. You can also specify these ports at the SSH Connection step of the New Linux Server wizard.
Note that ports are opened dynamically: if 10 concurrent jobs are running, Veeam Backup & Replication opens
ports 2500-2510.
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If you use the firewalld tool, you can configure firewall rules to open ports only in necessary zones. By
default, Veeam Backup & Replication opens ports in all active firewalld zones. If your firewall is configured
for different zones, and you want to minimize security holes, you can configure Veeam Backup & Replication to
open the ports only for certain zones. To do this, perform the following:
1. On the helper host or target Linux host, create the /etc/VeeamNetConfig file and define the following
parameter:
FirewalldZones=zone_name_1, zone_name_2
where zone_name_1, zone_name_2 is a list of zone names where the ports must be open.
Veeam Backup & Replication will skip the zones that are not in this list.
2. [Only for helper host] If you select a Linux host that is already added to the Veeam Backup & Replication
infrastructure, you should also add required zones to the
/opt/veeam/transport/VeeamTransportConfig file.
FirewalldZones=zone_name_1, zone_name_2
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication opens the port 2500 in all zones even if you have specified the required
zones in configuration files.
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Step 1. Launch Guest File Restore Wizard
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vSphere > Restore from backup > Guest files restore > Linux and
other.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, click the VM whose files you want to restore and click Guest files > Linux and other on the ribbon.
Alternatively, right-click the VM whose files you want to restore and select Restore guest files > Linux and
other.
Alternatively for restore from regular backups, you can double-click the VBK or VBM file (for example, in
Microsoft Windows Explorer). In the displayed window, select the VM and click Restore > Guest files (Linux and
other). You can use this option if you perform restore on the backup server. You cannot use this option if you
perform restore remotely over the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
Alternatively for restore from storage snapshots, you can open the Storage Infrastructure view. In the inventory
pane, expand the storage system tree and select the necessary volume snapshot. In the working area, select a
VM whose files you want to restore and click Guest Files > Linux and other on the ribbon. You can also right-
click a VM and select Restore guest files > Linux a nd other.
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Step 2. Select VM
At the Virtual Machine step of the wizard, select the VM whose guest OS files you want to restore:
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select the restore point from which you want to restore VM guest OS
files.
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Step 4. Configure Staging Host
This step of the wizard is available only if you restore VMs from storage snapshots.
At the Sta ging Host step of the wizard, select an ESXi host to which the clone or virtual copy of the storage
snapshot will be mounted. On the selected ESXi host, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a temporary VM.
2. In the Host field of the Restore Configuration window, select an ESXi host to which the snapshot clone
must be mounted.
3. In the Resource p ool field, specify a resource pool to which you want to place the temporary VM.
4. In the VM folder field, specify a VM folder to which you want to place the temporary VM.
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Step 5. Specify Helper Host
At the Help er Host step of the wizard, you can select a machine that will be used as a helper host.
Veeam Backup & Replication will mount disks of a machine from the backup or replica to the selected helper
host. Alternatively, you can choose to configure a new helper appliance where Veeam Backup & Replication will
mount VM disks. For details on helper hosts and appliances, see Restore from Linux, Unix and Other File
Systems.
1. From the Linux server list, select one of the following options:
o < Hostname> — to specify a Linux server as the helper host. The wizard displays all Linux servers
added to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure.
o Sp ecify a different host — to specify a Linux server that is not added to the
Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure.
o Use a temporary helper appliance — to use a temporary helper appliance. If you select this option, the
wizard will include a step for configuring the helper appliance.
2. [For Sp ecify different host option] In the Linux Server window, specify the helper host name and
connection setting:
a. In the Host name field, specify the IPv4 or IPv6 address or the host name of the Linux server which
will be used as a helper host. Note that you can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is
enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
b. From the Credentials list, select an account that will be used to connect to the helper host.
If you have not added the account before, click the Ad d button on the right of the Credentials list and
follow the instructions described in Linux Accounts.
c. If you want to change the default SSH settings, click Ad vanced and configure SSH settings as
described in Specify Credentials and SSH Settings.
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d. Click OK to save the helper host settings.
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Step 6. Specify Location for Helper Appliance
The Helper Appliance step of the wizard is available only if you have selected the Use a temporary helper
a p pliance option at the Specify Helper Host step. This step is not available if you recover VMware vSphere VMs
from backups or replicas.
At this step of the wizard, you specify an ESXi host to which you want to place the helper appliance.
2. In the Host field, specify the ESXi host on which the helper appliance must be registered.
3. In the Resource p ool field, specify a resource pool to which the helper appliance must be placed.
NOTE
If you perform restore from storage snapshots, the Host and Resource pool fields cannot be
changed. Their values are taken from the Configure Staging Host step of the wizard.
In the Select Network window, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a list of networks to which
the specified host is connected.
b. From the Networks list, select a network to which the helper appliance must be connected and click
OK.
Mind that the backup server and the mount server must have access to the helper appliance over the
network.
5. Specify IP addressing settings for the helper appliance and DNS server:
a. Click Configure.
b. Switch to the IP v4 or IP v6 tab depending on which addresses you want to configure. Note that you
can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
▪ If you use a DHCP server in the network and want to obtain the IP address automatically, leave
the Ob tain an IP address automatically option selected.
▪ To manually assign a specific IP address to the helper appliance, click Use the following IP
a d dress and specify the IP address settings.
▪ If you use a DHCP server in the network and want to obtain the IP address automatically, leave
the Ob tain DNS server address automatically option selected.
▪ To manually assign a specific IP address to the DNS server, click Use the following DNS server
a d dress and specify preferred and alternate addresses.
e. Click OK.
6. To enable FTP access to the restored file system, select the E nable FTP server on appliance (advanced)
check box. As a result, users will be able to access the helper appliance over FTP, browse the file system
of the restored VM and download necessary files on their own.
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7. If you are performing restore of a VM with the Novell Storage Services file system, select the Restore from
Novell Storage Services (NSS) file system check box. Veeam Backup & Replication will deploy a specific
appliance that supports the Novell Storage Services file system.
IMP ORTANT
• When choosing an ESXi host for the helper appliance used for file-level restore from the Novell
Storage Services file system, make sure that it allows running VMs with 64-bit guest OSes.
• If you restore files from a non-NSS file system, check that the Restore from Novell Storage Services
( NSS) file system check box is not selected. Otherwise, the restore process may work incorrectly.
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Step 7. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring VM guest OS files. The information you provide
will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 8. Start Mount Process
This step of the wizard is available only if you restore VMs from storage snapshots.
At the Restore step of the wizard, wait while Veeam Backup & Replication mounts VM disks. Then click Nex t.
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Step 9. Verify Restore Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the restore settings and click Browse to open the Veeam Backup
browser.
If you have selected to mount disks to a helper appliance, it may take about 10 -40 seconds to boot the helper
appliance and open the browser.
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Step 10. Finalize Restore
After the wizard is closed, Veeam Backup & Replication opens the Veeam Backup browser displaying the file
system tree of the restored VM.
In the Veeam Backup browser, you can perform the following operations:
NOTE
You can browse the VM guest OS files and access restored files on the FTP only while the Veeam Backup
browser with the restored files is open. After the Veeam Backup browser is closed,
Veeam Backup & Replication unmounts the VM disks from the helper appliance and removes helper
appliance from the ESXi host.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select one of the following:
o To overwrite the original files and folders with the ones restored from the backup, select Restore >
Overwrite.
o To save the restored files and folders next to the original ones, select Restore > Keep.
Veeam Backup & Replication will add the RESTORED_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS postfix to the original
names and store the restored items in the same folder where the original items reside.
To restore files to the original location, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the account for VM guest OS access
specified in the backup job settings. If this account does not have sufficient rights to access the target VM, you
will be prompted to enter credentials. In the Credentials window, specify a user account to access the
destination location (server or shared folder). For more information on adding credentials, see Credentials
Manager.
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In some cases, you may remove the original VM and restore it from the backup by the time of file -level restore.
If you then attempt to restore VM guest OS files to the original location, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be
able to find the original VM by its reference ID, and will display a warning. Click OK and browse to the target VM
in the virtual infrastructure to which you want to restore VM guest OS files.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected items and select one of the following:
o If you want to overwrite files and folders with identical names in the target location, select Restore to
> Overwrite.
o If you want to keep files and folders with identical names in the target location, select Restore to >
Keep.
If there are items with identical names, Veeam Backup & Replication will add the
RESTORED_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS postfix to the original names and store the restored items in the
target location.
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5. In the Choose Target Folder window, click Browse and select a folder where items will be restored.
1. Select the necessary files and folders in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right.
2. Right-click one of the selected files or folders and select Cop y to.
o To recover files to a server already added to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure, select the
server from the Server drop-down list and then specify the path to a folder where files will be
recovered.
o To recover files to a Linux server that is not added to the Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure,
select Sp ecify a different host from the Server drop-down list and follow the steps of the wizard to
add a Linux server that will be used as a target host. The server will be added ad-hoc. Then specify
the path to a folder where files will be recovered.
The server you add ad-hoc will not appear in the list of managed hosts in
Veeam Backup & Replication: its purpose is to host the files that you recover. It will only remain
visible in the Veeam Backup browser until all currently active file-level restore sessions are
completed.
IMP ORTANT
o To recover files to a shared folder, specify a path to the destination folder in the P a th to folder field.
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4. If you want to preserve original permissions and ownership for recovered files, select the P reserve
p ermissions a nd ownership check box in the Select Destination window.
IMP ORTANT
To restore original permissions and ownership settings, the user account you have specified must
have privileges to change the owner on the selected server or shared folder.
5. If prompted, in the Credentials window, specify settings of the user account to access the destination
location.
Accessing the appliance over FTP requires credentials. Use the Guest OS helper appliance credentials specified
in managed credentials. If the password has not been updated, refer this Veeam KB article.
NOTE
[For restore from storage snapshots] You can browse to the VM guest OS files and access restored files on
the FTP only while the Veeam Backup browser is open. After the Veeam Backup browser is closed,
Veeam Backup & Replication will unmount VM disks from the helper appliance, remove the helper
appliance and unmount the storage snapshot from the ESXi host (unless this storage snapshot is used by
other restore operations).
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Accessing Helper Appliance Logs
If you need to access logs of the helper appliance, click Sup port Logs on the Veeam Backup browser ribbon.
Veeam Backup & Replication will show the Log node under the file system tree. To hide this node, click Sup port
Log s once again.
1. In the virtual infrastructure, find a VM that can read the file system of the original VM.
2. Use Instant Disk Recovery to mount a disk of the original VM to the VM that can read the f ile system.
Alternatively, you can mount the VM disks to a Microsoft Windows VM and use file management tools.
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To view the restore session statistics, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select La st 24 hours. In the working area, double-click the
necessary restore session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
• Open the History view, in the inventory pane select Restore. In the working area, double-click the
necessary restore session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
The file restore statistics provides detailed data on file restore sessions:
• At the top of the Restore Session window, Veeam Backup & Replication shows general session statistics: a
name of the machine whose guest OS files are restored during the session, a user name of the account
under which the session was started, session status and duration details.
• The Sta tistics tab shows detailed information about the files restored during the session.
• The Rea son tab shows the reason for the guest OS file restore that was specified at the Rea son step of the
File Level Restore wizard.
• The P a rameters tab shows information about the restore point selected for the guest OS file restore at the
Restore Point step of the File Level Restore wizard.
• The Log tab shows a list of operations performed during the session.
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Application Item Restore
Veeam Backup & Replication provides auxiliary tools called Veeam Explorers that allow you to restore
application items directly from backups or replicas. These backups and replicas must be created with the
enabled application-aware processing option.
• Oracle
• PostgreSQL
• Microsoft Exchange
• Microsoft SharePoint
• Microsoft Teams
Veeam Explorers are distributed as part of Veeam Backup & Replication, and you do not need to install them
separately. You also do not need to purchase any additional license to use Veeam Explorers. For more gene ral
information, see the Veeam Explorers Overview section of the Veeam Explorers User Guide.
If you want to restore application items from storage snapshots, see the Application Item Restore from Storage
Snapshots section in Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
IMP ORTANT
Before you restore Microsoft Active Directory items, check requirements and limitations listed in the
Planning and Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements
is that the backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Active Directory from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> Microsoft Active Directory on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and select
Restore application items > Microsoft Active Directory objects.
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4. In the opened Microsoft Active Directory Object Restore wizard, select a restore point from which you
want to restore application items.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Active Directory. In this explorer, you
can browse, search, restore application items and so on. The detailed information is provided in the Veeam
Explorer for Microsoft Active Directory main section of the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. For example:
• Information about viewing and searching objects in the backup file is in the Browsing, Searching and
Viewing Items section.
• Information about adding a database manually is in the Adding Standalone Databases section.
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Restoring Microsoft SQL Server Items
To restore databases from a backup or replica of a Microsoft SQL Server, Veeam Backup & Replication uses
Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL Server.
IMP ORTANT
Before you restore Microsoft SQL databases, check requirements and limitations listed in the Planning and
Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements is that the
backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL Server from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> Microsoft SQL Server on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and select
Restore application items > Microsoft SQL Server databases.
4. In the opened Microsoft SQL Server Database Restore wizard, select a restore point from which you want
to restore databases.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL Server. In this explorer, you can
view, restore databases and so on. The detailed information is provided in the Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL
Server main section of the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. For example:
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• Information about adding a database manually is in the Adding Standalone Databases section.
IMP ORTANT
Before you restore Oracle databases, check requirements and limitations listed in the Planning and
Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements is that the
backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for Oracle from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> Ora cle on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and select Restore application
items > Oracle databases.
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4. In the opened Ora cle Database Restore wizard, select a restore point from which you want to restore
databases.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for Oracle. In this explorer, you can view, restore
databases and so on. The detailed information is provided in the Veeam Explorer for Oracle main section of the
Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. For example:
• Information about database is in the Viewing Database Information section. Oracle databases cannot be
added manually.
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IMP ORTANT
Before you restore PostgreSQL instances, check requirements and limitations listed in the Planning and
Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements is that the
backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for PostgreSQL from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> P ostgreSQL on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and select Restore
a p plication items > P ostgreSQL instances.
4. In the opened P ostgreSQL Server Database Restore wizard, select a restore point from which you want to
restore instances.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for PostgreSQL. In this explorer, you can view, restore
instances and so on. The detailed information is provided in the Veeam Explorer for PostgreSQL main section of
the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. For example:
• Information about the data restore process is in the Data Restore section.
IMP ORTANT
Before you restore Microsoft Exchange items, check requirements and limitations listed in the Planning and
Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements is that the
backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Exchange from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> Microsoft Exchange on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and select
Restore application items > Microsoft Exchange mailbox items.
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4. In the opened Microsoft Exchange Item Level Restore wizard, select a restore point from which you want
to restore application items.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Exchange. In this explorer, you can view,
browse, restore Microsoft Exchange items and so on. The detailed information is provided in the Veeam Explorer
for Microsoft Exchange main section of the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. For example:
• Information about viewing and searching objects in the backup file is in the Browsing, Searching and
Viewing Items section.
• Information about adding a database manually is in the Standalone Databases Management section.
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Restoring Microsoft SharePoint Items
To restore Microsoft SharePoint items from a backup or replica of a Microsoft SharePoint Server,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint.
IMP ORTANT
Before you restore Microsoft SharePoint items, check requirements and limitations listed in the Planning
and Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements is that
the backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> Microsoft SharePoint on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and select
Restore application items > Microsoft SharePoint content.
4. In the opened Microsoft SharePoint Item Restore wizard, select a restore point from which you want to
restore application items.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint. In this explorer, you can
view, search, restore Microsoft SharePoint items and so on. The detailed information is provided in the Veeam
Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint main section of the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. For example:
• Information about viewing and searching objects in the backup file is in the Browsing, Searching and
Viewing Items section.
• Information about adding a database manually is in the Standalone Databases Management section.
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• Information about restoring process is in the Data Restore section.
IMP ORTANT
Before you restore Microsoft OneDrive for Business data, check requirements and limitations listed in the
Planning and Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements
is that the backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for Microsoft OneDrive for Business from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> Microsoft OneDrive for Business on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and
select Restore application items > Microsoft OneDrive for Business files.
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4. In the opened Microsoft OneDrive for Business Files wizard, select a restore point from which you want to
restore application items.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for Microsoft OneDrive for Business. In this explorer,
you can browse, view, restore Microsoft OneDrive for Business data and so on. The detailed information is
provided in the Veeam Explorer for Microsoft OneDrive for Business main section of the Veeam Backup
Explorers User Guide. For example:
• Information about viewing and searching objects in the backup file is in the Browsing, Searching and
Viewing Items section.
• Information about adding a database manually is in the Standalone Databases Management section.
• Information about restoring process is in the Restoring Microsoft OneDrive Data section.
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Restoring Microsoft Teams Items
To restore Microsoft Teams data from a backup or replica of a Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365 server,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Teams.
IMP ORTANT
Before you restore Microsoft Teams data, check requirements and limitations listed in the Planning and
Preparation section in the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. One of the main requirements is that the
backup or replica must be created with application-aware processing enabled.
To launch Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Teams from Veeam Backup & Replication:
3. In the working area, select the necessary machine in the backup or VM replica and click Ap p lication Items
> Microsoft Teams on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the machine or VM replica and select Restore
a p plication items > Microsoft Teams.
4. In the opened Microsoft Teams Files Restore wizard, select a restore point from which you want to restore
data.
Then Veeam Backup & Replication opens Veeam Explorer for Microsoft Teams. In this explorer, you can browse,
view, restore Microsoft Teams data and so on. The detailed information is provided in the Veeam Explorer for
Microsoft Teams main section of the Veeam Backup Explorers User Guide. For example:
• Information about viewing and searching objects in the backup file is in the Browsing, Searching and
Viewing Items section.
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• Information about restoring process is in the Data Restore section.
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Veeam Data Integration API
Data integration API is a technology that allows you to get the backup content using the iSCSI or FUSE protocol.
This technology helps if you want to analyze data of your backups: look for specific documents, usage patterns,
and perform antivirus scan of backed-up data. It also allows you to specify the content that you want to mount
more precisely: instead of mounting all backups, you can mount only the necessary disks or files.
Data integration API does not depend on the file system of the target machine and on the content of backed-up
data. You can mount a disk from any type of the backup to both Windows -based and Unix-based OSes. To
present backed-up disks as images, data integration API uses either the iSCSI protocol (for Windows -based
OSes) or the FUSE protocol (for Unix-based OSes). After that, the target host can access the backup content
using the ISCSI initiator and read the necessary data from disks. The backups that you mounted are available as
long as the mount server is up and running. If you turn off the backup server, you still will be able to access the
mounted backups.
With data integration API you can mount the following types of backed -up data:
• VM backups
• VM replicas
• Computer backups
Supported Environments
With data integration API you can mount the following backups created with Veeam backup solutions:
• Backups of VMware vSphere virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of VMware Cloud Director virtual machines created by Veeam Backup & Replication
• Backups of machines running Microsoft Windows created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
• Backups of machines running Linux created with Veeam Agent for Linux
• Backups of machines running Oracle Solaris created with Veeam Agent for Oracle Solaris
• Backups of machines running IBM AIX created with Veeam Agent for IBM AIX
• Backups of machines running macOS created with Veeam Agent for Mac
• Backups of Nutanix AHV virtual machines created with Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV
• Backups of Amazon EC2 instances created with Veeam Backup for AWS
• Backups of Microsoft Azure virtual machines created with Veeam Backup for Amazon EC2
• Backups of Google instances created with Veeam Backup for Google Cloud
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IMP ORTANT
You can not add the mount server to the backup infrastructure with the Veeam PowerShell cmdlets. To
assign the mount server role to a host you must use the Veeam Backup & Replication UI. For more
information, see the Specify Mount Server Settings section.
Mount Modes
Depending on the way the iSCSI session is configured, you can use one of the following mount modes:
• Ma nual — use this mode if you want to manually start an iSCSI session from any host that has access to the
iSCSI target. In this case you must specify an array of IP addresses for hosts that are allowed to access the
iSCSI target server. For more information, see Example 1 of the Publish-VBRBackupContent cmdlet.
• Automatic — use this mode if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically configure the iSCSI
initiator and mount disks on the specific server. To use this option, you must specify a name and
credentials of the target server. For more information, see Example 2 of the Publish-VBRBackupContent
cmdlet.
NOTE
If you want to automatically mount data to Unix-based machines, you must use the FUSE protocol. For
more details, see Example 3 of the Publish-VBRBackupContent cmdlet.
How It Works
Data Integration API technology is implemented with the Veeam PowerShell cmdlets. When you run the
cmdlets, you can mount the backup content, scan through this content, get details on the mount session, and
unmount data from the target host. For more information, see Veeam Data Integration API section of the Veeam
PowerShell Reference.
To start the mount session you must provide the following details:
1. Get the restore point that contain a backup of data you want to mount.
2. [For the manual mount option] Provide a list of IP addresses that are allowed to access the iSCSI target
server.
3. [For the automatic mount option] Specify a name and credentials for the target server.
4. [Optional] Specify an ID of a machine that has the mount host role. In this case
Veeam Backup & Replication will set up the iSCSI target on this host. If you do not specify the ID of the
mount server, Veeam Backup & Replication will set up the iSCSI target on the mount server associated
with the backup repository.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication connects to a mount host and a backup repository.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication starts the following agents on the mount host:
o The repository agent — this agent runs on a backup repository or on a gateway server associated with
this repository.
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o The mounting agent — this agent makes the iSCSI target available and triggers the repository agent to
read the backup data. It also uses a range of allowed IP addresses to control the access to the iSCSI
target.
3. If the iSCSI session is set up automatically, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the target mount server
and configures the iSCSI initiator on this machine to mount the content of the backup automatically. For
Linux Veeam Backup & Replication uses the FUSE protocol. If Veeam Backup & Replication does not
configure the session automatically, you must configure it manually after the iSCSI target is set up on the
mount host.
4. After you specify the target server in the iSCSI target settings, the mounted disk will be available under
the following locations:
o [Windows-based file systems] Disks will show up under the C:\VeeamFLR\ folder.
o [Unix-based file systems] Disks will show up under the /tmp/Veeam.Mount.Disks location. After
you mount these disks to a loop device, they will displa y in the Veeam.Mount.FS location.
After that the mounted disks will show up in the file system of the target host. You can browse these disks and
perform data analysis operations with them.
NOTE
Veeam PowerShell returns only active mount sessions. To view statistics on the completed sessions, check
the Veeam Backup & Replication UI.
To view mount sessions statistics from the Veeam Backup & Replication UI, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Instant Recovery. In the working area, select the
necessary mount session and click P roperties on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the session and
P roperties.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select La st 24 hours. In the working area, double-click the
necessary mount session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
• Open the History view, in the inventory pane select Restore. In the working area, double-click the
necessary mount session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
• At the top of the Restore Session window, Veeam Backup & Replication shows general session statistics: a
name of the machine whose disks you want to mount, a name of the backup server which initiated the
mount session, a user name of the account under which the session was started, session status, and
duration details.
• The Rea son tab shows the reason for the mount session.
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• The P a rameters tab shows information about the target mount server, the machine whose disks you want
to mount, and a restore point selected for the mount session.
• The Log tab shows a list of operations performed during the session.
To stop the mount session from the Veeam Backup & Replication UI, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Instant Recovery. In the working area, select the
necessary mount session and click Stop P ublishing on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click the session and
Stop Publishing.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select La st 24 hours. In the working area, double-click the
necessary mount session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
• Open the History view, in the inventory pane select Restore. In the working area, double-click the
necessary mount session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
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Secure Restore
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to perform secure restore — scan machine data with antivirus software
before restoring the machine to the production environment.
During secure restore, Veeam Backup & Replication mounts disks of the machine that you plan to restore to the
mount server. On the mount server, Veeam Backup & Replication triggers the antivirus software to scan files
from the mounted disks. If during the scan the antivirus software detects malware, Veeam Backup & Replication
will either abort the restore process, or restore the machine or its disks with restrictions depending on secure
restore settings.
• Instant Recovery
• Entire VM Restore
• Disk Export
• SureBackup
To perform secure restore, you must enable the Sca n the restored machine for malware prior to performing the
recovery option at the Secure Restore step of the restore wizard.
TIP
You can also scan machine data for malware regularly within a SureBackup job. For information on how to
enable the malware scan for a SureBackup job, see the Settings step of the SureBackup job wizard.
• You can perform secure restore only for machines that run Microsoft Windows.
• The antivirus software must be installed on the mount server and support the command line interface
(CLI).
• The antivirus configuration file must be located on the mount server and must be properly configured. For
details, see Antivirus XML Configuration File.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform malware scan for disks or volumes that cannot be mounted
to the mount server.
For example, Storage Spaces disks or ReFS volumes (if ReFS is not supported by the mount server OS) are
skipped from the scan and restored in a regular way.
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How Secure Restore Works
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the mount server as a staging server for scanning machine data with antivirus
software. By default, the mount server role is assigned to one of the following machines: the Veeam backup
server or a repository that stores machine backups. However, you can assign the mount server role to any 64-bit
Microsoft Windows machine in your backup infrastructure. For example, you may want to run the malware scan
process on a different server for security reasons. For details on mount server deployment and requirements,
see Mount Server.
To run the malware scan, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following actions:
1. On the mount server, Veeam Backup & Replication runs Veeam Mount Service to check the antivirus
configuration file and antivirus software:
a. Veeam Mount Service verifies if the AntivirusInfos.xml configuration file is located in the
%ProgramFiles%\Common Files\Veeam\Backup and Replication\Mount Service folder.
b. Veeam Mount Service checks the scan settings in the configuration file and verifies if the antivirus is
installed on the mount server.
Note that if the antivirus is not installed or the configuration file is improperly configured,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not start the restore process. In the restore wizard, you will not be
able to pass the step with secure restore settings.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication mounts machine disks from backups to the mount server under the
C:\VeeamFLR\<machinename> folder.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication triggers the antivirus to scan files in the C:\VeeamFLR\<machinename>
folder.
If during the scan the antivirus does not detect malware, Veeam Backup & Replication restores the machine or
its disks to the target location.
If the antivirus detects malware, Veeam Backup & Replication will either abort the restore process, or restore
the machine or its disks with restrictions depending on the following secure restore settings:
You can further access the restored machine or its disks in the isolated environment and clean the infection.
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Antivirus XML Configuration File
The antivirus software that you plan to use for scanning backups is described in the AntivirusInfos.xml
file. Veeam Backup & Replication creates this configuration file on every machine with the mount server role
and stores the file in the %ProgramFiles%\Common Files\Veeam\Backup and Replication\Mount
Service folder.
During secure restore, Veeam Backup & Replication reads settings from the configuration file and triggers the
antivirus to scan backup files. The settings in the file are already predefined for the following antivirus software:
• ESET
• Windows Defender
If you want to scan machine data with other antivirus software, you must add configuration for this software to
the AntivirusInfos.xml file. The configuration must contain the same elements and attributes as the
antiviruses supported out-of-the-box. Mind that the antivirus software must support the command line
interface (CLI).
NOTE
If you made changes to the antivirus configuration file, you do not need to restart Veeam services on the
backup server — Veeam Backup & Replication will perform the next malware scan with new settings.
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<Antiviruses>
<!-- Symantec -->
<AntivirusInfo Name='Symantec' IsPortableSoftware='false' ExecutableFilePath=
'Veeam.Backup.Antivirus.Scan.exe' CommandLineParameters='/p:%Path%' RegPath='HK
EY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\symcscan' ServiceName='symcs
can' ThreatExistsRegEx='Threat\s+found' IsParallelScanAvailable='false'>
<ExitCodes>
<ExitCode Type='Success' Description='No threats detected'>0</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Invalid command line argument'>1</E
xitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Antivirus scan was completed with e
rrors'>2</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Antivirus scan was canceled'>4</Exi
tCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Virus threat was detected'>3</Ex
itCode>
</ExitCodes>
</AntivirusInfo>
<!-- Eset -->
<AntivirusInfo Name='Eset File Security' IsPortableSoftware='true' Executable
FilePath='%ProgramFiles%\ESET\ESET File Security\ecls.exe' CommandLineParameter
s='%Path% /clean-mode=None /no-symlink' RegPath='' ServiceName='' ThreatExistsR
egEx='threat\s*=\s*["'](?!is OK["'])[^"']+["']' IsParallelS
canAvailable='false'>
<ExitCodes>
<ExitCode Type='Success' Description='No threats detected'>0</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Virus threat was detected'>1</Ex
itCode>
<ExitCode Type='Warning' Description='Some files were not scanned'>10</
ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Virus threat was detected'>50</E
xitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Antivirus scan was completed with e
rrors'>100</ExitCode>
</ExitCodes>
</AntivirusInfo>
<AntivirusInfo Name='ESET Antivirus' IsPortableSoftware='true' ExecutableFile
Path='%ProgramFiles%\ESET\ESET Security\ecls.exe' CommandLineParameters='%Path%
/clean-mode=None /no-symlink' RegPath='' ServiceName='' ThreatExistsRegEx='thre
at\s*=\s*["'](?!is OK["'])[^"']+["']' IsParallelScanAvailab
le='false'>
<ExitCodes>
<ExitCode Type='Success' Description='No threats detected'>0</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Virus threat was detected'>1</Ex
itCode>
<ExitCode Type='Warning' Description='Some files were not scanned'>10</
ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Virus threat was detected'>50</E
xitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Antivirus scan was completed with e
rrors'>100</ExitCode>
</ExitCodes>
</AntivirusInfo>
<!-- Windows Defender -->
<AntivirusInfo Name='Windows Defender' IsPortableSoftware='false' ExecutableF
ilePath='%ProgramFiles%\Windows Defender\mpcmdrun.exe' CommandLineParameters='-
Scan -ScanType 3 -File %Path% -DisableRemediation -BootSectorScan' RegPath='HKE
Y_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\WinDefend' ServiceName='WinDe
fend' ThreatExistsRegEx='Threat\s+information' IsParallelScanAvailable='false'>
<ExitCodes>
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<ExitCode Type='Success' Description='No threats detected'>0</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Antivirus scan was completed with e
rrors'>2</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Virus threat was detected'>2</Ex
itCode>
</ExitCodes>
</AntivirusInfo>
<!-- Kaspersky Security -->
<AntivirusInfo Name='Kaspersky Security' IsPortableSoftware='false' Executabl
eFilePath='kavshell.exe' CommandLineParameters='scan %Path%' RegPath='HKEY_LOCA
L_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\KAVFS' ServiceName='kavfs' ThreatEx
istsRegEx='' IsParallelScanAvailable='false'>
<ExitCodes>
<ExitCode Type='Success' Description='No threats detected'>0</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Warning' Description='There were processing errors for
some files'>-82</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Warning' Description='Some files were not scanned'>-83<
/ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Warning' Description='Some files were corrupted'>-84</E
xitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Operation timed out'>2</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Antivirus scan was canceled'>1</Exi
tCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Service process is not running'>-2<
/ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Access denied'>-3</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Object not found'>-4</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Invalid syntax'>-5</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Invalid operation'>-6</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Service does not exist'>-7</ExitCod
e>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Service disabled'>-8</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Service logon failure'>-9</ExitCode
>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Unable to create file'>-10</ExitCod
e>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Invalid command line argument'>-11<
/ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Invalid password'>-12</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Cannot create report file'>-85</Exi
tCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='License is invalid'>-301</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Error' Description='Antivirus bases are corrupted'>-236
</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Infected object was detected'>-8
0</ExitCode>
<ExitCode Type='Infected' Description='Possibly infected object was det
ected'>-81</ExitCode>
</ExitCodes>
</AntivirusInfo>
</Antiviruses>
• ExitCodes. The element encapsulates messages that Veeam Backup & Replication displays on scan results.
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• ExitCode. The element describes the subject and the body of the message that
Veeam Backup & Replication displays on scan results.
AntivirusInfo
The element has the following attributes:
Attribute Description
Na me Specifies the antivirus name. Veeam Backup & Replication will display this name
in restore session logs.
CommandLineParameters Specifies antivirus commands that you want to execute during the scan. Make
sure that the antivirus supports the specified commands. For example, the list of
commands for ESET is available in this ESET KB article.
Note: The %Path% variable is required for this attribute. During secure restore,
Veeam Backup & Replication substitutes this variable for the path to the folder
with mounted disks (C:\VeeamFLR\<machinename>).
ServiceName Specifies the name of the antivirus service. The service must be responsible for
data scanning. The attribute value can be an empty string if IsP ortableSoftware =
True and E x ecutableFilePath is specified.
Reg Path Specifies the registry value of the anitivirus service. The attribute value can be an
empty string if IsP ortableSoftware = True and E x ecutableFilePath is specified.
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Attribute Description
Note: You must have a good understanding of the regular expression language
to specify this attribute properly. For more information on the regular expression
language, see Microsoft Docs.
IsParallelScanAvailable Indicates if the antivirus will run multiple jobs to scan files on mounted disks
simultaneously.
If you set this attribute to True, Veeam Backup & Replication will lock the
antivirus to perform the scan for the current restore session. The antivirus will
not be available for other sessions with enabled secure restore until the scan
completes.
The default value for antivirus lock time-out is 24 hours. If the scan does not
complete after this period, Veeam Backup & Replication will finish other restore
sessions as specified in the restore wizard: abort restore sessions or restore
machines (or its disks) with restrictions.
Note: You can change the lock time-out using registry values. For more
information, contact Veeam Support.
If the antivirus CLI does not support multiple scan jobs, set this attribute to
False.
ExitCode
The element has the following attributes:
Attribute Description
Ty p e Specifies the subject of the message that Veeam Backup & Replication will
display on scan results:
• Success
• Infected
• Warning
• Error
Description Specifies the body of the message that Veeam Backup & Replication will display
on scan results.
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TIP
You can distribute the XML configuration file among other mount servers in your backup infrastructure
using Veeam PowerShell. For more information, see the Copy-VBRAntivirusConfigurationFile section in the
Veeam PowerShell Reference.
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Viewing Malware Scan Results
Results of the malware scan are available in restore session statistics.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select La st 24 hours. In the working area, double-click the
necessary restore session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
• Open the History view, in the inventory pane select Restore. In the working area, double-click the
necessary restore session. Alternatively, you can select the session and click Sta tistics on the ribbon or
right-click the session and select Sta tistics.
To view the detailed logging of the malware scan, click the Sca n Log button at the bottom of the window with
restore session statistics. Veeam Backup & Replication will display the most recent logs in a file of 1 MB in size.
Full logs of the scan are stored on the mount server in the following folder:
C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\FLRSessions\Windows\FLR__<machinename>_\Antivirus.
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VMware Cloud Director Support
Veeam Backup & Replication provides support for VMware Cloud Director. Veeam Backup & Replication uses
VMware Cloud Director API to back up vApps and VMs and restore them directly to the VMware Cloud Director
hierarchy.
The main entity with which Veeam Backup & Replication works during backup is a vApp. A vApp is a virtual
system that contains one or more individual VMs along with parameters that define operational details — vApp
metadata. When Veeam Backup & Replication performs backup of VMs, it captures not only data of VMs being a
part of vApps, but also vApp metadata. As a result, you can restore VMware Cloud Director objects back to the
VMware Cloud Director hierarchy and do not need to perform any additional actions on import and VM
configuration.
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Viewing VMware Cloud Director VMs
After you add the VMware Cloud Director server to the backup infrastructure, you can view the VMware Cloud
Director hierarchy in Veeam Backup & Replication and work with VMware Cloud Director VMs.
The hierarchy of the VMware Cloud Director server will become available in the inventory pane. VMs managed
by VMware Cloud Director will be displayed in the working area. You can work with these VMs just as if you
worked with VMs managed by vCenter Servers or registered on ESXi hosts in your backup infrastructure.
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Backup and Restore of vApps
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you back up VMware Cloud Director vApps and restore them back to the
VMware Cloud Director hierarchy.
In terms of VMware Cloud Director, a vApp is a coherent system that includes one or more VMs. Every vApp is
described with a set of operational details — vApp metadata. vApp metadata contains the following information:
• vApp network settings: information about organization networks to which the vApp is connected
When Veeam Backup & Replication performs backup of a vApp, it backs up all VMs being a part of this vApp
along with the vApp metadata. Backup of the vApp is performed with the VMware Cloud Director backup job.
The VMware Cloud Director backup job may contain one or several vApps. If necessary, you can exclude specific
VMs and VM disks from the backup when configuring a VMware Cloud Director backup job.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following restore options for backed -up vApps:
• Restore of separate VMs being a part of the vApp to VMware Cloud Director
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication shows restore points of a VM that is no longer processed, for example
excluded from the job or deleted, as long as incremental backup files with this VM exist in the active
backup chain. After Veeam Backup & Replication deletes the files according to the retention policy, it also
hides the VM restore points from the list of restore points created with this backup job. Although the full
backup file with the VM may still exist, restore from this file into the VMware Cloud Director is not
supported.
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Backup of VMware Cloud Director VMs
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you perform backup for vApps and VMs, as well as VM containers in VMware
Cloud Director such as organization VDC, organization and even the VMware Cloud Director instance.
When Veeam Backup & Replication performs backup of vApps and VMs, it additionally captures vApp metadata.
• General information about the vApp where VMs reside, such as: vApp name, description, VMs de scriptions
• Information about vApp networks and organization networks to which the vApp is connected
• User information
• Lease
• Quota
vApp metadata is stored together with the VM content. Capturing vApp metadata is extremely important for
restore: without it, you will not be able to restore vApps and VMs back to VMware Cloud Director.
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Data to Back Up
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you back up the following types of VMware Cloud Director VMs:
• Standalone VMs that were created in the VMware Cloud Director tenant portal
• VM disk content
• vApp metadata
• VM metadata
• vApp metadata
• VM metadata
During full backup of linked clone VMs, Veeam Backup & Replication consolidates data of the VM template and
delta disk and saves it as a regular VM disk in the backup file. Data merging guarantees proper VM restore: even
if a VM template is lost by the time of recovery, you will still be able to restore the linked clone VM from the
backup.
During incremental backup, Veeam Backup & Replication saves only changed data of the delta file.
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Limitations for Backup of Linked Clone VMs
Before you back up linked clone VMs, consider the following:
• [For vCenter 6.5 or later] If you back up a linked clone VM that has snapshots,
Veeam Backup & Replication may fail to produce a valid restore point. To overcome this issue, do one of
the following:
For details on how to enable CBT on the VM template, contact Veeam Customer Support.
• Backup of linked clone VMs that were created with services other than VMware Cloud Director may cause
snapshot-related problems. To overcome this issue, disable Veeam Snapshot Hunter. For details, see this
Veeam KB article.
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Cloud Director Backup Jobs
For VMs managed by VMware Cloud Director, Veeam Backup & Replication offers a special type of the backup
job — VMware Cloud Director backup job. VMware Cloud Director backup jobs process VMware Cloud Director
objects, ensure their proper restore and support of Cloud Director-specific features.
