4 recovery procedures, 1 point-in-time recovery, Recovery procedures – HP 3PAR Application Software Suite for Microsoft Exchange User Manual

Page 94: Point-in-time recovery, Chapter 8, Nding. see

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8.4

Recovery Procedures

3PAR Recovery Manager 4.1.0 For Microsoft Exchange 2010 User’s Guide

8.4 Recovery Procedures

In many cases, the Exchange server is able to quietly recover when a server crashes and the

contents of the database buffer in the memory are lost. Exchange automatically recovers when

you start the information store after the failure using the checkpoint file to identify the oldest

transaction not flushed to disk and then replaying log files forward. If the checkpoint file is

missing, all the log files are scanned to determine if any committed transactions have not been

written to the database. At the end, the database is consistent and can start normally. Most of

the time, recovering an Email or a user's Email is all that is needed.

Recovery Manager provides several options for a full mailbox database recovery:

point-in-time recovery

volume promote point-in-time recovery

point-of-failure recovery

single mailbox recovery

8.4.1 Point-In-Time Recovery

Recovery procedures for Exchange 2010 Database Availability Group (DAG) configurations

should be run on the active copy of the Mailbox Database. Restores to the passive copy is

not supported by Microsoft. The passive copy will need to be reseeded after a restore is

performed on the active copy.

To perform a point-in-time recovery for Exchange 2010:

1

In the Exchange Management Console, right-click the desired database you want to

recover and select Properties.

Result: The Properties dialog box appears.

2

Under the General tab, select This database can be overwritten by a restore.

3

Click OK.

4

On the Database Management tab in the Exchange Management Console, right-click

the storage group you want to recover and select Dismount Database.

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