You can browse and restore backed up data for your instance, partial database or an entire database.
Restore Objectives
Your objective for restoring data determines the process you must follow and the restore destination.
Restore Objective |
Description |
---|---|
Disaster recovery |
Plan your full system recovery in advance. |
Recover data from long-term storage |
If you back up your data to tape for long-term storage, you must identify the corresponding media, and make sure that it is available for the recovery operation. |
Restore data from a specified time range |
If you need to restore data during a range of time (for example, data that was deleted accidentally), you can browse and restore data based on a time range that you specify. Typically, this data would be restored to an out-of-place destination. |
Restore to a point in time |
If your SQL database becomes corrupted or otherwise invalid, you can restore the database to a point in time before the database became unusable. Typically, this data would be restored to an in-place destination. |
Restore Methods
You can restore backed-up data by using the following methods:
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Command Center
You can perform the browse and restore operation from the Command Center. For more information, see SQL Restores.
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CommCell Console
You can perform the browse and restore operation from the CommCell Console.
You can use Commvault Plug-in to perform Commvault backup and restore operations in the SQL Management Studio. For more information, see Commvault Plug-in for SQL Management Studio.
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Command Line
The command line interface provides a way to restore data from the command line, where various restore options can be specified either as parameters on the command line or in a separate arguments file. For more information, see Restoring SQL Server Agent Using the Command Line Interface.
Factors in Choosing the Appropriate Restore Methods and Options
When you select a restore time, the software determines the optimal combination of full backup, differential backup, and log backups necessary to bring the restored databases back to the selected time. This combination of backups is called the restore chain.
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For basic database restores, the restore chain consists of the most recent full backup, the latest differential backup (if any), and all the subsequent log backups (if any) taken prior to the selected restore time.
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While restoring databases to a transaction mark or during a point-in-time restore, the restore chain consists of the most recent full backup, the latest differential backup (if any), all the subsequent log backups taken prior to the selected browse time, and the next log backup after the browse time. The transparent inclusion enables restores to a selected point in time.
Scope
To what degree does data need to be restored?
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To restore all or part of a client's data, you can perform a Browse and Restore operation from the CommCell Console. If the system is not available, but the media is intact, then use Media Explorer to perform the restore.
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To restore the full system (operating system and application) on a client, perform a Full System Recovery: SQL Server Agent.
Time
Do you need to restore data from the latest available backup data or from a previous point in time?
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To browse and restore to a point in time, see:
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To browse and restore from the latest data, see Browse the Latest Data.
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In a basic restore, you can restore point-in-time data by specifying the time range options in the Advanced Restore Options (Time Range) dialog box.
For instructions, see Browsing and Restoring Data between Specified Backup Times.
Note
Browse from subclient level is not supported for the SQL Agent.
Block-Level Restores and SQL Recover Point Restores
Unless otherwise noted for a particular feature, block-level browse is not supported from backups to tape libraries or virtual tape libraries. If you want to perform either of these restore operations by using a secondary copy on tape libraries or virtual tape libraries, move the copy to disk storage before performing the restore.
Restore Chains
When you select a restore time, the software determines the optimal combination of full backup, differential backup, and log backups necessary to bring the restored databases back to the selected time. This combination of backups is called the restore chain.
-
For basic database restores, the restore chain consists of the most recent full backup, the latest differential backup (if any), and all the subsequent log backups (if any) taken prior to the selected restore time.
-
While restoring databases to a transaction mark or during a point-in-time restore, the restore chain consists of the most recent full backup, the latest differential backup (if any), all the subsequent log backups taken prior to the selected browse time, and the next log backup after the transparent browse time. The transparent inclusion enables restores to a selected point in time.
Restore Destinations
The destination where you restore data is determined by your restore objective. Generally, you perform an in-place or an out-of-place restore.
In-place restore
When you restore a database in place, you restore it to the same path on the same client from which the database was backed up.
Out-of-place restore
When you restore a database out of place, you can restore it to any one of the following destinations:
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A different client from which the database was backed up
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A different path on the same client from which the database was backed up
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A different database
You can perform in-place and out-of-place restores from the command line interface.
Restores to a SMB or CIFS share, mapped drives, and network paths are currently not supported.
SQL Portability
You can use the SQL Server Agent to perform the following cross-server restore operations.
Source |
Destination |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|
Windows |
Linux |
Azure |
AWS |
|
Windows |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes, but it must be on the same proxy. |
Yes |
Linux |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
Azure |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
No |
AWS |
Yes |
No |
No |
Yes |
For a video about SQL database restores, see How to perform a SQL database restore.