Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

13.1 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "13.1 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and."— Presentation transcript:

1 13.1 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Goals  Understand the Windows Backup Utility  Schedule a backup  Restore system data  Understand fault tolerance in hard disk volumes  Restore your system using Safe Mode  Use the Last Known Good Configuration  Work with the Recovery Console  Implement Automated System Recovery  Configure the Volume Shadow Copy Service

2 13.2 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Managing the backup process  Determine the data to back up  Have the necessary user rights  Select the media to use  Choose the backup type (Skill 1) Understanding the Windows Backup Utility

3 13.3 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Categories of data stored on any computer  System State data  Consists of several key components related to the operating system or applications  Loss of System State data can render a computer non-operational  User data  User data can be the most important asset of an organization  You must protect it from losses due to viruses, disk drive failures, or user deletion (Skill 1) Understanding the Windows Backup Utility (2)

4 13.4 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Protecting data  Safeguard data by creating backups (copies) of the files and folders saved on network file servers or on a local computer  A comprehensive backup plan allows the retrieval of lost or damaged data  Use the Windows Backup utility to perform backups and to schedule backups to be performed at a specified date and time  Use the Restore utility to retrieve lost data from the backup copies  An Automated System Recovery (ASR) is a backup of your system configuration including critical system files and the Registry Understanding the Windows Backup Utility (3) (Skill 1)

5 13.5 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Type of data to back up  Before you perform a backup, you must decide whether you want to back up user data, System State data, or both  If you are backing up user data, you can either back up all the files and folders on a computer or only specific files and folders  You back up the System State data so that you can restore the operating system to its original state in the event of a system failure Understanding the Windows Backup Utility (4) (Skill 1)

6 13.6 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Working with System State data  Perform a System State restore on a clean installation of the operating system to recover all of the configuration changes  Make frequent System State backups part of the backup process because the System State changes occur when system components, such as the Registry, are modified  Using Ntbackup  You cannot back up the System State data on a remote computer  You cannot back up individual components of the System State data as all of the components of the System State data are dependent on each other Understanding the Windows Backup Utility (5) (Skill 1)

7 13.7 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Restoring data  To restore a backed up file or folder, you must have the appropriate user rights and permissions  File or folder owners can restore the backup copy  Other users can restore files or folders if they have Write, Modify, or Full Control permissions  Members of the local Administrators and Backup Operators groups can restore any file or folder on the local computer  Administrators and Backup Operators on the domain controller have the Restore files and directories user right by default and can restore any backup file or folder on the domain Understanding the Windows Backup Utility (6) (Skill 1)

8 13.8 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Backup types  There are five different backup types from which you can choose using the Backup Wizard or on the Backup Type tab in the Options dialog box  All are identified according to how they handle the archive attribute (archive bit)  The archive attribute is a property for files and folders used to identify them when they have changed  When a file has changed, the archive attribute, which is actually an attribute of the file header, is automatically selected  Some backup types remove the archive attribute to mark files as having been backed up, while others do not Understanding the Windows Backup Utility (8) (Skill 1)

9 13.9 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Backup types  Normal backup: The archive attribute is removed to denote that the file has been backed up  Copy backup: The archive attribute is not removed, it is ignored, which creates a representation of your data at a particular point in time  Incremental backup: Backs up only selected files and folders that have the archive attribute; then the archive attribute is removed  Differential backup: Backs up only selected files and folders with the archive attribute; the archive attribute is not removed  Daily backup: Backs up all selected files and folders that have changed on that day; the archive attribute is not removed Understanding the Windows Backup Utility (9) (Skill 1)

10 13.10 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-1 The Backup or Restore Wizard Click to open the Backup Utility Advanced Mode window (Skill 1)

11 13.11 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-2 The Backup Utility Advanced Mode (Skill 1)

12 13.12 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-3 Selecting the folders and files to backup (Skill 1)

13 13.13 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-4 The Backup Job Information dialog box (Skill 1)

14 13.14 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-5 The Backup Progress dialog box (Skill 1)

15 13.15 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-6 The backup log file (Skill 1)

16 13.16 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-7 The Restore and Manage Media tab (Skill 1)

17 13.17 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Considerations  System State changes when any system component, such as the Registry changes, which can happen quite frequently  To keep up-to-date with these changes, you should perform a backup of System State data regularly (typically every night)  You can use the Backup utility to schedule backups to run at specified dates and times  Ntbackup uses the Task Scheduler to schedule the backup Scheduling a Backup (Skill 2)

18 13.18 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-8 Backing up the System State data (Skill 2)

19 13.19 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-9 The Backup Type, Destination, and Name screen Enter the location to save the backup file Enter a name for the backup file (Skill 2)