It is recommended that you use VMware Cloud Director backup jobs to back up VMs managed by VMw are Cloud
Director. If you back up VMs managed by VMware Cloud Director using a regular backup job,
Veeam Backup & Replication will perform backup at the level of the underlying vCenter Server and will not
capture vApp metadata. As a result, you will not be able to restore a fully-functioning VM to VMware Cloud
Director.
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Performing Backup of VMware Cloud Director
VMs
The VMware Cloud Director backup is practically the same as a regular VM backup. The VMware Cloud Director
backup job aggregates main settings for the backup task and defines when, what, how and where to back up
VMware Cloud Director VMs.
You can perform the VMware Cloud Director backup job for single VMs and for VM containers:
• vApp
• Organization VDC
• Organization
Just like a regular backup job, the VMware Cloud Director backup job can be scheduled or run manually. To
create a VMware Cloud Director backup job, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Ba ckup Job > Virtual Machine and select VMware C loud Director.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane right-click Job s and select Ba ckup > Virtual Machine >
VMwa re Cloud Director.
• Open the Inventory view, click the View tab and click Cloud Director View on the ribbon. In the inventory
pane expand the VMwa re Cloud Director hierarchy, in the working area select one or more VMs, click Ad d
to Ba ckup on the ribbon and select New job. Alternatively, you can right-click one or several VMs and
select Ad d to backup job > New job. In this case, the selected VMs will be automatically added to the new
VMware Cloud Director backup job. You can add other VMs to the job when passing through the wizard
steps.
You can quickly include VMs to already existing VMware Cloud Director backup jobs. To do this, in the Inventory
view, in the working area right-click necessary VMs and select Ad d to backup job > < name of the job> .
The backup wizard for VMware Cloud Director offers the same options as the backup wizard for VMware virtual
machines. For more information, see Creating Backup Jobs.
IMP ORTANT
• Limitation of concurrent tasks is not supported for VMware Cloud Director backup jobs. Fore more
information, see Limitation of Concurrent Tasks.
• If you run a VMware Cloud Director backup job for the vApp, the job is considered to finish with the
Success status and the complete restore point for the vApp is created only if all VMs in the vApp are
successfully backed up. If any VM in the job fails, the restore point for the vApp will be in the
incomplete status, and you will not be able to restore the whole vApp from such restore point.
However, you will be able to perform restore to the original vApp for VMs that were partially or
successfully backed up and whose data is available in the incomplete restore point.
Veeam Backup & Replication will restore all data that is available for such VMs in the backup.
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Managing Cloud Director Backups
Managing for Cloud Director backups is practically the same as for regular backups. You can view backup
properties, copy, move, export and delete backups from disk. For more information, see the following sections:
• Moving Backups
• Copying Backups
• Exporting Backups
• Retrying Jobs
NOTE
The move and copy operations are available at the backup job level and at the vApp level. You cannot use
these operations for individual VMs.
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Creating VeeamZIP Files for VMware Cloud
Director VMs
You can create a VeeamZIP file for one or more VMware Cloud Director VMs.
When Veeam Backup & Replication creates a VeeamZIP file for a VMware Cloud Director VM, it backs up a VM as
separate object. Veeam Backup & Replication does not capture metadata of the vApp to which the VM belongs.
When you restore a VMware Cloud Director VM from the VeeamZIP file, Veeam Backup & Replication registers
the VM on the underlying ESXi host and does not register the VM in VMware Cloud Director.
The process of VeeamZIP files creation for VMware Cloud Director VMs does not differ from that for regular
VMware VMs. For more information, see Creating VeeamZIP Files.
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CDP for VMware Cloud Director
Continuous data protection (CDP) for VMware Cloud Director is a technology that helps you protect mission-
critical vApps and VMs when data loss for seconds or minutes is unacceptable. CDP also provides minimum
recovery time objective (RTO) in case a disaster strikes because CDP rep licas are in a ready-to-start state.
CDP for VMware Cloud Director utilizes a similar mechanisms as CDP for VMware vSphere VMs. The main
difference is that the unit for replication and failover is a vApp, not a VM. For more information on CDP for
VMware vSphere VMs, see Continuous Data Protection (CDP).
To protect vApps using CDP for Cloud Director, you first need to configure the infrastructure and then to create
a Cloud Director CDP policy. For more information, see Backup Infrastructure for Cloud Director CDP and
Creating Cloud Director CDP Policies. To recover vApps to a short-term or long-term restore point, you need to
fail over to its replica. For more information, see Failover and Failback for Cloud Director CDP.
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Backup Infrastructure for Cloud Director CDP
The following backup infrastructure components are required for VMware Cloud Director CDP:
• Backup server
Backup Server
The backup server is the configuration, administration and management core of the backup infrastructure. The
backup server runs the Veeam CDP Coordinator Service. This service coordinates replication and data transfer
tasks, and controls resource allocation. We recommend that you place the backup server in the target site or as
a separate unit.
The source and target VDC organizations perform the following tasks:
• The source organization VDC reads vApp and VM disk data, reads and processess I/O operations and sends
data to source VMware CDP proxies. The data is sent uncompressed.
• The target organization VDC receives data from target VMware CDP proxies and saves this data to replicas
on the datastore. Also, the target VDC manages replicas: creates replicas, retains restore points and so on.
It is the I/O filter that reads and processes I/O operations between the protected v Apps and their underlining
datastore and that sends and receives data from VMware CDP proxies. Also, the filter communicates with the
Veeam CDP Coordinator Service on the backup server and notifies the service that the backup infrastructure
must be reconfigured if any proxy becomes unavailable. This I/O filter is built on the basis of vSphere API for I/O
filtering (VAIO).
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The source and target VMware CDP proxies perform the following tasks:
• The source proxy prepares data for short-term restore points from data received from the source host,
compresses and encrypts the data (if encryption is enabled in the network traffic rules). Then sends it to
the target proxy.
• The target proxy receives the data, decompresses and decrypts it, and then sends to the target host.
For more information on VMware CDP proxies, their requirements, limitations and deployment, see VMware CDP
Proxy.
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Requirements and Limitations
Consider the following for CDP for VMware Cloud Director:
• As CDP for VMware Cloud Director is based on the CDP mechanism for VMware vSphere VMs,
requirements and limitations are also actual. For more information, see Requirements and Limitations for
CDP.
• The version of target hosts must be 7.0 or higher. Target hosts of version 6.5 and 6.7 are not supported.
• The maximum number of VMs in a vApp that can be protected with CDP is 128.
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How Cloud Director CDP Works
Cloud Director CDP works in a similar way as CDP for VMware vSphere VMs. For more information, see the
following sections:
• Retention Policies
• Guaranteed Delivery
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Installing I/O Filter on VDCs
To be able to protect VM containers with CDP, you must install I/O filter on each organization VDC that you plan
to protect and where Cloud Director replicas will reside. For more information on the filter, see Backup
Infrastructure for Cloud Director CDP.
To install I/O filter on a VMware Cloud Director server and all the connected organization VDCs, use the I/O
Filter Management wizard.
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Step 1. Launch I/O Filter Management Wizard
To launch the I/O Filter Management wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Ba ckup Infrastructure view. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Ma naged Servers > VMware
Cloud Director. In the working area select a VMware Cloud Director server on which you want to install the
filter. Right-click the servers and select Ma nage I/O filters. Alternatively, click Ma nage I/O Filters on the
ribbon.
• Open the Inventory view. Click the View tab on the ribbon and click Cloud Director View. In the inventory
pane, navigate to the VMwa re Cloud Director > VMs and vApps > <Cloud Director Server > node. Right-
click the node and select Ma nage I/O filters. Alternatively, click Ma nage I/O Filters on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Select VDC Organizations
At the Org anization VDC step of the wizard, select check boxes near organization VDCs on which you want to
install I/O filter.
If you select check boxes near VDCs where the filters are already installed, Veeam Backup & Replication will
update the filters. If you clear check boxes, Veeam Backup & Replication will delete the I/O filter from these
VDCs. For more information, see Updating and Uninstalling I/O Filter.
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Step 3. Apply Filter Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait untill Veeam Backup & Replication installs I/O filter. Click Nex t.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review on which organization VDCs I/O filter is installed and click Finish to
exit the wizard.
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Updating and Uninstalling I/O Filter
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to update or uninstall I/O filter from organization VDCs using the
Veeam Backup & Replication console.
Requirements
Mind the following:
• Make sure that you have disabled or deleted all VMware Cloud Director CDP policies as described in the
Disabling and Deleting Policies section.
• [When uninstalling the filter] If you have manually assigned the Veeam CDP Replication storage policy to
VMs that are parts of organization VDCs to which the filter was installed, or replicas are still present in the
Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database, you must change the storage policy for these VMs.
For more information on how to change storage policies, see VMware Docs. To see the list of replicas,
open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click the Rep licas node.
1. Launch the I/O Filter Management wizard as described in Launch VeeamCDP Filter Management Wizard.
o To update the filter, make sure that check boxes are selected near the necessary organization VDCs.
o To uninstall the filter, clear the check boxes near the necessary organization VDCs.
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3. Proceed to the last step of the wizard and close the wizard.
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Creating Cloud Director CDP Policies
To protect vApps with CDP, you must configure a VMware Cloud Director CDP policy. The CDP policy defines
which vApps to protect, where to store replicas, how often create short-term and long-term restore points, and
so on. One CDP policy can process one or multiple vApps.
To create a CDP policy, use the New VMware Cloud Director CDP P olicy wizard.
• Check that all the required components are added to the backup infrastructure. For more information on
the required components, see Backup Infrastructure for Cloud Director CDP.
• I/O filter must be installed on each VDC where VMs that you plan to protect reside. For more information
on how to install the filter, see Installing I/O Filter on VDCs.
• If you plan to use replica seeding, you must create a seed as described in the Creating vApp Replica Seeds
section.
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Step 1. Launch New VMware Cloud Director CDP Policy Wizard
To launch the New VMware Cloud Director CDP Policy wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view. On the ribbon, click CDP P olicy > VMware Cloud Director.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, right-click Job s and select CDP Policy > VMware Cloud
Director.
• Open the Inventory view. In the inventory pane, right-click workloads that you want to replicate. Select
Ad d to CDP p olicy > New job if you want to create a new VMware Cloud Director CDP policy, or Ad d to
CDP policy > <Policy Name> if you want to add workloads to an existing VMware Cloud Director CDP
policy.
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Step 2. Specify Policy Name and Advanced Settings
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the CDP policy, and choose whether you
want to use replica seeding or network mapping:
3. If a network between your production and disaster recovery (DR) sites has low bandwidth, and you want
to reduce the amount of traffic sent during the initial synchronization of the CDP policy, select the Rep lica
seeding (for low bandw idth DR sites) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Seeding step where you will have to configure replica seeding
and mapping.
4. If your DR site networks do not match your production site networks, select the Network remapping (for
DR sites with different virtual networks) check box.
When selected, this check box enables the Network step where you will have to configure a network
mapping table.
NOTE
Cloud Director CDP policies do not support network mapping of the vApp networks. You can configure a
mapping table for organization VDC network only.
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Step 3. Select vApps to Replicate
At the vAp ps step of the wizard, select VM containers (vApps, organization or organization VDCs) that you want
to replicate.
1. Click Ad d .
When you add new items to VM containers, Veeam Backup & Replication updates settings automatically to
process these new items.
IMP ORTANT
• You cannot replicate standalone VMs. You can replicate only VM containers (vApps, organization
VDCs and so on).
• If you replicate VM containers and add new VMs to these container in future,
Veeam Backup & Replication will update policy settings automatically to include these VMs.
However, note that only vApps and VMs are replicated. VM templates, logs, folders and so on are
not replicated.
• You can replicate only turned on VMs added to vApps. The turned off VMs will be skipped from
processing.
• You cannot add to a CDP policy vApps that were already added to other CDP policies created on the
same backup server.
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Step 4. Exclude Objects
After you have added vApps and VM containers to the replication job, at the vAp ps step of the wizard you can
specify which objects you want to exclude from the replication job.
NOTE
You can exclude only child objects that are added to a VM container. For example, if you add an
organization VDC to a replication job, you can exclude only vApps that are available in this organization
VDC.
2. In the E x clusions window, check that the VMs tab is selected. Click Ad d .
3. In the Select Objects window, select VMs and VM containers that you want to exclude. Click OK.
Select the Show full hierarchy check box to display the hierarchy of all VMware Cloud Director servers
added to the backup infrastructure.
Excluding Disks
To exclude disks:
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2. In the E x clusions window, do the following:
b. To exclude disks of VMs, click Ad d . In the Ad d Objects window, select the necessary VMs and click
Ad d . Veeam Backup & Replication will include these VMs in the list as standalone objects.
d. Click E d it.
3. In the Select Disks window, select disks that you want to replicate: all disks, 0:0 disks (as a rule, system
disks) or specific IDE, SCSI, SATA or NVMe disks. Disks that you do not select will be excluded from
processing. Click OK.
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Step 5. Specify vApp Processing Order
At the vAp ps step of the wizard, click Up and Down to change the processing order. VM containers (vApps,
organization, organization VDCs, and so on) at the top of the list have a higher priority and will be processed
first.
NOTE
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Step 6. Select Replica Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select an organization VDC where you want to store replicas and the
storage policy that you want to apply to the replicas.
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Step 7. Configure Network Mapping
The Network step of the wizard is available if you have selected the Network remapping option at the Na me
step of the wizard.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the
production site to networks in the disaster recovery (DR) site. When the replication session starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will check the network mapping table. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will
update replica configuration to replace the production networks with the specified networks in the DR site. As a
result, you will not have to re-configure network settings manually.
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Source network field.
3. In the Select Network window, select the production network to which the source workloads are
connected and click OK.
4. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Ta rget network field.
5. In the Select Network window, select a network in the DR site to which replicas will be connected and
click OK.
NOTE
• Cloud Director CDP policies do not support network mapping of vApp networks. You can configure a
mapping table for organization VDC networks only.
• If your replica has a configured network remapping and IP addresses are set as a static pool on the
target, Veeam Backup & Replication will assign these IP addresses to VM NICs on a "first come, first
served" basis: the first available IP address will be assigned to the first NIC, the second available IP
address will be assigned to the second NIC and so on.
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Step 8. Configure vApp Seeding and Mapping
The Seeding step is available if you have selected the Rep lica seeding check box at the Na me step of the wizard.
At the Seeding step of the wizard, configure replica seeding and mapping. Seeding and mapping help reduce the
amount of traffic sent during the initial replica synchronization. For more information on when to use seeding
and mapping, see vApp Seeding and Mapping.
IMP ORTANT
If the Rep lica seeding check box is enabled in a policy, all vApps in the policy must be covered with seeding
or mapping. If a vApp neither has a seed, nor has mapping to an existing vApp, it will be skipped from
processing.
1. Make sure that you have backups of replicated vApps in a backup repository in the DR site. If you do not
have the backups, create them as described in the Creating vApp Replica Seeds section.
IMP ORTANT
2. In the Initial seeding section, select the Get seed from the following backup repository check box.
3. From the list of available backup repositories, select the repository where your replica seeds are stored.
NOTE
If a vApp has a seed and is mapped to an existing replica, replication will be performed using replica
mapping because mapping has a higher priority.
2. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to scan the DR site to detect existing copies of vApps that you
plan to replicate, click Detect.
If any matches are found, Veeam Backup & Replication will populate the mapping table. If
Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a match, you can map a vApp to its copy manually. Note that
the mapping list does not display vApps added to the list of exclusions for replication.
3. If you want to map a VM manually, select a source VM from the list, click E d it and select the copy of this
VM on the target host in the DR site.
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TIP
If there is no existing replica in the DR site, you can restore a vApp from the backup and map it to the
source vApp.
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Step 9. Specify Data Transfer and Replica Settings
At the P olicy Settings step of the wizard, select VMware CDP proxies that must be used for the CDP policy,
specify which suffix to add to replica names and VMware CDP proxies availability:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select proxies automatically, leave Automatic selection in
the Source proxy and Ta rget proxy fields.
Veeam Backup & Replication will assign VMware CDP proxies for VM processing one by one. Before
processing a new VM from the list, Veeam Backup & Replication will check available VMware CDP
proxies.
i. Click Choose next to the Source proxy field if you want to select VMware CDP proxies in the
production site, or next to the Ta rget proxy field if you want to select VMware CDP proxies in
the disaster recovery site.
ii. In the Ba ckup Proxy window, click Use the selected backup proxy servers only. Select proxies
that you want to use and click OK.
NOTE
We recommend that you deploy at least two VMware CDP proxies: one CDP proxy in the production
site and one CDP proxy in the disaster recovery site.
2. To test whether VMware CDP proxies available in the backup infrastructure can handle replication, click
Test.
Veeam Backup & Replication will analyze available CPU on all source and all target VMware CDP proxies,
the maximum VM disk write speed during the last hour, and will calculate approximate requirements for
VMware CDP proxies. In the CDP Infrastructure Assessment window, you will see the calculated values:
o The CP U rows show CPU cores available on all proxies (source or target).
o The P roxy RAM rows show RAM required for CDP and, in parenthesis, RAM available on all proxies
(source or target). If values in the parentheses and near the paranthesis are the same, you need to
upgrade proxies for which values coincide to provide more resources. For example, you can double up
the amount of RAM.
o The P roxy Bandwidth rows show the maximum disk write speed during the last hour and, in
parenthesis, available bandwidth based on available cores of source or target proxies.
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3. In the Rep lica name suffix field, specify a suffix that will be added to names of replicas.
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Step 10. Specify Notification Settings
At the P olicy Settings wizard, specify notification settings:
2. To receive SNMP traps on the CDP policy, select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box.
SNMP traps will be sent if you configure global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and
configure software on recipient machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying
SNMP Settings.
3. To receive notifications by email in case of policy failure, success or warning, select the Send email
notifications to the following recipients check box. Then configure notification settings:
a. Check that you have configured global email notification settings as described in the Configuring
Global Email Notification Settings section.
b. In the text field, specify a recipient email address. If you want to specify multiple addresses, separate
them by a semicolon.
d. To specify a custom notification subject and redefine at which time notifications must be sent, select
Use custom notification settings specified below. Then specify the following settings:
i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %JobResult%, %JobName%, %ObjectCount% (number of VMs in the policy) and
%Issues% (number of VMs in the policy that have been processed with the Warning or Failed
status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on error or Notify on warning check boxes to receive
email notification if the policy gets the Warning , Success of Error status.
NOTE
A CDP policy will get the Warning or Error status according to the reporting settings configured at
the Schedule step of the wizard. The policy will get the Success status after the initial configuration
succeeds and every day at 8 A.M. if no error or warning occurs.
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Step 11. Configure Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, configure the schedule and retention policies:
a. In the Recovery point objective field, specify the necessary RPO in seconds or minutes, that is, how
often to create short-term restore points.
The minimum RPO is 2 seconds, however it can be not optimal if your CDP policy contains many VMs
with high workload. The optimal RPO is not less than 15 seconds. The maximum RPO is 60 minutes.
During every specified period, Veeam Backup & Replication will prepare data for short-term restore
points for VM replicas and send this data to the target destination. Note that short-term restore
points are crash-consistent.
b. If you want to prohibit the policy to run at specific time intervals, click Schedule. In the schedule box,
click Denied and select the necessary time area.
2. To instruct the CDP policy to display a warning or error if a newly created restore points are not
transferred to the target within the set RPO, click Rep orting. Then specify when the policy must display
error and warning.
If you have configured email notification settings, Veeam Backup & Replication will mark the policy with
the Warning or Error status and will also send email notifications.
3. In the Short-term retention section, configure the short-term retention policy, that is, specify for how
long to store short-term restore points.
4. In the Long -term retention section, specify when to create long-term restore points and for how long to
store them:
a. In the Create additional restore points every field, specify how often you want to create long-term
restore points.
b. In the Keep restore points for field, specify for how long to retain these long-term restore points.
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c. To specify time periods when Veeam Backup & Replication must create application-consistent and
crash-consistent long-term restore points, click Schedule. In the schedule box, click Cra sh-consistent
or Ap p lication-consistent and select the necessary time area. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication
creates application-consistent backups if you enable application-aware processing at the Guest
P rocessing step of the wizard. If you do not enable application-aware processing,
Veeam Backup & Replication will create crash-consistent long-term restore points.
If you want to shift the schedule, specify the offset in the Sta rt time within a n hour field. For
example, you schedule creation of crash-consistent restore points from 00:00 to 01:00, and set the
offset value to 25. The schedule will be shifted forward, and the crash-consistent restore points will
be created from 0:25 and to 01:25.
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Step 12. Specify Guest Processing Settings
At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, enable and configure guest OS processing.
Guest OS processing involves application-aware processing that allows creation of transactionally consistent
replicas and guest file system indexing (however, indexing is not available for replicas). In its turn, application -
aware processing includes transaction log backup, log truncation, execution of custom scripts and guest OS file
exclusions. For more information on guest processing, see the Guest Processing section.
To be able to use guest processing, you must also configure user accounts to access guest OSes and guest
interaction proxies.
To enable guest OS processing and start configuring it (accounts and guest interaction proxies):
When you select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication enables application-aware processing with the
default settings for all VMs. You can further disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and
reconfigure the default settings.
2. If you have added Microsoft Windows VMs to be processed, specify which guest interaction proxy
Veeam Backup & Replication can use to perform different guest processing tasks:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select the guest interaction proxy automatically, leave
Automatic selection on the Guest interaction proxy field.
o If you want to explicitly specify which servers will perform the guest interaction proxy role, click
Choose. In the Guest Interaction Proxy window, click P refer the following guest interaction proxy
server, and select the necessary proxies.
For more information on the guest interaction proxy, requirements and limitations for it, see Guest
Interaction Proxy.
3. From the Guest OS credentials list, select a user account that will be used to connect to guest OSes and
that has enough permissions. For more information on the permissions and requirements for the user
account, see Permissions for Guest Processing.
[For Microsoft Windows VMs] Veeam Backup & Replication will also use this account to deploy the non-
persistent runtime components or use (if necessary, deploy) persistent agent. For more information on
guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent
Agent Components.
[For Linux VMs] If you installed persistent agent components for VMs running Linux or Unix operating
systems, select Use management agent credentials from the list. For more information, see Persistent
Agent Components.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click the Ad d button to
add credentials. For more information on adding credentials, see the Credentials Manager section.
NOTE
If you plan to use Kerberos authentication, check limitations and requirements listed in the Guest
Processing section.
4. To specify credentials for individual workloads, click Credentials. Then select the necessary workload and
set user credentials for it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose a VM whose settings you want to customize. Then
select the VM in the list and define the necessary settings.
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5. To check whether Veeam Backup & Replication can connect to VMs using the specified guest OS
credentials and can deploy the non-persistent runtime components or connect to persistent agent
components on the guest OSes, click Test Now.
After you have enabled application-aware processing for all VMs and configured other settings required for
guest processing, you can disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and change the default
settings. For more information, see the following sections:
• Application-aware Processing
• Script settings
To configure general application-aware processing settings and specify whether Veeam Backup & Replication
processes transaction logs or creates copy-only replicas:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
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3. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options window, select workloads for which you want to configure
application-aware processing, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Ap p lications section, specify the behavior scenario for application-aware
processing:
o Select Require successful processing if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the replication
process if any error occurs during application-aware processing.
o Select Try application processing, but ignore failures if you want to continue the replication process
even if an error occurs during application-aware processing. This option guarantees that replication
will continue working. However, the resulting replica will be crash consistent, not transactionally
consistent.
o Select Disable application processing if you want to disable application-aware processing for the
workload.
5. [For Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft SQL Server] In the VSS Settings section, specify if
Veeam Backup & Replication must process transaction logs or create copy-only replicas:
a. Select P rocess transaction logs with this job if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to process
transaction logs.
[For Microsoft Exchange VMs] With this option selected, the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait for replication to complete successfully
and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the replication job fails, the logs will remain
untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components.
[For Microsoft SQL Server] You will need to configure how to process transaction logs.
TIP
To configure log processing for Oracle and PostgreSQL databases, switch to the Oracle and
PostrgeSQL tabs.
b. Select P erform copy only if you use another tool to perform guest level processing, and this tool
maintains consistency of the database state. Veeam Backup & Replication will create a copy-only
replica for the selected VMs. The copy only replica preserves the chain of full and differential files and
transaction logs on the VM. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
6. [For Microsoft Windows VMs] In the P ersistent guest agent section, select the Use persistent guest agent
check box to use for application-aware processing persistent guest agents on each protected VM.
For more information on guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime
Components and Persistent Agent Components.
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[For Linux VMs] To use persistent guest agents, you must install Management Agent on protected VMs.
For more information, see Persistent Agent Components.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Microsoft SQL Servers, you must check that application-
aware processing is enabled and then specify settings of transacrion log processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Microsoft SQL Server and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
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Specifying Transaction Log Settings
In the P rocessing Settings window, switch to the SQL tab and specify how transaction logs must be processed:
• If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to trigger truncation of transaction logs after the CDP policy
creates a long-term restore point, select Truncate logs.
In this case, transaction logs will be truncated after the CDP policy creates a long-term restore point. If
the creation fails, the logs will remain untouched until the next start of the long -term restore point
creation.
• If you do not want Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate logs at all, select Do not truncate logs.
This option is recommended if you use another tool to perform VM guest-level replication, and this tool
maintains consistency of the database state.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Oracle server, you must check that application-aware
processing is enabled and then specify settings of archive log processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
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2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Oracle server and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
2. From the Sp ecify Oracle account with SYSDBA privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the Oracle databases. The account that you plan to use
must have privileges described in Permissions.
You can select Use guest credentials from the list of user accounts. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to
access the VM guest OS and connect to the Oracle databases.
o If you want to preserve archived logs on the VM guest OS, select Do not delete archived logs. When
the replication job completes, the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components will
not truncate transaction logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases where the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned
off. If the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned on, archived logs may grow large and consume all disk space.
o If you want to delete archived logs older than <N> hours, select Delete logs older than <N> hours and
specify the number of hours.
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o If you want to delete archived logs larger than <N> GB, select Delete logs over <N> GB and specify
the size. The specified size refers to the log size of each database, not all databases on the selected
Oracle server.
Transaction logs will be deleted using Oracle Call Interface after the CDP policy creates a long -term
restore point. If the creation fails, the logs will remain untouched until the next start of the long-term
restore point creation.
Script Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to run custom scripts before the CDP policy starts the creation of a
long-term restore point and after the policy finishes the creation. For example, these can be pre-freeze and
post-thaw scripts for a VM that does not support VSS. The scripts will quiesce the VM file system and
application data to bring the VM to a consistent state before the creation of a restore point, and bring the VM
and applications to their initial state after the creation finishes.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
2. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options list, select workloads for which you want to configure
scripts, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
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2. Click the Scripts tab.
3. In the Script processing mode section, select a scenario for script execution:
o Select Require successful script execution if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the
replication process if scripts fail.
o Select Ig nore script execution failures if you want to continue the replication process even if script
errors occur.
o Select Disable script execution if you do not want to run scripts for the VM.
5. In the W indows scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Microsoft Windows VMs. For the list of
supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
6. In the Linux scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Linux VMs. For the list of supported script formats,
see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
If you plan to replicate a VM container with Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs, you can select to execute
both Microsoft Windows and Linux scripts. When replication starts, Veeam Backup & Replication will
automatically determine which OS type is installed on the VM and use corresponding scripts for this VM.
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Step 13. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured settings. If you want to start the policy right after you
close the wizard, leave the E na ble the policy when I click Finish check box selected, otherwise clear the check
box. Then click Finish to close the wizard.
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Managing Cloud Director CDP Policies
After you create VMware Cloud Director CDP policies, you can view statistics, edit, disable
and delete policies.
To view all created CDP policies, open the Home view and navigate to the Job s > CDP node. The
working area displays the full list of the created policies. Here, you can manage the policies.
• To view real-time statistics for the policy, open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Job s > CDP.
In the working area, double-click the necessary policy. Alternatively, right-click the policy and select
Sta tistics. In the opened window, you will be able to switch between statistics of individual vApps and
VMs.
• To view real-time statistics for an individual vApp, open the Home view. In the inventory pane select Job s,
La st 24 hours or Running. In the working area, double-click the necessary vApp. Alternatively, right-click
the vApp and select Sta tistics.
• To view statistics on the finished policy sessions, open the History view. In the inventory pane select CDP .
In the working area, double-click the necessary policy session.
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The statistics provides detailed data on policy sessions: duration, performance bottlenecks, amount of
processed data, read and transferred data.
Statistics Counters
Veeam Backup & Replication displays policy statistics for the following counters:
• The La st 24 hours (all VMs) section shows the general information for all vApp and VMs added to vApps
for which you have opened the statistics. This information is collected during 24 hours.
▪ Rea d — amount of data read from the datastore prior to applying compression and
deduplication. The value of this counter is typically lower than the value of the Tota l size
counter. Veeam Backup & Replication reads only data blocks that have changed since the last
policy session, processes and copies these data blocks to the target.
▪ Tra nsferred — amount of data transferred from the source VMware CDP proxy to the target
VMware CDP proxy. The data is transferred after compression and deduplication.
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▪ Ma x delay — difference between the configured RPO and time required to transfer and save
data.
o The Sta tus box shows information about task session results. This box informs how many task sessions
have completed with the Success, Warning and Error statuses during the 24-hour session. One task
session lasts for the period between the creation of two long -term restore points.
• The La st sync session section shows general information collected during the last synchronization session
of the 24-hour session. One synchronization session lasts for the period between the creation of the two
short-term restore points.
o Duration — time period during which data was collected and sent to the target host.
o Rea d — amount of data read from the datastore prior to applying compression and deduplication.
o Tra nsferred — amount of data transferred from the source VMware CDP proxy to the target VMware
CDP proxy. The data is sent after compression and deduplication.
• The La st period section shows general information collected during the last task session of the 24-hour
session. One task session lasts for the period between the creation of two long -term restore points.
▪ Ma x delay — difference between the configured RPO and time required to transfer and save
data.
o The Sy nc session box shows information about synchronization session results. This box informs how
many synchronization sessions have completed with the Success, Warning and Error statuses during
the last task session. One synchronization session lasts for the period between the creation of the two
short-term restore points.
▪ Sy nc interval — duration of a synchronization session configured in the policy, that is, the
specified RPO.
• The pane at the left shows the list of vApps and VMs included into the session statistics. VMs that belong
to a vApp are showed right under the vApp.
• The pane at the bottom shows the list of operations performed during the session. If you open statistics
for a policy, you can see the list of operations for the whole policy or an individual vApp or VM. To see the
list of operations for an individual vApp or VM, click the vApp or VM in the pane on the le ft. To see the list
of operations for the whole policy, click anywhere on the blank area in the left pane.
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Colored Graph
To visualize the data transfer process, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a colored graph in the statistics
window:
• The green color defines the amount of data read from the source.
• The brown color defines the amount of data transferred to the target.
If the session is still being performed, you can click the graph to view data rate for the last 5 minutes or the last
24 hours. If the session has already ended, the graph will display information for the last 24 hours only.
The colored graph is displayed only for the currently running session or the latest finished session. If you open
statistics for past sessions other than the latest one, the colored graph will not be displayed.
Editing Policies
To edit a CDP policy:
3. In the working area, select the necessary policy and select E d it on the ribbon. As an alternative, right-click
the necessary policy and select E d it.
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Disabling CDP Policies
To disable a CDP policy:
3. In the working area, select the necessary policy and select Disable on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click
the necessary policy and select Disable.
TIP
3. Check that you have disabled the policy that you want to delete.
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4. In the working area, select the necessary policy and select Delete on the ribbon. Alternatively, right-click
the necessary policy and select Delete.
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Managing Cloud Director CDP Replicas
To view all created replicas, open the Home view and navigate to the Rep licas node. The
working area displays the full list of the created replicas. Here, you can view replica
properties and delete replicas from the configuration database or disk.
3. In the working area, right-click the necessary replica and select P roperties. Alternatively, select P roperties
on the ribbon.
Rescanning Replicas
Rescan is a process that allows Veeam Backup & Replication to verify that the following data written to
configuration database is up to date: information about the disaster recovery (DR) site, its components and VM
containers. The replica rescan process is performed the following way:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication gathers information on replicas that are currently available in the DR site.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication compares this information with information stored in the configuration
database about replicas from this DR site.
3. If information about replicas from the DR site differs from information stored in the configuration
database about these replicas, Veeam Backup & Replication updates the configuration database.
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To rescan replicas, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Rep licas node and select Rescan replicas.
To remove records about replicas from the Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database:
3. In the working area, select replicas in the Ready state and click Remove from > Configuration on the
ribbon. Alternatively, right-click one of the selected replicas and select Remove from configuration.
NOTE
• The Remove from configuration operation can be performed only for replicas in the Ready state. If
the replica is in the Failover or Failback state, this option is disabled.
• When you perform the Remove from configuration operation for a vApp that is replicated as a
standalone object, Veeam Backup & Replication removes this vApp from the initial Cloud Director
CDP policy. When you perform the Remove from configuration operation for a vApp that is
replicated as part of a container (organization VDC or Cloud Director server),
Veeam Backup & Replication adds this vApp to the list of exclusions in the initial policy. For more
information, see Exclude Objects.
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Deleting from Disk
When you delete replicas from disks, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the replicas not only from the
Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database, but also from host storage.
NOTE
• You can delete records only about replicas that are in the Ready state.
• Do not delete replica files from the destination storage manually, use the Delete from disk option
instead. If you delete replica files manually, subsequent replication sessions will fail.
• Unlike the Remove from configuration operation, the Delete from disk operation does not remove
the processed workload from the initial replication job.
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3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Remove from > Disk on the ribbon. As an
alternative, right-click the replica and select Delete from disk.
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Failover and Failback for Cloud Director CDP
Failover and failback are operations that allow you to manage your production and disaster recovery (DR) sites if
a disaster strikes. Failover is a process of switching from the vApp on the source organization VDC to its replica
on a target organization VDC that is set up as the disaster recovery ( DR) site. Failback is a process of returning
from the replica to the source vApp or a new vApp.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides the following failover and failback operations:
• P erform failover
When you perform failover, you shift all processes from the source vApp in the production organization
VDC to the replica in the DR organization VDC. Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized:
you can perform permanent failover, perform failback or undo failover.
When you perform permanent failover, you permanently switch from the source vApp to a replica and use
this replica as the production vApp. The source vApp is excluded from VMware Cloud Director replica
processing.
• Und o failover
When you undo failover, you switch back to the source vApp and discard all changes made to the replica
while it was running. For example, you can use the undo failover scenario if you have failed over to the
replica for testing and troubleshooting purposes, and you do not need to sy nchronize the source vApp
state with the current state of the replica.
• P erform failback
When you perform failback, you switch back to the source vApp and send to the source vApp all changes
that took place while the replica was running. If the source org anization VDC is not available, you can
recover a vApp with the same configuration as the source vApp and switch to it.
When you perform failback, changes are only sent to the source or recovered vApp but not published. You
must test whether the source or recovered vApp works with these changes. Depending on the test results,
you can do the following:
o Commit failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the source or recovered vApp works as
expected and you want to get back to it.
o Und o failback. When you undo failback, you confirm that the source or recovered vApp is not working
as expected and you want to get back to the replica.
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The following scheme can help you decide which steps are preferable when you fail over to a replica.
Failover
Failover is a process of switching from the source vApp in the production organization VDC to its replica in the
disaster recovery organization VDC. During failover, Veeam Backup & Replication recovers the replica to the
required restore point and shifts all I/O processes from the source vApp to its replica. As a result, you have a
fully functional vApp within several minutes, and your users can access services and applications with minimum
disruption.
You can fail over to replicas not only when a disaster strikes the production organization VDC, but also to test
replicas for recoverability. If the source vApps and replicas are located in the same network, consider temporary
disconnecting the source vApps from the network to avoid IP address or machine name conflicts.
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3. Veeam Backup & Replication recovers a replica to the required restore point.
The source vApp still exists and failover does not change the vApp state: if the vApp is powered on when
you perform failover, it remains powered on when failover completes; if the vApp is powered off, it
remains in this state.
5. All changes made to the replica while it is running in the Failover state are written to the delta file and
stored in the target host.
6. After failover completes successfully, the vApp state is changed from Processing to Failover.
Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. You can perform the following operations:
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
Performing Failover
To perform failover, do the following.
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Step 1. Launch Failover Wizard
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vCloud Director > Restore from replica > Entire vApp > Failover
vAp p to a replica.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas. In the working area, select the necessary
replica, right-click one of the selected replica and click Fa ilover Now. Alternatively, click Fa ilover Now on
the ribbon.
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Step 2. Select vApps
At the vAp p step of the wizard, you can modify a list of vApps from which you fail over. To add vApps, click Ad d
> From infrastructure if you want to add vApps from the virtual infrastructure, or Ad d > From replicas if you
want to add vApps from existing replicas. Then select the necessary vApps. If you select organizations or
organization VDCs, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand them to a vApp list.
NOTE
Make sure that vApps you select from the virtual environment have been successfully replicated at least
once.
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Step 3. Select Restore Points
At the vAp p step of the wizard select to which state of replicas you want to fail over:
1. In the vAp p list, select the necessary vApp and click P oint.
2. In the Restore Points window, select to which restore point you want to fail over:
o Latest crash-consistent restore point. In this case, you will lose the least amount of data.
o Latest long-term application-consistent restore point. In this case, you will be able to restore specific
application data.
o Specific point in time. In this case, you will restore to any selected restore point.
To restore to a short-term restore point, select a point in the green area. To restore to a crash-
consistent or application consistent long-term point, select a violet or turquoise vertical bar. A yellow
restore point (a short-term restore point in the yellow area or a long-term restore point as a vertical
bar) indicates that the point is in the mixed state. This means that some VMs were powered off, not
processed successfully, have different states — crash-consistent and application-consistent, and so
on. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will suggest to restore the VMs on the nearest short-
term restore point.
Use the right and left arrows on the keyboard to select the required restore point. To quickly find a
long-term restore point, click a link that shows a date. In the opened window, you will see a calendar
where you can select the necessary day. In the Timestamp section, you will see long-term restore
points created during the selected day.
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Step 4. Specify Failover Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for failing over to the replicas. The information you provide will
be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the failover task. Then click Finish to start the failover
process.
When the failover process is complete, the replicas will be started on the target hosts.
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
To retry failover:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry failover.
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Permanent Failover
Permanent failover is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you perform permanent failover, you
permanently switch from the source vApp to its replica. As a result, the replica stops acting as a replica and
starts acting as the production vApp.
NOTE
It is recommended that you perform permanent failover if the source vApp and its replica are located in the
same site and are nearly equal in terms of resources. In this case, users will not experience any latency in
ongoing operations. Otherwise, perform failback.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication removes restore points of the replica from the replication chain and deletes
associated files from the datastore. Changes that were written to the delta disks are committed to the
replica to bring the replica to the most recent state.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the replica from the list of replicas in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console and the replica becomes the production vApp.
