Restoring data, Restore duration – HP B6960-96035 User Manual
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Restoring data
Policies for restoring data are an essential part of the overall backup strategy in the
company. Keep the following in mind:
•
Backing up and restoring files is essentially the same as copying files. Therefore,
ensure that only authorized people have the rights to restore confidential data.
•
Ensure that unauthorized people cannot restore files of other people.
This section describes some possible implementations of the restore policy using Data
Protector. You can restore your filesystem data by browsing through restore objects
or restore sessions. By default, data is restored to its original location. However, you
can specify any location to be the destination of restored data.
Restore duration
After data loss, access to data is possible only after the recovery process is finished.
It is often critical to minimize restore duration so that users can do their regular work.
Therefore, plan for the time needed to restore specific data.
Factors affecting restore duration
The restore duration depends on a number of factors, such as:
•
The amount of data to be restored. This also directly influences all the following
items.
•
A combination of full and incremental backups. For more information, see “
•
Media and devices used for backup. For more information, see
•
Speed of networks and systems. For more information, see “
•
The application you are recovering, for example, Oracle database files. For more
information, see the appropriate HP Data Protector integration guide.
•
The use of parallel restore. Several objects can be restored with a single read
operation, depending on how the data was backed up. See “
•
Speed and ease of selecting the data to be restored, which depends on the
logging level settings used during the backup and on catalog protection time.
See “
Logging level as an IDB key tunable parameter
Concepts guide
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