20 13.20 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-10 The Schedule Job dialog box (Skill 2) Used to set power management and idle time settings

21 13.21 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-11 The Advanced Schedule Options dialog box Used to set the repetition cycle for the backup operation within a specified time frame (Skill 2)

22 13.22 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-12 The Set Account Information dialog box (Skill 2)

23 13.23 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-13 Scheduled jobs on the calendar on the Schedule Jobs tab (Skill 2)

24 13.24 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-14 The Scheduled Tasks window (Skill 2)

25 13.25 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Types of restores  Non-authoritative (Normal) restore: Use when you need to recover a domain controller from hardware failure or replacement and you are sure that the data on the other domain controllers in the forest is correct  Authoritative restore: Use when an Active Directory object or group of objects has been accidentally deleted; to do so, execute the Ntdsutil command on a domain controller  Primary restore: Use when you must rebuild the domain from backup because all domain controllers in the domain have been lost Restoring System Data (2) (Skill 3)

26 13.26 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-15 Authoritative restore (Skill 3)

27 13.27 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-17 Restoring the System State data (Skill 3)

28 13.28 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-18 The Advanced Restore Options screen (Skill 3)

29 13.29 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-19 The Restore Progress dialog box (Skill 3)

30 13.30 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-20 The restore log (Skill 3)

31 13.31 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  Hard disk failure can occur as a result of a power failure or just every day wear and tear  You can improve the odds against losing data due to a disk failure by using fault-tolerant disk arrays  To maintain data access when you experience hard disk failure, Windows Server 2003 supports several disk redundancy technologies known as RAID, or redundant array of inexpensive (or independent) disks  Disk redundancy technologies are the software implementation of RAID  RAID is used to increase disk life and prevent the data loss Understanding Fault Tolerance in Hard Disk Volumes (Skill 4)

32 13.32 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery RAID level 0  Involves the use of striped volumes to distribute data evenly in stripes across up to 32 disks in a volume  Provides extremely fast read and write access  If one disk in a striped volume fails, you will generally lose all of your data Understanding Fault Tolerance in Hard Disk Volumes (2) (Skill 4)

33 13.33 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery RAID level 1 (mirrored volumes)  Offers a fault-tolerant solution that duplicates data on two disks (a primary disk and a secondary disk)  If one disk fails, data can be “restored” in the sense that it is resynchronized with the mirror when a replacement drive is installed  Windows Server 2003 supports disk mirroring, which can include disk duplexing  Disk duplexing means that rather than having two mirrored disks, both attached to the same disk controller or SCSI adapter, the mirrored disk is attached to a different disk controller than the primary disk; if one disk controller fails, data is still accessible Understanding Fault Tolerance in Hard Disk Volumes (3) (Skill 4)

34 13.34 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery RAID 5  Sometimes referred to as striped volumes with parity  Data is written in stripes across a set of at least three (up to 32) physical disks  Error correction and checksum verification information are written in blocks that are spread over all of the disks in the array Understanding Fault Tolerance in Hard Disk Volumes (4) (Skill 4)

35 13.35 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-21 RAID level 0 (Skill 4)

36 13.36 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-22 RAID level 1 (Skill 4)

37 13.37 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-23 Disk Duplexing (Skill 4)

38 13.38 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  Software RAID implementation: Fault tolerance is handled by the server’s operating system  Hardware RAID implementation: Fault tolerance is independent of the operating system and is implemented through the server’s hardware  The disk controller (SCSI adapter) includes a chip on which the RAID setup is stored  More expensive than software implementation, but has faster read and write access Understanding Fault Tolerance in Hard Disk Volumes (5) (Skill 4)

39 13.39 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-24 RAID 5 (Skill 4)

40 13.40 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  When you boot in Safe Mode, the computer starts up with a basic set of drivers to boot the system and make it accessible  Use Safe Mode to resolve problems that result from faulty device drivers, faulty programs, system service failures, or services that start automatically  Safe Mode with Networking includes networking drivers and services if you need network access to fix the problem  Safe Mode with Command Prompt opens the command prompt instead of the Graphical User Interface (GUI) environment  Safe Mode options  Enable Boot Logging  Enable VGA Mode  Last Known Good Configuration  Directory Services Restore Mode  Debugging Mode Restoring Your System Using Safe Mode (Skill 5)

41 13.41 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-25 The Shut Down Windows dialog box (Skill 5)

42 13.42 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-26 The Windows Advanced Options Menu (Skill 5)

43 13.43 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-27 List of drivers loaded in Safe Mode (Skill 5)

44 13.44 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-28 The Desktop message box (Skill 5)