3. To protect the replica from corruption after permanent failover is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication
reconfigures the job or policy and adds the source vApp to the list of exclusions. When replication job
starts, the source vApp is skipped from processing. As a result, no data is written to the working replica .
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas > Active. In the working area, select the
necessary vApp and click P ermanent Failover on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas > Active. In the working area, right-click the
necessary vApp and select P ermanent Failover.
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Performing Permanent Failover Retry
If permanent failover failed, you can retry this operation. When you perform a retry,
Veeam Backup & Replication restarts permanent failover only for the failed VMs that are added to vApps.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not process VMs that have been processed successfully. As a result,
permanent failover takes less time and does not consume as many resources as when processing a whole vApp.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry P ermanent Failover on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry permanent failover.
Failover Undo
Failover undo is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you undo failover, you switch back from a vApp
replica to the original vApp. Veeam Backup & Replication discards all changes made to the vApp replica while it
was in the Failover state.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication reverts the replica to its pre-failover state. To do this,
Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the vApp replica and gets it back to the latest restore point in the
replication chain.
2. The state of the replica gets back to Ready , and Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication activities
for the original vApp on the source host.
Undoing Failover
To undo failover:
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively,
right-click the necessary replica and select Und o Failover.
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4. In the displayed window, click Y es to confirm the operation.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Undo Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively,
you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry undo failover.
Failback
Failback is an option that allows you to switch back from the replicated vApp on a disaster recovery organization
VDC to the production vApp. When you perform failback, you switch back to the production VM from a VM
replica, shift I/O processes from the disaster recovery site to the production site.
• Fail back to a vApp already recovered to a new location. This vApp must be recovered before you perform
failback. For example, you can recover the VM from a backup.
• Fail back to a vApp recovered from a replica to a new location, or to any location but with different
settings. The vApp will be recovered from the replica during the failback process.
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The first two options help you decrease recovery time and the use of the network traffic because
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer only differences between the source or recovered vApp and
replica. For the third option, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer the whole vApp data, including its
configuration and virtual disk content. Use the third option if there is no way to use the source vApp or restore it
from a replica.
• First phase: Veeam Backup & Replication synchronizes the state of the production vApp (the source vApp,
an already recovered vApp or a vApp recovered from the replica) with the current state of the replica. This
phase may take a lot of time especially if vApp is large. While Veeam Backup & Replication performs the
first phase of failback, VMs from replicas are still up and running, users can access these VMs and perform
daily routine tasks as normal. All changes made to vApps during the first phase of a failback a written to a
delta file.
• Second phase: Veeam Backup & Replication transfers all changes made to the replica during the first
phase of failback to the production vApp, switches all processes from the replica to the production vApp
and turns off the replica.
The time when the second phase starts depends on how you want to switch from the replica to the
production vApp. You can switch to the production vApp automatically, at the scheduled time or
manually. If you select to switch automatically, the second phase will start right after the first phase
finishes. If you select to switch at the scheduled time or manually, the second phase will start at the time
you want.
The process of failing back to the source vApp or a source vApp restored in a different location differs from the
process of failing back to a specific location:
• How failback to the source vApp or a source vApp restored in a different location works
1. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference between disks of the production vApp and disks of
the replica in the Failover state. The calculation of the difference helps Veeam Backup & Replication
understand what data needs to be transferred to the production vApp and to synchronize its state with
the state of the replica.
[For ESXi hosts prior to version 7.0] If you fail back to the source vApp in the source location and you have
enabled the Quick rollback option, this calculation can be performed much faster. For more information on
the Quick rollback option, see Quick Rollback.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers the data that was detected as different to the production vApp. The
transferred data is written to the production vApp.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failover to Ready to switch.
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During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations:
1. The guest OS of the replica is shut down or the replica is powered off.
If VMware Tools are installed on the VM added to the replica, Veeam Backup & Replication tries to shut
down the replica guest OS. If nothing happens in 15 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the
vApp replica. If VMware Tools are not installed on the VM added to the replica or the vApp is suspended,
Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the vApp. The replica remains powered off until you commit
failback or undo failback.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference between disks of the production vApp and disks of
the replica. The calculation of the difference helps Veeam Backup & Replication understand what data was
changed while the replica was in the Ready to switch state.
3. Sends data changed on the replica while it was in the Ready to switch state to the production vApp.
5. [If you fail back to a recovered vApp] Veeam Backup & Replication updates the ID of the source vApp in
the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database. The ID of the source vApp is replaced with the ID
of the recovered vApp.
6. If you have selected to power on the production vApp after failback, Veeam Backup & Replication powers
on the production vApp on the host.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication requests VMware Cloud Director to create on the target organization VDC an
empty vApp with the same configuration as the replica. VMware Cloud Director server registers the
created production vApp.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers data of the replica to the production vApp to update the production
vApp state to the replica state.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failover to the Ready to switch.
During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the same operations as described in How
Failback to Source vApp or Already Recovered vApp Works except for the step 2.
Failback is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. If the production vApp works as expected and you
want to get back to it, commit failback. If the vApp does not work as expected, undo failback.
Quick Rollback
Quick rollback helps you significantly reduce the failback time. You can use quick rollback if you fail back from a
replica to the source vApp in the original location.
During failback, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates differences between VM disks of the source vApp and
disks of the replica. With the quick rollback option enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication compares only those
disk sectors that have changed during the replica was in the Failover state instead of comparing entire disks. To
get information about the changed disk sectors, Veeam Backup & Replication uses VMware vSphere Changed
Block Tracking (CBT).
As a result of enabling quick rollback, difference calculation becomes much faster. After the differences are
calculated, Veeam Backup & Replication performs failback in a regular way: transport changed blocks to the
source vApp, powers off the replica and synchronizes the source vApp with the replica once again.
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Requirements for Quick Rollback
To perform quick rollback, make sure that the following requirements are met:
• Do not use quick rollback if the problem occurred at the vApp hardware level, storage level or due to a
power loss.
Use quick rollback if you fail back to the source vApp that had a problem at the guest OS level — for
example, there was an application error or a user accidentally deleted a file on the source VM guest OS.
• Due to changes in VMware vSphere 7.0 and newer, the replica failback operation forces digest
recalculation for both source and target vApps. That is why the Quick rollback option is ignored for ESXi
hosts starting from version 7.0.
• During the first replication job session after failback with quick rollback, CBT on the source vApp is reset.
Due to that Veeam Backup & Replication will read data of the entire vApp.
Performing Failback
To perform failback, do the following:
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Step 1. Launch Failback Wizard
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware Cloud Director > Restore from replica > Entire vApp > Failback
to p roduction.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas > Active. In the working area, right-click the
necessary replica and select Fa ilback to production. Alternatively, click Fa ilback to Production on the
ribbon.
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Step 2. Select Replicas
At the Rep lica step of the wizard, select replicas from which you want to fail back.
To update the list of replicas that are ready for failback (replicas in the Failover state), click P op ulate.
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Step 3. Select Failback Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select the failback destination and backup proxies for vApp data transport
during failback:
1. Select a destination for failback. Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following options:
o Fa ilback to the original vApp — select this option if you want to fail back to the source vApps that
reside on the source hosts. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the source
vApps with the current state of their replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the replicas while
running in the disaster recovery (DR) site.
If this option is selected, you will proceed to the Fa ilback Mode step of the wizard.
o Fa ilback to the original vApp restored in a different location — select this option if the source vApps
have already been recovered to a new location, and you want to switch to the recovered vApps from
their replicas. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the recovered vApps with the
current state of the vApp replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the replicas while running in
the DR site.
If this option is selected, you will proceed to the Ta rget vApp step of the wizard.
TIP
o Fa ilback to the specified location — select this option if you want to recover the source vApps from
replicas. You can recover vApps to a new location, or to any location but with different settings (such
as network settings, virtual disk type, configuration file path and so on). Select this option if there is
no way to fail back to the source vApp or an already recovered vApp.
If you select this option, the wizard will include additional steps.
If you select one of the first two options, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the source/recovered
vApps only differences between the existing virtual disks of VMs included in the vApps.
Veeam Backup & Replication will not send replica configuration changes such as different IP address or
network settings (if replica Re-IP and network mapping were applied), new hardware or virtual disks
added while the replicas were in the Failover state.
If you select Fa ilback to the specified location, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the specified
location whole replica data, including configurations and virtual disk content.
2. To select which backup proxies will be used for data transfer, click P ick backup proxies for data transfer.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication selects proxies automatically. Before processing a new vApp in
the vApp list, Veeam Backup & Replication checks available backup proxies. If more than one backup proxy
is available, Veeam Backup & Replication selects the most appropriate proxy basing on the following
information: transport modes that the backup proxies can use and the current workload on the backup
proxies.
If want to select proxies manually and if vApps and their replicas reside in different sites, select at least
one backup proxy in the production site and one proxy in the disaster recovery site. If vApps and replicas
reside in the same site, you can use the same backup proxy as the source and target one.
We recommend that you select at least two backup proxies in each site to ensure that failback will be
performed in case one proxy fails or looses the network connection.
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4. [For ESXi hosts prior to version 7.0; for failback to the source vApps] If you want to fasten failback, and
the source vApps had problems at the guest OS level, select the Quick rollback check box.
When you click Nex t, Veeam Backup & Replication will check storage policies in the virtual environment and
compare this information with the information about the replica storage policy. If the original storage policy has
been changed or deleted, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning. You can select one of the
following options:
• Current — the restored VM will be associated with the profile with which the source VM in the production
environment is currently associated.
• Default — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that is set as default for the target datastore.
• Stored — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that was assigned to the source VM at the
moment of replication.
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Step 4. Select Organization VDCs
The Organization VDC step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Org anization VDC step of the wizard, specify the organization VDCs to which Veeam Backup & Replication
will add restored vApps and specify names for the restored vApps. To do this, select the necessary vApp and
perform the following steps:
1. To specify a name for the restored vApp, click Na me and enter the name for the vApp.
2. To specify an organization VDC, click VDC and select the necessary organization VDC.
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Step 5. Specify Storage Policies
The Storage Policy step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Storage Policy step of the wizard, specify storage policies that Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to
vApps that you want to restore:
1. In the vAp ps list, select vApps for which you want to change the policy and click P olicy.
2. In the Select storage policy window select the policy that you want to apply.
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Step 6. Configure Network Mapping
The Network step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the DR site
to networks in the site where recovered vApps reside. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the network
mapping table to update configuration files of VMs added to vApps on the fly, during the failback process.
1. In the Network connections list, select the necessary vApps and click Network.
If vApps are connected to multiple networks, select the necessary network and click Network.
2. In the Select network window, select networks to which vApps must be connected after restore.
If you do not want to connect restored vApps to any virtual network, select the necessary vApps and click
Disconnect.
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Step 7. Select Taget vApp
The Ta rget vApp step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the original VM restored in a different
loca tion option at the Destination step.
At the Ta rget vApp step of the wizard, specify to which vApps you want to fail back from replicas. These vApps
must be already restored from backups in the required location.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication fails back the replica to the source vApps. If you want to specify the
target vApp manually, perform the following steps:
2. In the Selects Objects window, select a vApp or vApp container to which you want to fail back.
3. Click Ad d .
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Step 8. Schedule Switch to Production vApps
At the Fa ilback Mode step of the wizard, specify when switch from replicas to production vApps must be
performed:
• Select Auto if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch automatically right after the
state of the production vApps is synchronized with the state of their replicas.
• Select Scheduled if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch at a specific time.
If you select the Scheduled or Ma nual option, you can further reset or set the scheduled time or switch to the
production VM manually. For more information, see Changing Switching Time and Switching to Production
vApps Manually.
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Step 9. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured failback settings. If you want to power on the
production VMs right after the switch to production operation is performed, select the P ower on target vApp
a fter failback check box. Then click Finish.
• Commit failback
• Undo failback
To change the time when the switch from replicas to production vApps must be performed:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the vApp in the Ready to switch state and select Switchover Time on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Cha nge switchover time.
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If the switching time operation failed, you can retry this operation again. To perform a retry, in the working area,
select the necessary vApp and select Retry Switchover Time on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the
necessary vApp and select Retry switchover time.
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Switchover to p roduction on the ribbon. As an
alternative, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Switchover to production.
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If the switch to production operation failed, you can retry this operation again. To perform a retry, in the
working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Switchover to Production on the ribbon. Alternatively,
you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry switchover to production.
To retry failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Failback on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry failback.
Failback Undo
Failback undo is one of the ways to finalize failback. You can use this option if the vApp to which you failed back
(the production vApp) works in a wrong way and you want to get back to the replica.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication reverts the replica to its pre-failback state.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication powers on the replica and changes the replica state from Failback or Ready to
Switch to Failover.
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Undoing Failback
To undo failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failback on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary replica and select Und o Failback.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Undo Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively,
you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry undo failback.
Failback Commit
Failback commit is one of the ways to finalize failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the vApp to
which you failed back (the production vApp) works as expected. After the commit operation,
Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication activities for the production vApp.
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The commit failback operation is performed in the following way:
1. Depending on whether you have failed back to the source vApp or recovered vApp:
o If you have failed back to a vApp recovered from a backup or replica, Veeam Backup & Replication
reconfigures all existing jobs where the source vApp is present and adds the source vApp to the list of
exclusions. The recovered vApp takes the role of the source vApp and is included into all jobs instead
of the excluded vApp. When the VMware Cloud Director replication process starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication processes the recovered vApp instead of the former source vApp.
o If you have failed back to the source vApp, the replication job or policy is not reconfigured. When the
replication process starts, Veeam Backup & Replication still processes the source vApp.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failback to Ready .
During failback commit, the failback delta disk that saves the pre-failback state of a replica is not deleted.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this delta disk as an additional restore point for replica. With the pre -failback
delta disk, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer fewer changes and therefore puts less load on the
network when replication activities are resumed.
Committing Failback
To commit failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Commit Failback on the ribbon. As an
alternative, you can right-click the replica and select Commit failback.
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Performing Failback Commit Retry
If the commit failback operation failed, you can retry this operation. When you perform a retry,
Veeam Backup & Replication restarts the commit failback operation only for the failed VMs that are added to
vApps. Veeam Backup & Replication does not process VMs that have been processed successfully. As a result,
the commit failback operation takes less time and does not consume a s many resources as when processing the
whole vApp.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Commit Failback on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry commit failback.
1990 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
VMware Cloud Director Replication
VMware Cloud Director replication is a technology that allows you to replicate VM containers between
production and disaster recovery VMware Cloud Director environments, to the source organization VDC or to
another organization VDC added to a different VMware Cloud Director. Using the VMware Cloud Director
replication you can replicate the following VM containers:
• vApps
The VMware Cloud Director replication technology utilizes the same mechanisms as the VM replica and follows
the same recovery scenarios. The main differences from VM replica are the following:
• The VMware Cloud Director replica target is an organization VDC and it must be set up beforehand in your
VMware Cloud Director infrastructure.
• A minimal unit of a VMware Cloud Director replication is a vApp, you cannot replicate a single VM that is
added to a vApp.
• The VMware Cloud Director replica snapshots are created on the VMs that are added to the target vApp.
• A single restore point of the VMware Cloud Director replica contains snapshots of al l VMs added to a
vApp.
• Veeam Backup & Replication assigns a new CLOUD.UUID to the replicated VMs when a VMware Cloud
Director replication job runs.
The VMware Cloud Director replication technology supports functionality similar to normal VM replication: you
can create VMware Cloud Director replication jobs, perform failover and failback operations with replicated VM
containers and manage these VM containers.
Related Topics
• Creating VMware Cloud Director Replication Job
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vApp Replica Seeding and Mapping
Replica seeding and mapping are technologies that help reduce the amount of traffic sent over the network.
With these technologies, Veeam Backup & Replication does not have to transfer all of vApp data from the
source host to the target host across the sites during the initial synchronization.
• Seeding
Configure replica seeding if, in a backup repository located in the disaster recovery (DR) site, you have
backups of vApps that you plan to protect. During replication, Veeam Backup & Replication will restore
image of VMs that are added to vApps from these backups and will synchronize the state of the restored
vApps with the latest state of the source vApps. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will use these restored
vApps as replicas.
For more information on how to create backups that can be used as "seeds" for replica, see Creating
Replica Seeds.
• Ma pping
Configure replica mapping if, on the host in the DR site, you have ready -to-use copies of the source vApps.
These can be restored vApps or replicas. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of these
ready-to-use vApps with the latest state of the source vApps and will use these vApps as replicas.
You can also configure both replica seeding and replica mapping in the same job. For example, if a job includes 2
vApps, you can use seeding for one vApp and map the other vApp to an existing vApp.
IMP ORTANT
If seeding or mapping is enabled in a job, all vApps in the job must be covered with seeding or mapping. If a
vApp neither has a seed, nor is mapped to an existing vApp, it will be skipped from processing.
1. As a preparatory step for replica seeding, you need to create a backup of a vApp that you plan to protect.
For more information on how to create a backup that will be used as a "seed" for replica, see Creating
Replica Seeds.
2. When you create a replication job, you should point it to a backup repository in the DR site. During the
initial synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication accesses the backup repository where the replica seed
is located, and restores the image of VMs that are added to vApp from the backup. The res tored vApp is
registered on the target host in the DR site. Files of the restored vApp are placed to the location you
specify as the replica destination datastore.
Virtual disks of a replica restored from the backup preserve their format (that is, if the s ource VM used
thin provisioned disks, virtual disks of the replica are restored as thin provisioned).
3. Veeam Backup & Replication synchronizes the restored vApp with the latest state of the source vApp.
After successful synchronization, in the Home view in the Veeam Backup & Replication console, under
Rep licas node you will see a vApp replica with two restore points. One point will contain the state of the
vApp from the backup file; the other point will contain the latest state of the source vApp you want to
replicate.
4. During incremental synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers only incremental changes in a
regular manner.
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Replica seeding dramatically reduces traffic sent over WAN or slow connections because
Veeam Backup & Replication does not send the full contents of the vApp. Instead, it transmits only differential
data blocks.
1. The first step differs depending on which vApp you have selected for mapping:
o If you have selected a regular vApp, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the differences between
the source and mapped vApp.
o If you have selected a snapshot replica, Veeam Backup & Replication deletes all restore points and
delta disks and then calculates the differences between the source and mapped vApp.
o If you have selected a CDP replica, Veeam Backup & Replication imports all restore points of this
replica and then calculates the differences between the source and mapped vApp. Note that if d isk
sizes of the source and mapped vApp differ, Veeam Backup & Replication will delete all restore points
of the mapped vApp.
2. To synchronize the state of the mapped vApp with the state of the source vApp,
Veeam Backup & Replication sends the calculated changes to the mapped vApp.
The first and second steps take place during the initial synchronization.
3. During the incremental synchronization, Veeam Backup & Replication transfers only incremental changes
in a regular manner.
After the successful initial synchronization, in the Home view of Veeam Backup & Replication, under Rep licas
node you will see a replica with restore points. If you have selected for mapping a regular vApp or snapshot
replica, you will see two restore points: one restore point will contain the latest state of the mapped vApp, the
other will contain the state of the source vApp. If you have selected a CDP replica, you will see all restore points
of the mapped vApp plus one restore point that will contain the state of the source vApp.
1993 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Creating Cloud Director Replication Job
To replicate a vApp or another VM container, you must configure a VMware Cloud Director replication job. The
VMware Cloud Director replication job defines a scope of VM containers to replicate, where to store replicat ed
VM containers and how often to replicate VM containers. Every time the VMware Cloud Director replication job
runs, replica snapshots are created on the VMs that are added to the target vApp. If a disaster strikes, you can
fail over to the necessary restore point of your VM container. During failover, Veeam Backup & Replication shifts
from the source VM container to their replicas. As a result, you have fully functional vApps within a couple of
seconds, and your users can access services and applications with minimum disruption.
IMP ORTANT
VMware Cloud Director replication job does not support replication of a single VM that is added to a vApp.
You can replicate only vApps or VM containers.
1. Check prerequisites
• You must add VMware Cloud Director server to the backup infrastructure. The backup server must be able
to resolve short names and connect to source and target virtualization hosts.
• You must set up the organization VDC that will keep the replicas.
• You must disable the VM discovery option in VMware Cloud Director settings. For more information on
where you can change the option, see VMware Docs.
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• VMware Cloud Director replication does not use and support continuous data protection (CDP).
• VMware Cloud Director replication does not support replication of a vApp to a Cloud Provider.
NOTE
It is possible to replicate vSphere VMs to your Cloud Provider Cloud. For more information, see
Creating Replication Jobs.
• If you plan to replicate VM containers using WAN accelerators, source and target WAN accelerators must
be added to the backup infrastructure and properly configured. For more information, see Adding WAN
Accelerators.
• If you plan to replicate VM containers using WAN accelerators, it is recommended that you pre -populate
global cache on the target WAN accelerator before you start the VMware Cloud Director replication job.
Global cache population helps reduce the amount of traffic transferred over WAN. For more information,
see Populating Global Cache.
• If you plan to use pre-job and post-job scripts and/or pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts, you must create
scripts before you configure the VMware Cloud Director replication job. Veeam Backup & Replication
supports script files in the following formats: EXE, BAT, CMD, JS, VBS, WSF, PS1, SH. For more
information, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
• You must check limitations for replication. For more information, see Requirements and Limitations.
• Due to VMware vSphere limitations, if you change the size of VM disks on the source VM, all VM snapshots
that were created previously, will not be available for failover, failback and other subsequent operations.
For more information, see this VMware KB article.
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Step 1. Launch New Replication Job Wizard
To launch the New Replication Job wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Rep lication Job > VMware vCloud Director.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane right-click Job s and select Rep lication > VMware vCloud
Director.
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Advanced Settings
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a job name and description, and configure advanced settings for the
VMware Cloud Director replication job.
3. Depending on your DR site configuration, you can select the following adv anced settings for the job:
o Select the Rep lica seeding (for low bandwidth DR sites) check box to enable the Seeding step in the
wizard. Replica seeding can be used if you plan to replicate vApps and want to reduce the amount of
traffic sent over the network during the first run of the replication job.
o Select the Network remapping (for DR sites with different virtual networks) check box to enable the
Network step in the wizard. If the network in the DR site does not match the production network, you
can resolve this mismatch by creating a network mapping table.
NOTE
VMware Cloud Director replication jobs do not support network mapping of the vApp networks.
You can configure a mapping table for organization VDC network only.
4. Select the Hig h priority check box if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to prioritize this job higher
than other similar jobs. Veeam Backup & Replication will allocate resources to this job in the first place.
For more information on job priorities, see Job Priorities.
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Step 3. Select vApps to Replicate
At the vAp ps step of the wizard, select VM containers (vApps, organization or organization VDCs) that you want
to replicate.
1. Click Ad d .
When you add new items to VM containers, Veeam Backup & Replication updates settings automatically to
process these new items.
IMP ORTANT
VMware Cloud Director replication job does not support replication of a single VM that is added to a vApp.
You can replicate only vApps or VM containers.
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Step 4. Exclude Objects
After you have added vApps or VM containers to the replication job, at the vAp ps step of the wizard you can
specify which objects you want to exclude from the replication job.
NOTE
You can exclude only child objects that are added to a VM container. For example, if you add an
organization VDC to a replication job, you can exclude only vApps that are available in this organization
VDC.
2. In the E x clusions window, check that the VMs tab is selected. Click Ad d .
3. In the Select Objects window, select VMs and VM containers that you want to exclude. Click OK.
Select the Show full hierarchy check box to display the hierarchy of all VMware Cloud Director servers
added to the backup infrastructure.
Specifying Disks
To exclude disks:
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2. In the E x clusions window, do the following:
b. To exclude disks of VMs, click Ad d . In the Ad d Objects window, select the necessary VMs and click
Ad d . Veeam Backup & Replication will include these VMs in the list as standalone objects.
d. Click E d it.
3. In the Select Disks window, select disks that you want to replicate: all disks, 0:0 disks (as a rule, system
disks) or specific IDE, SCSI, SATA or NVMe disks. Disks that you do not select will be excluded from
processing. Click OK.
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Step 5. Specify vApp Processing Order
At the vAp ps step of the wizard, click Up and Down to change the processing order. VM containers (vApps,
organization, organization VDCs, and so on) at the top of the list have a higher priority and will be processed
first.
NOTE
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Step 6. Select Replica Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select an organization VDC where you want to store replicas and the
storage policy that you want to apply to the replicas. You can assign a storage policy to all objects of your
VMware Cloud Director infrastructure and also specify a storage policy for a particular vApp or VM.
1. Next to the Org anization VDC field, click Choose and select an organization VDC where replicas must be
registered.
2. Next to the Storage p olicy VDC field, click Choose and select the storage policy.
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply this storage policy to the replicas.
d. Select the added vApp in the Storage policy list and click P olicy at the bottom of the window.
e. From the list of available storage policies, select the necessary storage policy.
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Step 7. Configure Network Mapping
The Network step of the wizard is available if you have selected the Network remapping option at the Na me
step of the wizard.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the
production site to networks in the disaster recovery (DR) site. When the replication session starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication will check the network mapping table. Then Veeam Backup & Replication will
update replica configuration to replace the production networks with the specified networks in the DR site. As a
result, you will not have to re-configure network settings manually.
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Source network field.
3. In the Select Network window, select the production network to which the source workloads are
connected and click OK.
4. In the Network Mapping window, click Browse next to the Ta rget network field.
5. In the Select Network window, select a network in the DR site to which replicas will be connected and
click OK.
NOTE
• Cloud Director CDP policies do not support network mapping of vApp networks. You can configure a
mapping table for organization VDC networks only.
• If your replica has a configured network remapping and IP addresses are set as a static pool on the
target, Veeam Backup & Replication will assign these IP addresses to VM NICs on a "first come, first
served" basis: the first available IP address will be assigned to the first NIC, the second available IP
address will be assigned to the second NIC and so on.
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Step 8. Specify Replication Job Settings
At the Job Settings step of the wizard, define VMware Cloud Director replication job settings.
1. From the Rep ository for replica metadata list, select a backup repository. Veeam Backup & Replication
uses this backup repository to keep metadata for replicas. Metadata is required when you perform failback
with the Quick Rollback option. For more information on metadata, see Changed Block Tracking.
2. In the Rep lica name suffix field, enter a suffix for the name of replicas. Veeam Backup & Replication will
add this suffix to the name of the target vApps and will register replicas with this suffix.
3. In the Restore points to keep field, specify the number of restore points the replication job must maintain.
If this number is exceeded, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the earliest restore point.
When you specify the retention policy settings for the replication job, consider available space on the
target datastore. Due to VMware restrictions on the number of VM snapshots, the maximum number of
restore points for replicas is limited to 28. An excessive amount of restore points may overfill the target
datastore.
IMP ORTANT
• You cannot store replica metadata on deduplicating storage appliances. During replication jobs,
Veeam Backup & Replication frequently reads and writes small portions of metadata from/to the
backup repository. Frequent access to metadata causes low performance of deduplicating storage
appliances, which may result in low performance of replication jobs.
• You cannot store replica metadata in a scale-out backup repository or NFS backup repository.
• At least one successful run of a VMware Cloud Director replication job is required to apply a
retention policy to a VMware Cloud Director replica and to delete previous restore points.
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Step 9. Specify Advanced Replica Settings
At the Job settings step of the wizard, you can specify the following settings for the VMware Cloud Director
replication job:
• Traffic Settings
• Notification Settings
• vSphere Settings
• Integration Settings
• Script Settings
TIP
After you specify necessary settings for the replication job, you can save them as default settings. To do
this, click Save as Default at the bottom left corner of the Advanced Settings window. When you create a
new replication job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new
job.
Traffic Settings
To specify traffic settings for a VMware Cloud Director replication job:
3. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the NTFS MFT file on VMs with Microsoft Windows OS to
identify data blocks of the hiberfil.sys file (file used for the hibernate mode) and pagefile.sys file
(swap file), and excludes these data blocks from processing. The swap file is dynamic in nature and
changes intensively between replication job sessions, even if the VM itself does not change much.
Processing of service files reduces the job performance and increases the size of incremental data.
If you want to include data blocks of the hiberfil.sys file and pagefile.sys file to the replica, clear
the E x clude swap file blocks check box. For more information, see Swap Files.
4. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication does not copy deleted file blocks ("dirty" blocks on the VM guest
OS) to the target location. This option lets you reduce the size of the replica and increase the job
performance. If you want to copy dirty blocks, clear the E x clude deleted file blocks check box. For more
information, see Deleted File Blocks.
5. From the Compression level list, select a compression level for the created replica: None, Dedupe-
friendly , Optimal, High or Extreme. Compression is applicable only if data is transferred between two
backup proxies. If one backup proxy acts as the source and target backup proxy, data is not compressed at
all.
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6. In the Storage optimization section, select block size that will be used to process VMs. For more
information on the data blocks sizes and how they affect performance, see Storage Optimization.
Notification Settings
To specify notification settings for a VMware Cloud Director replication job:
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when the job
completes successfully.
SNMP traps will be sent if you configure global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and
configure software on recipient's machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying
SNMP Settings.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive
notifications by email if a job completes with a failure, warning or success. In the field below, specify a
recipient email address. You can enter several addresses separated by a s emicolon.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
5. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the
backup server. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
o To configure a custom notification for a job, select Use custom notification settings specified below.
You can specify the following notification settings:
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i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %ObjectCount% (number
of VMs in the job) and %Issues% (number of VMs in the job that have been processed with
the Warning or Failed status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if the job completes successfully, fails or completes with a warning.
iii. Select the Sup press notifications until the last retry check box to receive a notification about
the final job status. If you do not enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will send
one notification per every job retry.
vSphere Settings
To specify vSphere settings for a VMware Cloud Director replication job:
3. Select the E na ble VMware tools quiescence check box to freeze the file system of processed VMs during
replication. Depending on the VM version, Veeam Backup & Replication will use VMware FileSystem Sync
Driver (vmsync) or VMware VSS component in VMware Tools for VM snapshot creation. These tools are
responsible for quiescing the VM file system and bringing the VM to a consistent state suitable for
replication.
4. In the Cha nged block tracking section, configure VMware vSphere Changed Block Tracking CBT:
a. Make sure that the Use changed block tracking data check box is selected if you want to enable CBT.
b. Make sure that the E na ble CBT for all processed VMs automatically check box is selected if you want
to force using CBT even if CBT is disabled in VM configuration.
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c. Make sure that the Reset CBT on each Active Full backup automatically check box is selected if you
want to reset CBT after the replication job starts for the first time.
CBT reset helps avoid issues, for example, when CBT returns incorrect changed data.
IMP ORTANT
You can use CBT for VMs with virtual hardware version 7 or later. These VMs must not have existing
snapshots.
Integration Settings
On the Integration tab, define whether you want to use the Backup from Storage Snapshots technology to
create a VMware Cloud Director replica. Backup from Storage Snapshots lets you leverage storage snapshots for
VM data processing. The technology improves RPOs and reduces the impact of replication activities on the
production environment. For more information, see Backup from Storage Snapshots section.
3. By default, the E na ble backup from storage snapshots option is enabled. If you do not want to use Backup
from Storage Snapshots, clear this check box.
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4. If you want to replicate vApps with multiple VMs whose disks are located on the same volume or LUN,
select the Limit processed VM count per storage snapsh ot to check box and specify the number of VMs for
which one storage snapshot must be created. In a regular job processing course,
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a VMware snapshot for every VM added to the job and then triggers
one storage snapshot for all VMs. In some situations, creating VMware snapshots for all VMs may require a
lot of time. If you limit the number of VMs per storage snapshot, Veeam Backup & Replication will divide
VMs into several groups, trigger a separate storage snapshot for every VM group and read VM data from
these snapshots. As a result, the job performance will increase.
For example, you add to the job vApps with 30 VMs whose disks are located on the same volume and set
the Limit processed VM count per storage snapshot to option to 10. Veeam Backup & Replication will
divide all VMs into 3 groups and create 3 storage snapshots from which it will read VM data.
5. If the backup infrastructure is configured incorrectly, for example, the backup proxy does not meet the
necessary requirements, Backup from Storage Snapshots will fail and VMs residing on the storage systems
will not be processed by the job at all. To fail over to the regular VM processing mode and process such
VMs in any case, select the Fa ilover to standard backup check box.
Script Settings
To specify script settings for the replication job:
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3. If you want to execute custom scripts before and/or after the replication job, select the Run the following
script before the job and Run the following script after the job check boxes and click Browse to choose
executable files from a local folder on the backup server. The scripts are executed on the backup server.
You can select to execute pre- and post-replication actions after a number of job sessions or on specific
week days.
o If you select the Run scripts every... backup session option, specify the number of the replication job
sessions after which scripts must be executed.
o If you select the Run scripts on selected days only option, click Da ys and specify week days on which
scripts must be executed.
NOTE
• Custom scripts that you define in the advanced job settings relate to the replication job itself, not
the VM quiescence process. To add pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for VM image quiescence, use
the Guest Processing step of the wizard.
• If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, Veeam Backup & Replication executes
scripts only once on each selected day — when the job runs for the first time. During subsequent job
runs, scripts are not executed.
• To run the script, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Service Account under which the Veeam
Backup Service is running.
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Step 10. Specify Data Transfer Settings
At the Da ta Transfer step of the wizard, select backup infrastructure components that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use for the replication process and choose a path for vApp data transfer.
1. If you plan to replicate vApp data within one site, the same proxy can act as the source and target proxy.
For off-site replication, you must deploy at least one proxy in each site to establish a stable connection for
vApp data transfer across sites.
Click Choose next to the Source proxy and Ta rget proxy fields to select backup proxies for the job. In the
Ba ckup Proxy window, you can choose automatic proxy selection or assign backup proxies explicitly.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that have
access to the source and target datastores and automatically assign optimal proxy resources for
processing vApp data.
Veeam Backup & Replication assigns resources to vApp included in the replication job one by one.
Before processing a new vApp from the list, Veeam Backup & Replication checks available backup
proxies. If more than one proxy is available, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport modes
that the backup proxies can use and the current workload on the backup proxies to select the most
appropriate proxy for vApp processing.
o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy servers only, you can explicitly select backup proxies
that the job can use. It is recommended that you select at least two backup proxies to ensure that the
job will be performed if one of backup proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the source datastore.
o To transport vApp data directly using backup proxies to the target datastore, select Direct.
o To transport vApp data using WAN accelerators, select Through built-in WAN accelerators. From the
Source W AN accelerator list, select the WAN accelerator configured in the source site. From the
Ta rget W AN a ccelerator list, select the WAN accelerator configured in the target site.
You should not assign one source WAN accelerator to several replication jobs that you plan to run
simultaneously. The source WAN accelerator requires a lot of CPU and RAM resources, and does not
process multiple replication tasks in parallel. Alternatively, you can create one replication job for al l
vApps you plan to process over one source WAN accelerator.
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The target WAN accelerator, however, can be assigned to several replication jobs. For more
information, see Adding WAN Accelerators.
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Step 11. Configure Seeding and Mapping Settings
The Seeding step is available if you have selected the Rep lica seeding option at the Na me step wizard. You can
use this step to configure replica seeding and mapping for a VMware Cloud Director replication job. For more
information on when to use seeding and mapping, see vApp Seeding and Mapping.
If you use replica seeding or mapping, make sure that you select the following backup infrastructure
components for the job properly: source-side backup repository to keep metadata and proxies. It is
recommended that you explicitly assign proxies in the production site and disaster recovery (DR) site. For more
information, see Specify Data Transfer Settings.
IMP ORTANT
If the Rep lica seeding check box is enabled in a policy, all vApps in the policy must be covered with seeding
or mapping. If a vApp neither has a seed, nor has mapping to an existing vApp, it will be skipped from
processing.
1. Make sure that you have backups of replicated vApps in a backup repository in the DR site. If you do not
have the backups, create them as described in the Creating vApp Replica Seeds section.
IMP ORTANT
2. In the Initial seeding section, select the Get seed from the following backup repository check box.
3. From the list of available backup repositories, select the repository where your replica seeds are stored.
NOTE
If a vApp has a seed and is mapped to an existing replica, replication will be performed using replica
mapping because mapping has a higher priority.
2. If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to scan the DR site to detect existing copies of vApps that you
plan to replicate, click Detect.
If any matches are found, Veeam Backup & Replication will populate the mapping table. If
Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a match, you can map a vApp to its copy manually. Note that
the mapping list does not display vApps added to the list of exclusions for replication.
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3. If you want to map a VM manually, select a source VM from the list, click E d it and select the copy of this
VM on the target host in the DR site.
TIP
If there is no existing replica in the DR site, you can restore a vApp from the backup and map it to the
source vApp.
To use replica mapping, you must point the replication job to a replica on the host in the DR site. During the first
session of the replication job, Veeam Backup & Replication will calculate the difference between the source
vApp and replica and copy necessary data blocks to synchronize the replica to the latest state of the source
vApp. All subsequent incremental replication sessions will be performed in the regular manner.
TIP
If there is no existing replica in the DR site, you can restore a vApp from the backup and map it to the
source vApp.
2. Click Detect. Veeam Backup & Replication will scan the destination location to detect existing replicas. If
any matches are found, Veeam Backup & Replication will populate the mapping table.
If Veeam Backup & Replication does not find a match, you can map a vApp to its replica manually. To do
this, select a production vApp from the list, click E d it and choose an existing replica. To facilitate
selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window.
To break a mapping association, select the vApp in the list and click Remove.
IMP ORTANT
The mapping list does not display VMs added to the list of exclusions. For more information, see Exclude
objects from replication job.
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Step 12. Specify Guest Processing Settings
At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, enable and configure guest OS processing.
Guest OS processing involves application-aware processing that allows creation of transactionally consistent
replicas and guest file system indexing (however, indexing is not available for repl icas). In its turn, application-
aware processing includes transaction log backup, log truncation, execution of custom scripts and guest OS file
exclusions. For more information on guest processing, see the Guest Processing section.
To be able to use guest processing, you must also configure user accounts to access guest OSes and guest
interaction proxies.
To enable guest OS processing and start configuring it (accounts and guest interaction proxies):
When you select this option, Veeam Backup & Replication enables application-aware processing with the
default settings for all VMs. You can further disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and
reconfigure the default settings.
2. If you have added Microsoft Windows VMs to be processed, specify which guest interaction proxy
Veeam Backup & Replication can use to perform different guest processing tasks:
o If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to select the guest interaction proxy automatically, leave
Automatic selection on the Guest interaction proxy field.
o If you want to explicitly specify which servers will perform the guest interaction proxy role, click
Choose. In the Guest Interaction Proxy window, click P refer the following guest interaction proxy
server, and select the necessary proxies.
