Disaster recovery for Exchange
Details:
Disaster
recovery for Exchange
This
procedure guides you through a complete restoration of Exchange using Backup
Exec. You should have already performed all the appropriate
preparation.
See
Preparing for disaster recovery of Exchange Server.
If the
Exchange 2000 Server being recovered contains the Site Replication Service (SRS)
and/or Key Management Service (KMS), then before you begin the disaster
recovery, refer to your Exchange documentation for details on recovering those
databases.
Always log
in to Windows using the Administrator account (or an Administrator equivalent)
during this procedure. Other requirements include:
- The
storage groups and databases must already exist on the target server, and have
the same names as the original storage groups or databases.
- The
destination server must have the same Organization and Administrative Group name
as the source server.
- The
destination databases must be configured so that they can be
overwritten.
See
Configuring a database in Exchange 2000, 2003, and 2007.
You can use
Intelligent Disaster Recovery to recover the Exchange server.
See About
Microsoft Exchange recovery notes.
To perform
disaster recovery for Exchange 2000 or later
1.
Recover the Windows server first.
See
Returning to the last known good configuration.
Make sure
you restore the Exchange Server 2000 Server or later files that existed on all
disk partitions.
When the
Windows 2000 server disaster recovery procedure is complete (after the last
reboot), you must recover the Exchange server.
2.
From the Services applet, verify the Microsoft Exchange Information Store
service is started.
3.
Start Backup Exec.
4.
Catalog the media that contains the latest backup of the Exchange 2000 Server or
later storage groups you want to recover.
5.
On the navigation bar, click the arrow next to Restore.
6.
Click New Restore Job.
7.
On the Properties pane, under Source, click Selections.
8.
Select the latest full backups of each storage group for restore.
If
continuous protection is enabled, you can select the backup sets from a full
backup or a recovery point.
If the
Exchange 2000 Server being recovered contains the Site Replication Service (SRS)
and/or Key Management Service (KMS), then select those databases for restore as
well.
9.
If necessary, select all subsequent incremental storage group backups.
If
differential backups are to be restored, only the most recent differential
storage group backups need to be selected.
10.
On the Properties pane, under Settings, click Microsoft
Exchange.
11.
Click the Purge existing data and restore only the databases and transaction
logs from the backup sets option.
12.
In the Path on Exchange Server for temporary storage of log and patch files
field, type a location where the associated log and patch files are to be kept
until the database is restored.
Make sure
the temporary location for log and patch files is empty before you start a
restore job. If a restore job fails, check the temporary location (including
subdirectories) to make sure any previous log and patch files from a previous
restore job were deleted.
13.
If your selection contains the last backup set to be restored, check Commit
after restore completes.
Do not check
this if you still have backup sets to restore.
If Commit
after restore completes is checked when an intermediate backup is being applied,
you cannot continue to restore backups and you must restart the restore
operation from the beginning.
After the
database is restored, the log and patch files in the temporary location are
applied to the database, and then the current log files are applied. After the
restore is complete, the log and patch files are automatically deleted from the
temporary location (including any subdirectories).
14.
If you want the databases to be immediately available to users after the
recovery, check Mount database after restore.
15.
Start the restore job or select other restore options on the Properties
pane.
16.
After completing the restore, it is recommended that a full backup of the
restored databases be performed.
Products Applied:
Backup Exec for Windows Servers 12.5
Subjects:
Backup Exec for Windows Servers
Information Development: Agents
Windows NT Small Business Server
Information Development: Agents
Languages:
English (US)
Operating Systems:
Windows 2000Professional, Server
Windows NT Small Business Server
2000
Windows XP
Pro 5.1, Pro 5.1 64 bit SP1, Pro 5.1 64 bit SP2, Pro 5.1 64-bit, Pro 5.1 SP1, Pro 5.1 SP2
Windows Server 2003
DataCenter, DataCenter (IA64), DataCenter (x64), DataCenter SP1, DataCenter SP1(IA64), DataCenter SP1(x64), DataCenter SP2, Datacenter SP2(x64), Enterprise (IA64), Enterprise (x64), Enterprise SP1(IA64), Enterprise SP1(x64), Enterprise SP2, Enterprise SP2(x64), Enterprise Server, Enterprise ServerSP1, R2, Standard Server, Standard Server SP1, Standard Server SP1 (x64), Standard Server SP2, Standard Server SP2 (x64), Standard Server(x64), Storage Server, Storage Server SP1, Storage Server SP2, Web Server, Web Server SP1, Web Server SP2
Windows Server 2008
DataCenter (x64-64bit), DataCenter (x86-32bit), Enterprise (x64-64bit), Enterprise (x86-32bit), Itanium, Standard (x64-64bit), Standard (x86-32bit), Web Server (x64-64bit), Web Server (x86-32bit)