Veritas™ System Recovery 21 Management Solution Administrator's Guide
- Introducing Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- Installing Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- Getting started with Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- About the Veritas System Recovery 21 Management Solution Home page
- Starting Veritas System Recovery 21 Management Solution
- Sending feedback to Veritas
- Preparing to manage the backups of client computers
- Discovering client computers on the network
- Installing the Symantec Management Agent on client computers
- Installing the Veritas System Recovery Plug-in on computers
- Uninstalling the Veritas System Recovery Plug-in on computers
- Installing Veritas System Recovery 21 and later or Veritas System Recovery 21 and later Linux Edition on client computers
- Installing Veritas System Recovery 18 or 16 on client computers
- Installing Veritas System Recovery 18 or 16 Linux Edition on client computers
- Uninstalling Veritas System Recovery-related products and components from client computers
- Generating the LightsOut Restore package in Veritas System Recovery 21 Management Solution
- Generating the LightsOut Restore 18 and 16 package
- Configuring and installing LightsOut Restore 21, 18, or 16 on client computers
- Uninstalling LightsOut Restore from client computers
- Updating the settings of a package
- Uninstalling Veritas System Recovery-related products from the Symantec Management Platform
- Adding or removing recovery point passwords
- About managing recovery point destinations
- Configuring a Dedicated Offsite Copy task
- About viewing filters
- About organizational views
- About managing Veritas System Recovery license policies
- Adding Veritas System Recovery license policies
- Deleting Veritas System Recovery license policies
- Assigning Veritas System Recovery licenses to client computers
- Unassigning Veritas System Recovery licenses from client computers
- Checking the license status of Veritas System Recovery on client computers
- Managing backups
- About backup policies
- Creating a basic backup policy
- Creating an advanced backup policy
- Creating an independent backup task
- Deploying a backup policy
- Deploying an existing backup policy as soon as possible
- Viewing the status of computers within a backup policy
- Editing a backup policy
- Editing the schedule of a backup policy
- Renaming a backup policy
- Disabling a backup policy
- Disabling a backup schedule
- Deleting a backup policy
- Viewing Veritas System Recovery details for a client computer
- Managing recovery points
- Managing the conversion of recovery points to virtual disks
- Managing Cloud Storage
- Remote recovery of drives and computers
- Local recovery of files, folders, drives, and computers
- About recovering lost data locally
- Recovering a computer locally
- Starting a computer locally by using Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Checking a hard disk for errors
- Recovering a computer locally by using a Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About using Restore Anyware to recover locally to a computer with different hardware
- Recovering files and folders locally by using Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About using the networking tools in Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Viewing the properties of a recovery point
- Viewing the properties of a drive within a recovery point
- About the Support Utilities on Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Monitoring computers and processes
- Appendix A. About backing up databases
- Appendix B. About Active Directory
- Appendix C. Backing up Microsoft virtual environments
- Appendix D. About Veritas System Recovery 21 Management Solution and Windows Server 2008 Core
- Index
About using Restore Anyware to recover locally to a computer with different hardware
The Veritas System Recovery Restore Anyware feature lets administrators restore a system drive of all supported Windows managed client computers.. You can restore the system drive. This recovery is possible even if the hardware is different from the original computer from which the recovery point was made.
Restore Anyware lets you make the necessary changes for the system to be able to start. Depending on the client computer's configuration, you may need to make additional changes for the computer to run exactly as it did previously.
If you intend to restore to identical (or very similar) hardware, you do not need to select Restore Anyware.
For example, you can use Restore Anyware in the following scenarios:
The motherboard fails
You want to upgrade to new hardware from an older computer
This feature is used to recover drives only. The feature cannot be used to recover at a file or a folder level.
Note:
You can obtain more information about domain controller support.
See https://www.veritas.com/support/en_US/search-results.html?keyword=V-269-16*.
Warning:
If you have an OEM license from a hardware vendor or a single-user license, you may be prompted to reactivate Windows software. You can reactivate by using your Windows product license key. Be aware that OEM and single-user licenses might have a limited number of activations. Verify that using Restore Anyware does not violate the operating system or application license agreements.
Keep in mind the following when you use Restore Anyware:
Performing Restore Anyware to hardware that is significantly different might require you to do the following:
Add mass storage device drivers.
Install hot fixes for the Windows operating system that you restore.
Reactivate your Windows operating system when the system restarts.
Provide your license key when the system restarts.
Provide a local user name and password for the recovery point when the system restarts.
When you restore a recovery point by using Restore Anyware, you might be prompted for the local administrator name and password. You should have this information ready before you perform the restore. Technical support cannot restore a lost password.
You cannot use Restore Anyware to restore a single recovery point to multiple computers. The product does not generate a unique SID for every computer.
If you use Restore Anyware with a computer that uses a static IP address, you must manually reconfigure the computer after the restore is complete.
Veritas System Recovery supports one NIC on a system. If you have a dual NIC system, you might need to manually configure the additional NICs to perform a restore through Restore Anyware.
See Recovering a computer locally by using a Veritas System Recovery Disk.