For more information on the guest interaction proxy, requirements and limitations for it, see Guest
Interaction Proxy.
3. From the Guest OS credentials list, select a user account that will be used to connect to guest OSes and
that has enough permissions. For more information on the permissions and requirements for the user
account, see Permissions for Guest Processing.
[For Microsoft Windows VMs] Veeam Backup & Replication will also use this account to deploy the non-
persistent runtime components or use (if necessary, deploy) persistent agent. For more information on
guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime Components and Persistent
Agent Components.
[For Linux VMs] If you installed persistent agent components for VMs running Linux or Unix operating
systems, select Use management agent credentials from the list. For more information, see Persistent
Agent Components.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click the Ad d button to
add credentials. For more information on adding credentials, see the Credentials Manager section.
NOTE
If you plan to use Kerberos authentication, check limitations and requirements listed in the Guest
Processing section.
4. To specify credentials for individual workloads, click Credentials. Then select the necessary workload and
set user credentials for it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose a VM whose settings you want to customize. Then
select the VM in the list and define the necessary settings.
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5. To check whether Veeam Backup & Replication can connect to VMs using the specified guest OS
credentials and can deploy the non-persistent runtime components or connect to persistent agent
components on the guest OSes, click Test Now.
TIP
You can specify guest processing settings for vApps and for specific VMs.
After you have enabled application-aware processing for all VMs and configured other settings required for
guest processing, you can disable application-aware processing for individual VMs and change the default
settings. For more information, see the following sections:
• Application-aware processing
To configure general application-aware processing settings and specify whether Veeam Backup & Replication
processes transaction logs or creates copy-only replicas:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
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2. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, click Ap p lications.
3. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options window, select workloads for which you want to configure
application-aware processing, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Ap p lications section, specify the behavior scenario for application-aware
processing:
o Select Require successful processing if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the replication
process if any error occurs during application-aware processing.
o Select Try application processing, but ignore failures if you want to continue the replication process
even if an error occurs during application-aware processing. This option guarantees that replication
will continue working. However, the resulting replica will be crash consistent, not transactionally
consistent.
o Select Disable application processing if you want to disable application-aware processing for the
workload.
5. [For Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft SQL Server] In the VSS Settings section, specify if
Veeam Backup & Replication must process transaction logs or create copy-only replicas:
a. Select P rocess transaction logs with this job if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to process
transaction logs.
[For Microsoft Exchange VMs] With this option selected, the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait for replication to complete successfully
and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the replication job fails, the logs will remain
untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components.
[For Microsoft SQL Server] You will need to configure how to process transaction logs.
TIP
To configure log processing for Oracle and PostgreSQL databases, switch to the Oracle and
PostrgeSQL tabs.
b. Select P erform copy only if you use another tool to perform guest level processing, and this tool
maintains consistency of the database state. Veeam Backup & Replication will create a copy-only
replica for the selected VMs. The copy only replica preserves the chain of full and differential files and
transaction logs on the VM. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
6. [For Microsoft Windows VMs] In the P ersistent guest agent section, select the Use persistent guest agent
check box to use for application-aware processing persistent guest agents on each protected VM.
For more information on guest agent and non-persistent components, see Non-Persistent Runtime
Components and Persistent Agent Components.
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[For Linux VMs] To use persistent guest agents, you must install Management Agent on protected VMs.
For more information, see Persistent Agent Components.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Microsoft SQL Servers, you must check that application-
aware processing is enabled and then specify settings of transacrion log processing.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Microsoft SQL Sever and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
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Specifying Transaction Log Settings
In the P rocessing Settings window, switch to the SQL tab and specify how transaction logs must be processed:
• If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to trigger truncation of transaction logs only after the job
completes successfully, select Truncate logs.
In this case, the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components will wait for replication to
complete and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the replication job fails, the logs will remain
untouched on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or
persistent components.
o If you do not want Veeam Backup & Replication to truncate logs at all, select Do not truncate logs.
This option is recommended if you are using another backup tool to perform VM guest-level backup or
replication, and this tool maintains consistency of the database state. In such scenario,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not trigger transaction log truncation. After you fail over to the
necessary restore point of the VM replica, you will be able to apply transaction logs to get the database
system to the necessary point in time between replication job sessions.
To create transactionally consistent backups of an Oracle server, you must check that application-aware
processing is enabled and then specify settings of archive log processing.
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Enabling Application-Aware Processing
Before configuring archive log processing, check that application-aware processing is enabled:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
3. In the displayed list, select the Oracle server and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
2. From the Sp ecify Oracle account with SYSDBA privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the Oracle databases. The account that you plan to use
must have privileges described in Permissions.
You can select Use guest credentials from the list of user accounts. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the wizard to
access the VM guest OS and connect to the Oracle databases.
o If you want to preserve archived logs on the VM guest OS, select Do not delete archived logs. When
the replication job completes, the non-persistent runtime components or persistent components will
not truncate transaction logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases where the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned
off. If the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned on, archived logs may grow large and consume all disk space.
o If you want to delete archived logs older than <N> hours, select Delete logs older than <N> hours and
specify the number of hours.
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o If you want to delete archived logs larger than <N> GB, select Delete logs over <N> GB and specify
the size. The specified size refers to the log size of each database, not all databases on the selected
Oracle server.
The non-persistent runtime components or persistent components running on the VM guest OS will wait
for the replication job to complete successfully and then trigger transaction logs truncation using Oracle
Call Interface (OCI). If the job does not manage to replicate the Oracle VM, the logs will remain untouched
on the VM guest OS until the next start of the non-persistent runtime components or persistent
components.
PostgreSQL Settings
The P ostgreSQL tab applies to VMs that run PostgreSQL.
To create transactionally consistent backups of a PostgreSQL VM, you must check that application-aware
processing is enabled and then specify settings of WAL files processing .
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the E nable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Ap p lications.
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3. In the displayed list, select the PostgreSQL VM and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
4. In the P rocessing Settings window, on the General tab, check that Require successful processing or Try
a p plication processing, but ignore failures option is selected in the Ap p lications area.
2. From the Sp ecify PostgreSQL account with superuser privileges drop-down list, select a user account that
Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to the PostgreSQL instance. The account must have
privileges described in Permissions. You can select Use guest credentials from the list of user accounts. In
this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the account specified at the Guest Processing step of the
wizard to access the VM guest OS and connect to the PostgreSQL instance.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link or click the Ad d button to
add credentials. Note that if you select the Sy stem user without password file (peer) option in the The
sp ecified user is area, you can add a user account without specifying a password.
3. In the The specified user is section, specify how the user selected in the Sp ecify PostgreSQL account with
sup eruser privileges drop-down list will authenticate against the PostgreSQL instance:
o Select Da tabase user with password if the account is a PostgreSQL account, and you entered the
password for this account in the Credentials Manager.
o Select Da tabase user with password file (.pgpass) if the password for the account is defined in the
.pgpass configuration file on the PostgreSQL server. For more information about the password file,
see PostgreSQL documentation.
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o Select Sy stem user without password file (peer) if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to use the
peer authentication method. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply the OS account as
the PostgreSQL account.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
2. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options list, select workloads for which you want to exclude files and
folders and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
3. In the P rocessing Settings window, switch to the E x clusions tab and specify whether you want to exclude
or include files and folders:
o To remove individual files and folders from replicas, select E x clude the following files and folders and
click Ad d .
o To include only the specified files and folders in replicas, select Include only the following files and
folders and click Ad d .
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4. In the Sp ecify Folder window, specify which files and folders you want to include or exclude. For the
methods that you can use to specify the list of exclusions or inclusions, see VM Guest OS Files.
NOTE
When you select files to be included or excluded, mind requirements and limitations that are listed in the
Requirements and Limitations for VM Guest OS File Exclusion section.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, check that you have selected the E nable application-aware
p rocessing check box and configured guest OS credentials.
2. In the Ap p lication-Aware Processing Options list, select workloads for which you want to configure
scripts, and click E d it.
To define custom settings for a VM added as a part of a VM container, you must include the VM in the list
as a standalone object. To do this, click Ad d and choose the necessary VM. Then select the VM in the list
and define the necessary settings.
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2. Click the Scripts tab.
3. In the Script processing mode section, select a scenario for script execution:
o Select Require successful script execution if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to stop the
replication process if scripts fail.
o Select Ig nore script execution failures if you want to continue the replication process even if script
errors occur.
o Select Disable script execution if you do not want to run scripts for the VM.
5. In the W indows scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Microsoft Windows VMs. For the list of
supported script formats, see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
6. In the Linux scripts section, specify paths to scripts for Linux VMs. For the list of supported script formats,
see Pre-Freeze and Post-Thaw Scripts.
If you plan to replicate a VM container with Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs, you can select to exec ute
both Microsoft Windows and Linux scripts. When replication starts, Veeam Backup & Replication will
automatically determine which OS type is installed on the VM and use corresponding scripts for this VM.
TIP
Beside pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for VM quiescence, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication
to run custom scripts before the job starts and after the job completes. For more information, see
Advanced Settings.
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Step 13. Define Job Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, select to run the VMware Cloud Director replication job manually or
schedule the job to run on a regular basis.
1. Select the Run the job automatically check box. If you do not select this check box, you will have to start
the job manually to perform VMware Cloud Director replication.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Da ily at
this time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. Use the fields on the right
to configure the necessary schedule.
NOTE
When you configure the job schedule, keep in mind possible date and time changes (for
example, related to daylight saving time transition).
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a set time interval, select P eriodically every. In the
field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use the time
table to define the permitted time window for the job. In the Sta rt time within an hour field, specify
the exact time when the job must start.
▪ Veeam Backup & Replication always starts counting defined intervals from 12:00 AM. For
example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00
AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
▪ If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is over,
Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately start the job and then run the job by the defined
schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours
from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first run at 9:00 AM, when the
denied period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the P eriodically every option and choose Continuously from the
list on the right.
o To chain jobs, use the After this job field. In the common practice, jobs start one after another: when
job A finishes, job B starts and so on. If you want to create a chain of jobs, you must define the time
schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest of the jobs in the chain, select the After this job
op tion and choose the preceding job from the list.
NOTE
The After this job function will only start a job if the first job in the chain is started
automatically by schedule. If the first job is started manually, jobs chained to it will not be
started.
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3. In the Automatic retry section, define whether Veeam Backup & Replication should attempt to run the job
again if the job fails for some reason. During a job retry, Veeam Backup & Replication processes failed
vApps only. Enter the number of attempts to run the job and define time spans between them. If you
select continuous schedule for the job, Veeam Backup & Replication will retry the job for the defined
number of times without any time intervals between the job sessions.
4. In the Ba ckup window section, determine a time interval within which the job must be completed. The
backup window prevents the job from overlapping with production hours and ensures it does not provide
unwanted overhead on your production environment. To set up a backup window for the job:
a. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box and click W ind ow.
b. In the Time P eriods section, define the allowed hours and prohibited hours for vApp replication. If the
job exceeds the allowed window, it will be automatically terminated.
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Step 14. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the VMware Cloud Director replication job. If you want to
start the job right after you close the wizard, leave the Run the job when I click Finish check box selected,
otherwise clear the check box. Then click Finish to close the wizard.
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Creating vApp Replica Seeds
To use seeding, you must have backups of replicated vApps in a backup repository in the disaster recovery (DR)
site. These backups are known as replica seeds. For more information on seeding and when to use it, see vApp
Seeding and Mapping.
1. Create a backup of vApps that you plan to replicate as described in the Creating Backup Jobs section. As
the target repository for this job, select a backup repository in the production site. Then run the job.
If you already have backups containing the necessary vApps, there is no need to configure and run a new
backup job. For seeding, you can use any existing backups created with Veeam Backup & Replication. The
backup must include VBK and VBM files. If you have a full backup and a chain of forward increments, you
can use VIB files together with the VBK and VBM files. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will
restore vApps from the seed to the latest available restore point.
2. Copy the backup from the backup repository in the production site to a backup repository in the DR site.
You can move the backup using a file copy job or any other appropriate method, for example, copy the
backup to a removable storage device, ship the device to the DR site and copy backups to the backup
repository in the DR site.
If you do not have a backup repository in the DR site, you need to create the repository as described in
Backup Repository.
IMP ORTANT
3. After the backup is copied to the backup repository in the DR site, perform rescan of this backup
repository as described in the Rescanning Backup Repositories section. Otherwise,
Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to detect the copied backup.
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Managing Cloud Director Replication Jobs
After you create VMware Cloud Director replication jobs, you can edit, disable and delete
them.
To view all created VMware Cloud Director replication jobs, open the Home view and navigate
to the Job s > Replication node. The working area displays the full list of the created replication
jobs. Here, you can manage the jobs.
You can manage VMware Cloud Director replication jobs with the following options:
3. In the working area, select the necessary VMware Cloud Director replication job and select Retry on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary VMware Cloud Director replication job and select
Retry.
3. In the working area, select the necessary VMware Cloud Director replication job and select E d it on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary VMware Cloud Director replication job and select
E d it.
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To disable a VMware Cloud Director replication job:
3. In the working area, select the necessary policy and select Disable on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can
right-click the necessary policy and select Disable.
TIP
To enable a disabled VMware Cloud Director replication job, select it and click Disable once again.
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to delete only disabled VMware Cloud Director replication jobs.
3. In the working area, select the necessary VMware Cloud Director replication job and select Delete on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary VMware Cloud Director replication job and select
Delete.
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Managing Cloud Director Replicas
To view all created replicas, open the Home view and navigate to the Rep licas node. The
working area displays the full list of the created replicas. Here, you can view replica
properties and delete replicas from the configuration database or disk.
3. In the working area, right-click the necessary replica and select P roperties. Alternatively, select P roperties
on the ribbon.
Rescanning Replicas
Rescan is a process that allows Veeam Backup & Replication to verify that the following data written to
configuration database is up to date: information about the disaster recovery (DR) site, its components and VM
containers. The replica rescan process is performed the following way:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication gathers information on replicas that are currently available in the DR site.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication compares this information with information stored in the configuration
database about replicas from this DR site.
3. If information about replicas from the DR site differs from information stored in the configuration
database about these replicas, Veeam Backup & Replication updates the configuration database.
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To rescan replicas, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Rep licas node and select Rescan replicas.
To remove records about replicas from the Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database:
3. In the working area, select replicas in the Ready state and click Remove from > Configuration on the
ribbon. Alternatively, right-click one of the selected replicas and select Remove from configuration.
NOTE
• The Remove from configuration operation can be performed only for replicas in the Ready state. If
the replica is in the Failover or Failback state, this option is disabled.
• When you perform the Remove from configuration operation for a vApp that is replicated as a
standalone object, Veeam Backup & Replication removes this vApp from the initial replication job.
When you perform the Remove from configuration operation for a vApp that is replicated as part of
a VM container, Veeam Backup & Replication adds this vApp to the list of exclusions in the initial
replication job. For more information, see Exclude Objects from Replication Job.
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Deleting from Disk
When you delete replicas from disks, Veeam Backup & Replication removes the replicas not only from the
Veeam Backup & Replication console and configuration database, but also from host storage.
NOTE
• You can delete records only about replicas that are in the Ready state.
• Do not delete replica files from the destination storage manua lly, use the Delete from disk option
instead. If you delete replica files manually, subsequent replication sessions will fail.
• Unlike the Remove from configuration operation, the Delete from disk operation does not remove
the processed workload from the initial replication job.
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3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Remove from > Disk on the ribbon. As an
alternative, right-click the replica and select Delete from disk.
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Failover and Failback for Cloud Director
Failover and failback are operations that allow you to manage your production and disaster recovery (DR) sites if
a disaster strikes. Failover is a process of switching from the vApp on the source organization VDC to its replica
on a target organization VDC that is set up as the disaster recovery (DR) site. Failback is a process of returning
from the replica to the source vApp or a new vApp.
Veeam Backup & Replication provides the following failover and failback operations:
• P erform failover
When you perform failover, you shift all processes from the source vApp in the production organization
VDC to the replica in the DR organization VDC. Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized:
you can perform permanent failover, perform failback or undo failover.
When you perform permanent failover, you permanently switch from the source vApp to a replica and use
this replica as the production vApp. The source vApp is excluded from VMware Cloud Director replica
processing.
• Und o failover
When you undo failover, you switch back to the source vApp and discard all changes ma de to the replica
while it was running. For example, you can use the undo failover scenario if you have failed over to the
replica for testing and troubleshooting purposes, and you do not need to synchronize the source vApp
state with the current state of the replica.
• P erform failback
When you perform failback, you switch back to the source vApp and send to the source vApp all changes
that took place while the replica was running. If the source organization VDC is not available, you can
recover a vApp with the same configuration as the source vApp and switch to it.
When you perform failback, changes are only sent to the source or recovered vApp but not published. You
must test whether the source or recovered vApp works with these changes. Depending on the test results,
you can do the following:
o Commit failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the source or recovered vApp works as
expected and you want to get back to it.
o Und o failback. When you undo failback, you confirm that the source or recovered vApp is not working
as expected and you want to get back to the replica.
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The following scheme can help you decide which steps are preferable when you fail over to a replica.
Failover
Failover is a process of switching from the source vApp in the production organization VDC to its replica in the
disaster recovery organization VDC. During failover, Veeam Backup & Replication recovers the replica to the
required restore point and shifts all I/O processes from the source vApp to its replica. As a re sult, you have a
fully functional vApp within several minutes, and your users can access services and applications with minimum
disruption.
You can fail over to replicas not only when a disaster strikes the production organization VDC, but also to test
replicas for recoverability. If the source vApps and replicas are located in the same network, consider temporary
disconnecting the source vApps from the network to avoid IP address or machine name conflicts.
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3. Veeam Backup & Replication recovers a replica to the required restore point.
The source vApp still exists and failover does not change the vApp state: if the vApp is powered on when
you perform failover, it remains powered on when failover completes; if the vApp is powered off, it
remains in this state.
5. All changes made to the replica while it is running in the Failover state are written to the delta file and
stored in the target host.
6. After failover completes successfully, the vApp state is changed from Processing to Failover.
Failover is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. You can perform the following operations:
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
In This Section
• Performing Failover
Performing Failover
To perform failover, do the following.
• The failover operation can be performed for vApp that have been successfully replicated at least once.
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Step 1. Launch Failover Wizard
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware vCloud Director > Restore from replica > Entire vApp > Failover
vAp p to a replica.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas. In the working area, select the necessary
replica, right-click one of the selected replica and click Fa ilover Now. Alternatively, click Fa ilover Now on
the ribbon.
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Step 2. Select vApps
At the vAp p step of the wizard, you can modify a list of vApps from which you fail over. To add vApps, cl ick Ad d
> From infrastructure if you want to add vApps from the virtual infrastructure, or Ad d > From replicas if you
want to add vApps from existing replicas. Then select the necessary vApps. If you select organizations or
organization VDCs, Veeam Backup & Replication will expand them to a vApp list.
NOTE
Make sure that vApps you select from the virtual environment have been successfully replicated at least
once.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest valid restore point of the replica. However, you can fail
over to an earlier state of the vApps. If you have chosen to perform failover for several vApps, you can select
the necessary restore point for every vApp in the list.
3. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point to which you want to fail over.
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Step 4. Specify Failover Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for failing over to the replicas. The information you provide will
be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the failover task. Then click Finish to start the failover
process.
When the failover process is complete, the replicas will be started on the target hosts.
• Undo failover
• Perform failback
To retry failover:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry failover.
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Permanent Failover
Permanent failover is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you perform permanent failover, you
permanently switch from the source vApp to its replica. As a result, the replica stops acting as a replica and
starts acting as the production vApp.
NOTE
It is recommended that you perform permanent failover if the source vApp and its replica are located in the
same site and are nearly equal in terms of resources. In this case, users will not experience any latency in
ongoing operations. Otherwise, perform failback.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication removes restore points of the replica from the replication chain and deletes
associated files from the datastore. Changes that were written to the delta disks are committed to the
replica to bring the replica to the most recent state.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication removes the replica from the list of replicas in the
Veeam Backup & Replication console and the replica becomes the production vApp.
3. To protect the replica from corruption after permanent failover is complete, Veeam Backup & Replication
reconfigures the job or policy and adds the source vApp to the list of exclusions. When replication job
starts, the source vApp is skipped from processing. As a result, no data is written to the working replica.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas > Active. In the working area, select the
necessary vApp and click P ermanent Failover on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas > Active. In the working area, right-click the
necessary vApp and select P ermanent Failover.
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Performing Permanent Failover Retry
If permanent failover failed, you can retry this operation. When you perform a retry,
Veeam Backup & Replication restarts permanent failover only for the failed VMs that are added to vApps.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not process VMs that have been processed successfully. As a result,
permanent failover takes less time and does not consume as many resources as when processing a whole vApp.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry P ermanent Failover on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry permanent failover.
Failover Undo
Failover undo is one of the ways to finalize failover. When you undo failover, you switch back from a vApp
replica to the original vApp. Veeam Backup & Replication discards all changes made to the vApp replica while it
was in the Failover state.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication reverts the replica to its pre-failover state. To do this,
Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the vApp replica and gets it back to the latest restore point in the
replication chain.
2. The state of the replica gets back to Ready , and Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication activities
for the original vApp on the source host.
Undoing Failover
To undo failover:
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively,
right-click the necessary replica and select Und o Failover.
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4. In the displayed window, click Y es to confirm the operation.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Undo Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively,
you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry undo failover.
Failback
Failback is an option that allows you to switch back from the replicated vApp on a disaster recovery organization
VDC to the production vApp. When you perform failback, you switch back to the production VM from a VM
replica, shift I/O processes from the disaster recovery site to the production site.
• Fail back to a vApp already recovered to a new location. This vApp must be recovered before you perform
failback. For example, you can recover the VM from a backup.
• Fail back to a vApp recovered from a replica to a new location, or to any location but with different
settings. The vApp will be recovered from the replica during the failback process.
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The first two options help you decrease recovery time and the use of the network traffic because
Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer only differences between the source or recovered vApp and
replica. For the third option, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer the whole vApp data, including its
configuration and virtual disk content. Use the third option if there is no way to use the source vApp or restore it
from a replica.
• First phase: Veeam Backup & Replication synchronizes the state of the production vApp (the source vApp,
an already recovered vApp or a vApp recovered from the replica) with the current state of the replica. This
phase may take a lot of time especially if vApp is large. While Veeam Backup & Replication performs the
first phase of failback, VMs from replicas are still up and running, users can access these VMs and perform
daily routine tasks as normal. All changes made to vApps during the first phase of a failback a written to a
delta file.
• Second phase: Veeam Backup & Replication transfers all changes made to the replica during the first
phase of failback to the production vApp, switches all processes from the replica to the production vApp
and turns off the replica.
The time when the second phase starts depends on how you want to switch from the replica to the
production vApp. You can switch to the production vApp automatically, at the scheduled time or
manually. If you select to switch automatically, the second phase will start right after the first phase
finishes. If you select to switch at the scheduled time or manually, the second phase will start at the time
you want.
The process of failing back to the source vApp or a source vApp restored in a different location differs from the
process of failing back to a specific location:
• How failback to the source vApp or a source vApp restored in a different location works
1. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference between disks of the production vApp and disks of
the replica in the Failover state. The calculation of the difference helps Veeam Backup & Replication
understand what data needs to be transferred to the production vApp and to synchronize its state with
the state of the replica.
[For ESXi hosts prior to version 7.0] If you fail back to the source vApp in the source location and you have
enabled the Quick rollback option, this calculation can be performed much faster. For more information on
the Quick rollback option, see Quick Rollback.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers the data that was detected as different to the production vApp. The
transferred data is written to the production vApp.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failover to Ready to switch.
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During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the following operations:
1. The guest OS of the replica is shut down or the replica is powered off.
If VMware Tools are installed on the VM added to the replica, Veeam Backup & Replication tries to shut
down the replica guest OS. If nothing happens in 15 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the
vApp replica. If VMware Tools are not installed on the VM added to the replica or the vApp is suspended,
Veeam Backup & Replication powers off the vApp. The replica remains powered off until you commit
failback or undo failback.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates the difference between disks of the production vApp and disks of
the replica. The calculation of the difference helps Veeam Backup & Replication understand what data was
changed while the replica was in the Ready to switch state.
3. Sends data changed on the replica while it was in the Ready to switch state to the production vApp.
5. [If you fail back to a recovered vApp] Veeam Backup & Replication updates the ID of the source vApp in
the Veeam Backup & Replication configuration database. The ID of the source vApp is replaced with the ID
of the recovered vApp.
6. If you have selected to power on the production vApp after failback, Veeam Backup & Replication powers
on the production vApp on the host.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication requests VMware Cloud Director to create on the target organization VDC an
empty vApp with the same configuration as the replica. VMware Cloud Director server registers the
created production vApp.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication transfers data of the replica to the production vApp to update the production
vApp state to the replica state.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failover to the Ready to switch.
During the second phase, Veeam Backup & Replication performs the same operations as described in How
Failback to Source vApp or Already Recovered vApp Works except for the step 2.
Failback is an intermediate step that needs to be finalized. If the production vApp works as expected and you
want to get back to it, commit failback. If the vApp does not work as expected, undo failback.
Quick Rollback
Quick rollback helps you significantly reduce the failback time. You can use quick rollback if you fail back from a
replica to the source vApp in the original location.
During failback, Veeam Backup & Replication calculates differences between VM disks of the source vApp and
disks of the replica. With the quick rollback option enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication compares only those
disk sectors that have changed during the replica was in the Failover state instead of comparing entire disks. To
get information about the changed disk sectors, Veeam Backup & Replication uses VMware vSphere Changed
Block Tracking (CBT).
As a result of enabling quick rollback, difference calculation becomes much faster. After the differences are
calculated, Veeam Backup & Replication performs failback in a regular way: transport changed blocks to the
source vApp, powers off the replica and synchronizes the source vApp with the replica once again.
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Requirements for Quick Rollback
To perform quick rollback, make sure that the following requirements are met:
• Do not use quick rollback if the problem occurred at the vApp hardware level, storage level or due to a
power loss.
Use quick rollback if you fail back to the source vApp that had a problem at the guest OS level — for
example, there was an application error or a user accidentally deleted a file on the source VM guest OS.
• Due to changes in VMware vSphere 7.0 and newer, the replica failback operation forces digest
recalculation for both source and target vApps. That is why the Quick rollback option is ignored for ESXi
hosts starting from version 7.0.
• During the first replication job session after failback with quick rollback, CBT on the source vApp is reset.
Due to that Veeam Backup & Replication will read data of the entire vApp.
Performing Failback
With the Fa ilback option, you can switch from a replica back to the source vApp or restore a vApp from a replica
in a new location.
• vApps for which you plan to perform failback must be successfully replicated at least once.
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Step 1. Launch Failback Wizard
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware Cloud Director > Restore from replica > Entire vApp > Failback
to p roduction.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Rep licas > Active. In the working area, right-click the
necessary replica and select Fa ilback to production. Alternatively, click Fa ilback to Production on the
ribbon.
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Step 2. Select Replicas
At the Rep lica step of the wizard, select replicas from which you want to fail back.
To update the list of replicas that are ready for failback (replicas in the Failover state), click P op ulate.
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Step 3. Select Failback Destination
At the Destination step of the wizard, select the failback destination and backup proxies for vApp data transport
during failback:
1. Select a destination for failback. Veeam Backup & Replication supports the following options:
o Fa ilback to the original vApp — select this option if you want to fail back to the source vApps that
reside on the source hosts. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the source
vApps with the current state of their replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the replicas while
running in the disaster recovery (DR) site.
If this option is selected, you will proceed to the Fa ilback Mode step of the wizard.
o Fa ilback to the original vApp restored in a different location — select this option if the source vApps
have already been recovered to a new location, and you want to switch to the recovered vApps from
their replicas. Veeam Backup & Replication will synchronize the state of the recovered vApps with the
current state of the vApp replicas to apply any changes that occurred to the replicas while running in
the DR site.
If this option is selected, you will proceed to the Ta rget vApp step of the wizard.
TIP
o Fa ilback to the specified location — select this option if you want to recover the source vApps from
replicas. You can recover vApps to a new location, or to any location but with different settings (such
as network settings, virtual disk type, configuration file path and so on). Select this option if there is
no way to fail back to the source vApp or an already recovered vApp.
If you select this option, the wizard will include additional steps.
If you select one of the first two options, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the source/recovered
vApps only differences between the existing virtual disks of VMs included in the vApps.
Veeam Backup & Replication will not send replica configuration changes such as different IP address or
network settings (if replica Re-IP and network mapping were applied), new hardware or virtual disks
added while the replicas were in the Failover state.
If you select Fa ilback to the specified location, Veeam Backup & Replication will send to the specified
location whole replica data, including configurations and virtual disk content.
2. To select which backup proxies will be used for data transfer, click P ick backup proxies for data transfer.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication selects proxies automatically. Before processing a new vApp in
the vApp list, Veeam Backup & Replication checks available backup proxies. If more than one backup proxy
is available, Veeam Backup & Replication selects the most appropriate proxy basing on the following
information: transport modes that the backup proxies can use and the current workload on the backup
proxies.
If want to select proxies manually and if vApps and their replicas reside in different sites, select at least
one backup proxy in the production site and one proxy in the disaster recovery site. If vApps and repli cas
reside in the same site, you can use the same backup proxy as the source and target one.
We recommend that you select at least two backup proxies in each site to ensure that failback will be
performed in case one proxy fails or looses the network connection.
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4. [For ESXi hosts prior to version 7.0; for failback to the source vApps] If you want to fasten failback, and
the source vApps had problems at the guest OS level, select the Quick rollback check box.
When you click Nex t, Veeam Backup & Replication will check storage policies in the virtual environment and
compare this information with the information about the replica storage policy. If the original storage policy has
been changed or deleted, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning. You can select one of the
following options:
• Current — the restored VM will be associated with the profile with which the source VM in the production
environment is currently associated.
• Default — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that is set as default for the tar get datastore.
• Stored — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that was assigned to the source VM at the
moment of replication.
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Step 4. Specify Organization VDCs
The Organization VDC step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Org anization VDC step of the wizard, specify the organization VDCs to which Veeam Backup & Replication
will add restored vApps and specify names for the restored vApps. To do this, select the necessary vApp and
perform the following steps:
1. To specify a name for the restored vApp, click Na me and enter the name for the vApp.
2. To specify an organization VDC, click VDC and select the necessary organization VDC.
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Step 5. Specify Storage Policies
The Storage Policy step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Storage Policy step of the wizard, specify storage policies that Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to
vApps that you want to restore:
1. In the vAp ps list, select vApps for which you want to change the policy and click P olicy.
2. In the Select storage policy window select the policy that you want to apply.
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Step 6. Configure Network Mapping
The Network step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the specified location option at the
Destination step.
At the Network step of the wizard, configure a network mapping table. This table maps networks in the DR site
to networks in the site where recovered vApps reside. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the network
mapping table to update configuration files of VMs added to vApps on the fly, during the failback process.
1. In the Network connections list, select the necessary vApps and click Network.
If vApps are connected to multiple networks, select the necessary network and click Network.
2. In the Select network window, select networks to which vApps must be connected after restore.
If you do not want to connect restored vApps to any virtual network, select the necessary vApps and click
Disconnect.
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Step 7. Select Target vApp
The Ta rget vApp step is available if you have selected the Fa ilback to the original VM restored in a different
loca tion option at the Destination step.
At the Ta rget vApp step of the wizard, specify to which vApps you want to fail back from replicas. These vApps
must be already restored from backups in the required location.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication fails back the replica to the source vApps. If you want to specify the
target vApp manually, perform the following steps:
2. In the Selects Objects window, select a vApp or vApp container to which you want to fail back.
3. Click Ad d .
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Step 8. Schedule Switch to Production vApps
At the Fa ilback Mode step of the wizard, specify when switch from replicas to production vApps must be
performed:
• Select Auto if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch automatically right after the
state of the production vApps is synchronized with the state of their replicas.
• Select Scheduled if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switch at a specific time.
If you select the Scheduled or Ma nual option, you can further reset/set the scheduled time or switch to the
production vApps manually. For more information, see Changing Switching Time and Switching to Production
vApps Manually.
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Step 9. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the configured failback settings. If you want to power on the
production VMs right after the switch to production operation is performed, select the P ower on target vApp
a fter failback check box. Then click Finish.
• Commit failback
• Undo failback
To change the time when the switch from replicas to production vApps must be performed:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the vApp in the Ready to switch state and select Switchover Time on the
ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Cha nge switchover time.
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If the switching time operation failed, you can retry this operation again. To perform a retry, in the working area,
select the necessary vApp and select Retry Switchover Time on the ribbon. Alternatively, you can right-click the
necessary vApp and select Retry switchover time.
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Switchover to p roduction on the ribbon. As an
alternative, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Switchover to production.
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If the switch to production operation failed, you can retry this operation again. To perform a retry, in the
working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Switchover to Production on the ribbon. Alternatively,
you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry switchover to production.
To retry failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Failback on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry failback.
Failback Undo
Failback undo is one of the ways to finalize failback. You can use this option if the vApp to which you failed back
(the production vApp) works in a wrong way and you want to get back to the replica.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication reverts the replica to its pre-failback state.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication powers on the replica and changes the replica state from Failback or Ready to
Switch to Failover.
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Undoing Failback
To undo failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Und o Failback on the ribbon. Alternatively, you
can right-click the necessary replica and select Und o Failback.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Undo Failover on the ribbon. Alternatively,
you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry undo failback.
Failback Commit
Failback commit is one of the ways to finalize failback. When you commit failback, you confirm that the vApp to
which you failed back (the production vApp) works as expected. After the commit operation,
Veeam Backup & Replication resumes replication activities for the production vApp.
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The commit failback operation is performed in the following way:
1. Depending on whether you have failed back to the source vApp or recovered vApp:
o If you have failed back to a vApp recovered from a backup or replica, Veeam Backup & Replication
reconfigures all existing jobs where the source vApp is present and adds the source vApp to the list of
exclusions. The recovered vApp takes the role of the source vApp and is included into all jobs instead
of the excluded vApp. When the VMware Cloud Director replication process starts,
Veeam Backup & Replication processes the recovered vApp instead of the former source vApp.
o If you have failed back to the source vApp, the replication job or policy is not reconfigured. When the
replication process starts, Veeam Backup & Replication still processes the source vApp.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication changes the state of the replica from Failback to Ready .
During failback commit, the failback delta disk that saves the pre-failback state of a replica is not deleted.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses this delta disk as an additional restore point for replica. With the pre -failback
delta disk, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to transfer fewer changes and therefore puts less load on the
network when replication activities are resumed.
Committing Failback
To commit failback:
2. In the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary replica and click Commit Failback on the ribbon. As an
alternative, you can right-click the replica and select Commit failback.
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Performing Failback Commit Retry
If the commit failback operation failed, you can retry this operation. When you perform a retry,
Veeam Backup & Replication restarts the commit failback operation only for the failed VMs that are added to
vApps. Veeam Backup & Replication does not process VMs that have been processed successfully. As a result,
the commit failback operation takes less time and does not consume as many resources as when processing the
whole vApp.
To perform a retry:
1. Open the Home view, in the inventory pane, navigate to the Rep licas > Active node.
2. In the working area, select the necessary vApp and select Retry Commit Failback on the ribbon.
Alternatively, you can right-click the necessary vApp and select Retry commit failback.
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Restore of VMware Cloud Director VMs
Veeam Backup & Replication enables full-fledged restore of VMs to VMware Cloud Director. You can restore
separate VMs to vApps, as well as VM data.
For restore, Veeam Backup & Replication uses VM metadata saved to a backup file and restores specific VM
attributes. As a result, you get a fully-functioning VM in VMware Cloud Director, do not need to import the
restored VM to VMware Cloud Director and adjust the settings manually.
Backed-up objects can be restored to the same VMware Cloud Director hierarchy or to a different VMware Cloud
Director environment. Restore options include:
• Instant Recovery
• Restore of VM disks
• Restore of VM files
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Restoring Regular and Standalone VMs to
VMware Cloud Director
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you restore regular VMs that are part of vApps and standalone VMs that were
created in the VMware Cloud Director tenant portal.
When you restore regular or standalone VMs back to the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy, the restore process
includes the following steps:
1. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the captured vApp metadata to define the vApp settings and VM
original location in the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication restores VMs from the backup file to their original location or to a different
location. Additionally, Veeam Backup & Replication restores all VM settings.
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Restoring Linked Clone VMs to VMware Cloud
Director
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you restore linked clone VMs – VMs that were deployed from a VM template
using the fast provisioning technology. There are several mechanisms for processing linked clone VMs.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the captured vApp metadata to define the initial settings of the VM.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates a signature for the consolidated VM disk in the backup file
(containing the VM template data and data of the delta file) and the signature for the VM existing in
VMware Cloud Director. Veeam Backup & Replication then compares the disk signatures to define what
data blocks have changed.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication restores only changed data blocks from the backup file and writes them to
the user delta file.
1. Veeam Backup & Replication uses VMware Cloud Director to create a new linked clone VM from the VM
template that the user selects. The new VM has a blank user delta file.
2. Veeam Backup & Replication calculates a signature for the consolidated VM disk in the backup file
(containing the VM template data and data of the delta file) and the signature for the created VM in
VMware Cloud Director. Veeam Backup & Replication then compares the disk signatures to define what
data blocks need to be restored.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication restores only those data blocks that need to be restored from the backup file
and writes them to the blank user delta file.
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By default, Veeam Backup & Replication links the VM to the same VM template that was used by the original
VM. During restore, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the settings of the VM template to which the restored
VM is linked: verifies connection settings, makes sure the disk size coincide and so on.
• You are restoring a VM to the organization VDC which has the fast provisioning option disabled.
• A VM template to which the restored VM should be linked is not accessible in the location to which the VM
is restored.
In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the same algorithm as for restore of full VMs in the virtual
environment. It retrieves the data of the consolidated VM disk from the backup file and restores the VM in the
VMware Cloud Director hierarchy.
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Performing Instant Recovery for VMs
Veeam Backup & Replication provides two options for Instant Recovery of VMware Cloud Director VMs:
• You can instantly recover a VM to the virtual infrastructure. In this case, the VM will be restored at the
level of the underlying vCenter Server, and the Instant Recovery process will be the same as for regular
VMware VMs.
When you instantly recover a VM to VMware Cloud Director, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the vPower NFS
datastore, just as with other VMware VMs. To import the VM to the vApp, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to
associate the vPower NFS datastore with some storage policy. To do this, Veeam Backup & Replication creates
for the underlying vCenter Server an auxiliary storage policy — Veeam-InstantVMRecovery , and displays it in
VMware Cloud Director.
