Veritas NetBackup™ for Microsoft SQL Server Administrator's Guide
- Introducing NetBackup for SQL Server
- Installation and host configuration
- Host configuration and job settings
- Managing SQL Server objects for use with SQL Server Intelligent Policies
- About discovery of SQL Server objects
- About registering SQL Server instances and availability replicas
- Registering instances or availability replicas with an instance group
- Configuring backups with SQL Server Intelligent Policy
- About tuning parameters for SQL Server backups
- Performing restores of SQL Server
- Redirecting a SQL Server database to a different host
- Protecting SQL Server data with VMware backups
- About protecting an application database with VMware backups
- Configuring backups with Snapshot Client
- Using copy-only snapshot backups to affect how differentials are based
- About SQL Server agent grouped backups (legacy SQL Server policies)
- Protecting SQL Server availability groups
- Protecting SQL Server availability groups with intelligent policies
- Protecting SQL Server availibility groups with legacy policies
- About protecting the preferred replica in a SQL Server availability group (legacy backup policies)
- About protecting a specific node in a SQL Server availability group (legacy backup policies)
- About protecting the preferred replica in a SQL Server availability group (legacy backup policies)
- Protecting SQL Server in a cluster environment
- Configuring backups with legacy SQL Server policies using clients and batch files
- About using batch files with NetBackup for SQL Server
- About schedule properties
- Performing user-directed backups of SQL Server databases
- Performing user-directed backups of read-only filegroups
- Using NetBackup for SQL Server with multiple NICs
- Performance and troubleshooting
- About debug logging for SQL Server troubleshooting
- About disaster recovery of SQL Server
- Appendix A. Other configurations
- About SQL Server backups and restores in an SAP environment
- Appendix B. Register authorized locations
About performing a SQL Server page-level restore
Note:
Page-level restores are only applicable for SQL Server legacy backup policies.
Use page-level restore to recover only the pages that are corrupted. If many pages are corrupt, then a full database recovery may be faster.
When you select the page restore option, NetBackup for SQL Server creates a page restore template.
This template includes the following parts:
A page restore operation that you can modify by inserting the IDs of the pages that you want to restore.
A series of transaction log images for recovering the database to the current point in time.
A tail-log backup and recovery operation, which is required to bring the database online.
The following requirements and limitations exist when you perform SQL Server page-level restores:
Pages can be restored from the following backup types: Database, filegroup, file, read-write filegroups, and partial database.
Your SQL Server must use either the full or bulk-logged recovery model.
SQL Server sometimes cannot recover the specific pages that you request if they contain critical information about the definition of the database itself. For example, you cannot use page-level restore for the first page in a database file. When you detect that page-level restore does not work, you need to use full database recovery.
A maximum of 1000 pages can be recovered from a backup image through a page-level restore.
This topic describes how to perform page-level restores. Note that the Microsoft SQL Server service must have full access permission to the folder install_path\netbackup\dbext\mssql\temp
.
To perform a page-level restore
- Obtain a list of corrupt pages in the database.
- Browse for the backup images you want to restore.
- Expand the database instance and the database.
- Select the database backup image that contains pages you want to restore.
- From the Scripting list, select Create a page restore template.
- Click Restore.
- Type a file name for the page restore script and click Save > Yes.
- Edit the page first operation the page IDs that you want to replace.
For example, replace:
# # Create one or more page restore requests. These use the following format #PAGE file-id:page-id
with
# # Create one or more page restore requests. These use the following format PAGE 1:14 PAGE 1:20
- When you finish modifying the template, save it.
- Select the script you created and click Start > Yes.
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