You can perform a centralized restore of a full or transaction log backup of a SQL stand-alone database in the
PowerProtect Data Manager UI. The following procedure restores a single database.
Steps
In the
PowerProtect Data Manager UI, select
Restore > Assets and select the
SQL tab.
The
Restore window displays all the databases that are available for restore.
To filter the displayed list of assets if needed, you can click the
Host/Cluster/Group Name,
Application Name, and
Protection Type column headings:
The
Host/Cluster/Group Name column lists the hostnames.
The
Application Name column lists the SQL instance names.
The
Protection Type column lists the Application Direct or VM Direct protection type for each asset.
NOTE Only the assets that were created by a SQL Application Direct or virtual machine application-aware protection policy and have at least one copy are displayed. You can select assets only from the same SQL host and instance.
Select the check box next to the stand-alone database, and click
Restore.
The restore wizard opens on the
Select Copy page.
On the
Select Copy page, click the
DD icon in the left pane. You can select the primary or secondary DD.
The right pane displays the available backup copies.
In the right pane, select the check box next to the backup copy that you want to restore.
NOTE You can select only one backup copy at a time, as a Differential, Full, or Log copy type. The
Selected Copy Time appears at the top of the right pane.
To see the log copies, click the
> symbol beside a full copy, which displays a list of the available log copies. When you select a log copy, you can optionally click
Select Point in Time and follow the prompts to specify a point-in-time restore. When you select a point-in-time, the
Selected Point in Time also appears at the top of the right pane.
Click
Next to continue.
On the
Select Destination page, the
Host,
SQL Instance, and
Database fields are prepopulated, but you can click
Select for each field to specify the host, instance, and database values as needed. You may choose to restore to an existing database name or type a new database name.
NOTE
The database name must have 128 or fewer characters. Do not specify a SQL system database name such as master, model, msdb, or tempdb.
If you specify a SQL instance that is part of an Always On Failover Cluster Instance, the database restore is directed to the active node.
Click
Next to continue.
On the
Select File Location page, select one of the following options for
Restore database files to, and then click
Next:
Original file location (location at backup time)
NOTE If the directory path cannot be created during the centralized restore, the restore fails.
Default file location as set by Microsoft SQL Server
User-specified file location
NOTE
When you select this option, you must specify the restore file directories for the database files and log files.
To restore a database to a different name, ensure that you specify a custom destination directory that is different from the directory that contains the source
mdf and
ldf files.
On the
Select Options page, select any the following options, and then click
Next:
Overwrite Databases WITH REPLACE—Overwrites the existing databases during the restore operation.
NOTE When a database exists but the
Overwrite Databases WITH REPLACE option is not selected, the restore fails.
Tail Log—Performs a tail-log backup.
NOTE The tail-log backup option is displayed when the destination is the same as the host. This option is selected by default.
Compressed Restore—Uses DD Boost compression for the restore operation.
Disconnect Users—Disconnects the database users before the restore operation.
Troubleshooting—Enables the debug log, setting the debug level to a value of 9.
Restore State—Select one of the following options:
RESTORE WITH RECOVERY—Leaves the database ready to use by rolling back the uncommitted transactions. Additional transaction logs cannot be restored.
RESTORE WITH NO RECOVERY—Leaves the database nonoperational and does not roll back the uncommitted transactions. Additional transaction logs can be restored.
On the
Summary page:
Review the
Source,
Destination,
File Location, and
Options information to ensure that the restore details are correct.
NOTE When the specified database name matches the name of an existing database, the restore overwrites the existing database.
Click
Restore.
The restore operation starts. Then the
Go to Jobs informational dialog box appears with a link to the
Jobs page where you can monitor the restore job.
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