The created storage policy is added to the Provider VDC and organization VDC hosting the vApp to which the
VM is restored. When the vPower NFS datastore is mounted to the ESXi host, the vPower NFS datastore is
associated with the Veeam-InstantVMRecovery storage policy. After that, the VM is instantly restored in a
regular manner and imported to the selected vApp.
When an Instant Recovery session is finished, the storage policy is not deleted from the Provider VDC, it remains
on vCenter Server. This helps speed up all subsequent Instant Recovery operations. However, the storage policy
is deleted from the organization VDC as organization VDC settings can be accessed only by organization
administrators.
Before you start Instant Recovery, check prerequisites. Then use the Instant Recovery to VMware Cloud Director
wizard to recover the necessary VM.
• You can restore only those VMs whose placement policy is the same as the default placement policy of
the target organization VDC (VDC where the vApp to which you restore VMs reside). For more information on
placement policies, see VMware Docs.
• You can perform Instant Recovery for a VM that has been successfully backe d up at least once.
• You must have at least 10 GB of free disk space on the datastore where write cache folder is located. This
disk space is required to store virtual disk updates for the restored VM.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication writes virtual disk updates to the IRCache folder on a volume
with the maximum amount of free space, for example, C:\ProgramData\Veeam\Backup\IRCache.
The write cache is not used when you select to redirect virtual disk updates to a VMware vSphere
datastore when configuring the job.
• If you are recovering a VM to the production network, make sure that the original VM is powered off to
avoid conflicts.
• If you want to scan VM data for viruses, check the secure restore requirements and limitations.
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• Mind that during Instant Recovery, Veeam Backup & Replication restores standalone VMs as regular
VMware Cloud Director VMs.
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Step 1. Launch Instant Recovery to VMware Cloud Director Wizard
To launch the Instant Recovery to VMware Cloud Director wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup and do one of the following:
o Select the machine that you want to restore and click Instant Recovery > VMware Cloud Director on
the ribbon.
o Right-click the machine that you want to restore and select Instant recovery > VMware Cloud
Director.
• On the Home tab, click Restore > VMware Cloud DIrector. In the Restore window, select Restore from
b a ckup > VM restore > E ntire VM restore > Instant recovery > Instant recovery to VMware Cloud Director.
• Open the Inventory view. On the View tab, click Cloud Director View. In the inventory pane, expand the
vCloud Director hierarchy. In the working area, right-click the VM you want to restore and select Restore >
Instant recovery > VMware Cloud Director.
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Step 2. Select VMs
At the Virtual Machine step of the wizard, select a VM that you want to recover.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
At the Restore P oint step of the wizard, select the restore point for the VM.
In the Loca tion column, you can view a name of a backup repository where a restore point resides.
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Step 4. Select Restore Mode
At the Restore Mode of the wizard, choose the necessary restore mode.
o Select Restore to the original location if you want to restore the VM with its initial settings to its
original location. If this option is selected, you will pass directly to the Reason step of the wizard.
o Select Restore to a new location, or with different settings if you want to restore the VM to a
different location and/or with different settings (such as vApp, VM name, network settings and so
on). If this option is selected, the Instant Recovery wizard will include additional steps for customizing
VM settings.
2. Select the Restore VM tags check box if you want to restore tags that were assigned to the original VM,
and assign them to the restored VM. Veeam Backup & Replication will restore the VM with original tags if
the following conditions are met:
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Step 5. Select Destination for Restored VM
The Destination step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings of the
restored VM.
1. In the vAp p field, specify a vApp to which the VM must be restored. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication restores the VM to its original vApp.
2. In the Restored VM name field, enter a name under which the VM must be restored and registered. By
default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the original name of the VM. If you are restoring the VM to the
same vApp where the original VM is registered and the original VM still reside s there, it is recommended
that you change the VM name to avoid conflicts.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication checks the lease term for the vApp to which the VM is restored. In case the
lease period has expired, the lease will be automatically updated.
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Step 6. Select Destination for Virtual Disk Updates
The Da tastore step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings of the
restored VM.
Select the location for holding the VM disk changes when the VM is restored. By def ault, disk changes are stored
directly on the vPower NFS server. However, you can store disk changes on any datastore in your virtual
environment.
To select a datastore:
2. From the Da tastore list, choose the necessary datastore. You can select only a datastore that is available
in the organization VDC hosting the vApp to which the VM is restored.
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Step 7. Select Destination Network
The Network step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings of the
restored VM.
2. The Select Network window displays all networks that are configured for the destination vApp. From the
list of available networks, choose a network to which selected VM should have access upon restore.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter a network na me or a part of
it and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
3. To prevent the restored VM from accessing any network, select it in the list and click Disconnect.
Veeam Backup & Replication maps the network settings you define and network settings of the original VM. If
necessary, Veeam Backup & Replication makes changes to the network settings of the recovered VM. For
example, if the original VM was connected to the network using the static IP mode and you have selec ted to
connect a recovered VM to a network using the dynamic IP mode, Veeam Backup & Replication will change the
network settings to the dynamic mode.
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Step 8. Specify Secure Restore Settings
This step is available if you restore Microsoft Windows VMs and restore them to a new location or with different
settings.
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan VM data with antivirus software
before restoring the VM to the production environment. For more information on secure r estore, see Secure
Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n the restored machine for malware prior to
p erforming the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o P roceed with recovery but disable network adapters. Select this action if you want to restore the VM
with disabled network adapters (NICs).
o Ab ort VM recovery. Select this action if you want to cancel the restore session.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue the VM data
scan after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see
Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 9. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for performing Instant Recovery of the VM. The information
you provide will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
TIP
If you do not want to display the Rea son step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this page
again check box.
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Step 10. Verify Instant Recovery Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, specify additional settings for Instant Recovery:
1. If you want to start the recovered VM, select the P ower on VM automatically check box.
2. Check the specified settings of Instant Recovery and click Finish. Veeam Backup & Replication will recover
the selected VM in the specified destination.
Alternatively, you can open the History view, select the Instant Recovery node under Restore in the inventory
pane and double-click the necessary instant restore session.
After the VMs have been successfully recovered, you must finalize the process. For this, test the recovered VMs
and decide whether to migrate them to production environment or stop publishing.
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Testing Recovered VMs
To test the recovered VMs before you migrate them to production, you can launch VMware Remote Console
software from the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
IMP ORTANT
Before you launch VMware Remote Console, make sure that this software is installed on the machine
where the Veeam Backup & Replication console runs.
Migrating Recovered VM
To migrate the restored VM to production:
3. In the working area, right-click the VM and select Mig rate to production. Veeam Backup & Replication will
launch the Quick Migration wizard.
During migration, Veeam Backup & Replication will restore the VM from the backup file and additionally
move all changes that were made while the VM was running from the backup in the Instant Recovery
mode.
TIP
When you pass though the Quick Migration wizard, enable the Delete source VM files upon successful
mig ration option. Veeam Backup & Replication will restore the VM to production and automatically stop
the Instant Recovery session. If you do not enable this option, the Instant Recovery session will still be
running, and you will need to unpublish the recovered VM manually.
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TIP
After the VM has been published from the backup, you can open the VM console directly from
Veeam Backup & Replication. To do this, in the working area right-click the VM and select Op en VM
Console.
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Restoring VMs with Instant Recovery into vSphere
infrastructure
The process of Instant Recovery for VMware Cloud Director VMs does not differ from the regular Instant
Recovery process. For more information, see Performing Instant Recovery to VMware vSphere.
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Restoring Cloud Director vApps
You can restore the whole vApp from the backup to VMware Cloud Director.
vApps can be restored to their organization VDC or to any other organization VDC. You can restore the vApp
that already exists, for example, in case the vApp is corrupted or you want to revert to an earlier state of the
vApp, or the vApp that no longer exists, for example, if it was deleted by mistake. If you restore a vApp that
already exists, the vApp is overwritten with that from the VMware Cloud Director backup.
IMP ORTANT
You can restore only those VMs whose placement policy is the same as the default placement policy of the
target organization VDC (VDC where the vApp to which you restore VMs reside). For more information on
placement policies, see VMware Docs.
To restore a vApp to VMware Cloud Director, use the vCloud Full vApp Restore wizard.
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Step 1. Launch Full vApp Restore Wizard
To launch the Full vApp Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select VMware Cloud Director. In the Restore window, select Restore
from backup > Entire vApp restore.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup and do one of the following:
o Right-click the vApp and select Restore VMware Cloud Director vApp.
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Step 2. Select vApp to Restore
At the Ob jects to Restore step of the wizard, select the vApp you want to restore.
To add a vApp, click Ad d vApp and select where to browse for vApps:
• From infrastructure — browse the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy and select a vApp to restore. Note that
the vApp you select from the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy must be successfully backed up at least
once.
• From backup — browse existing backups and select the vApp under backup jobs.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
You can select the restore point for the vApp.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest valid restore point to recover the vApp. However, you
can restore the vApp to an earlier state.
1. Select the vApp in the list and click P oint on the right.
2. In the Restore Points window, select a restore point that must be used to recover the vApp.
In the Loca tion column, you can view a name of a backup repository where a restore point resides.
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Step 4. Select Restore Mode
At the Restore Mode step of the wizard, choose the necessary restore mode and backup proxy for VM data
transport:
o Select Restore to original location if you want to restore the vApp with its initial settings and to its
original location. If this option is selected, you will immediately pass to the Summary step of the
wizard.
o Select Restore to a new location, or with different settings if you want to restore the vApp to a
different location and/or with different settings (such as organization VDC, network settings, fast
provisioning settings and so on). If this option is selected, the vCloud Full vApp Restore wizard will
include additional steps for customizing vApp settings.
2. [For vApp restore to the original location] Select the Quick rollback check box if you want to use
incremental restore for the vApp. Veeam Backup & Replication will query CBT to get data blocks that are
necessary to revert the vApp to an earlier point in time, and will restore only these data blocks from the
backup. Quick rollback significantly reduces the restore time and has little impact on the production
environment.
It is recommended that you enable this option if you restore VMs in the vApp after a problem that
occurred at the level of the VM guest OS: for example, there has been an application error or a user has
accidentally deleted a file on the VM guest OS. Do not enable this option if the problem has occurred at
the VM hardware level, storage level or due to a power loss.
3. Click the P ick proxy to use link to select backup proxies over which vApp data must be transported to the
source datastore. You can assign backup proxies explicitly or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to
automatically select backup proxies.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that are
connected to the source datastore and will automatically assign optimal proxy resources for
processing vApp data.
During the restore process, VMs in the vApp are processed simultaneously.
Veeam Backup & Replication checks available backup proxies. If more than one backup proxy is
available, Veeam Backup & Replication analyzes transport modes that the backup proxies can use for
writing data to target, current workload on these backup proxies, and selects the most appropriate
resources for VMs processing.
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o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy serves only, you can explicitly select backup proxies that
will be used for restore. It is recommended that you select at least two proxies to ensure that VMs are
recovered should one of backup proxies fail or lose its connectivity to the source datastore during
restore.
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Step 5. Select vApp Location
The vAp p step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings of the restored
vApp.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores the vApp to its original location with its original name.
2. From the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy, choose an organization VDC where the selected vApp must be
registered.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter an object’s name or a part
of it and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
NOTE
If a vApp contains a standalone VM, Veeam Backup & Replication restores the standalone VM in such vApp
as a regular VMware Cloud Director VM.
2. In the Cha nge Name window, enter a new name explicitly or specify a change name rule by adding a prefix
and/or suffix to the original vApp name.
3. You can also change the vApp name directly in the list: select a vApp, click the New Na me field and enter
the name to be assigned to the recovered vApp.
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Step 6. Select Destination Network
The vAp p Network step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings of the
restored vApp.
2. The Select Network window displays all networks that are configured for the destination organization
VDC. From the list of available networks, choose a network to which selected vApp must have access upon
restore.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter a network name or a part of
it and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
To prevent the restored vApp from accessing any network, select it in the list and click Disconnect.
NOTE
When Veeam Backup & Replication backs up a vApp, along with vApp networks data it saves information
about organization networks to which the vApp is connected. If you restore the vApp to the original VDC
organization and do not change the organization network settings, Veeam Backup & Replication attempts
to connect the vApp to all source organization networks to which the vApp was connected at the moment
of backup. If one or several source organization networks are not detected, for example, if they have been
changed or removed by the time of restore, Veeam Backup & Replication will not be able to restore the
vApp to its original organization. In this case, you will need to change the network settings for the restored
vApp: map the vApp to other organization networks or disconnect it from organization networks at all.
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Step 7. Select Template to Link
The Fa st Provisioning step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change settings of the restored vApp,
for example, its name or location.
To select a VM template:
2. From the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy, choose a template to which the VMs from the restored vApp
must be linked.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter a VM template name or a
part of it and click the Start search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
If you want to disable fast provisioning for the VM and restore it as a regular VM, select the VM in the list and
click Disable.
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Step 8. Select Storage Policy and Datastores
The Da tastores step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change settings of the restored vApp, for
example, its name or location.
2. In the displayed window, select the necessary policy for the vApp.
If you have selected to disable fast provisioning at the previous step of the wizard, you must select a datastore
on which the disks of restored VMs will be placed. To do this:
2. In the displayed window, select the datastore on which the disks of the VM must be placed.
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Step 9. Specify Secure Restore Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan vApp data with antivirus
software before restoring the vApp. For more information on secure restore, see Secure Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n the restored machine for malware prior to
p erforming the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o P roceed with recovery but disable network adapters. Select this action if you want to restore the
vApp VMs with disabled network adapters (NICs).
o Ab ort VM recovery. Select this action if you want to cancel the restore session.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue the vApp data
scan after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see
Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 10. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring the selected vApp. The information you provide
will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
TIP
If you do not want to display the Rea son step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this page
a g ain check box.
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Step 11. Verify Recovery Settings and Finish Working with
Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, specify additional settings for vApp restore:
1. If you want to start VMs in the restored vApp, select the P ower on VM after restoring check box.
2. Check the settings for vApp restore and click Finish. Veeam Backup & Replication will recover the vApp in
the specified destination.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication checks the lease term for the restored vApp. If the lease period has expired,
the lease will be automatically updated.
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Restoring VMs into Cloud Director vApp
You can restore one or several VMs from VMware Cloud Director backups back to VMware Cloud Director.
The VMware Cloud Director VM can be restored to its original location — to a vApp in which the VM is already
registered, or to a different location. You can restore a VM that already exists, for example, if the original VM is
corrupted or you want to revert to an earlier state of the VM, or a VM that no longer exists, for example, if the
VM was deleted by mistake. If you restore a VM that already exists, the original VM is overwritten with that from
the VMware Cloud Director backup.
When restoring VMs to the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy, make sure that you select the Restore into vCloud
vAp p option. If you select the Restore into vSphere infrastructure option, the VM will be restored at the level of
the underlying vCenter Server. To get a fully functional VM managed by VMware Cloud Director, you will need
to manually import the restored VM to the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy.
Before you restore a VM to the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy, check prerequisites. Then use the VMwa re
Cloud Director Entire VM Restore wizard to restore the necessary VM.
• You can restore only those VMs whose placement policy is the same as the default placement policy of
the target organization VDC (VDC where the vApp to which you restore VMs reside). For more information on
placement policies, see VMware Docs.
• Veeam Backup & Replication restores standalone VMs as regular VMware Cloud Director VMs in the
following cases:
o If the original standalone VM no longer exists in the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy.
• It is not recommended to restore VMware Cloud Director VMs to a vApp that already contains a
standalone VM. After the restore process is complete, the vApp may not work as expected.
• If you restore linked clone VMs to a different location, make sure that fast provisioning is enabled at the
level of the target organization VDC. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will restore the linked clone
VM to a selected vApp as a regular VM.
• If you want to scan VM data for viruses, check the secure restore requirements and limitations.
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Step 1. Launch VMware Cloud Director Entire VM Restore
Wizard
To launch the VMware Cloud Director Entire VM Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup. Select a VM you want to restore and click E ntire VM > VMware Cloud Director on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Backups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup. Right-click the VM you want to restore and select Restore entire VM > VMware Cloud Director.
• On the Home tab, click Restore and select VMware Cloud Director. In the Restore window, select Restore
from backup > VM restore > Entire VM restore > E ntire VM restore > E ntire VM restore to VMware Cloud
Director.
• Open the Inventory view. On the View tab, click Cloud Director View. In the inventory pane, expand the
VMware Cloud Director hierarchy. In the working area, right-click the VM you want to restore and select
Restore > Restore entire VM > VMware Cloud Director.
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Step 2. Select VMs to Restore
At the Ob jects to Restore step of the wizard, select one or several VMs to restore.
• From infrastructure — browse the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy and select VMs to restore. Note that
the VM you select from the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy must be successfully backed up at least
once.
• From backup — browse existing backups and select VMs under backup jobs.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the Select VMs window: enter an object’s name or a
part of it and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
To add VMs to the list, you can also use the search field at the top of the window:
1. Enter a VM name or a part of it in the search field and Veeam Backup & Replication will search existing
backups for the specified VM and display matching results.
3. If the necessary VM is not found, click the Show more link to browse existing backups and choose the
necessary VM.
To remove a VM from the list, select it and click Remove on the right.
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Step 3. Select Restore Point
You can select the restore point for the VM.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest valid restore point to recover a VM. However, you can
restore a VM to an earlier state. If you have chosen to restore multiple VMs, you can select a different restore
point for every VM specifically.
2. In the Restore Points window, select the restore point that must be used to recover the VM.
In the Loca tion column, you can view a name of a backup repository where a restore point resides.
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Step 4. Select Restore Mode
At the Restore Mode step of the wizard, choose the necessary restore mode and backup proxy for VM data
transport:
o Select Restore to original location if you want to restore the VMs with initial settings and to the
original location. If this option is selected, you will immediately pass to the Summary step of the
wizard.
o Select Restore to a new location, or with different settings if you want to restore the VMs to a
different location and/or with different settings (such as VM location, network settings, fast
provisioning settings and so on). If this option is selected, the vCloud Full VM Restore wizard will
include additional steps for customizing VM settings.
2. [For VM restore to the original location] Select the Quick rollback check box if you want to use
incremental restore for the VMs. Veeam Backup & Replication will use CBT to get data blocks that are
necessary to revert the VMs to an earlier point in time, and will restore only these data blocks from the
backup. Quick rollback significantly reduces the restore time and has little impact on the production
environment.
It is recommended that you enable this option if you restore the VMs after a problem that occurred at the
level of the VM guest OS: for example, there has been an application error or a user has accidentally
deleted a file on the VM guest OS. Do not enable this option if the problem has occurred at the VM
hardware level, storage level or due to a power loss.
3. Click the P ick proxy to use link to select backup proxies over which VM data must be transported to the
source datastore. You can assign backup proxies explicitly or instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to
automatically select backup proxies.
o If you choose Automatic selection, Veeam Backup & Replication will detect backup proxies that are
connected to the source datastore and will automatically assign optimal proxy resources for
processing VM data.
During the restore process, VMs are processed simultaneously. Veeam Backup & Replication checks
available backup proxies. If more than one backup proxy is available, Veeam Backup & Replication
analyzes transport modes that the backup proxies can use for writing data to target, current workload
on these backup proxies, and selects the most appropriate resources for VMs processing.
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o If you choose Use the selected backup proxy servers only, you can explicitly select backup proxies
that will be used for restore. It is recommended that you select at least two proxies to ensure that
VMs are recovered should one of backup proxies fail or lose its connectivity to the source datastore
during restore.
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Step 5. Select VM Location
The Location step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings for the
restored VMs.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores the VM to its original location. To restore the VM to a different
location:
2. From the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy, choose a vApp in which the restored VM must be registered.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter the vApp name or a part of
it and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
2. In the Cha nge Name window, enter a new name explicitly or specify a change name rule by adding a prefix
and/or suffix to the original VM name.
3. You can also change VM names directly in the list: select a VM, click the New Name field and enter the
name to be assigned to the recovered VM.
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Step 6. Select Destination Network
The VM Network step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the location and settings of the
restored VMs.
2. The Select Network window displays all networks that are configured for the destination vApp. From the
list of available networks, choose a network to which the restored VM must have access upon restore.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter a network name or a part of
it and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
To prevent the restored VM from accessing any network, select it in the list and click Disconnected.
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Step 7. Select Template to Link
The Fa st Provisioning step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the settings of the restored
VMs.
To select a VM template:
2. From the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy, choose a template to which the restored VM must be linked.
To facilitate selection, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter a VM template name or a
part of it and click the Sta rt search button on the right or press [Enter] on the keyboard.
If you want to disable fast provisioning for the VM and restore it as a regular VM, select the VM in the list and
click Disable.
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Step 8. Select Storage Policy and Datastores
The Da tastores step of the wizard is available if you have chosen to change the settings of the restored VMs.
2. In the displayed window, select the necessary policy for the VM.
If you have selected to disable fast provisioning at the previous step of the wizard, you mus t select a datastore
on which disks of the restored VM will be placed.
2. In the displayed window, select the datastore on which the VM disks must be located.
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Step 9. Specify Secure Restore Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan VM data with antivirus software
before restoring the VM into a vApp. For more information on secure restore, see Secure Restore.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Sca n the restored machine for malware prior to
p erforming the recovery check box.
2. Select which action Veeam Backup & Replication will take if the antivirus software finds a virus threat:
o P roceed with recovery but disable network adapters. Select this action if you want to restore the VM
with disabled network adapters (NICs).
o Ab ort VM recovery. Select this action if you want to cancel the restore session.
3. Select the Sca n the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue the VM data
scan after the first malware is found. For information on how to view results of the malware scan, see
Viewing Malware Scan Results.
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Step 10. Specify Restore Reason
At the Rea son step of the wizard, enter a reason for restoring the selected VMs. The information you provide
will be saved in the session history and you can reference it later.
TIP
If you do not want to display the Rea son step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this page
again check box.
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Step 11. Verify Recovery Settings and Finish Working with
Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, specify additional settings for VMs restore:
1. If you want to start the restored VMs, select the P ower on VM after restoring check box.
2. Check the settings for VMs restore and click Finish. Veeam Backup & Replication will recover the VMs in
the specified destination.
NOTE
Veeam Backup & Replication checks the lease term for the restored VMs. In case the lease period has
expired, the lease will be automatically updated.
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Restoring Entire VMs into vSphere Infrastructure
You can restore VMware Cloud Director VMs from the backup to the VMware vSphere infrastructure.
During restore, Veeam Backup & Replication neglects the vApp metadata saved to the backup file and performs
a regular entire VM restore process. The VM is restored to the vCenter Server or ESXi host and is not registered
in VMware Cloud Director. Cloud Director-specific features such as fast provisioning are not supported for such
type of restore.
• Open the Home view, in the inventory pane select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup, select the VMs you want to restore and click E ntire VM > VMware vSphere on the ribbon.
• Open the Inventory view. In the inventory pane, expand the VMware Cloud Director hierarchy and select
the vCenter Server. In the working area, right-click the VM you want to restore and select Restore entire
VM > VMware vSphere.
Entire VM restore of VMware Cloud Director VMs does not differ from entire VM restore of regular VMware VMs.
For more information, see Performing Entire VM Restore.
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Restoring VM Files
The process of VM files restore for VMware Cloud Director VMs does not differ from that for regular VMware
VMs. For more information, see Restoring VM Files.
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Restoring VM Hard Disks
The process of VM hard disks restore for VMware Cloud Director VMs does not differ f rom that for regular
VMware VMs. For more information, see Restoring Virtual Disks.
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Restoring VM Guest OS Files
The process of VM guest files restore for VMware Cloud Director VMs does not differ from that for regular
VMware VMs. For more information, see Restoring VM Guest OS Files (FAT, NTFS or ReFS) and Restoring VM
Guest OS Files (Multi-OS).
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VMware Cloud on AWS Support
Veeam provides support for VMware Cloud on AWS. With Veeam Backup & Replication, you can administer
backup, replication and restore operations in VMware Cloud on AWS environments.
Deployment
To perform data protection and disaster recovery tasks in VMware Cloud on AWS, consider the following
recommendations and requirements on the backup infrastructure deployment:
• Ba ckup Server: it is recommended to deploy Veeam backup server in the VMware Cloud on AWS
environment. The machine must run Microsoft Windows.
• Ba ckup Proxy: you must deploy a backup proxy in the VMware Cloud on AWS environment. The machine
must run Microsoft Windows. You can assign the role of the backup proxy to a dedicated VM or to the
backup server.
To provide sufficient resources, deploy at least one backup proxy per each SDDC cluster in the VMware
Cloud on AWS. This is required for VMware Cloud on AWS specific Hot-Add processing.
• Ba ckup Repository: it is recommended to use a backup repository created outside of the VMware Cloud on
AWS environment, for example, on the Amazon EC2 server. This type of deployment allows for efficient
data transfer over the fast ENI connection used by VMware to communicate with AWS.
Alternatively, you can store backups in a Veeam backup repository in the on-premises VMware
environment or use Veeam Cloud Connect to transfer backups to the cloud. Note that in this scenario you
may be charged additional fee for the traffic from VMware Cloud on AWS to the internet.
To add VMware Cloud on AWS to the backup infrastructure, follow the same steps as described in the Adding
VMware vSphere Servers section.
Simple Deployment
Simple deployment is preferable for VMware Cloud on AWS environments with low traffic load. Per this
deployment type, you can install the backup server and the backup proxy on the same VM.
In a simple VMware Cloud on AWS deployment the backup infrastructure includes the following components:
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• Veeam backup repository: an EC2 instance in AWS
Advanced Deployment
Advanced deployment is intended for large-scale VMware Cloud on AWS environments with a large number of
backup and replication jobs. Per this deployment type, it is recommended to install several backup proxies on
dedicated VMs to move the workload from the backup server.
In an advanced VMware Cloud on AWS deployment the backup infrastructure includes the following
components:
• Several Veeam backup proxies for better performance and workload distribution
To increase scalability and optimize performance in an advanced deployment, follow the recommendations
below:
• Scale accordingly CPU and RAM resources of the EC2 insta nce used as a backup repository. Make sure it
has enough free space for storing backups.
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Mind that transferring backups over the internet may require paying additional fees. As a cost -effective
alternative, you can store backups in a different AWS geographical location. In this ca se, backup copies are
transferred through the AWS backbone. Using such AWS network solution provides data transfer at lower
latency and cost when compared to the public internet.
To perform backup copy to a different AWS location, the backup infrastructure must contain the following
components:
• Veeam backup repository for backup copy: an EC2 instance in another AWS location
TIP
As an off-site backup solution, you can copy backups to virtual tapes and store them in Amazon S3/Glacier
cloud storage. In this case, AWS Storage Gateway performs the role of a Virtual Tape Library (VTL).
Note that capacity tier is available only as part of scale-out backup repository. For more information on capacity
tier, see Capacity Tier.
To transfer backup files to the capacity tier, the backup infrastructure must contain the following components:
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• A configured scale-out backup repository with an object storage added as a capacity extent
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Tape Devices Support
Veeam provides native tape support that is fully integrated into Veeam Backup & Replication. You can
administer all operations on tapes from your Veeam console.
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NAS Backup
With Veeam Backup & Replication you can easily back up and restore content of various NAS file shares.
To protect your NAS file shares, you can use your existing Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure. Just
configure the following components:
• File share
• Backup proxy
• Cache repository
• Storage repositories
For system requirements for NAS backup components, see System Requirements.
To learn how NAS backup components interact during file share backup, see How File Share Backup Works.
File Share
A file share is a storage device or data source available to multiple hosts through a computer network.
File share backup jobs in Veeam Backup & Replication can read data from the following sources:
• NFS path
• VSS snapshot
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NOTE
• Reading from VSS snapshots on SMB shares is available only under certain conditions, listed in this
Veeam KB article.
• Reading from VSS snapshots on DFS shares is not supported.
To learn how to add NAS file shares to the backup infrastructure, see Adding File Share.
Backup Proxy
A backup proxy is an architecture component that sits between the file share and other components of the
backup infrastructure. The backup proxy operates as a data mover that transfers data between the source file
share and the backup repository. The backup proxy processes jobs and delivers backup and restore traffic.
You can assign the role of a backup proxy to any Windows-managed server added to your
Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure. By default, this role is assigned to the backup server. But this option
is sufficient only for small installations where all components are located in the same network segment. For
larger installations with larger workload, assign the role of a backup proxy to a dedicated server, as described in
Adding Backup Proxy. After that, choose this backup proxy to process the backup traffic from file shares, as
described in Adding NFS File Share and Adding SMB File Share.
To optimize performance of several concurrent tasks, you can use several backup proxies. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will distribute the backup or restore workload between available backup proxies on
per-task basis, taking into account proxy connectivity and their current load. You can deploy backup proxies in
the primary site or in remote sites. Mind that using a remote backup proxy may reduce backup performance and
is not recommended. To minimize the network load during backup, locate the backup proxy closer to the source
file share in the computer network: at the best they should be one hop away from each other.
Cache Repository
A cache repository is a storage location where Veeam Backup & Replication keeps temporary metadata and uses
it to reduce the load on the file share during the backup procedure. The cache repository keeps track of all
objects that have changed between each backup session. This allows performing incremental backups from the
file share super fast and very efficiently.
You can assign the role of a cache repository to a simple backup repository added to the
Veeam Backup & Replication infrastructure. To assign this role, select the backup repository as a cache
repository, as described in Specify File Share Processing Settings.
To minimize the network load during backup, locate the cache repository closer to the backup proxy in the
computer network: at the best, they should be located on one machine.
Storage Repositories
A b a ckup repository is a main storage location where Veeam Backup & Replication keeps all versions of backed
up files for the configured period and metadata files. Backups stored in the backup repository can be used to
quickly restore the entire file share to the state as of a specific restore p oint.
[Optional] If you want to retain specific files for a longer period of time, you can use cheaper devices for archive
purposes. To enable file archiving, configure Veeam Backup & Replication to move backup files and metadata
files from the backup repository to an a rchive repository. By default, usage of the archive repository is disabled
and, after the retention period for the backup repository is over, backup files are deleted.
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[Optional] If you want to store a copy of the file share backup in a different r epository, you can configure a
secondary repository where Veeam Backup & Replication will copy all backups created in the backup repository.
The secondary repository can have its own retention policy and encryption settings. By default, no secondary
repository is configured.
The table below describes which roles can be assigned to different storage types.
Secondary
Storage Type Ba ckup Repository Archive Repository
Rep ository
Linux server
NFS share
ExaGrid
HPE StoreOnce 2
Quantum DXi
Infinidat InfiniGuard
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Secondary
Storage Type Ba ckup Repository Archive Repository
Rep ository
1
If you use a Dell PowerScale (formerly Isilon) storage system in the CIF S Share Access mode, make sure that you have
assigned your service account to the built-in Bac kupAdmin role within PowerScale. Otherwise, the access to the share will be
denied.
2
If you plan to use HPE StoreOnce storage appliances, mind the following recommendations for optimal performance:
• A StoreOnce system can have multiple Catalyst stores, and large backup loads (exceeding 1PB) should be spread
across more than one Catalyst store on the same StoreOnce system.
• Do not include Catalyst stores in a SOBR intended for NAS backups. This will reduce the global deduplication of the
StoreOnce system.
3
An object storage repository added as a capacity tier in a scale-out backup repository cannot be used for storing NAS
backups. To archive NAS backup files to an object storage repository, assign the object storage repository as an archive
repository when you create a file share backup job.
4
SOBR consisting of object storage repositories cannot be used as a target backup repository for file share backup jobs.
5
Mind the following limitations:
• Amazon S3 Glacier and Azure Blob Storage Archive Tier are not supported for NAS backup.
• Amazon S3 Snowball Edge and Azure Databox are not supported as archive repositories for NAS backup, but you can
use them as backup repositories, secondary repositories, or targets for copying file share backups.
You can create two object storage repositories pointing to the same cloud folder/bucket and use these repositories for
storing both NAS backups and Capacity Tier backups at the same time: one object storage repository will be used to store
NAS backups, the other one – to store virtual and physical machine backups as a capacity tier in a single SOBR. However,
these object storage repositories (mapped to the same cloud folder) must not be used across multiple
Veeam Backup & Replication servers for the same purposes as it leads to unpredictable system behavior and inevitable data
loss.
• Configure the backup repository and the archive repository as described in Define Target Backup Storage
Settings.
If the required storage is not added as a backup repository in your Veeam Backup & Replication Backup
Infrastructure, add it as described in Adding Backup Repositories.
When you run the file share backup job for the first time, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a full backup for
all files and folders of the file share. During subsequent backup job sessions, Veeam Backup & Replication copies
only files and folders that have changed since the last backup job session.
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Although the file share backup job first creates a full backup and afterwards incremental backups,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not create a separate file for each backup job run as it does during VM backup.
Instead of this, it consistently creates multiple VBLOB files accompanied by metadata files that track all the
changes on the file share.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the following structure for storing the file share backup data in the backup
repository:
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Fold er/File Description
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Fold er/File Description
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How File Share Backup Works
Veeam Backup & Replication performs file share backup to the backup storage in the following way:
1. When a new backup job session starts, Veeam Backup & Replication assigns a backup proxy to process the
file share data.
2. The backup proxy enumerates files and folders on the file share and creates a cyclic redundancy check
(CRC) tree.
3. The backup proxy transfers the CRC tree to the cache repository.
When the cache repository receives a new CRC tree structure from the proxy, it compares it with the CRC
tree created during the previous run of the backup session. If any files or folders of the file share have
changed since the previous backup session run, the cache repository instructs the backup proxy to start
reading changed data from the source file share.
5. The backup proxy reads new data from the file share.
6. The backup proxy creates data packages and transfers them to the target backup repository.
Data packages comprise backup data files (each 64 Mb in size) and metadata files that contain names and
versions of backup files and allocation of data in backup files.
7. Veeam Backup & Replication checks file versions in the backup repository against retention settings and
moves backup data from the backup repository to the archive repository if necessary.
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NAS Backup Retention Scenarios
There can be a number of backup retention scenarios depending on the configuration of backup and archive
repositories. Below you can find example cases that illustrate NAS backup retention with different settings.
Ca se 1
File version 1 always remains in the backup repository and is not moved to the archive repository even if this
behavior is enabled and configured in the retention policy settings.
Ca se 2
Retention for the backup repository is set to 5 days. No archive repository is configured. The file changes once a
day. The backup is performed once a day.
On day 6, file version 6 is added to the backup repository, file version 1 is deleted by retention.
Ca se 3
Retention for the backup repository is set to 3 days. The file changes every hour. The backup is performed 2
times a day.
On day 4, versions 7 and 8 are added to the backup repository, file versions 1 and 2 added to the backup
repository on day 1 are deleted by retention.
Ca se 4
Retention for the backup repository is set to 3 days. The file changes once a day.
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On day 3, the source file is deleted from the source share, the backup repository considers file version created
on this day as deleted.
On day 4, the backup repository still detects the file as deleted, file version 1 is deleted from the backup
repository by retention.
On day 5, the backup repository still detects the file as deleted, file version 2 is deleted from the backup
repository by retention.
Thus, no file versions are stored in the backup repository for this file any longer.
Ca se 5
Retention for the backup repository is set to 5 days. The archive repository is enabled with default settings. The
file changes every day. The backup is performed once a day.
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On day 6, file version 6 is added to the backup repository, file version 1 is moved to the archive repository by
retention.
Ca se 6
Retention for the backup repository is set to 3 days. The archive repository is enabled with DOCX files to be
excluded from archiving. The files change once a day. The backup is performed once a day.
On day 4, file versions created on day 1 are removed from the backup repository. File version 1 for DOCX file is
deleted, file version 1 for XLSX file (non-DOCX) is moved to the archive repository.
Ca se 7
Retention for the backup repository is set to 4 days. The archive repository is enabled and configured to keep 3
versions of active files and 2 versions of deleted files.
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On day 8, file version 8 is added to the backup repository, file version 4 is moved from the backup repository to
the archive repository to keep file versions for 4 days, file version 1 is deleted from the archive repository to
keep 3 file versions of the active file (versions 2, 3, 4).
On day 9, the file is removed from the source, file version 9 (denoting the missing file) is added to the backup
repository, file version 5 is moved from the backup repository to the archive repository, file versions 2 and 3 are
deleted from the archive repository to keep 2 file versions of the deleted file (versions 4 and 5).
On day 10 and 11, file versions 6 and 7 are successively moved from the backup repository to the archive
repository. File versions 4 and 5 are deleted from the archive rep ository.
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On day 12, file version 8 (the last file version) is moved from the backup repository to the archive repository, file
version 6 is deleted from the archive repository. After that, versions 7 and 8 are stored in the archive repository
further on.
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Object Storage as NAS Backup Repository
How File Share Backup to Object Storage Repository Works
You can select an object storage repository added in your backup infrastructure as a backup repository for
storing NAS backups.
• Direct. In this mode, the file share backup proxy writes directly to the object storage. This connection type
is used, for example, for backup and restore sessions when your target object storage repository is located
in your local infrastructure.
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• Through gateway servers. In this mode, the backup server automatically selects the most suitable gateway
server from the preconfigured list. This connection type is used, for example, for backup copy sessions
when the source backup is stored on an SMB or NFS share, or if the target object storage repository is a
cloud repository.
The connection type is configured at the Account step of the New Object Storage Repository wizard.
The main peculiarity of storing NAS backups in an object storage repository is keeping a copy of the metadata in
the object storage next to the data. The main metadata is stored in the cache repository. This metadata is active:
it is actively used during backup, restore, merge, transform, or health check operations. All the changes in the
active metadata is then replicated to the metadata copy.
The metadata copy is self-sufficient: if anything happens to the source file share and the cache repository, you
still will be able to restore data from the backup stored in the object storage repository.
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Helper Appliance in NAS Backup
NAS backup is forever forward incremental and it does not create periodic full backups. To avoid constantly
downloading and uploading data for performing transform and health check operations, you can configure a
helper appliance. To learn how to configure the helper appliance, see the Mount Server step in Adding S3
Compatible Object Storage, Adding Amazon S3 Storage, Adding Google Cloud Object Storage, Adding IBM Cloud
Object Storage, Adding Azure Blob Storage, Adding Wasabi Cloud Object Storage.
• Atta ch manually migrated data. You can manually copy metadata from the old cache repository to a new
one. After that, when changing the cache repository for the file share, click Attach in the displayed
window.
• Cop y metadata from the previous cache repository. If you click Cop y when changing the cache repository
for the file share, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically copy all metadata from the old cache
repository to a new one.
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• Download metadata from the archive repository. If the old cache repository is not available, you can click
Download when changing the cache repository for the file share to automatically download all metadata
to a new cache repository.
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NAS Backups in Immutable Repositories
When creating NAS backups in the backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication also creates a copy of
metadata in the same repository next to the data. Data in immutable repositories is temporarily locked and
cannot be changed or removed. When NAS backups are stored in the immutable repository, the copy of
metadata that is stored next to the data is also immutable and cannot be changed till the immutability period
ends. However, metadata stored on the cache repository changes actively and keeps the up -to-date state of the
NAS backup. Once a month, Veeam Backup & Replication uses metadata copy files created during this month to
create a new locked metadata flat file.
