Block-Level Restores

You can perform a file-level or a volume-level restore from a block-level backup.

You cannot apply filters for block-level restores if you ran the backup operations without metadata collection.

High-Level Process for Block-Level Restores

  1. If you are performing a volume-level browse and restore, the entire volume is restored.

    Note

    Make sure that the destination volume selected for volume-level restore is clean.

  2. If you are performing a file-level browse and restore, the following operations occur:

    • One of the following browse methods is selected if you perform a browse operation:

      • If files were indexed after backups, a browse from the index is initiated.

      • If files were not indexed, a live browse is initiated.

    • The selected files and folders are restored.

Live Browse

Applies to: Microsoft Windows 2008 R2 or later.

Live browse initiates a pseudo-mount which constructs a device to store the blocks. The size of the staging folder must be at least 4 GB. The recommended size of the staging folder is 10% of the restore data, and it can be as large as the restore data. If the size of the staging folder is smaller than the restore data, then the extents are pruned based on the LRU (Least Recently Used) algorithm, for the new extent restores. This might result in decreased performance during the restore operation.

Pruning Blocks to Reclaim Space

The restored blocks are saved in the device files under the job results folder. To reclaim space in the job results directory, the restored blocks are pruned using the LRU (Least Recently Used) algorithm.

Best Practice

  • Stage the extents on a high-performing disk storage media (SSD).

  • Perform file system defragmentation on the source volume.

Loading...