You can use a wildcard to represent one or more characters when you define the content for backups and filters for a subclient.
The search for subclient content is not case-sensitive.
Note
If the subclient content consists of wildcard characters and no eligible files are found for the backup, the backup operation can still successfully complete.
"<MR>." filters the files with same name as extension and not the folder
| Example string with wildcard | What the example string matches | Examples of files that are filtered | 
|---|---|---|
| <MR>.bak | <MR>.bak would filter all the files that have .bak extension | 
 | 
* (Any Number of Characters)
| Example string with wildcard | What the example string matches | Examples of files and directories that are backed up | 
|---|---|---|
| *.docx | All files that have the .docx file extension. | Are backed up: 
 | 
| /Data/*.docx | All files that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 | 
| a*.so | All files that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 | 
| /Finance/Agenda* | All files and directories that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 | 
? (A Single Character)
| Example string with wildcard | What the example string matches | Examples of files and directories that are backed up | 
|---|---|---|
| access? | All files and directories that have a name that begins with "access", followed by any 1 character. | Are backed up: 
 | 
| access?? | All files and directories that have a name that begins with "access", followed by any 2 characters. | Are backed up: 
 | 
| Class?report | All files and directories that have a name that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 Are not backed up, because "Class" is followed by a number of characters other than 1: 
 | 
[n] (A Range of Characters)
Numbers within square brackets are treated as single digits, and a dash between two digits indicates the complete range of numbers between those two digits.
| Example string with wildcard | What the example string matches | Examples of files and directories that are backed up | 
|---|---|---|
| /[a-m]* | All files that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 | 
| /[AEIOU]*.docx | All files that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 Are not backed up: 
 | 
| /Finance/report[1-47-9] | All files and directories that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 | 
| /Department-[A-CS] | All files and directories that have names that begin with "Department-", followed by A-C, or S. | Are backed up: 
 | 
[!n] (The Negation of a Range or a Set of Characters)
| Example string with wildcard | What the example string matches | Examples of files and directories that are backed up | 
|---|---|---|
| /root/[!AEIOU]*.docx | All files that: 
 | Are backed up: 
 | 
** (Any Number of Characters Across Any Number of Path Levels)
| Example string with wildcard | What the example string matches | Examples of files and directories that are backed up | 
|---|---|---|
| /**/move.cpp | All files that have the name move.cpp. | Are backed up: 
 | 
| /etc/** | All files and directories under the /etc directory, including all sub-directories. | Are backed up: 
 | 
*** (Filters and Exceptions)
Use this wildcard in the following scenarios:
- 
To filter the directory/library and the objects that are under it. 
- 
To add an exception to a filter. 
| Example string with wildcard | What the example string matches | Examples of files and directories that are backed up | 
|---|---|---|
| /QSYS.LIB/ABC.LIB/*** | This string filters ABC.LIB and its contents. | |
| The filter QSYS.LIB/*** and the exception /QSYS.LIB/ABC.LIB/*** | This string backs up ABC.LIB and its contents. |