After the immutability period for the metadata copy files, which were already transformed into the metadata
flat file, ends, Veeam Backup & Replication removes them from the object storage repository. The default
immutability period is 30 days. But this period may be increased for metadata copy files if this data is required
to restore the newer restore point.
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Scale-Out Repository as NAS Backup Repository
If you use a scale-out backup repository as a backup repository for storing NAS backups, by default
Veeam Backup & Replication evenly distributes backup data among all the performance extents added to this
repository. The NAS backup data is accompanied by the meta data files. To provide an opportunity to restore
data written to extents remaining available in case one or two of other extents are unavailable,
Veeam Backup & Replication triplicates metadata when writing it to extents. Thus, every extent keeps metadata
for data stored on this extent (in folder meta) and replica of metadata for data stored on adjacent extents (in
folder metabackup). Even if two of three adjacent extents are lost, you can restore NAS backup data stored on
the third extent.
NOTE
Mind the following when storing NAS backups on a scale-out backup repository:
• The metadata redundancy approach protects against two extents out of three being completely lost.
• The metadata redundancy approach allows protecting metadata, not data.
• The backup file placement policy set for the scale-out backup repository, as described in Backup File
Placement, is ignored.
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Scale-Out Repository with Extents in Metadata
and Data Roles
When you use a standalone repository for storing NAS backups, it stores both data and metadata. But when you
plan to use a scale-out repository, you can configure its performance extents to act as data extents or as
metadata extents. Thus, you can store metadata separate from the backup data.
NOTE
We strongly recommend differentiating metadata and data roles for extents, when you plan to create a
scale-out backup repository that will consist of a fast SSD storage and slow deduplicating storage
appliances (Dell Data Domain, ExaGrid, HPE StoreOnce, Quantum DXi). In this case, you can set the
metadata role to the SSD storage and the data role to deduplicating storage appliances.
Most often, when performing restore, merge, transform operations, Veeam Backup & Replication interacts with
metadata rather than with the backup data. Obviously, processing metadata stored on the SSD is faster and
more efficient than accessing large data arrays stored on a slow storage.
IMP ORTANT
Mind the following when assigning roles to extents in a scale-out backup repository:
• An extent with the metadata role can be used for storing NAS backup jobs metadata only. However,
extents with the data role can be used by any job.
• Make sure that you assign both roles to extents in a scale-out repository. If an extent with one of
the roles is missing, Veeam Backup & Replication cannot store backups on this scale-out repository.
NOTE
If the data role is assigned to an extent, Veeam Backup & Replication will also copy replica of metadata to
this extent to provide the metadata redundancy. While the original metadata is available,
Veeam Backup & Replication does not use the replica of metadata on data extents. If by some reason
metadata stored on metadata extents is corrupted or lost, to restore it Veeam Backup & Replication will
use the replica of metadata stored on data extents.
To assign the metadata or data role to extents in a scale-out backup repository, use the Set-
VBRRepositoryExtent cmdlet, as described in the Veeam PowerShell Reference. If previously the role was
not assigned to the extents for NAS backup or you changed the assigned role, during the next run of the NAS
backup job that writes backups to this scale-out repository, Veeam Backup & Replication will move metadata to
the metadata extent, data — to the data extents.
For example, if you already have an existing backup and want to move its metadata to a specific extent that will
operate as a metadata only extent, do the following:
1. Make sure that your license allows using a scale-out backup repository with object storage support. For
more information, see Viewing License Information and Veeam Backup & Replication Feature Comparison.
2. Create a scale-out backup repository with the following extents: one extent that currently stores the
backup (its data and metadata), another extent that will store metadata of the backup. Usually, it is a fast
storage, for example, SSD-based. Let us assume that these extents are named “Backup Repository 1” and
"NAS Backup Repository on SSD" respectively.
3. Run the Set-VBRRepositoryExtent cmdlet to assign the data role to the “Backup Repository 1” extent
and the metadata role to the "NAS Backup Repository on SSD" extent.
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Set-VBRRepositoryExtent –Extent “NAS Backup Repository on SSD” -Metadata
Set-VBRRepositoryExtent –Extent “Backup Repository 1” –Data
4. Run the NAS backup job and make sure that the metadata of the backup was moved to the metadata
extent: the backup job session displays a line notifying of that.
To view the roles of the extents in a scale-out backup repository, do either of the following:
• Check the role of each extent (the Role column) in the list of extents under the certain scale-out
repository in the Ba ckup Infrastructure view.
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NAS Backup Integration with Storage Systems
There are two approaches in backing up file shares residing on enterprise NAS storage systems.
1. Add the storage system as an NFS file share to the inventory, as described in Adding NFS File Share, or as
an SMB fie share, as described in Adding SMB File Share. As a file share path, specify the root server
folder.
When adding the storage system in this way, you cannot configure what containers, volumes or file shares
will be available for further protection. Therefore, to configure them, you must carefully configure
inclusion/exclusion settings when creating a file share backup job.
Mind that servers accessed by NFS (with file shares and folders within them) and servers accessed by SMB
(with file shares and folders within them) are added to the inventory separately. For example, if the
storage system IP address is 173.25.136.64, add an NFS share for this server by specifying its root folder as
173.25.136.64:/, and add an SMB share for this server by specifying its root folder as
\\173.25.136.64.
NOTE
If you add a root server folder as a source for protection, hidden and admin file shares are skipped
from processing by default. You can enable their processing with registry keys. For more
information, contact Veeam Customer Support.
2. Create a file share backup job, as described in Creating File Share Backup Jobs. As a source to protect, you
can select the following entities:
o whole server
To protect all file shares residing on one server, you must add to the file share backup job both NFS and
SMB shares previously added to the inventory.
3. Configure what files and folders must be included in or excluded from processing by the file share backup
job. For more information on how to include/exclude files and folders from processing, see Select Files
and Folders to Back Up.
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NOTE
If you used to protect NFS and SMB file shares residing on the enterprise storage system and added as file
shares in inventory, and now you want to protect them using benefits of NAS filer, you can convert backups
created for existing SMB or NFS shares into the format of NAS filer shares . For more information, see
Converting Backups from SMB or NFS Shares to NAS Filer Shares.
The procedure of configuring the file share protection in this case will look as follows:
1. Add the storage system to the backup infrastructure, as described in Adding NetApp Data ONTAP, Adding
Lenovo ThinkSystem DM Series, Adding Dell PowerScale (formerly Isilon), or Adding Nutanix Files Storage,
depending on the type of the NAS system you use.
Depending on storage settings, the IP address for accessing the storage system can differ from one used
for accessing it as a server where file shares reside. You can also use the DNS name of the server.
When adding the storage system, make sure that you do not forget to perform the following steps:
a. Enable the NAS filer role for the added storage system.
b. Specify what protocols the storage should use as a NAS filer: NFS and/or SMB. Only file shares using
the selected protocols will be displayed when you add the storage as a NAS filer and thus available for
protection.
c. Select storage volumes to analyze for the presence of newly added file shares. You can either
configure Veeam Backup & Replication to analyze all storage volumes, or exclude some volumes from
processing, or specify only certain volumes that will be processed. Only file shares on the selected
storage volumes will be displayed when you add the storage as a NAS filer and thus available for
protection.
At this step, you must carefully consider what file shares on what volumes must be protected and via what
protocols. Limiting the number of volumes reduces the storage load.
NOTE
Hidden and admin file shares on storage systems added as NAS filers are skipped from processing by
default. You can enable their processing with a registry key. For more information, contact Veeam
Customer Support.
2. Add the configured storage system as a NAS filer to the inventory, as described in Adding Enterprise NAS
System Share.
3. Create a file share backup job, as described in Creating File Share Backup Jobs. As a source to protect, you
can select the following entities:
o whole storage
o container (for Dell PowerScale — access zone, for NetApp Data ONTAP — SVM, for Nutanix Files
Storage — not applied)
o volume
o file share
You cannot specify separate folders within file shares. Therefore, to configure files and folders to be
protected, you must properly configure inclusion/exclusion settings.
4. Configure what files and folders must be included in or excluded from processing by the fil e share backup
job. For more information on how to include/exclude files and folders from processing, see Select Files
and Folders to Back Up.
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Adding File Share
You must add to the backup infrastructure file shares that you plan to use as sources for backup.
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Adding Managed Server File Share
Before you add a Windows- or Linux-managed server as a file share to the inventory of the virtual infrastructure,
mind the following:
• If you plan to use a devoted cache repository, make sure it is added in Ba ckup Infrastructure.
• Data from managed server file shares are transferred directly to the repository without a proxy server.
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Step 1. Launch New File Share Wizard
To launch the New File Share wizard:
o In the inventory pane, right-click the File Shares node and select Ad d File Share.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share on the ribbon.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share in the working area.
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Step 2. Add Managed Server as File Server
At the File Server step of the wizard, choose the server, which you want to use as a file share server. Select it
from the Ma naged Server drop-down list.
NOTE
If you plan not only to back up the Linux-managed file share, but also to restore files to it, use an account
with root access when adding the server to the backup infrastructure.
If the drop-down list does not display the required server, you must add it to the backup infrastructure. To add
the server, do the following:
1. Click Ad d New.
3. Add a new Windows or Linux server to the backup infrastructure as described in Adding Microsoft
Windows Servers and Adding Linux Servers.
4. Select the newly added server from the Ma naged Server drop-down list.
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Step 3. Specify File Share Processing Settings
At the P rocessing step of the wizard, define file share processing settings:
1. From the Ca che repository drop-down list, select a cache repository where temporary cache files must be
stored. This repository must be located as close to the source file share as possible.
If you change the cache repository for an existing file share whose backups are stored in object storage,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to either attach migrated metadata, copy metadata from the
previous cache repository, or download metadata manually from the archive repository. For more
information on storing NAS backups in the object storage and changing the cache repository, see Object
Storage as NAS Backup Repository.
2. Use the Ba ckup I/O control slider to define how fast the backup proxy can read data from the source file
share. This setting is based on the number of parallel threads that can be used by the proxy configured for
processing the file share. If resources of your NAS device are limited, it is recommended that you select
the Lower impact option. If your NAS device is powerful enough, select the Fa ster backup option.
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Step 4. Review Components to Install
At the Review step of the wizard, review what Veeam Backup & Replication components are already installed on
the server and click Ap p ly to start installation of missing components.
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Step 5. Apply File Share Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all required
components. Click Nex t to complete the procedure of the file share role assignment to the managed file server.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the file server added as a file share and click Finish to exit
the wizard.
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Adding Enterprise Storage System as NAS Filer
Before you add an enterprise storage system as a NAS filer to the inventory of the virtual infrastructure, check
the following prerequisites:
• If you plan to use a devoted backup proxy server or cache repository, make sure these components are
added in Backup Infrastructure.
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Step 1. Launch New File Share Wizard
To launch the New File Share wizard:
o In the inventory pane, right-click the File Shares node and select Ad d File Share.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share on the ribbon.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share in the working area.
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Step 2. Select NAS Device
At the NAS Filer step of the wizard, choose the NAS device, which you want to use as a NAS filer where
protected file shares reside.
1. Select the required NAS device from the Select NAS filer drop-down list.
If the drop-down list does not display the required device, you must add it to the storage infrastructure.
To add the NAS device, click Ad d New and follow the instructions described in Adding NetApp Data
ONTAP, Adding Lenovo ThinkSystem DM Series, Adding Dell PowerScale, or Adding Nutanix Files Storage,
depending on the type of the storage system you use.
2. If you must specify user credentials to access the storage system, select the Use the following account to
a ccess the NAS filer check box. From the Credentials drop-down list, select a credentials record for a user
account that has Full Control permissions on the storage system.
[For Nutanix Files Storage] When adding a Nutanix Files Storage as a NAS filer, use credentials of an AD
user account with administrator privileges added as a file server admin or backup admin. Otherwise,
Veeam Backup & Replication cannot access SMB file shares.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link at the bottom of the list or
click Ad d on the right to add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
• The Dell PowerScale system must be licensed for SnapshotIQ. Otherwise NAS integration will not work.
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• The PowerScale service account is used to add the Dell PowerScale system to
Veeam Backup & Replication, as described in the Adding Dell PowerScale section of the Integration with
Storage Systems Guide. This account is used only for registering the storage system in the backup
infrastructure and further storage rescans. You cannot use it for NAS file share backup and restore.
• We recommend that you create a custom Veea mStorageIntegration role to group all necessary privileges.
This role must be created in the System access zone. For more information on access zones, see the Dell
documentation.
ISI_PRIV_LOGIN_PAPI True Used to log in to the Platform API and the web administration
interface.
ISI_PRIV_JOB_ENGINE False Used for array Change File Tracking report scheduling for
R/W changelist API call.
You can use the following command to check privileges added to the Veea mStorageIntegration role:
Make sure that you make the service account to be used for NAS integration a member of the
VeeamStorageIntegration role.
• To enable backup and restore of SMB file shares, additionally do the following:
o Grant minimum read access to SMB file shares for the account that will be used for NAS integration.
That will allow backing up SMB file shares.
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o Grant "run as root" access to SMB file shares for the account that will be used for NAS integration.
That will allow restoring SMB file shares.
Mind that the PowerScale BackupAdmin role is not enough for backup and restore. It is mainly used for
SMB access and enables backup and restore of files from /ifs. It does not propagate down to subfolders
and therefore cannot be used to backup anything, but the system access zone.
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Step 3. Specify File Share Processing Settings
At the P rocessing step of the wizard, define file share processing settings:
1. From the Ca che repository drop-down list, select a cache repository where temporary cache files must be
stored. This repository must be located as close to the NAS filer with file shares as possible.
NOTE
Mind that you cannot use a Linux-based server as a cache repository to process content of the
protected shares on enterprise storage systems if you enable the Use native changed files tracking
option.
If you change the cache repository for an existing file share whose backups are stored in object storage,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to either attach migrated metadata, copy metadata from the
previous cache repository, or download metadata manually from the archive repository. For more
information on storing NAS backups in the object storage and changing the cache re pository, see Object
Storage as NAS Backup Repository.
2. Use the Ba ckup I/O control slider to define how fast the backup proxy can read data from the source file
share. This setting is based on the number of parallel threads that can be used by the proxy configured for
processing the file shares on the NAS filer. If resources of your storage system are limited, it is
recommended that you select the Lower impact option. If your storage system is powerful enough, select
the Fa ster backup option.
3. [For Dell PowerScale (formerly Isilon) and Nutanix Files] Select the Use native changed files tracking
check box if you want to use the file change tracking technology provided by the storage system
manufacturer.
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Step 4. Apply File Share Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all required
components. Click Nex t to complete the procedure of adding the storage system as a NAS filer.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the storage system added as a NAS filer and click Finish to
ex it the wizard.
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Adding NFS File Share
Before you add an NFS file share to the inventory of the virtual infrastructure, check the following prerequisites:
• If you plan to use a devoted backup proxy server or cache repository, make sure these components are
added in Backup Infrastructure.
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Step 1. Launch New File Share Wizard
To launch the New File Share wizard:
o In the inventory pane, right-click the File Shares node and select Ad d File Share.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share on the ribbon.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share in the working area.
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Step 2. Specify Path to NFS File Share
At the NFS File Share step of the wizard, specify the path to an NFS file share in the server:/folder format.
You can add the root server folder in the server:/ format to protect all NFS file shares residing on this server.
You can specify the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the server. Note that you can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6
communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
After that, create a single file share backup job to protect the added server, as described in Creating File Share
Backup Jobs. Then all NFS file shares added on this server will be automatically processed with the file share
backup job and protected. If you previously had several separate non-root shared folders residing on the same
server and want to switch to using a single root shared folder to cover the same shares, you do not have to run
full backups to update data of protected shares. Instead, you can convert existing backups and update existing
file share backup jobs to protect single root shared folders comprising all other non-root shared folders residing
on the same server. To learn more about the conversion, see Converting Backups from Non-Root to Root Shared
Folders. Perform the conversion with extreme caution.
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Step 3. Specify Advanced NFS File Share Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to back up data from native storage snapshots. During backup
jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication will read data of shared files and folders from snapshots, which speeds up
backup operations and improves RPOs.
To define if Veeam Backup & Replication will use snapshots for backups:
o To ignore the snapshot functionality, select Ba ck up directly from the file share.
Veeam Backup & Replication will ignore locked files and folders. When creating a backup job, you can
configure notifications to list files and folders that are skipped during the backup procedure. For more
information see Notification Settings.
o To back up files from the native storage snapshot, select Ba ckup from a native storage snapshot at
the following path and specify the path in the server:/snapshotfolder/snapshotname format to the
snapshot stored on the NFS file share. You can specify the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the server. Note
that you can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
If you select this option, you can additionally use custom scripts written by you, for example, to
create a snapshot before the backup and remove it after the backup. You can define these scripts
when creating a new file share backup job, as described in Script Settings.
NOTE
Mind that Veeam Backup & Replication does not take snapshots itself, but it can use a snapshot
taken by the storage system.
File share backup jobs do not trigger the storage snapshot creation and deletion automatically. You
can specify the folder where the storage snapshot is stored. In this case file share backup jobs can
access this folder and read data from the storage snapshot.
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3. Select Fa ilover to direct backup if a snapshot is not available if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to
read data for backup directly from the file share when the snapshot is unavailable. If you do not select the
option and the snapshot is unavailable, the file share backup job will stop with a failure.
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Step 4. Specify File Share Processing Settings
At the P rocessing step of the wizard, do the following:
1. Click Choose next to the Ba ckup proxy field to select a backup proxy.
o If you select All p roxies, Veeam Backup & Replication will use all available backup proxies for file
backup. The number of proxies in use defines the number of data threads that transfer data from the
file share to the backup repository. The more data transfer threads Veeam Backup & Replication uses,
the higher is the data transfer speed.
If the file share is used as a source for a file to tape backup job, the tape server utilized for this job is
added as yet another backup proxy when creating a file to tape backup job. This backup p roxy has the
highest priority over all others and is used by default if it has access rights to the file share. For details
on file to tape backup jobs, see the File Backup to Tape section in the Veeam Backup & Replication
User Guide.
o If you select Use the selected backup proxies only, you can explicitly specify backup proxies that
Veeam Backup & Replication must use for file backup.
It is recommended that you select at least two backup proxies to ensure that the backup jobs start
even if one of the proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the source file share. The more proxies you
select, the more data transfer threads Veeam Backup & Replication will use for backup jobs, thus
improving performance.
Even if the file share is used as a source for file to tape backup jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication will
use only proxies selected in the list to process the backup data traffic.
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3. From the Ca che repository drop-down list, select a cache repository where temporary cache files must be
stored. This repository must be located as close to the source file share as possible.
If you change the cache repository for an existing file share whose backups are stored in object storage,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to either attach migrated metadata, copy metadata from the
previous cache repository, or download metadata manually from the archive repository. For more
information on storing NAS backups in the object storage and changing the cache repository, see Object
Storage as NAS Backup Repository.
4. Use the Ba ckup I/O control slider to define how fast all proxies can read data from the source file share.
This setting is based on the number of parallel threads that can be used by all the proxies configured for
processing the file share. If resources of your NAS device are limited, it is recommended that you select
the Lower impact option. If your NAS device is powerful enough, select the Fa ster backup option.
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Step 5. Apply File Share Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all required
components and adds the NFS file share to the backup infrastructure. Click Nex t to proceed.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the added NFS share and click Finish to exit the wizard.
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Adding SMB File Share
Before you add an SMB file share to the inventory of the virtual infrastructure, check the following
prerequisites:
• If you plan to use a devoted backup proxy server or cache repository, make sure these components are
added in Ba ck up Infrastructure.
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Step 1. Launch New File Share Wizard
To launch the New File Share wizard:
o In the inventory pane, right-click the File Shares node and select Ad d File Share.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share on the ribbon.
o Select the File Shares node and click Ad d File Share in the working area.
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Step 2. Specify Path to SMB File Share and Access Credentials
At the SMB File Share step of the wizard, specify access settings for the SMB file share:
1. In the SMB server of file share field, specify the path to an SMB file share in the \\server\folder format.
You can specify the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the server. Note that you can us e IPv6 addresses only if IPv6
communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
You can also click Browse and select the shared folder from the list of available network shares.
You can add the root server folder in the \\server format to protect all SMB file shares residing on this
server. After that, create a single file share backup job to protect the added server, as described in
Creating File Share Backup Jobs. Then all SMB file shares added on this server will be automatically
processed with the file share backup job and protected. If you previously had several separate non-root
shared folders residing on the same server and want to switch to using a single root shared folder to cover
the same shares, you do not have to run full backups to update data of protected shares. Instead, you can
convert existing backups and update existing file share backup jobs to protect single root shared folders
comprising all other non-root shared folders residing on the same server. To learn more about the
conversion, see Converting Backups from Non-Root to Root Shared Folders. Perform the conversion with
extreme caution.
2. If you must specify user credentials to access the shared folder, select the This share requires access
credentials check box. From the Credentials drop-down list, select a credentials record for a user account
that has Full Control permissions on the shared folder.
To access the SMB share, you must use an account that meets either of the following requirements:
o If you only plan to back up the share, you can use an account with read -only permissions.
o If you plan not only to back up the share, but also to restore files to it, use an account with read/write
permissions.
NOTE
Accessing the SMB file share with credentials in the User Principal Name format ( [email protected] )
is not supported.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Ma nage accounts link at the bottom of the list or
click Ad d on the right to add the credentials. For more information, see Managing Credentials.
NOTE
If the This share requires access credentials check box is not selected, to access the file share
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the computer account of the backup proxy server.
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Step 3. Specify Advanced SMB File Share Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to back up data from Microsoft VSS snapshots or native storage
snapshots. During backup jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication will read data of shared files and folders from
snapshots, which speeds up backup operations and improves RPOs.
To define if Veeam Backup & Replication will use snapshots for backups:
o To ignore the snapshot functionality, select Ba ck up directly from the file share.
Veeam Backup & Replication will ignore locked files and folders. When creating a backup job, you can
configure notifications to list files and folders that are skipped during the backup procedure. For more
information see Notification Settings.
o To back up files from Microsoft VSS snapshots, select Ba ckup from Microsoft VSS snapshot.
If you select this option, make sure that the file share and the backup proxy used for the file backup
job support SMB protocol version 3.0 or later.
o To back up files from the native storage snapshot, select Ba ckup from a native storage snapshot at
the following path and specify the path in the \\server\snapshotfolder\snapshotname format to the
snapshot stored on the SMB file share. You can specify the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the server. Note
that you can use IPv6 addresses only if IPv6 communication is enabled as described in IPv6 Support.
If you select this option, you can additionally use custom scripts written by you, for example, to
create a snapshot before the backup and remove it after the backup. You can define these scripts
when creating a new file share backup job, as described in Script Settings.
NOTE
Mind that Veeam Backup & Replication does not take snapshots itself, but it can use a snapshot
taken by the storage system.
File share backup jobs do not trigger the storage snapshot creation and deletion automatically. You
can specify the folder where the storage snapshot is stored. In this case file share backup jobs can
access this folder and read data from the storage snapshot.
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3. Select Fa ilover to direct backup if snapshot is unavailable if you want Veeam Backup & Replication to read
data for backup directly from the file share when the snapshot is unavailable. If you do not select the
option and the snapshot is unavailable, the file share backup job will stop with a failure.
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Step 4. Specify File Share Processing Settings
At the P rocessing step of the wizard, do the following:
1. Click Choose next to the Ba ckup proxy field to select a backup proxy.
o If you select All p roxies, Veeam Backup & Replication will use all available backup proxies for file
backup. The number of proxies in use defines the number of data threads that transfer data from the
file share to the backup repository. The more data transfer threads Veeam Backup & Replication uses,
the higher is the data transfer speed.
If the file share is used as a source for a file to tape backup job, the tape server utilized for this job is
added as yet another backup proxy when creating a file to tape backup job. This backup proxy has the
highest priority over all others and is used by default if it has access rights to the file share. For details
on file to tape backup jobs, see the File Backup to Tape section in the Veeam Backup & Replication
User Guide.
o If you select Use the selected backup proxies only, you can explicitly specify backup proxies that
Veeam Backup & Replication must use for file backup.
It is recommended that you select at least two backup proxies to ensure that the backup jobs start
even if one of the proxies fails or loses its connectivity to the source file share. The more proxies you
select, the more data transfer threads Veeam Backup & Replication will use for backup jobs, thus
improving performance.
Even if the file share is used as a source for file to tape backup jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication will
use only proxies selected in the list to process the backup data traffic.
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3. From the Ca che repository drop-down list, select a cache repository where temporary cache files must be
stored. This repository must be located in the close proximity to the source file share and backup proxies.
If you change the cache repository for an existing file share whose backups are stored in object storage,
Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to either attach migrated metadata, copy metadata from the
previous cache repository, or download metadata manually from the archive repository. For more
information on storing NAS backups in the object storage and changing the cache repository, see Object
Storage as NAS Backup Repository.
4. Use the Ba ckup I/O control slider to define how fast all proxies can read data from the source file share.
This setting is based on the number of parallel threads that can be used by all the proxie s configured for
processing the file share. If resources of your NAS device are limited, it is recommended that you select
the Lower impact option. If your NAS device is powerful enough, select the Fa ster backup option.
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Step 5. Apply File Share Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all required
components and adds the SMB file share to the backup infrastructure. Click Nex t to proceed.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the added SMB share and click Finish to exit the wizard.
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Adding Backup Proxy
You must add to the backup infrastructure one or more backup proxies that you plan to use for moving backup
data from the file share to the backup repository.
Before you add a backup proxy to the inventory of the virtual infrastructure, check the following prerequisites:
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Step 1. Launch New Backup Proxy Wizard
To launch the New Backup Proxy wizard, do the following:
2. In the inventory pane, right-click the Ba ckup Proxies node and select Ad d Proxy. Alternatively, you can
click Ad d Proxy on the ribbon.
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Step 2. Choose Microsoft Windows Server
At the Server step of the wizard, specify server settings for the backup proxy.
1. From the Choose server list, select a Microsoft Windows server that you want to use as a backup proxy.
The list of servers contains only those managed servers that are added to the backup infrastructure. If the
server is not added to the backup infrastructure yet, you can click Ad d New to open the New W indows
Server wizard. For more information, see Adding Microsoft Windows Servers.
2. In the P roxy description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who added the backup proxy, date and time when the backup proxy was
added.
3. In the Ma x concurrent tasks field, specify the number of tasks that the backup proxy can process in
parallel.
If the number of parallel tasks reaches this value, the backup proxy will not start a new task until one of
current tasks completes. Veeam Backup & Replication creates one task per every source file share. The
recommended number of concurrent tasks is calculated automatically based on the amount of available
resources. Backup proxies with multi-core CPUs can handle more concurrent tasks.
For example, for a 4-core CPU, it is recommended that you specify a maximum of 8 concurrent tasks, for
an 8-core CPU — 16 concurrent tasks. When defining the number of concurrent tasks, keep in mind
network traffic throughput in the infrastructure.
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Step 3. Configure Traffic Rules
At the Tra ffic Rules step of the wizard, configure network traffic rules. These rules help you throttle and encrypt
traffic transferred between backup infrastructure components. For more information, see Configuring Network
Traffic Rules.
The list of network traffic rules contains only rules applied to the backup proxy: its IP address falls into the IP
range configured for the rule.
2. Click View. The View Network Traffic Rule window will display settings configured for the rule.
2. The Global Network Traffic Rules window will display the full list of all existing global network traffic
rules.
3. Select the rule that you want to modify and click E d it. For more information on how to configure network
traffic rules, see Configuring Network Traffic Rules.
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Step 4. Review Components to Install
At the Review step of the wizard, review what Veeam Backup & Replication components are already installed on
the server and click Ap p ly to start installation of missing components.
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Step 5. Apply Backup Proxy Settings
At the Ap p ly step of the wizard, wait till Veeam Backup & Replication installs and configures all required
components. Click Nex t to complete the procedure of the backup proxy role assignment to the server.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review details of the added backup proxy and click Finish to exit the wizard.
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Creating File Share Backup Jobs
To protect files and folders on the file share, you must configure a file share backup job. The backup job defines
how, where and when to back up data from the file share. One job can be used to process one or more file
shares. Jobs can be started manually or scheduled to run automatically at a specific time.
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Before You Begin
Before you create a file share backup job, check the following prerequisites:
• Backup infrastructure components that will take part in the file share backup process must be added to
the backup infrastructure and properly configured. These include source f ile shares to back up, backup
proxy, and all repositories, including cache, backup and archive repositories.
• The target backup repository must have enough free space to store created backup files. If you want to
receive notifications on the repository running low on free space, configure global notification settings as
described in Specifying Other Notification Settings.
• Make sure that repositories intended to store file share backups are not configured to store files in the
WORM status. Otherwise, the backup jobs will fail when Veeam Backup & Replication cannot update the
backup metadata files.
• If you plan to map a file share backup job to a backup that already exists in the backup repository, you
must perform the rescan operation for this backup repository. Otherwise, Veeam Backup & Replication will
not be able to recognize backup files in the backup repository.
For more information on how to rescan backup repositories, see Rescanning Backup Repositories.
• If you plan to use pre-job and/or post-job scripts, you must create scripts before you configure the file
share backup job.
• For more information, see Storage Repositories in the NAS Backup Support section.
• Antivirus software may significantly slow down file share backup jobs. To improve performance, we
recommend you exclude the c:\P rogram Files (x86)\Veeam\Backup Transport\x64\VeeamAgent.exe
process from the antivirus scan on machines running the file backup proxy and backup repository roles.
Keep in mind that it can weaken the security of these machines.
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Step 1. Launch New File Backup Job Wizard
To launch the New File Share Backup Job wizard, do one of the following:
• Open the Inventory view. In the inventory pane, click File Shares. In the working area, click Create Job.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, right-click Job s and select Ba ckup > File Share.
• You can quickly add the file share to an already existing job. Open the Inventory view. Under the File
Sha res node in the inventory pane, select type of the file share you want to back up. In the working area,
right-click the file share you want to back up and select Ad d to backup job > name of the job .
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Step 2. Specify Job Name and Description
At the Na me step of the wizard, specify a name and description for the file share backup job.
1. In the Na me field, enter a name for the file share backup job.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created the job, date and time when the job was created.
3. Select the Hig h priority check box if you want the resource scheduler of Veeam Backup & Replication to
prioritize this job higher than other similar jobs and to allocate resources to it in the first place. For more
information on job priorities, see Job Priorities.
TIP
In the UI, jobs with the Hig h priority option enabled will be marked with a special flag ( ).
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Step 3. Select Files and Folders to Back Up
At the Files and Folders step of the wizard, select files and folders that you want to back up.
1. Click Ad d .
2. From the Server list, select a file share on which the necessary files or folders reside.
NOTE
If you plan to protect file shares residing on the enterprise storage system, you can choose between
two different approaches. For more information, see NAS Backup Integration with Storage Systems.
NOTE
If you select a NAS filer from the Server list, but the Folders tree is empty, make sure that the
storage system rescan was performed and finished. For more information about the storage system
rescan process, see Storage Discovery Process.
To select multiple folders, hold [Ctrl] and click necessary folders. Although different folders of the same
share form separate records in the table, they will be processed by one job task.
o Symbolic links in file shares are protected as links, without the content they refer to.
4. In the Files a nd Folders screen, use the Up and Down buttons on the right to move sources up or down.
The sources of the job are processed in the order in which the list displays them.
5. If you add a folder to the job, all the folder contents will be processed.
If necessary, you can choose only specific files from the added folder.
To specify filters:
2. In the File Filters window, use Include masks and E x clude masks fields to filter the folder contents:
o To include content, you can create name masks or use exact file names. For example:
▪ To backup only PDF files, enter *.PDF in the Include masks field and click Ad d .
▪ To backup all files with name sa les_report.xlsx, enter sales_report.xlsx in the Include
ma sks field and click Ad d .
o To exclude content, you can use name masks, exact file names, or specify the path to the folder or the
whole file share to exclude. For example:
▪ To exclude PDF files from processing, enter *.PDF in the E x clude masks field and click Ad d .
▪ To exclude all files with name p ricelist.xlsx from processing, enter pricelist.xlsx in the
E x clude masks field and click Ad d .
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▪ To exclude folder 2016 from processing, you can enter the full path to it in the E x clude masks
field and click Ad d . For example, for an NFS file share this path looks like:
QA04:/NFS04/Documents/2016, for an SMB file share —
\\fileserv05\Documents\2016).
Alternatively, you can specify a relative path to the folder or file to exclude. In case of the NAS
filer, this is the only option to specify a path to exclude. For example, to exclude folders
ca ll_records (where call records are located) from all file shares residing on the NAS filer, specify
/call_records (this mask will exclude the ca ll_records folder from processing for all NFS file
shares on this NAS filer) and \call_records (this mask will exclude the ca ll_records folder
from processing for all SMB file shares on this NAS filer).
You can exclude a whole file share from processing. For example, you add the \\Server\ SMB
server to the file share backup job, but you want to exclude the \\Server\Sharing file share
from processing. To exclude this file share from processing, enter the \\Server\Sharing path
in the E x clude masks field and click Ad d . The job will back up all file shares that
Veeam Backup & Replication detects on this server, but will skip the excluded file share.
NOTE
Mind the following:
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Step 4. Specify Backup Repository Settings
At the Ba ckup Repository step of the wizard, define the primary backup repository where the file share backup
job must store backup files, and settings for moving files and folders to this repository. To learn what storage
types you can assign the role of the backup repository to, see NAS Backup Support.
NOTE
Mind that if you use the option of limiting the number of file versions to keep configured in File Version
Settings, Veeam Backup & Replication first applies those file-version retention settings and only after that
applies time-based retention settings specified at this step.
1. From the Ba ckup repository drop-down list, select a repository where backup files must be stored. When
you select a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically checks the amount of free
space left. Make sure that you have enough free space to store backups.
2. You can map the job to a specific backup stored in the backup repository. Backup job mapping allows you
to move backup files to a new backup repository and to point the job to existing backups on this new
backup repository. You can also use backup job mapping if the configuration database got corrupted and
you need to reconfigure backup job settings.
To map the job to a backup, click the Ma p backup link. In the opened Select Backup window, select a
backup in the backup repository. Backups can be easily identified by job names. To find the backup, you
can also use the search field at the bottom of the window.
3. Use the Keep all file versions for the last field to specify how long copies of all recent file versions in the
selected file share must be kept in the backup repository. You can restore the entire file share to any
restore point within the period specified in this setting.
If, for example, Keep all file versions for the last is set to 30 days, the backup repository will store all file
versions that appeared at the file share during the last 30 days. At the scheduled time on the 31st day, the
file share backup job first backs up new file versions and saves them to the backup repository. Right after
that, file versions older than 30 days (created on the 1st day) are either deleted from the backup
repository or moved to the archive repository if the Keep previous file version for check box is selected
and the archive retention is configured.
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4. If you need to keep a copy of the backups in another repository, s elect the Configure secondary
d estinations for this job check box. That enables the Secondary Target step of the wizard.
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Step 5. Specify Advanced Backup Settings
At the Storage step of the wizard, specify advanced settings for the file share backup job:
• Storage settings
• Maintenance settings
• Script settings
• Notification settings
TIP
After you specify necessary settings for the backup job, you can save them as default settings. To do this,
click Sa ve as Default at the bottom left corner of the Ad vanced Settings window. When you create a new
backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new job.
2. On the File Versions tab, specify to what file versions the settings should apply:
o Select Keep all file versions to keep all file versions for the time period specified in the main window
at the Storage step.
o Select Limit the number of archived file versions only to limit archived file versions to the numbers
specified below.
o Select Limit the number of both recent and archived file versions to limit recent and archived file
versions to the numbers specified below.
3. After you choose what file versions to keep, specify how many file versions to keep:
o Select Active file versions limit to keep the specified number of versions for files currently existing in
the source file share. Specify how many versions of active files copied from the backup repository to
store.
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o Select Deleted file versions limit to keep the specified number of versions for files deleted from the
source file share. Specify how many versions of deleted files copied from the backup repository to
store.
2. On the ACL Handling tab, specify how the backup job will process permissions and attributes:
o Select Fold er-level only (recommended) to back up permissions and attributes from folders only. The
restored files will inherit permissions from the target folder.
o Select Files and folders (slower) to back up permissions and attributes from both folders and
individual files. This option can significantly reduce the backup performance.
NOTE
Mind that Veeam Backup & Replication does not collect ACL handling settings of the source file share root
folder, so you cannot restore them. Before restoring an entire file share, you will have to specify required
ACL handling settings for the root folder of the target file share.
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Storage Settings
To specify advanced storage settings for the file share backup job:
o From the Compression level list, select a compression level for the backup: None, Dedupe-
friendly , Optimal, High or Extreme.
o To encrypt the content of backup files, select the E na ble backup file encryption check box. In the
P a ssword field, select a password that you want to use for encryption. If you have not created the
password beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new password. For
more information, see Managing Passwords for Data Encryption.
If the backup server is not connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager and does not have the
Veeam Universal License or a legacy socket-based Enterprise or Enterprise Plus license installed, you
will not be able to restore data from encrypted backups in case you lose the password.
Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning about it. For more information, see Decrypting
Data Without Password.
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NOTE
If you enable encryption for an existing backup job, during the next job session
Veeam Backup & Replication will back up all the files of the file share to a new backup file
irrespective of whether they changed or not. The created backup files and subsequent backup files
will be encrypted with the specified password.
If you enable encryption for an existing job, Veeam Backup & Replication does not encrypt the
previous backup chain created with this job.
Maintenance Settings
You can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to periodically perform a health check for the latest restore point
in the backup chain. The health check helps make sure that the restore point is consistent, and you will be able
to restore data from this restore point.
During the health check, Veeam Backup & Replication performs a CRC check for metadata and a hash check for
data blocks in the file share backup files to verify their integrity. For more information, see Health Check for File
Share Backup Files.
2. On the Ma intenance tab, select P erform backup files health check to enable the health check option. It
allows ensuring that all data and metadata is backed up correctly.
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3. Click Configure and specify the time schedule for the health check.
Script Settings
You can configure custom scripts to run before or after the file share backup job. For example, you can configure
scripts to take a VSS snapshot before running the job and to delete it after completing the job.
3. If you want to execute custom scripts, select the Run the following script before the job and Run the
following script after the job check boxes and click Browse to choose executable files from a local folder
on the backup server. The scripts are executed on the backup server.
You can select to execute pre- and post-backup actions after a number of backup sessions or on specific
week days.
o If you select the Run scripts every <N> backup session option, specify the number of the backup job
sessions after which the scripts must be executed.
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o If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, click Da y s and specify week days on
which the scripts must be executed.
