Guest files and folders can be restored to a physical client or to a virtual machine (VM) in the following ways:
Note
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For the fastest recovery time and the least space required for extent caching, use Live File Recovery with a restore-only file system agent in the guest.
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You can use agentless file recovery when the total restore size is less than 10 GB and you are restoring fewer than 10,000 files.
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To restore virtual machine files and folders when the total restore size is larger than 10 GB or has more than 10,000 files, use a restore-only file system agent installed in the destination client or virtual machine.
General Requirements
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To recover larger files or in other cases where you cannot restore a file, restore the complete virtual machine or the disk that contains the file.
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If a backup set contains some subclients configured for regular backup and other subclients configured for IntelliSnap backup, initiate browse and restore operations from each subclient rather than from the backup set.
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If a virtual machine has a GPT partition, you can restore files from a streaming backup, IntelliSnap backup, or backup copy.
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When you restore folders from a backup that was performed using the Collect File Details option, folder permissions are not restored.
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For Windows guest VMs:
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Restores of symbolic link files and hard link files are not supported.
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For files stored on Windows Storage Spaces, you can perform a live browse to view and restore guest files and folders, with the following considerations:
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The VSA proxy or MediaAgent that is used for the live browse must be running on Windows Server 2012 or later.
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The MediaAgent that is used for the live browse cannot be part of a clustered environment.
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You cannot simultaneously browse two cloned VMs that use the same storage space information.
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You can restore files from NTFS file systems with the following limitations:
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The formatted cluster size (allocation unit) must be 1024 or greater.
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You cannot restore any archived (stubbed) files and folders.
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Use Live File Recovery to restore files that have been dehydrated by Windows deduplication.
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For Linux guest VMs:
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From a backup that was performed using the Collect File Details option, you cannot restore any file that has zero bytes, hard links, or symbolic links.
To restore these files, deploy a Linux Access Node and MediaAgent and use Live File Recovery.
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