Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations Wanet Telecoms Ltd on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Echange 2000 Backup using Backup Exec 9.1

Status
Not open for further replies.

solipsist

Technical User
Apr 27, 2004
2
GB
Hello all...

I am fairly new to the backing up game, and was wondering if anyone could tell me which selections I need to make in Backup Exec in order to get a full backup of my Exchange server?

I honestly have looked all over the place for the answer to this, but cannot seem to find it anywhere!

I would really appreciate a little help!
 
Create a FULL backup job to do this. You will need to backup the following,
1. OS drive (Presumably c:\)(Exclude mounted Volumes on C:\ if you have them)
2. System State
3. Information Store

Also keep a log of all updates, hotfixes and service packs on the Exchange server. You will need all this info if you need to rebuild the server in a disaster.

If you have the brick level agent you can also backup each indiviual mailbox. With this you can restore any item from a users mailbox. This is just a nice to have but is not needed for a disaster recovery situation. If you have a deleted items retension time set then you do not really need this (that is unless most of your user do a shift-delete, then it could be useful).

I run Backup Exec 8.6. In over a year and a half I have only restored 2 items from a brick level backup. But one was for the President of the company!!!!
 
Also, DO NOT backup up in the regular file based backup the M: drive that Exchange creates on the server. Not Ever. Do not touch it. Don't even think about it. Forget it exists. You never saw it.
 
So you're saying DON'T backup the M: drive? Just let the program do a full backup and that's it?
 
Correct - if by M: drive we are referring to the virtual drive on the server that Exchange creates and that is a "browseable" interface into the information store.

Microsoft has several KBs on this - but basically they say that "when we created this, we thought it would be neat, but it really creates a lot of problems so don't go there."

The only appropriate way to back up Exchange is through using the NTBACKUP that Exchange installs or some 3rd party - like Veritas - that provides direct access to the IS through an agent.
 
Sorry, forgot to mention to exclude the M:\ drive. Also if there are other applications running on this Exchange server, such as anti-virus and anti-spam, you may need to exclude the program directories. I would also exclude the temp directory.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top