Veritas™ System Recovery 21 User's Guide
- Introducing Veritas System Recovery
- Installing Veritas System Recovery
- Installing Veritas System Recovery
- Ensuring the recovery of your computer
- Creating a new Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Creation Options
- Storage and Network Drivers Options
- Customizing an existing Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About restoring a computer from a remote location by using LightsOut Restore
- Creating a new Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Getting Started
- Setting up default general backup options
- File types and file extension
- Best practices for backing up your data
- Backing up entire drives
- Backing up files and folders
- Running and managing backup jobs
- Running an existing backup job immediately
- Backing up remote computers from your computer
- Monitoring the status of your backups
- About monitoring backups
- Monitoring the backup status of remote computers using Veritas System Recovery Monitor
- Adding a remote computer to the Computer List
- Exploring the contents of a recovery point
- Managing backup destinations
- About managing file and folder backup data
- Managing virtual conversions
- Managing cloud storage
- Direct to cloud
- About creation of Amazon Machine Image (AMI) in Amazon from Veritas System Recovery backups
- About S3-Compatible Cloud Storage
- About Veritas System Recovery supporting Veritas Access
- Recovering files, folders, or entire drives
- Recovering a computer
- Booting a computer by using the Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About using the networking tools in Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Copying a hard drive
- Using the Veritas System Recovery Granular Restore Option
- Best practices when you create recovery points for use with the Granular Restore Option
- Appendix A. Backing up databases using Veritas System Recovery
- Appendix B. Backing up Active Directory
- Appendix C. Backing up Microsoft virtual environments
- Appendix D. Using Veritas System Recovery 21 and Windows Server Core
Customizing the status reporting of a drive (or file and folder backups)
You can configure how Veritas System Recovery reports the status of a particular drive (or all backups of files and folders).
For example, suppose that drive D contains unimportant data and you have chosen not to include it in a drive-based backup. The status on the Home page continues to report that your computer is at risk. You can configure Veritas System Recovery to ignore drive D. By ignoring it, you ensure that it does not calculate the status of drive D in the Backup Status panel on the Home page.
Or, you can specify that only errors, such as missed or failed backups, are included in the status report.
Note:
The backup status of each drive is reported throughout the product, wherever the drive is listed. When you customize status reporting for a drive, the status is reflected anywhere that the drive is listed in Veritas System Recovery.
You should first determine the importance of the data that is on a particular drive. Or, the importance of data you have included in a backup of files and folders. Then you can decide on the level of status reporting to assign to it.
To customize the status reporting of a drive (or file and folder backups)
- On the Status page, click a drive (or File and folders) to select it.
You can also click Customize status reporting from the Home page.
- Click Customize status reporting.
- Select a status reporting option.
Full status reporting
Shows the current status of the selected drive or file and folder backups on the Home and Status pages.
Select this option if the data is critical.
Errors only status reporting
Shows the current status of the selected drive or file and folder backups only when errors occur.
Select this option if the data is important, but you only want the status to report errors, whenever they occur.
No status reporting
Does not show any status for the selected drive or file and folder backups.
Select this option if the data is unimportant and missed or failed backups do not need to be reported.
- Click OK.