Notification Settings
To specify notification settings for the backup job:
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when the job
completes successfully.
SNMP traps will be sent if you specify global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and configure
software on recipient's machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see Specifying SNMP
Settings.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive
notifications about the job completion status by email. In the field below, specify recipient’s email
address. You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
5. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings:
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case,
Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the
backup server. For more information, see Configuring Global Email Notification Settings.
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o To configure a custom notification for the job, select Use custom notification settings specified
b elow. You can specify the following notification settings:
i. In the Sub ject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %ObjectCount% (number of
file shares in the job) and %Issues% (number of files shares in the job that have finished with
the Warning or Failed status).
ii. Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning, and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if the job completes successfully, completes with a warning or fails.
iii. Select the Sup press notifications until the last retry check box to receive a notification about the
final job status. If you do not enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will send one
notification per every job retry.
o Select the Ma k e file or folder processing issues result in a job warning to receive a warning at the end
of the job processing session if any issues with file or folder processing occur.
o Select the Ma k e file or folder attribute's processing issues result in a job warning to receive a warning
at the end of the job processing session if any issues with processing of file or folder attributes occur.
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Step 6. Specify Archive Repository Settings
At the Archive Repository step of the wizard, define the archive repository where the file share backup job must
store backup files, and settings for moving files and folders to this repository. To learn what storage types you
can assign the role of the backup repository to, see NAS Backup Support.
1. If you need to keep versions of some files for a longer time after they are moved from the backup
repository, you can configure archiving options to move file versions to a cheaper archiv e storage, for
example, an object storage.
To use the archive repository, select the Archive file versions to the following archive repository check
box.
2. From the drop-down list below, select the storage to be used as a repository to store archived fil es and
folders.
By default, all files deleted from the backup repository will be moved to the archive repository. If you do
not need all the files in the archive, you can choose what files to keep.
3. If you need to keep the copy of the data stored in the backup repository also in the archive repository,
select the Archive recent file versions check box.
NOTE
The copy mode in NAS backup requires a license. Thus, this feature is not supported in the
Veeam Backup & Replication Community (free) Edition. For details, see Veeam Editions Comparison.
4. To specify the number of months or years during which backup files must be retained, select the Archive
old est file versions for check box and specify the period.
This setting denotes a time period starting from the creation of the backup files in the backup repository,
not from the moment when the file versions are moved from the backup repository to the archive
repository.
5. To specify what files must be archived or excluded from the archive, do the following:
▪ All files — select this option to archive all files moved from the backup repository to the archive
repository.
▪ All files except the following extensions — select this option to exclude files with certain
extensions from the selection to be archived. Specify extensions for files to exclude from the
selection. Files with the specified extensions will not be copied from the backup repository to
the archive repository.
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▪ Files with the following extensions only — select this option to archive files with certain
extensions only. Specify extensions for files to archive. Files with these extensions will be copied
from the backup repository to the archive repository.
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Step 7. Specify Secondary Repository Settings
At the Secondary Target step of the wizard, you can specify a secondary repository that will be used to store
additional copies of backup files from the backup storage for redundancy. To learn what storage types you can
assign the role of the secondary repository to, see NAS Backup Support.
If you add a secondary repository, Veeam Backup & Replication will create a separate job for backup copy to it.
The data copy process will start automatically after each primary job runs.
NOTE
This step is available, if you select the Configure secondary destinations for this job check box at the
Backup Repository step of the wizard.
1. Click Ad d .
2. From the list of existing repositories, select a repository that will keep additional copy of the backup files.
You can add several secondary repositories for copying files of the primary backup job. To quickly find the
repository, use the search field at the bottom of the wizard.
3. By default, retention and encryption settings for the secondary target repository are inherited from the
primary job. To customize them, select the necessary repository in the Secondary repositories list and click
E d it.
ii. Specify how long all versions of each file will be kept in the secondary repository.
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o To specify encryption settings different from those of the primary repository:
ii. In the P a ssword field, select a password that you want to use for encryption. If you have not
created the password beforehand, click Ad d or use the Ma nage passwords link to specify a new
password. For more information, see Managing Passwords for Data Encryption.
If the backup server is not connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager and does not have
the Veeam Universal License or a legacy socket-based Enterprise or Enterprise Plus license
installed, you will not be able to restore data from encrypted backups in case you lose the
password. Veeam Backup & Replication will display a warning about it. For more information,
see Decrypting Data Without Password.
o Configure time intervals at which the data can be copied to the secondary repository.
▪ If you select the Any time (continuously) option, Veeam Backup & Replication will copy backup
files to the secondary repository as soon as the primary file share backup job completes.
▪ If you want to specify time periods when copying backup to the secondary repository is
permitted, select the During the following time periods only option and configure allowed and
prohibited hours.
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Step 8. Define Job Schedule
At the Schedule step of the wizard, select to run the backup job manually or schedule the job to run on a regular
basis.
1. Select the Run the job automatically check box. If this check box is not selected, you will have to start the
job manually to create the file share backup.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Da ily at
this time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. Use the fields on the right
to configure the necessary schedule.
NOTE
When you configure the job schedule, keep in mind possible date and time changes (for
example, related to daylight saving time transition).
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a specific time interval, select P eriodically every. In
the field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use the
time table to define the permitted time window for the job. In the Sta rt time within an hour field,
specify the exact time when the job must start.
▪ Veeam Backup & Replication always starts counting defined intervals from 12:00 AM. For
example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00
AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
▪ If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is over,
Veeam Backup & Replication will immediately start the job and then run the job by the defined
schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours
from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first r un at 9:00 AM, when the
denied period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the P eriodically every option and choose Continuously from the
list on the right. A new backup job session will start as soon as the previous backup job session
finishes.
o To chain jobs, use the After this job field. In the common practice, jobs start one after another: when
job A finishes, job B starts and so on. If you want to create a chain of jobs, you must define the time
schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest of the jobs in the chain, select the After this job
op tion and choose the preceding job from the list.
3. In the Automatic retry section, define whether Veeam Backup & Replication must attempt to run the
backup job again if the job fails for some reason. During a job retry, Veeam Backup & Replication processes
failed file shares only. Enter the number of attempts to run the job and define time intervals between
them. If you select continuous backup, Veeam Backup & Replication will retry the job for the defined
number of times without any time intervals between the job runs.
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4. In the Ba ckup window section, define the time interval within which the backup job must complete. The
backup window prevents the job from overlapping with production hours and ensures that the job does
not provide unwanted overhead on the production environment. To set up a backup window for the job:
a. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box and click W ind ow.
b. In the Time P eriods window, define the allowed hours and prohibited hours for backup. If the job
exceeds the allowed window, it will be automatically terminated.
NOTE
The After this job function will automatically start a job if the first job in the chain is started automatically
by schedule. If you start the first job manually, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a notification. You
will be able to choose whether Veeam Backup & Replication must start the chained job as well.
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Step 9. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, complete the procedure of backup job configuration.
2. If you want to start the job right after you finish working with the wizard, select the Run the job when I
click Finish check box.
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Managing Backups
You can perform the following operations with backups:
• Perform the health check and repair operations for file share backup files.
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Viewing File Share Backup Properties
You can view summary information about the file share backup. The summary information provides the
following data:
• Name and path to the backup repository that stores file share backup files.
• Name and path to the archive repository that stores archived backup data.
• Path to the file share backup source and its original size.
• Available restore points: date of their creation, their type (Ba ckup or Archive) and status.
For the Ba ckup type, the table shows all restore points stored in the backup repository. You can restore
the file share to the state as of any of these points. To learn how to restore the file share, see File Share
Data Recovery.
For the Archive type, the table shows only a single record. The time stamp of this record denotes the date
and time of the restore point, which was created in the backup repository and files of which were the
latest to be moved to the archive repository according to retention settings. To learn how to restore files
from the archive, see Restoring Backup Files from Archive Repository.
4. To see the list of available restore points, select the required object from the Ob jects list.
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Copying File Share Backups
Copying backups can be helpful if you want to copy file share backups to a repository or local or shared folder.
Veeam Backup & Replication copies the whole backup chain.
When Veeam Backup & Replication performs the copy operation, it disables the job, copies files to the target
location and then enables the job. After the copy operation finishes, the copied backups are shown in a node
with the ( E xported) postfix in the inventory pane.
NOTE
This section is about one-time copy operation. If you want to copy backups on a schedule, create a backup
copy job. For more information, see Backup Copy.
Copying Backups
To copy file share backups, do the following:
4. Right-click the job and select Cop y backup. Alternatively, click Cop y Backup on the ribbon.
5. In the Cop y Backup to Another Location window, choose a repository to which you want to copy backups.
6. [For archive backups] If you also want to copy archive backups to another archive repository, select the
Cop y the associated archive check box. From the drop-down list, select the necessary repository.
7. Click OK.
After the copy process finishes, the copied backups are shown in the Disk (Exported) node in the inventory pane.
NOTE
• If you copy backups from a scale-out backup repository and some backups are stored on extents in
the Maintenance mode, such backups are not copied.
• Veeam Backup & Replication copies backups only from the performance tier of the scale-out backup
repository. If you want to copy data from the capacity tier, you first need to download it to the
performance tier. For more information, see Downloading Data from Capacity Tier.
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Starting New Backup Chain
You can start a new backup chain for the file share backup job. Veeam Backup & Replication then creates a new
active full backup that starts the new chain for the entire file share. All existing backup files are moved to the
Disk (Orphaned) node under the Ba ckups node in the Veeam Backup & Replication Console. Data files are stored
to the same folder in the backup repository. The data files for the new backup chain are stored to a new
separate folder in the backup repository.
3. In the working area, select a job of the File Backup type, press and hold the [Ctrl] key, right-click the job
and select Sta rt new backup.
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Performing Health Check and Repair for File
Share Backup Files
In this section you will learn how to perform:
3. In the working area, select a job of the File Backup type and click Run Health Check on the ribbon or right-
click the job and select Run health check.
To run the health check periodically, you must enable the P erform backup files health check option in the
backup job settings and define the health check schedule. By default, the health check is performed on the last
Friday of every month. You can change the schedule and run the health check weekly or monthly on specific
days. To learn how to configure periodic health check, see Maintenance Settings.
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Repair of File Share Backup Files
If during the health check Veeam Backup & Replication detects some inconsistency in the file share backup files,
you can run the backup repair procedure to fix the issues.
3. In the working area, select a job of the File Backup type, right-click the job and select Rep air backup.
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Converting Backups from SMB or NFS Shares to
NAS Filer Shares
You can use enterprise storage systems integrated with Veeam Backup & Replication both to host simple SMB or
NFS shares and to act as NAS filer shares.
To use all the advantages of NAS filer shares, for example the native file change tracking technology, y ou can
convert backups created for existing SMB or NFS shares into the format of NAS filer shares. After that you can
continue to protect the file shares as NAS filer shares by running existing file share backup jobs and by using
existing backup files. Perform the conversion with extreme caution.
To convert SMB or NFS shares into NAS filer shares, do the following:
1. Disable file share backup jobs protecting SMB or NFS shares, for which you want to convert backups. To do
that, right-click the required job in the Job s node of the inventory pane in the Home view and select
Disable. Alternatively, you can click Disable on the ribbon.
2. Make sure that you have created NAS filer, which corresponds to existing SMB or NFS shares, added to the
Veeam Backup & Replication inventory. The NAS filer and these shares must reside on the same storage
system. The correspondence of the shares must be full except for the host name.
3. Run the Convert-VBRNASBackupSANFormat PowerShell cmdlet to convert the format of the file share
backup to provide support of NAS filer shares.
For more information, see the description of the Convert-VBRNASBackupSANFormat cmdlet in the
Veeam PowerShell Reference.
As a result, the backup will be moved from Ba ckups > Disk node to Ba ck ups > Disk (Orphaned) node in the
inventory pane of the Home view.
At this step, you can check if the cmdlet has correctly converted the backup. To do that, check if backup
object names in the Disk (Orphaned) node have changed and now show the path to the NAS filer share. If
object names have not changed and show the path to the SMB or NFS share as before, continuing the
conversion process can lead to the unwanted result. For example, when you enable the backup job for the
converted backup, it will back up the NAS filer share not with an incremental run, but with a full run
instead, which may lead to extra costs.
4. Use the Edit File Backup Job wizard to edit the file backup job that protects the file shares:
a. At the Files and Folders step of the wizard, remove the existing SMB and NFS shares from the job and
add the corresponding NAS filer shares.
b. At the Backup Repository step of the wizard, map the job to the backup that was converted at step 2.
5. Enable file share backup jobs protecting file shares, for which you converted backups. To do that, right -
click the required job from the Job s node of the inventory pane in the Home view and clear selection of
Disable. Alternatively, you can click Disable on the ribbon.
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Veeam Backup & Replication supports conversion of backups created with backup copy jobs. To continue the old
backup chain created with the backup copy job, do the following:
1. Disable file share backup jobs protecting SMB or NFS shares, for which you want to convert backups. To do
that, right-click the required job in the Job s node of the inventory pane in the Home view and select
Disable. Alternatively, you can click Disable on the ribbon.
2. Make sure that you have created NAS filer, which corresponds to existing SMB or NFS shares, added to the
Veeam Backup & Replication inventory. The NAS filer and these shares must reside on the same storage
system. The correspondence of the shares must be full except for the host name.
3. Run the Convert-VBRNASBackupSANFormat PowerShell cmdlet to convert the format of the file share
backup to provide support of NAS filer shares.
For more information, see the description of the Convert-VBRNASBackupSANFormat cmdlet in the
Veeam PowerShell Reference.
4. Use the Edit File Backup Job wizard to remove the secondary target storage for the file share backup job
that protects the file shares:
a. At the Secondary Target step of the wizard, remove the required repository selected as a secondary
target for the file share backup job.
b. Go through all the wizard steps without running the job. Click Finish.
5. Use the Edit File Backup Job wizard to add the secondary target storage back for the file share backup job
that protects the file shares:
a. At the Secondary Target step of the wizard, add the required repository as a secondary target for the
file share backup job.
6. Enable file share backup jobs protecting file shares, for which you converted backups. To do that, right -
click the required job from the Job s node of the inventory pane in the Home view and clear selection of
Disable. Alternatively, you can click Disable on the ribbon.
File share backup copy will automatically map to the file share backup copy job. After that, the backup
copy job will back up new points of the main file share backup job if they were created.
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Converting Backups from Non-Root to Root
Shared Folders
Veeam Backup & Replication allows adding a server root folder as a source for file share backup jobs. In this
case, all changes to separate shared folders residing on this server will be reflected in the file share backup job
where the root shared folder of this server is added. You can even add shared root folders using different
protocols to one file share backup job and thus protect all file shares that are or will be added on the server.
If you previously had several separate non-root shared folders residing on the same server and want to switch to
using a single root shared folder to cover the same shares, you do not have to run full backups to update data of
protected shares. Instead, you can convert existing backups and update existing file share backup jobs to
protect single root shared folders comprising all other non-root shared folders residing on the same server.
Perform the conversion with extreme caution.
1. Disable file share backup jobs protecting file shares, for which you want to convert backups. To do that,
right-click the required job in the Job s node of the inventory pane in the Home view and select Disable.
Alternatively, you can click Disable on the ribbon.
2. Make sure that your backup infrastructure has a root share (for example, NFS or SMB) added for the whole
server or storage system where existing non-root shares reside. These shares must reside on the same
server or storage system. The correspondence of the shares must be full except for the host name.
As a result, the backup will be moved from Ba ckups > Disk node to Ba ck ups > Disk (Orphaned) node in the
inventory pane of the Home view.
At this step, you can check if the cmdlet has correctly converted the backup. To do that, check if backup
object names in the Disk (Orphaned) node have changed and now show the path to the server root folder.
If object names have not changed and show the paths to multiple separate non-root shared folders as
before, continuing the conversion process can lead to the unwanted result. For example, when you enable
the backup job for the converted backup, it will back up all shared folders under root folder not with an
incremental run, but with a full run instead, which may lead to extra costs.
4. Use the Edit File Backup Job wizard to edit the file backup job that protects the file shares:
a. At the Files and Folders step of the wizard, remove the existing non-root shared folders from the job
and add the server root folder instead.
b. At the Backup Repository step of the wizard, map the job to the backup that was converted at step 2.
5. Enable file share backup jobs protecting file shares, for which you converted backups. To do that, right-
click the required job from the Job s node of the inventory pane in the Home view and clear selection
Disable. Alternatively, you can click Disable on the ribbon.
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File Share Data Recovery
You can restore data previously backed up with file share backup jobs. You can restore the following data:
Veeam Backup & Replication offers several recovery options for different recovery scenarios:
• Instant file share recovery allows you to publish a point-in-time file share state to instantly access all
protected files.
• Restore of the entire file share allows you to recover all files and folders of the file share to one of the
restore points.
• Rollback to a point in time allows you to restore only changed files to one of the restore points.
• Restore of files and folders allows you to select files and folders to restore to one of the restore points.
• Restore of files from an archive repository allows you to select archived files to restore to one of the
restore points.
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Instant File Share Recovery
The instant file share recovery feature works in 2 modes depending on the type of the file share:
• For NFS file shares, you can use this feature to publish a point-in-time file share state to enable users to
instantly access all protected files in the read-only mode.
• For SMB file shares, you can use this feature to publish a point-in-time file share state to enable users to
add, update, remove files in the mounted file share. The updated file share may be then migrated to the
production server.
• NFS file shares recovered with instant recovery are available in the read -only mode.
• Files larger than 1 GB are not available for update in file shares recovered with instant recovery.
• You cannot rename folders in file shares recovered with instant recovery.
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Step 1. Launch Instant File Share Recovery Wizard
To launch the Instant File Share Recovery wizard, do one of the following:
• In the Home tab on the ribbon, click Restore > File Share. In the Restore from File Backup window, click
Instant file share recovery.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup and do one of the following:
o Click the file share that you want to restore. In the Ba ckup tab on the ribbon, click Instant Recovery.
o Right-click the file share that you want to restore and select Instant file share recovery.
You can perform the instant file share recovery by using a backup copy. Backup copies created in the
secondary repositories are represented in the Ba ckups > Disk (Copy) node in the inventory pane. If the
secondary repository is an object storage repository, backup copies created in it are represented in the
Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage (Copy) node in the inventory pane.
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Step 2. Select File Share to Restore
At the File Shares step of the wizard, select the file share for which you want to perform instant recovery:
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Ba ckups Browser window, expand the necessary backup job to select the required file share to
restore.
To quickly find a file share, you can use the search field at the bottom of the window.
Alternatively, you can use the File shares to publish search field to quickly search the required file share and add
it to the list of file shares to publish.
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Step 3. Specify Mount Server Settings
At the Mount Servers step of the wizard, specify mount server settings for published file shares.
• If you select the Automatic selection option, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically choose the
mount server where to restore file shares. The job will use the mount server from the repository where the
backup files reside. For scale-out backup repositories, Veeam Backup & Replication will use the least
occupied mount server.
• If you select the Ma nual selection option, you can specify which mount server to use to individually
publish each file share:
a. In the Mount servers list, select a file share for which you want to assign a mount server.
b. Click E d it. Alternatively you can double-click the required file share in the list.
c. In the Select mount server window, select a mount server to use to publish the chosen file sha re.
To quickly find a mount server, you can use the search field at the bottom of the window.
NOTE
Mind that data on the mounted file share may be available to the users added to the Administrators group
on this mount server.
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Step 4. Specify Access Permissions
After you specify file shares and mount servers, Veeam Backup & Replication validates them. If
Veeam Backup & Replication detects missing security descriptors on the file shares, it adds the Access
P ermissions step to the wizard. At this step you can specify the owner account and permissions for the file
share.
1. From the File shares list, select a file share for which you want to specify an owner account and
permissions.
2. Click Set Owner and specify the owner account for the file share.
3. Click P ermissions and configure access permissions for the file share. The following options are available:
o Deny to everyone
o Allow to everyone
Use Ad d and Remove buttons to configure accounts and groups to which you want to grant
permissions for accessing the file share.
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Step 5. Specify Reason for Recovery
At the Rea son step of the wizard, specify the reason for performing instant file share recovery. You can leave
the field blank.
If you do not want to specify the reason for instant file share recovery in the future, select the Do not show me
this page again check box.
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Step 6. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the instant file share recovery settings and click Finish.
Veeam Backup & Replication will publish the file share to the specified mount servers.
After you recover an SMB file share as described in Performing Instant File Share Recovery, you can update the
content of the mounted file share. After that, you can keep all the changes b y migrating the mounted file share
to production.
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Step 1. Launch Migrate to Production Wizard
To launch the Mig rate to Production wizard, open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Instant
Recovery. In the working area, select the necessary published file share and do one of the following:
• In the Instant Recovery tab on the ribbon, click Mig rate to Production.
• Right-click the file share that you want to migrate and select Mig rate to Production.
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Step 2. Define Destination for Migration
At the Destination step of the wizard, specify the location where you want to migrate the selected file share to.
• Select Orig inal location to migrate data to the location where it resided originally. This type of migration is
only possible if the original device is connected to Veeam Backup & Replication and powered on.
a. In the This server field, select a file share where files must be migrated to. You can select any file
share added to the backup inventory. If the required file share is missing in the drop-down list, click
Ad d and add a new file share to Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information on how to add a
new file share, see File Share.
b. In the P a th to folder field, specify a path to the folder on the selected file share where files must be
migrated to.
To select a specific folder on the file share to migrate files to, click Browse. In the Select Folder
window, select the target location for the file share.
If you want to restore the file share to a new folder, click New Folder at the bottom of the window,
enter the folder name and click OK to confirm the new folder creation.
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Step 3. Specify Restore Options
At the Restore Options step of the wizard, specify overwrite options in case the file with the same name already
exists in the destination:
• If you want to overwrite the existing files only if they are older than the restored files, select the Rep lace
old er files only option .
• If you want to restore the whole file share and overwrite the existing files with the restored files, select
the Restore anyway (overwrites the existing file) option.
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Step 4. Specify Switchover Options
During migration to production, Veeam Backup & Replication moves to the production site not only content of
the initial file share, but also incremental changes made by users in the mounted file share. When incremental
changes are being moved, the mounted share is not available to users. We call this stage a switchover. The
switchover may take some time, so ensure you properly plan when it is performed.
At the Switchover step of the wizard, specify file share switchover options:
• If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switchover automatically once the entire file
share is migrated, select the Automatic option.
• If you want to perform the switchover manually after the entire file share is migrated, select the Ma nual
option.
To launch the switchover manually, open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Instant Recovery.
In the working area, select the necessary published file share and do one of the following:
o Right-click the file share that you want to switch over to production and select Switchover now.
• If you want Veeam Backup & Replication to perform the switchover at a certain moment, select the
Scheduled at option and specify when you want it to be done.
Before the scheduled switchover starts, you can edit the switchover time. To edit it, open the Home view.
In the inventory pane, select Instant Recovery. In the working area, select the necessary published file
share and do one of the following:
o Right-click the file share that you want to update the switchover time for and select E d it switchover.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the migration to production settings and click Finish.
Veeam Backup & Replication will migrate the selected file share to the specified production destination.
• Right-click the file share that you want to unmount and select Stop publishing.
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Restoring Entire File Share
You can restore the entire file share from the backup to a specific restore point. That can be helpful, for
example, if your file share device gets out of order and you need to restore the entire file share to the original or
other location.
• You can restore files and folders of the file share from a backup that has at least one successfully created
restore point.
• The file share on which you plan to save restored files and folders must be added to the backup
infrastructure.
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Step 1. Launch File Restore Wizard
To launch the File Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• In the Home tab on the ribbon, click Restore > File Share. In the Restore from File Backup window, click
Restore entire share.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup and do one of the following:
o Click the file share that you want to restore. In the Ba ckup tab on the ribbon, click E ntire share.
o Right-click the file share that you want to restore and select E ntire file share.
You can restore the file share to the state as of a specific restore point by using a backup copy. Backup
copies created in the secondary repositories are represented in the Ba ckups > Disk (Copy) node in the
inventory pane. If the secondary repository is an object storage repository, backup copies created in it are
represented in the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage (Copy) node in the inventory pane.
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Step 2. Select File Share to Restore
At the File Shares step of the wizard, select the file share that you want to restore:
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Ba ckups Browser window, select the file share backup job and a file share in it that you want to
restore. Click OK.
3. In the File shares table, select the file share to select a restore point to restore to. Click P oint.
4. In the Select Restore Point window, select the restore point to which you want to restore the file share. To
select the required restore point, do one of the following:
o Click the date link under the Restore point slider. In the calendar in the right pane of the Restore
p oints window, select the date when the required restore point was created. The list of restore points
on the left pane displays restore points created on the selected date. Select the point to which you
want to restore the file share.
In the Files in backup tree, you can see what folders and files are covered by the selected restore point
and the date when each of them was modified.
Click OK.
To quickly find a file share, you can use the search field at the top of the window. Enter a file share name or a
part of it in the search field and press [Enter].
To exclude the file share from the restore process, select the file shar e in the table and click Remove.
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Step 3. Specify Destination for Data Restore
At the Destination step of the wizard, specify the location where you want to restore the file share.
• Select Orig inal location to restore data to the location where it resided originally. This type of restore is
only possible if the original device is connected to Veeam Backup & Replication and powered on.
a. In the This s erver field, select a file share to restore files to. You can select any file share added to the
backup inventory. If the required file share is missing in the drop -down list, click Ad d and add a new
file share to Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information on how to add a new file share, see
File Share.
b. In the P a th to folder field, specify a path to the folder on the selected file share to restore files to.
To select a specific folder on the file share to restore files to, click Browse. In the Select Folder
window, select the target location for the file share.
If you want to restore the file share to a new folder, click New Folder at the bottom of the window,
enter the folder name and click OK to confirm the new folder creation.
c. Select P reserve folder hierarchy to keep the folder hierarchy of the original file share in the new
location.
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Step 4. Specify Restore Options
At the Restore Options step of the wizard, specify overwrite options in case the file with the sa me name already
exists in the target folder:
• Sk ip restoring (keeps the existing file). Select this option if you do not want to overwrite the existing file
with the restored one.
• Rep lace older files only (use if a share was reverted to a storage snapsh ot). Select this option if you want
to overwrite the existing file only if it is older than the restored file.
• Rep lace newer files only ( use to discard unwanted contents changes) . Select this option if you want to
overwrite the existing file only if the restored file is older than the source share file.
• Restore anyway (overwrites the existing file). Select this option if you want to overwrite the existing file
with the restored file in all cases.
Select the Restore permissions and security attributes check box if you want the restored files to keep their
original ownership and security permissions. If you do not select this check box, Veeam Backup & Replication
will change security settings. The user account under which the Veeam Backup Service runs w ill be set as the
owner of the restored objects. Access permissions will be inherited from the target folder to which the objects
are restored.
NOTE
Mind that Veeam Backup & Replication does not collect ACL handling settings of the source file share root
folder, so you cannot restore them. Before restoring an entire file share, you will have to specify required
ACL handling settings for the root folder of the target file share.
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Step 5. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the file share restore settings and click Finish.
Veeam Backup & Replication will restore the file share to the specified location.
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Rolling Back to a Point in Time
You can roll back changes made to files and folders on the file share to a specific restore point that is older than
the current file share state. This option can be useful, for example, when the original file share was attacked by
ransomware. In this case you can roll back all the files that were changed by the ransomware to the state be fore
the attack.
Before you roll back the file share to a point in time, check prerequisites.
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Step 1. Launch File Restore Wizard
To launch the File Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• In the Home tab on the ribbon, click Restore > File Share. In the Restore from File Backup window, click
Rollback to a point in time.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup and do one of the following:
o Click the file share backup whose files you want to restore. In the Ba ckup tab on the ribbon, click
Rollback to a point in time.
o Right-click the file share backup whose files you want to restore and select Restore > Rollback to a
p oint in time.
You can roll back the file share to a point in time by using a backup copy. Backup copies created in the
secondary repositories are represented in the Ba ckups > Disk (Copy) node in the inventory pane. If the
secondary repository is an object storage repository, backup copies created in it are represented in the
Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage (Copy) node in the inventory pane.
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Step 2. Select Object to Restore
At the File Shares step of the wizard, select the file share, whose files you want to roll back:
1. Click Ad d .
2. In the Ba ckups Browser window, select the file share backup job and a file share in it, whose files you want
to roll back. Click OK.
3. In the File shares table, select the file share to select a restore point to rollback to. Click P oint.
4. In the Select Restore Point window, select the restore point to which you want to roll back the files. To
select the required restore point, do one of the following:
o Click the date link under the Restore point slider. In the calendar in the right pane of the Restore
p oints window, select the date when the required restore point was created. The list of restore points
on the left pane displays restore points created on the selected date. Select the point to whic h you
want to roll back the files to.
In the Files in backup tree, you can see what folders and files are covered by the selected restore point
and the date when each of them was modified.
Click OK.
To quickly find a file share, you can use the search field at the top of the window. Enter a file share name or a
part of it in the search field and press [Enter].
To exclude the file share from the rollback process, select the file share in the table and click Remove.
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Step 3. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the file share restore settings and click Finish.
Veeam Backup & Replication will restore the files to the specified point in time.
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Restoring Specific Files and Folders
You can restore specific files and folders to the original or a new location. This option can be useful, for
example, if you need to get an older version of some files and folders from the backup.
When you restore specific files, you can extract file versions not only from the backup repository, but also from
the archive repository. For more information, see Restoring Backup Files from Archive Repository.
NOTE
Mind that from the archive repository you can restore files only. Restore of whole folders from the long -
term repository is not supported.
• You can restore files and folders from a backup that has at least one created restore point, even if it is
incomplete.
• The file share on which you plan to save restored files and folders must be added to the backup
infrastructure.
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Step 1. Launch File Restore Wizard
To launch the File Restore wizard, do one of the following:
• In the Home tab on the ribbon, click Restore > File Share. In the Restore from File Backup window, click
Restore individual files and folders.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, select Ba ckups. In the working area, expand the necessary
backup and do one of the following:
o Click the file share backup whose files you want to restore. In the Ba ckup tab on the ribbon, click Files
a nd folders.
o Right-click the file share backup whose files you want to restore and select Restore > Files and
folders.
You can restore files and folders from a backup copy. Ba ckup copies created in the secondary repositories
are represented in the Ba ckups > Disk (Copy) node in the inventory pane. If the secondary repository is an
object storage repository, backup copies created in it are represented in the Ba ckups > Ob ject Storage
( Copy) node in the inventory pane.
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Step 2. Select Object to Restore
At the Ba ckup step of the wizard, select the file share backup whose files you want to restore:
To quickly find a file share, you can use the search field at the bottom of the window.
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Step 3. Verify Restore Object Settings
At the Summary step of the wizard, review selected restore object and click Finish to switch to the Backup
Browser and select files and folders to restore.
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Step 4. Select Files and Folders to Restore
In the Ba ckup Browser, select files and folders to restore. Backup browser has three representations of restore
points. You can select one of the following options in the Restore Point group on the ribbon to display file
versions:
• La test — the Ba ckup Browser shows the latest versions of files and folders on the file share.
• All Time — the Ba ckup Browser shows all files and folders ever backed up by the backup job. This option
retrieves file versions stored both in the backup and archive repositories. This representat ion additionally
shows how many file versions of each file are stored in the backup and the date when the latest file
version was created.
o If you restore a whole folder, you will be prompted to the Select Restore Point to Use step to select a
restore point to restore files and folders from.
NOTE
Mind that during file-level restore you cannot restore whole folders from the archive restore
points. If the files are already moved to the archive repository, you have to restore them one by
one.
o If you restore a single file, you will be prompted to the Select File Version to Restore step to select a
file version to restore the file from.
• Selected — the Ba ckup Browser shows versions of files and folders backed up as of the certain restore
point. Select the restore point in the list on the right of the Selected option on the ribbon.
You can use the search field at the top of the working area to search for specific fil es and folders.
NOTE
In order to keep the operation of the Backup Server stable, the number of retrieved search result records is
limited to 1000. Therefore, if you work with backup folders that store large volumes of data, it is
recommended to narrow the search criteria to fit into the limitation.
You can restore files and folders to their original location or a new location.
• To overwrite the original file on the file share with the file restored from the backup, select Restore >
Overwrite.
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• To save the file restored from the backup next to the original file, select Restore > Keep.
Veeam Backup & Replication will add the _RESTORED_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS suffix to the original file
name and store the restored file in the same folder where the original file resides.
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Step 5. Select Restore Point
The Restore Mode step is required if you use the All Time option at the Select Files and Folders to Restore step
and the selected folders have more than one restore point.
Specify the restore point to which you want to restore files and folders:
• To restore the folder to the latest available restore point, select La test state.
• To select a specific restore point, select E a rlier restore point, click Nex t and specify the restore point. To
select the required restore point, do one of the following:
o Click the date link under the Restore point slider. In the calendar in the left pane of the Restore points
window, select the date when the required restore point was created. The list of restore points on the
left pane displays restore points created on the selected date. Select the point to which you want to
restore the file share.
In the Files in backup tree, you can see what folders and files are covered by the selected restore point
and the date when files and folders were modified.
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Step 6. Select File Version to Restore
The File Version step is required if you use the All Time option at the Select Files and Folders to Restore step
and the selected files have more than one file version.
Select one or more versions to restore. You can restore files both from the b ackup repository and archive
repository. To select several file versions, hold [Ctrl] and select multiple records in the table. Restore of
multiple file versions can be helpful, for example, when you need to search for a specific version of the file, but
you do not know for sure which one contains required changes.
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Step 7. Specify Destination for File Restore
The Destination step is required if you choose the Cop y To option at the Select Files and Folders to Restore step.
Specify the destination where the restored files must be stored:
1. In the Restore files and folders to field, select a file share to which the files must be restored. All file
shares added to the inventory of Veeam Backup & Replication are available. If the required file share is
missing in the drop-down list, click Ad d and add a new file share to Veeam Backup & Replication.
For more information on how to add a new file share, see Adding File Share.
2. In the P a th to folder field, specify a path to the folder on the selected file share where files must be
restored.
To create a dedicated folder for restored files, click Browse. In the Select Folder window, select the target
location for the file share.
If you want to restore the file share to a new folder, click New Folder at the bottom of the window.
Confirm the new folder creation.
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Step 8. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, review the file restore settings and click Finish.
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Restoring Backup Files from Archive Repository
You can restore any file from the archive repository to the state of any file version stored in the archive.
Depending on the circumstances, such a restore can require different actions.
NOTE
Mind that from the archive repository you can restore files only. Restore of whole folders from the long -
term repository is not supported.
To restore files from the archive repository, for example, from an object storage:
1. If necessary, add the storage that keeps the required archive to the backup infrastructure as described in
Adding Backup Repositories.
a. Locate the required file backup archive under Ba ckups - Object Storage (Imported) node in the Home
view.
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b. Right-click the file backup and select Download backup metadata.
c. From the drop-down list, select a backup repository to store the downloaded metadata of files
archive and click OK.
4. Restore files from the archive backup as described in Restoring Specific Files and Folders.
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Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to create and manage data protection and restore tasks for Amazon
Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) environments. For this, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a AWS Plug-in
for Veeam Backup & Replication component. This component extends Veeam Backup & Replication functionality
and provides access to Veeam Backup for AWS from the Veeam Backup & Replication console. For more
information, see the Integration with Veeam Backup for AWS Guide.
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Integration with Veeam Backup for
Microsoft Azure
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to create and manage data protection and restore tasks for Microsoft
Azure environments. For this, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a Microsoft Azure Plug-in for Veeam Backup &
Replication component. This component extends Veeam Backup & Replication functionality and provides access
to Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure from the Veeam Backup & Replication console. For more information, see
the Integration with Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure Guide.
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Integration with Veeam Backup for
Google Cloud
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to create and manage data protection and restore tasks for Google
Cloud environments. For this, Veeam Backup & Replication uses a Google Cloud Plug-in for Veeam Backup &
Replication component. This component extends Veeam Backup & Replication functionality and provides access
to Veeam Backup for Google Cloud from the Veeam Backup & Replication console. For more information, see
the Integration with Veeam Backup for Google Cloud Guide.
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Integration with Veeam Backup for
Nutanix AHV
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to manage data protection and restore tasks for Nutanix AHV
environments. For this, Veeam Backup & Replication uses an additional component: Veeam Backup for Nutanix
AHV.
Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV extends Veeam Backup & Replication functionality and allows you to back up
and restore Nutanix AHV VMs. For more information, see the Veeam Backup for Nutanix AHV User Guide.
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Integration with Veeam Backup for Red
Hat Virtualization
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to manage data protection and restore tasks for Red Hat Virtualization
(RHV) hosts. For this, Veeam Backup & Replication uses an additional component: Veeam Backup for RHV.
Veeam Backup for RHV extends Veeam Backup & Replication functionality and allows you to back up and restore
RHV VMs. For more information, see the Veeam Backup for RHV User Guide.
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Integration with Kasten K10
Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to manage data protection and restore tasks for backups exported with
K10 policies. For this, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the Veeam Plug-in for Kasten K10 solution.
Veeam Plug-in for Kasten K10 extends Veeam Backup & Replication functionality and allows you to export
backups created by K10 policies to backup repositories. For more information, see the Integration with Veeam
Backup Repositories for Kasten K10 User Guide.
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Veeam Agent Management
To back up physical machines running Windows, Linux, Unix or macOS operating systems,
Veeam Backup & Replication uses backup agents installed on each computer. Veeam Backup & Replication
operates as a centralized control center for deploying and managing Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows,
Veeam Agent for Linux, Veeam Agent for IBM AIX, Veeam Agent for Oracle Solaris and Veeam Agent for Mac
(Veeam Agents).
For more information about Veeam Agents, see the Veeam Agent Management Guide.
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Veeam Cloud Connect
If you want to store your data in the cloud, you can connect to the service provider and write VM bac kups to
cloud repositories or create VM replicas on cloud hosts.
For more information about Veeam Cloud Connect, see the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
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Advanced VMware vSphere Features
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you leverage the following VMware vSphere features and functionality during
data protection and disaster recovery operations:
• VM tags
• Encrypted VMs
• Storage policies
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VM Tags
If you use vCenter Server tags to categorize objects in the virtual infrastructure, you can filter objects that you
add to data protection and disaster recovery jobs and tasks by these tags. Use of tags facilitates object
management. You can quickly configure jobs and tasks for VMs that belong to a specific category, for example, a
certain department or SLA level.
To add objects by tags, switch to the VMs a nd Tags or Ta g combination view in the Ad d Objects window.
Veeam Backup & Replication will display objects categorized by tags.
In the VMs a nd Tags view, you can select only one tag and those objects that have this tag will be processed by
a job. In the Ta g s combination view, you can select multiple tags and those object that have all the selected tags
will be processed.
• The VirtualCenter.FQDN parameter in the Ad vanced Settings of vCenter Server must contain the real fully
qualified domain name of the vCenter Server host.