45 13.45 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS)  Avoids data loss and component damage form sudden power outages  A hardware device that supplies power from capacitance cells to a computer full-time  UPS systems  Online UPS systems: Supply power directly from their capacitance cells, which are continually charging while the electrical power is intact  Offline UPS systems: Also referred to as SPS (standby power systems); these systems have battery backups Restoring Your System Using Safe Mode (2) (Skill 5)

46 13.46 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Notifications  When a UPS is attached to your system, the UPS service will prompt your system to send a notification in specific cases  Main-power failure detection: When the power supply fails, the UPS will alert you that your system is running on the UPS  Low-battery detection: When the battery for the UPS is low, it will alert you  UPS shutdown: When the UPS needs to shut down due to low battery power, it will prompt you to shut down your system Restoring Your System Using Safe Mode (4) (Skill 5)

47 13.47 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-29 The UPS Selection dialog box (Skill 5)

48 13.48 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-30 The UPS Configuration dialog box (Skill 5)

49 13.49 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  When you start your computer, there are usually only two configurations that can be used  Default configuration: Includes any changes made during the last logon session before the reboot process was initiated  Last Known Good Configuration: Contains settings saved in the Registry the last time a user successfully logged on to the computer; useful if you have incorrectly edited the Registry, added a defective or incompatible driver, or disabled a critical device driver Using the Last Known Good Configuration (Skill 6)

50 13.50 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-31 LKG and Default value entries in the Registry Contains configuration information that is saved when a computer shuts down normally Contains configuration information that was saved after the last successful logon (Skill 6)

51 13.51 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-33 Last Known Good Configuration (Skill 6)

52 13.52 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-34 The Hardware tab in the System Properties dialog box (Skill 6)

53 13.53 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  The Recovery console is a command-line interface used to:  Troubleshoot, enable, disable, and reconfigure services  Copy, rename, or replace operating system files and folders  Format hard disks  Repair the file system, boot sector, or the Master Boot Record (MBR)  Read and write data on a local drive Working with the Recovery Console (Skill 7)

54 13.54 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  You can also use the Recovery Console to obtain limited access to the hard disk of your computer to view and repair specific files and folders  %systemroot%  Windows Server 2003 installation subfolders  %systemdrive%  CD-ROM drive  Floppy drive Working with the Recovery Console (2) (Skill 7)

55 13.55 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-35 Accessing the Recovery Console installation files (Skill 7)

56 13.56 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-36 Windows Setup message box: Installing the Recovery Console as a startup option (Skill 7)

57 13.57 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-37 Windows Setup message box: Recovery Console has been installed (Skill 7)

58 13.58 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  The Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) provides two new services in Windows Server 2003  It can be used by applications to access locked files or files that are in use by other services or applications  It can be configured so that previous versions of saved files, which are stored on a network share on a particular volume, can be accessed and restored from shadow copies that are created at scheduled intervals Configuring the Volume Shadow Copy Service (Skill 9)

59 13.59 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-45 The Shadow Copies tab on the Properties dialog box for a disk Click to configure the settings for which drive to store the shadow copies on, and the maximum amount of space to use for the shadow copies (Skill 9)

60 13.60 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  Previous versions of files that users have inadvertently deleted or overwritten can be recovered on the file server  Previous Versions client  Stored on the server in the folder %systemroot%\system32\clients\twclient  Three versions of the client  one for x86-based computers  one for computers based on the AMD64 architecture  one for computers based on the IA-64 architecture Configuring the Volume Shadow Copy Service (2) (Skill 9)

61 13.61 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery  There are three ways to deploy the Shadow Copy Client to down-level clients  Place the ShadowCopyClient.msi file in a shared network folder; users can access and install the client from the share  Use Group Policy to assign the client to users on the network  Use the Systems Management Server (SMS) or another software management application to deploy the client as an.msi package Configuring the Volume Shadow Copy Service (3) (Skill 9)

62 13.62 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-46 The Previous Versions tab on the Properties dialog box for a folder (Skill 9) Click to restore a previous version of the file or folder; this will roll back the file or folder to its state at the date and time you select; changes made since that time will be lost

63 13.63 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-47 The three versions of the Previous Versions client (Skill 9)

64 13.64 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-48 The Settings dialog box By default the maximum size will be set to 10% of the VSS enabled volume (Skill 9)

65 13.65 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-49 The Schedule tab The default shadow copy schedule is 7:00 am and 12:00 noon Monday through Friday (Skill 9)

66 13.66 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-50 The Advanced Schedule Options dialog box (Skill 9)

67 13.67 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-51 ShadowCopyClient.msi on a network share (Skill 9)

68 13.68 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and System Recovery Figure 13-52 The Previous Version contents list for a folder (Skill 9)


Download ppt "13.1 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment Lesson 13: Implementing Data and."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google