Considering restore – HP B6960-96035 User Manual
Page 96
Incr3
<----
Incr1
<----
Full
8
Incr3
<----
Incr2
<----
Incr1
<----
Full
9
Incr3
<----
Incr2
<----
<----
<----
Full
10
Incr3
<----
<----
<----
<----
<----
Full
11
How to read Table 7
•
The rows in
on page 95 are independent of each other and show different
situations.
•
The age of the backups increases from right to left, so that the far left is the oldest
and the far right is the most recent backup.
•
The full and IncrX represent still protected objects of the same owner. Any existing
IncrX that is not protected can be used for restore, but is not considered for
referencing on subsequent backup runs.
Examples
•
In the second row, there is a full, still protected backup and an Incr2 is running.
There is no Incr1, so the backup is executed as an Incr1.
•
In the fifth row, there is a full backup, an Incr1 and another incremental is running.
Data Protector references the currently running backup to the previous incremental,
that is Incr1.
•
In the eighth row, the Incr3 is executed as Incr2, and in the eleventh row, the
Incr3 is executed as Incr1.
Considering restore
To restore the latest data, you need media from your last full backup and subsequent
incremental backups. Therefore, the more incremental backups you have, the more
media you need to handle. This is inconvenient if you use standalone devices, and
the restore can last long.
Using simple and leveled incremental backups, as indicated in
will require access to all five previously completed media sets, up to and including
the full backup. The space needed on the media is lowest here, but the restore is
rather complex. The series of required media sets is also called a restore chain.
Planning your backup strategy
96