• A certificate installed on vCenter Server must contain the real fully qualified domain name of the vCenter
Server host.
• The fully qualified domain name of the vCenter Server host must be accessible and resolved to its IP (and
vice versa) from machines on which Veeam Backup & Replication services are installed (at least the Veeam
Backup Service and Veeam Broker Service).
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• A user account used for specific data protection and disaster recovery operations must have sufficient
permissions on the vCenter Server. For more information, see Full VM Restore, Replica Failback and
Cumulative Permissions sections in the Permissions Reference.
• If VM tags are not displayed in the Veeam Backup & Replication console for some reason, try restarting
VMware vSphere services that are responsible for the tags functionality. In VMware vSphere earlier than
6.5, you must restart the vCenter Inventory Service. Starting from VMware vSphere 6.5, vCenter Inventory
Services functionality is replaced by the vCenter Content Library and other services that are part of
vCenter Server 6.5.
When you upgrade to VMware vSphere 6.5, data from vCenter Inventory Service is migrated to the new
database support services in vCenter Server 6.5. The vCenter Inventory Service may remain in the list of
services, however, it is no longer used.
• If you are using the vSphere Fault Tolerance feature, assign VM tags in one of the fol lowing ways in order
to provide proper VM backup processing by Veeam Backup & Replication:
o Assign the required VM tag to the primary VM. In case of the failover to the secondary VM, the VM tag
is copied to the secondary VM and this VM is used as a source for continuing
Veeam Backup & Replication jobs.
o Assign the required VM tag to the VM container that comprises the primary VM in the virtual
infrastructure inventory. The primary VM inherits this tag. In case of the failover to the secondary VM,
the VM tag is copied to the secondary VM and this VM is used as a source for continuing
Veeam Backup & Replication jobs.
Thus, there is no need to assign the VM tag to the secondary VM. Moreover, if you manually assign the
same tag both to the primary VM and the secondary VM and use this tag to add objects to a VM backup
job, this will result in the backup failure.
Veeam Backup & Replication ignores the cardinality setting for VM tag categories. For example, you create a tag
category Priority and set cardinality to One ta g per object. In the tag category, you create two tags: Normal and
High. You assign the Normal tag to a VM folder and the High tag to a VM in this folder. If you now configure a
job that will process objects with the Normal tag, the VM with the High tag will also be added to this job (since
Veeam Backup & Replication regards that VMs and templates in the VM container inherit the tag assigned to the
container).
To overcome this situation, you can add to the list of exclusions the tag assigned to objects that you do not
want to process.
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Encrypted VMs
Veeam Backup & Replication provides support for VMware vSphere encrypted VMs.
• VM encryption instances must be preconfigured in the virtual infrastructure: you must set up the Key
Management Server (KMS), create the VM encryption policy, and assign it to VMs in advance.
• The backup proxy must be working in the Virtual appliance or Network transport mode:
o The backup proxy working in the Virtual appliance transport mode must be deployed on an
encrypted VM.
o The backup proxy working in the Network transport mode uses the NBD protocol by default. If you
want to use NBDSSL, select the E nable host to proxy traffic encryption in Network mode (NBDSSL)
check box in the Tra nsport Mode window. Note that traffic encryption puts more stress on the CPU
of an ESXi host and can decrease performance.
• VM encryption instances must be preconfigured in the virtual infrastructure: you must set up the Key
Management Server (KMS), create the VM encryption storage policy, and assign it to VMs in advance.
• The backup proxy must be working in the Virtual appliance or Network transport mode:
o The backup proxy working in the Virtual appliance transport mode must be deployed on an
encrypted VM.
o The backup proxy working in the Network transport mode uses the NBD protocol by default. If
you want to use NBDSSL, select the E nable host to proxy traffic encryption in Network mode
( NBDSSL) check box in the Tra nsport Mode window. Note that traffic encryption puts more
stress on the CPU of an ESXi host and can decrease performance.
If you restore a VM as an encrypted one to the specified location, ensure that the target datastore is under the
VM E ncryption Policy node.
If a VM has several disks, you can optionally restore some disks as encrypted and some disks as unencrypted.
Keep in mind, that even if one disk is restored as encrypted, the VM configuration file must also be placed on a
datastore under the VM E ncryption P olicy node.
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Replication of Encrypted VMs
To replicate VMware encrypted VMs, the backup infrastructure must meet the following requirements:
• VM encryption instances must be preconfigured in the virtual infrastructure: you must set up the Key
Management Server (KMS), create the VM encryption policy, and assign it to VMs in advance. Ensure
that you use a common KMS or the KMS clusters at both sites use common encryption keys.
NOTE
If you do not set up KMS, the replication job will not fail, but replicated VMs will not be encrypted in
this case.
• Source and target backup proxies must be working in the Virtual appliance or Network transport
mode:
o The backup proxy working in the Virtual appliance transport mode must be deployed on an
encrypted VM.
o The backup proxy working in the Network transport mode uses the NBD protocol by default. If
you want to use NBDSSL, select the E nable host to proxy traffic encryption in Network mode
( NBDSSL) check box in the Tra nsport Mode window. Note that traffic encryption puts more
stress on the CPU of an ESXi host and can decrease performance.
To replicate a VM as an encrypted one, place disks and the configuration file of the VM replica on datastores
compatible with the VM encryption policy:
o At the Destination step of the wizard, click Choose near the Da tastore field.
o In the Select Datastore window, select a datastore under the VM E ncryption Policy node.
NOTE
• VM encryption instances must be preconfigured in the virtual infrastructure: you must set up the Key
Management Server (KMS), create the VM encryption policy and assign it to VMs in advance. Ensure
that you use a common KMS or the KMS clusters at both sites use common encryption keys.
• Source and target backup proxies must be working in the Virtual appliance or Network transport
mode:
o The backup proxy working in the Virtual appliance transport mode must be deployed on an
encrypted VM.
o The backup proxy working in the Network transport mode uses the NBD protocol by default. If
you want to use NBDSSL, select the E nable host to proxy traffic encryption in Network mode
( NBDSSL) check box in the Tra nsport Mode window. Note that traffic encryption puts more
stress on the CPU of an ESXi host and can decrease performance.
If you fail back an encrypted VM replica to the specified location, ensure that the target datastore is under the
VM E ncryption Policy node.
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Storage Profiles
During backup, Veeam Backup & Replication preserves information about the storage policy associated with the
VM, and stores this information to the backup file or replica metadata. When you restore the VM to its original
location, Veeam Backup & Replication also restores information about the VM storage policy. The restored VM
gets automatically associated with the original storage policy.
Veeam Backup & Replication restores the storage policy when you perform the following operations:
• Entire VM restore
• VM failback
Veeam Backup & Replication restores the storage policy only if you restore the VM to the original location. If
you restore the VM to a new location, Veeam Backup & Replication does not preserve the storage policy for the
VM.
In some cases, the original storage policy may be changed or missing by the time when you restore the VM. For
example, the storage policy may be deleted, the original VM in the production e nvironment may be associated
with another storage policy and so on. In such situation, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning and lets
you choose one of the following scenarios:
• Associate the VM with the current storage policy — the restored VM will be associated with the profile
with which the original VM in the production environment is currently associated.
• Associate the VM with the default storage policy — the restored VM will be associated with the profile that
is set as default for the target datastore.
• Associate the VM with the profile stored in the backup file — the restored VM will be associated with the
profile that was assigned to the original VM at the moment of backup, and whose information is stored in
the backup file.
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Veeam Backup & Replication Utilities
You can use the following Veeam Backup & Replication utilities to perform advanced administration tasks in
your backup infrastructure:
• Extract.exe Utility
• Veeam.Backup.DBConfig.exe Utility
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Extract Utility
Veeam Backup & Replication comes with an extract utility that can be used to recover ma chines from backup
files. The extract utility does not require any interaction with Veeam Backup & Replication and can be used as an
independent tool on Linux and Microsoft Windows machines.
The extract utility can be helpful, for example, if it is written to the tape next to machine backup files. In this
case, you get a possibility to recover machines from backups at any moment of time even if backups are
removed from Veeam Backup & Replication or Veeam Backup & Replication is not installed.
IMP ORTANT
If you want to use the extract utility to work with backup files located on any of the extents of your scale -
out backup repository, make sure that incremental and full backup files are located on the same extent.
The extract utility is located in the installation folder of Veeam Backup & Replication, by default:
%PROGRAMFILES%\Veeam\Backup and Replication\Backup. The folder contains three files for the
extract utility:
• extract.exe — utility working in the command-line interface, a version for Microsoft Windows
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Using Extract Utility in GUI
To restore machine data in the extract utility GUI:
2. In the Ba ckup file field, specify a path to the backup file from which you want to restore machine data.
3. If the backup file is encrypted, the extract utility will require you to provide a password to unlock the
backup file.
4. In the Ta rget folder field, specify a path to the destination folder where machine data must be restored.
5. From the Ma chines list, select machines whose data you want to restore.
IMP ORTANT
If you restore machine data in the extract utility GUI, consider the following:
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Using Extract Utility in Interactive Mode
To start the extract utility in the interactive mode, run the extract.exe file from the product installation
folder(in case of a Linux machine, run the extract file).
1. A path to the backup file from which the machine must be restored. After you enter the path, the e xtract
utility will display a list of all machines included in the backup and their description.
2. A name of the machine that you want to restore. If there is more than one machine with the specified
name in the backup, you will be asked to specify the host on which the backed-up machine resides. If you
want to restore all machines from the backup, press [Enter] on the keyboard.
3. If the backup was encrypted, password that was used to encrypt the backup file.
4. An output directory to which machines must be restored. If you want to restore machines to the current
directory, press [Enter] on the keyboard.
5. The operation confirmation. Press [Y] on the keyboard to restore a machine to the directory you specified.
If you want to abort the operation, press [Enter] on the keyboard.
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Using Extract Utility from Command Line
To run the extract utility from the command line, do one of the following:
• In the command line, change the current directory to the directory where the extract utility is located.
• Add the directory where the extract utility is located to the PATH variable.
Syntax
Parameters
p a thtobackup Path to the backup file from which machines must be restored. Optional
Example
This command validates an encrypted backup file.
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Displaying Help Information for Utility Usage
This command prints all variants of the extract utility usage along with required and optional parameters.
Syntax
extract.exe -help
Syntax
Parameters
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Syntax
Parameters
p a thtobackup Path to the backup file from which the machine must be restored. Required
Syntax
Parameters
Required for
p a ssword Password for the encrypted backup file. encrypted backup
files
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P a rameter Description Required/Optional
Example
This command restores winsrv29 machine from an encrypted backup file to the C:/Backup directory.
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Veeam Configuration Database Connection
Utility
Veeam Backup & Replication comes with the Veeam.Backup.DBConfig.exe utility that allows you to manage
connection settings for Veeam Backup & Replication and/or Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager configuration
database. Using this utility, you can:
• Connect to a different database on the same or another Microsoft SQL Server or PostgreSQL instance. If
you specify a database that does not exist yet, it will be created on the selected server.
• Change authentication method for database connection. Possible methods are Microsoft Windows
authentication and Microsoft SQL Server or PostgreSQL native authentication.
NOTE
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Using Veeam.Backup.DBConfig.exe Utility
You can launch the Veeam.Backup.DBConfig.exe utility from the Sta rt menu by clicking Configuration
Da tabase Connection Settings.
Alternatively, you can use the Veeam.Backup.DBConfig.exe file located in the installation folder. By
default, the path to the folder is the following: %PROGRAMFILES%\Common Files\Veeam\Backup and
Replication\DBConfig
To run the utility, you must have administrative rights on the local machine, as long as the utility makes changes
to the registry. If prompted at the launch, choose Run a s administrator.
To manage connection settings for Veeam Backup & Replication or Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager
configuration database, use the launched Veeam Backup & Replication Configuration Database Connection
Settings wizard.
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Step 1. Select Product
At the P roduct step of the wizard, select the database whose settings you want to configure.
The utility detects what server is installed on the local machine (backup server, Veeam Backup Enterprise
Manager server or both) and displays available products for your choice. If Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager is
not installed on the local machine, you will only have an opportunity to change Veeam Backup & Replication
database settings (and vice versa). In this case, the P roduct step of the wizard will be skipped.
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Step 2. Specify Connection Settings
At the Connection Settings step of the wizard, provide the connection settings for the selected database.
2. Specify an instance and a database name to which you want the Veeam Backup & Replication installation
to connect.
o For the Microsoft SQL Server, specify an instance name in localhost\instanceName format.
Both local and remote Microsoft SQL Server and PostgreSQL instances are supp orted. Microsoft SQL
Server instances available on the network are shown in the Instance name list. If necessary, click Refresh
to get the latest information.
If a database with the specified name does not exist on the selected Microsoft SQL or PostgreSQL
instance, it will be created anew.
NOTE
If you change the database to which Veeam Backup & Replication must be connected, make sure that
the database to which Veeam Backup & Replication is currently connected is available. If not, you
must stop the Veeam Backup Service on the machine where Veeam Backup & Replication is installed.
3. Select the authentication method that will be used for database connection:
o If you plan to use the Microsoft Windows authentication, consider that the current service account
will be used (that is, the account under which the Veeam Backup Service is running).
o If you plan to use the Microsoft SQL Server or the PostgreSQL native authentication, provide a login
name and a password. To view the entered password, click and hold the eye icon on the right of the
P a ssword field.
IMP ORTANT
When you migrate the configuration database to another server, you must use the Microsoft SQL
Server credentials that have CREATE ANY DATABASE permission on the target Microsoft SQL Server.
For details, see Microsoft Docs.
After database creation this account automatically gets a db_owner role and can perform all
operations with the database. If the current account does not have this permission, a Database
Administrator may create an empty database in advance and grant the db_owner role to the account
that will be used for migration of the configuration database.
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Step 3. Apply Connection Settings
Before proceeding, the utility validates the specified settings to make sure that the user account has enough
privileges to access the database.
• If you have selected the Microsoft Windows authentication method, the utility will check the privileges of
the current user account (that is, the account under which the utility is running) to connect to specified
Microsoft SQL Server.
• If you have selected the Microsoft SQL Server or the PostgreSQL native authentication method, the utility
will check the privileges of the account you have specified.
To ensure that these accounts (as well as the account under which the Veeam Backup Service is running) have
sufficient privileges for database access, you can contact your database administrator. Refer to the list of
required permissions for Veeam Backup & Replication for detailed information.
For the new settings to be applied, the utility needs to stop Veeam Backup & Replication services and jobs that
are currently running. Before proceeding to the Ap p ly step, you must confirm the operation. After you confirm
the operation by clicking Y es , Veeam Backup & Replication will force services and jobs to stop, and will apply
database connection settings. For example, if you are configuring Veeam Backup & Replication database
settings, the following prompt will be displayed.
Wait for the operation to complete and click Nex t to proceed to the Summary step of the wizard. Previously
stopped services will be started again at this moment.
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Step 4. Finish Working with Wizard
At the Summary step of the wizard, view the information about the changes in datab ase connection settings. If
you were configuring Veeam Backup & Replication database settings and you want the Veeam backup
management console to be opened automatically after you finish working with the wizard, select the Sta rt the
p roduct automatically check box.
NOTE
The Sta rt the product automatically option is not available for Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager.
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Veeam Backup Validator
Veeam Backup Validator is an utility that verifies the integrity of a backup file without extracting VM data.
Veeam Backup Validator is a command-prompt CRC check utility that tests a backup at the file level. You may
need this utility to check whether backup files were damaged: for example, after hardware failures occurred in a
backup storage side or if backup files were transferred over network.
For integrity validation, Veeam Backup Validator uses the checksum algorithm. When
Veeam Backup & Replication creates a backup of a VM, it calculates a checksum for every data block in the
backup file and attaches these checksums to data blocks. Veeam Backup Validator recalculates checksums for
data blocks and compares them against the initial checksum values. If the results match, the backup file is
viable.
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Using Veeam Backup Validator
Veeam Backup Validator is located on the backup server in the installation folder of Veeam Backup & Replication
— by default, %ProgramFiles%\Veeam\Backup and
Replication\Backup\Veeam.Backup.Validator.exe. If the default path was changed, you can find the
actual path in the following registry value: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Veeam\Veeam Backup and
Replication] CorePath.
To run the utility, open the command prompt on the backup server and change the current folder to the folder
where Veeam Backup Validator is located.
IMP ORTANT
• Veeam Backup Validator cannot validate per-machine backups with separate metadata files. For
more information on backup chain formats, see Backup Chain Formats.
• To run Veeam Backup Validator, you must use an account with administrative rights on the local
machine.
• You cannot use Veeam Backup Validator to verify integrity of NAS backups.
• You cannot use Veeam Backup Validator to verify integrity of backups created in Veeam Cloud
Connect repositories. For more information on Veeam Cloud Connect repositories, see the Cloud
Repository section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
• The cloud provider can verify integrity of tenant backups only by using the /file parameter and only
if the backup is not encrypted. They cannot verify encrypted backups and they cannot verify backups
by using other parameters.
• [For backups stored in scale-out backup repositories] Veeam Backup Validator can validate only
backups stored in the performance tier which consists of backup repositories (except object storage
repositories). Make sure that incremental and full backup files are located on the same extent.
Syntax
Veeam Backup Validator provides parameter sets that allow you to:
Veeam.Backup.Validator /?
• Validate integrity of the content of all VMs or selected VMs in the specified backup.
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Parameters
/b a ckup: Specifies a Required String For a backup copy job in the immediate
b a ckupname| name or an mode, you must specify the name of its
b a ckupID ID* of a child job — task that copies backup job
backup or added as a source to the backup copy
backup copy job. For example, if the "My Copy"
job that you backup copy job copies "Daily Backup"
want to backup job, then you must set the
validate. parameter value to "My Copy\Daily
Backup".
/username: To access files Required for String If you want to validate files located on
username on network network share different shares, make sure this account
/p a ssword: shares. has access rights to all these shares.
p a ssword Specifies
account
credentials
that the utility
uses to access
network
shares.
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P a rameter Description Required/Optio P a ramet Notes
na l er Ty pe
Note: You
must provide
this parameter
after the
/backup
parameter.
To get the
restore point
ID, run the
Get-
VBRRestorePo
int cmdlet and
retrieve the
PointID
property.
/d a te:pointdate Specifies the Optional Date Make sure to specify the date in the same
date when the format as used on the Veeam Backup
validated server. For example:
restore point
• For the mm/dd/yyyy format,
was created.
specify 08.30.2012.
• For the dd/mm/yyyy format,
specify 30.08.2012.
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P a rameter Description Required/Optio P a ramet Notes
na l er Ty pe
/sk ip Defines Optional Boolean In the vmname parameter, list all VMs
whether to that you want to skip.
skip from
processing
VMs listed in
the vmname
parameter.
* You can get IDs of backup jobs and restore points from the Veeam Backup & Replication database using scripts or
Management Studio.
Example 1
This command validates the winsrv29 VM in the incremental backup file and writes the results in the
report.html file.
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Example 2
This command validates the exch01 VM in the Exchange Backup Job file.
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Example 3
This command validates all VMs in the Exchange Backup Job file created on December 18, 2018 around
12:00 AM.
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Veeam Backup Configuration Tool
Veeam Backup & Replication comes with the Veeam.Backup.Configuration.Tool.exe utility that allows
you to manage BCO files. BCO files are backup files that contain backups of configuration databases.
Veeam Backup & Replication creates these files when it performs configuration backup. For more information on
configuration backup, see Configuration Backup and Restore.
You can use the Veeam Backup Configuration tool in the following scenarios:
• You do not have information on the BCO file version, parameters and attributes. In this case, you can use
the tool to get details on the BCO file version.
• Veeam Backup & Replication is not able to restore a configuration database using a specific BCO file. In
this case, you can use the tool to check if the BCO file is corrupted. The Veeam Backup Configuration tool
will perform the cyclic redundancy check (CRC) and will verify that the encrypted file is decrypted
properly.
• You do not have information on the specific configuration database. In this case, you can get details on its
version and also use the tool to back up this database.
• Your backup server is no longer available, but your configuration database is still up and running. You can
use the tool to create a backup of the configuration database and migrate this database to another backup
server. In this case, the tool produces the same configuration backup, as Veeam Backup & Replication
creates when you run the configuration backup job.
NOTE
If you back up the configuration database using the Veeam Backup Configuration tool, you will not
be able to choose the backup repository in which the configuration backup must be stored and the
necessary retention settings. Veeam Backup & Replication will keep last 10 restore points of the
configuration backup in the default backup repository. If you want to change these setting, see the
Scheduling Configuration Backups section.
2290 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Using Veeam Backup Configuration Tool
The Veeam Backup Configuration tool is located on the backup server in the installation folder of
Veeam Backup & Replication. The default path is %ProgramFiles%\Veeam\Backup and
Replication\Backup\Veeam.Backup.Configuration.Tool.exe. If the default path was changed, you
can find the actual path in the following registry value: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Veeam\Veeam
Backup and Replication] CorePath.
To run the tool, open the command prompt on the backup server and change the current folder to the folder
where Veeam Backup Configuration tool is located.
IMP ORTANT
To run the Veeam Backup Configuration tool, you must use an account with administrative rights on the
local machine.
Syntax
The Veeam Backup Configuration tool provides parameter sets that allow y ou to:
Veeam.Backup.Configuration.Tool /?
2291 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Parameters
2292 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
P a rameter Description Required/Optional P a rameter Type
Examples
Example 1
This example shows how to analyze the 193022052014.bco configuration backup file. After you start the
command, the command prompt will return the output.
Example 2
This example shows how to analyze the 193022052014.bco configuration backup file and back up the
configuration database. The command will contain the following settings of the configuration database:
Veeam.Backup.Configuration.Tool.exe /file:c:\backups\091323052014.bco
/backupdatabase /servername:WIN2008R2 /instancename:VeeamSql2008
/initialcatalog:VeeamBackup
2293 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Veeam Backup & Replication Events
This section provides information about events written by Veeam Backup & Replication to Microsoft Windows
Event Log on the backup server.
• General
• License
• Security
• Repositories
• Proxy Server
• WAN Accelerator
• Jobs
• NAS Backup
• Restore
• SureBackup
• Tape
• Agents
2294 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
General
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to the general settings.
31000 General options modified Backup server general options have been Info, Warning,
changed. Error
31100 Network traffic rules Backup server global network traffic rules have Info, Warning,
updated been changed. Error
31500 Configuration backup job Configuration job has been modified. Info, Warning,
updated Error
40100 Shell started The Veeam Backup & Replication console has Info
been launched.
40101 Shell closed The Veeam Backup & Replication console has Info
been closed.
40300 Logs export session finished Support logs export has been completed. Result: Info
<State>.
40400 Global exclusions added <N> objects have been added into the global Info
exclusions list.
40500 Global exclusions deleted <N> objects have been removed from the global Info
exclusions list.
40600 Global exclusions changed Global exclusions list has been modified. Info
40900 Location added Location <Location name> has been added. Info
40901 Location modified Location <Location name> has been modified. Info
2295 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
40902 Location removed Location <Location name> has been removed. Info
40903 Object location changed Object location has been changed. Info
2296 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
License
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to the product license usage.
24010 License installed <License type> License key for Veeam Backup & Replication Info
<Edition> has been installed.
24020 License expiring <License type> License key for Veeam Backup & Replication Warning
<Edition> is about to expire in <N> days.
24030 License expired <License type> License key for Veeam Backup & Replication Error
<Edition> has expired.
24040 License support Support contract for Veeam Backup & Replication is about to Warning
expiring expire in <N> days.
24050 License support Support contract for Veeam Backup & Replication has expired. Error
expired Contact Veeam sales representative to renew your support
contract.
24080 Part of merged <License type> license that was a part of the merged Info
license deleted Veeam Backup & Replication license has been removed.
41300 License report Product license consumption report was created by <Initiator Info
name>.
2297 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
E vent Message Message Details Severity
ID Summary
41303 License revoke License revocation was initiated for objects <Object names> by Info
<Initiator name>.
41304 License remove License removal was initiated for objects <Object names> by Info
<Initiator name>.
41305 License assign <License mode> license was assigned to objects <Object Info
names> by <Initiator name>.
2298 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Security
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to security.
31210 User or group failed Failed to add a user or a group: <User name/Group name>. Info
to add
31600 Password added to Encryption password <Password ID> has been added. Info,
the password Warning,
manager Error
31700 Password stored in Encryption password <Password ID> has been changed. Info,
the password Warning,
manager changed Error
31800 Encryption Encryption password <Password ID> has been deleted. Info,
password deleted Warning,
Error
31900 SSH credentials SSH options for credentials <Credentials> have been Info,
updated updated. Warning,
Error
36001 SPN registration <Host name> <Product name> is attempting to register a Info
request sent Service Principal Name (SPN) for the <Product name>
service.
36002 SPN registered Service Principal Name (SPN) <SPN> for the <Host name> Info
<Product name> service was successfully registered.
2299 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
36003 SPN failed to Failed to register Service Principal Name (SPN) <SPN> for the Warning
register <Host name> <Product name> service. Kerberos
authentication won't work until SPN for the <Product
name> service is registered correctly. Error: <Error code>
40200 Global MFA Multi-factor authentication has been enabled by <Initiator Info
enabled name>.
40201 Global MFA Multi-factor authentication has been disabled by <Initiator Info
disabled name>.
40202 MFA reset user Multi-factor authentication token has been reset for <User Info
token name> by <Initiator name>.
40203 User MFA enabled Multi-factor authentication has been disabled for <User Info
name> by <Initiator name>.
40204 User MFA disabled Multi-factor authentication token has been disabled for <User Info
name> by <Initiator name>.
2300 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Servers and Hosts
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to virtualization servers and hosts.
25600 Host added New hypervisor host has been added. Info, Warning,
Error
25700 Host deleted Hypervisor host has been deleted. Info, Warning,
Error
25800 Host updated Hypervisor host has been updated. Info, Warning,
Error
28300 Host added Host <Host name> (<Host type>) has been created. Info, Warning,
Error
28400 Host updated Host <Host name> (<Host type>) has been Info, Warning,
modified. Error
28500 Host deleted Host <Host name> (<Host type>) has been deleted. Info, Warning,
Error
32900 Component installed Component <Component name> on host <Host Info, Warning,
or updated name> has been installed or upgraded. Error
2301 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Repositories
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to repositories: backup repositories, scale-
out repositories and so on.
21224 Repository server lost Backup server has lost connection to backup Error
connection repository <Repository name>.
26500 Maintenance mode of Extent <ID> Maintenance mode has been changed. Info
scale-out backup New mode is <New status>.
repository changed
29700 Object storage repository Object storage repository <Repository name> has Info
created been created.
29800 Object storage repository Object storage repository <Repository name> has Info
modified been modified.
29900 Object storage repository Object storage repository <Repository name> has Info
deleted been deleted.
2302 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
40002 Management session The storage management session for repository Info,
finished <Repository name> has finished: <State>. Warning,
Error
Repository name: <Repository name>
41400 Storage added Storage <Host name> has been created. Info
41401 Storage modified Storage <Host name> has been modified. Info
41402 Storage deleted Storage <Host name> has been deleted. Info
2303 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Proxy Server
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to backup proxy servers.
21210 Proxy server established Connection to backup proxy <Proxy name> has been Info
connection restored.
21214 Proxy server lost connection Backup server has lost connection to backup proxy Error
<Proxy name>.
27700 Backup proxy created Backup proxy <Proxy name> (<Proxy type>) has Info
been created.
27800 Backup proxy modified Backup proxy <Proxy name> (<Proxy type>) has Info
been modified.
27900 Backup proxy deleted Backup proxy <Proxy name> (<Proxy type>) has Info
been deleted.
2304 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
WAN Accelerator
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to WAN accelerators.
21230 WAN accelerator established Connection to WAN accelerator <WAN name> has Info
connection been restored.
21234 WAN accelerator lost Backup server has lost connection to WAN Error
connection accelerator <WAN name>.
27100 WAN accelerator created WAN accelerator <WAN name> has been created. Info
27200 WAN accelerator modified WAN Accelerator <WAN name> has been modified. Info
27300 WAN accelerator deleted WAN Accelerator <WAN name> has been deleted. Info
33000 WAN accelerator cache Cache of WAN accelerator <WAN name> has been Info
populated populated.
33001 WAN accelerator cache cleared Cache of WAN accelerator <WAN name> has been Info
cleared.
2305 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Jobs
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to the Veeam Backup & Replication jobs
(including backup, replication, backup copy, file copy, VM copy and Quick Migration).
110 Backup job started <Job type> job <Job Info Backup
name> has been
started.
150 Backup task finished VM <Task name> task Info Backup, Replication,
has finished with SureBackup
<State> state.
190 Backup job finished The <Job type> job Info, Backup
<Job name> has Warning,
finished with <State> Error
state.
410 Backup copy job started <Job type> job <Job Info Backup copy
name> has been
started.
450 Backup copy task finished VM <Task name> task Info, Backup copy
has finished with Warning,
<State> state. Error
490 Backup copy job finished The <Job type> job Info, Backup copy
<Job name> has Warning,
finished with <State> Error
state.
510 File copy job started <Job type> job <Job Info File copy
name> has been
started.
512 VM copy job started <Job type> job <Job Info VM copy
name> has been
started.
590 File copy job finished The <Job type> job Info, File copy
<Job name> has Warning,
finished with <State> Error
state.
2306 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity Source
ID
592 VM copy job finished The <Job type> job Info, VM copy
<Job name> has Warning,
finished with <State> Error
state.
610 Quick migration job has been Quick Migration job Info, Quick migration
finished finished with <State> Warning,
state. Error
710 Veeam Agent backup job Agent Backup job Info Veeam Agent backup
started <Job name> has been
started.
790 Veeam Agent backup job Agent Backup job Info, Veeam Agent backup
finished <Job name> finished Warning,
with <State>. Job Error
details:
<Description>.
810 Rescan job started (Veeam Rescan job <Job Info Rescan job (Veeam Agent)
Agent) name> has been
started.
890 Rescan job finished (Veeam Rescan job <Job Info, Rescan job (Veeam Agent)
Agent) name> has been Warning,
finished with Error
<State>. Job details:
<Description>.
2307 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity Source
ID
23090 Job deleted The <Job type> job Info Backup, Replication, Backup
<Job name> has been copy
deleted.
23110 Job objects added <N> objects have been Info Backup, Replication, Backup
created for <Job copy
name>.
23130 Job objects modified <N> objects have been Info Backup, Replication, Backup
modified for <Job copy
name>.
23410 Second destination job <Job name> job has Info Backup copy
assigned been assigned as
secondary destination
for <N> jobs.
23420 Second destination job <Job name> job has Info Backup copy
removed been removed as
secondary destination
for <N> jobs.
25900 Failover plan created New failover plan has Info Replication
been created.
26000 Failover plan updated Failover plan has been Info Replication
updated.
26100 Failover plan deleted Failover plan has been Info Replication
deleted.
2308 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity Source
ID
32120 Job objects deleted <N> objects have Info Backup, Replication, Backup
been deleted for <Job copy
name>.
2309 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
NAS Backup
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to NAS backup functionality.
151 Task finished Source <Task name> task has finished with <State> state. Info
451 Copy task finished Source <Source name> task has finished with <State> Info
state.
600 Migration job started <Job type> job has been started by user Info
<Domain>\<User name>.
601 Migration switchover <Job type> switchover job has been started by user Info
job started <Domain>\<User name>.
610 Migration job finished <Job type> job finished with <State>. Info
28900 File share created File share <Server name> (<Server type>) has been Info
created.
28910 File share modified File share <Server name> (<Server type>) has been Info
modified.
28920 File share deleted File share <Server name> (<Server type>) has been Info
deleted.
28930 File server created File server <Server name> has been created. Info
28940 File server modified File server <Server name> has been modified. Info
28950 File server deleted File server <Server name> has been deleted. Info
41000 NAS backup download NAS backup metadata download has been started for backup Info
meta started <Backup name> by <User name>.
41001 NAS backup download NAS backup metadata download for backup <Backup Info
meta finished name> has been finished. Result: <State>.
2310 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Restore
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to data recovery.
210 Restore session started Restore session has been initiated by <User name>. Info
250 Restore VI task finished Restore for <Object name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
290 Restore session The restore session has finished with <State> state. Info, Warning,
finished Error
600 Migration job started <Job type> job has been started by user Info
<Domain>\<User name>.
601 Migration switchover <Job type> switchover job has been started by user Info
job started <Domain>\<User name>.
40210 Restore session started <Session type> session has been initiated by Info
(new) <Initiator name>.
40290 Restore session The <Session type> session has finished with Info, Warning,
finished (new) <State> state + info. Error
41500 Restore point mounted Backup has been mounted. MountID: <ID>. Info
41510 Restore point Backup has been unmounted. MountID: <ID>. Info
unmounted
2311 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
SureBackup
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to SureBackup functionality.
310 SureBackup job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been Info
started.
350 SureBackup VI verification VM <VM name> verification task has finished Info, Warning,
task finished with <State> state. Error
351 SureBackup VI validation VM <VM name> validation task has finished Info, Warning,
task finished with <State> state. Error
390 SureBackup job finished The <Job type> job <Job name> has finished Info, Warning,
with <State> state. Error
23210 SureBackup job created The SureBackup job <Job name> has been Info
created.
23220 SureBackup job modified The SureBackup job <Job name> has been Info
modified.
23230 SureBackup job deleted The SureBackup job <Job name> has been Info
deleted.
23310 SureBackup objects added <N> objects have been created for <Job Info
name>.
23320 SureBackup objects deleted <N> objects have been deleted from <Job Info
name>.
23330 SureBackup objects modified <N> objects have been modified for <Job Info
name>.
30300 Application group added Application group <Group name> has been Info
added.
30400 Application group modified Application group <Group name> has been Info
modified.
2312 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
30500 Application group deleted Application group <Group name> has been Info
deleted.
30600 Virtual lab created Virtual lab <Lab name> has been created. Info
30700 Virtual lab modified Virtual lab <Lab name> has been modified. Info
30800 Virtual lab deleted Virtual lab <Lab name> has been deleted. Info
2313 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
Tape
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to tape archiving.
114 Tape backup job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
115 Tape erase job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
116 Tape inventory job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
117 Tape catalog job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
118 Tape verification job <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
started
119 Tape export job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
120 Tape copy job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
121 Tape eject job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
122 Tape mark as free job <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
started
123 Tape move to media pool <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
job started
124 Tape delete from library <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
job started
125 Tape libraries discover job <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
started
126 Tape import job started <Job type> job <Job name> has been started. Info
194 Tape backup job finished <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
2314 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
195 Tape erase job finished <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
196 Tape inventory job <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
finished <State> state. Error
197 Tape catalog job finished <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
198 Tape verification job <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
finished <State> state. Error
199 Tape export job finished <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
200 Tape copy job finished <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
203 Tape eject job finished <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
204 Tape mark as free job <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
finished <State> state. Error
205 Tape move to media pool <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
job finished <State> state. Error
206 Tape delete from library <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
job finished <State> state. Error
207 Tape libraries discover job <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
finished <State> state. Error
208 Tape import job finished <Job type> job <Job name> has finished with Info, Warning,
<State> state. Error
10014 Tape restore point created VM <Task name> restore point has been Info
offloaded to the tape <Barcode>.
2315 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
23440 Tape backup job created <Job type> <Job name> has been created. Info
23450 Tape backup job modified <Job type> <Job name> has been modified. Info
23490 Tape backup job deleted <Job type> <Job name> has been deleted. Info
23610 Tape media pool created Tape media pool <Object name> has been Info
created.
23611 Tape media vault created Media vault <Object name> has been created. Info
23612 Tape medium created Tape medium <Object name> has been created. Info
23620 Tape media pool modified Tape media pool <Object name> has been Info
modified.
23621 Tape media vault modified Media vault <Object name> has been modified. Info
23622 Tape medium modified Tape medium <Object name> has been modified. Info
23623 Tape library modified Tape library <Object name> has been modified. Info
23630 Tape media pool deleted Tape media pool <Object name> has been Info
deleted.
23631 Tape media vault deleted Media vault <Object name> has been deleted. Info
23632 Tape medium deleted Tape medium <Object name> has been deleted. Info
23633 Tape library deleted Tape library <Object name> has been deleted. Info
28600 Tape server created Tape server <Server name> has been created. Info
28650 NDMP server added NDMP server <Server name> has been created. Info
28700 Tape server modified Tape server <Server name> has been modified. Info
28750 NDMP server modified NDMP server <Server name> has been modified. Info
2316 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
28800 Tape server deleted Tape server <Server name> has been deleted. Info
2317 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for VMware vSphere
Agents
The following table lists Veeam Backup & Replication events related to agent management.
10010 Restore point VM <VM name> restore point has been created. Info
created
10050 Restore point Restore point for VM <VM name> has been removed according Info
removed to the configured retention policy.
23010 Job created The <Job type> job <Job name> has been created. Info
23050 Job modified The <Job type> job <Job name> has been modified. Info,
Warning,
Error
23090 Job deleted The <Job type> job <Job name> has been deleted. Info
29100 Protection group Protection group <Group name> has been added. Info
added
29110 Protection group Protection group <Group name> has been modified. Info
modified
29120 Protection group Protection group <Group name> has been deleted. Info
deleted
29130 Protection group Protection group <Group name> scope has been increased. Info
items added
29140 Protection group Protection group <Group name> scope has been modified. Info
items modified
29150 Protection group Protection group <Group name> scope has been decreased. Info
items removed
36011 EP recovery token Recovery token has been created. Token ID: <ID>, Access list: Info
created <Access list>, Initiator: <Initiator name>, Expiration
Date UTC: <Date>.
2318 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere
E vent Message Summary Message Details Severity
ID
36012 EP recovery token Recovery token has been updated. Token ID: <ID>, Access list: Info
update <Access list>, Initiator: <Initiator name>, Expiration
Date UTC: <Date>.
36013 EP recovery token Recovery token has been removed. Token ID: <ID>, Access list: Info
removed <Access list>, Initiator: <Initiator name>.
36014 EP recovery token Recovery token has been authenticated. Token ID: <ID>, Info
authenticate Access list: <Access list>, Client: <Client>.
36021 EP plugin data Application Backup Policy for <Job name> has been started. Info
policy started
36022 EP plugin data Application Backup Policy job <Job name> finished with Info,
policy finished <Success/Warning/Failed>. Warning,
Error
36023 EP plugin data Backup of <Database path> with <Job name> policy has Info
policy task started been started. Initiator: <Initiator name>.
36024 EP plugin data Backup of <Database path> with <Job name> policy has Info
policy task been completed.
finished
36025 EP plugin log Application Log Policy for <Job name> has been started. Info
policy started
36026 EP plugin log Application Log Policy job <Job name> finished with Info,
policy finished <Success/Warning/Failed>. Warning,
Error
2319 | V eeam Backup & Replication | User Guide for V Mware vSphere