6 compression level, Compression level – Acronis Backup for Windows Server Essentials - User Guide User Manual

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Copyright © Acronis International GmbH, 2002-2014

If the destination disk runs out of free space while creating the backup, the task enters the Need
interaction
state. You have the ability to free additional space and retry the operation. If you do
so, the resulting backup will be split into the parts created before and after the retry.

When backing up to removable media (CD, DVD, Blu-Ray Discs, a stand-alone tape drive, an RDX
or USB drive used in the removable device (p. 193) mode):
The task will enter the Need interaction state and ask for a new media when the previous one is
full.

When backing up to an FTP server:
The backup will automatically be split into files no more than 2 GB in size. Splitting is needed to
allow data recovery directly from the FTP server.

When backing up to an SFTP server:
A single backup file will be created. If the destination storage runs out of free space while
creating the backup, the task will fail.

When you replicate or move a backup (p. 95) to other locations, these rules apply to each location
independently.

Example.
Suppose that the primary location for a 3-GB backup is a hard disk, the second location is an FTP
server, and the third location is a network share. In this case, the backup will be stored as a single file
in the primary location, as two files in the second location, and as a single file again in the third
location.

Fixed size

Enter the desired file size or select it from the drop-down list. The backup will then be split into
multiple files of the specified size. This comes in handy when creating a backup that you plan to burn
to multiple CDs or DVDs later on. You might also want to split a backup into 2-GB files if you are
backing up to a hard disk, but you plan to manually copy the backup to an FTP server later.

4.7.6 Compression level

This option is effective for Windows and Linux operating systems and bootable media.

The option defines the level of compression applied to the data being backed up.

The preset is: Normal.

The optimal data compression level depends on the type of data being backed up. For example, even
maximum compression will not significantly reduce the archive size if the archive contains essentially
compressed files, such as .jpg, .pdf or .mp3. However, formats such as .doc or .xls will be compressed
well.

To specify the compression level

Select one of the following:

None – the data will be copied as is, without any compression. The resulting backup size will be
maximal.

Normal – recommended in most cases.

High – the resulting backup size will typically be less than for the Normal level.

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