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What should happen to VBK files
I can see that most of my test VM backups from March have their initial VBK file and I have now edited the jobs. Since they are so old, will the reverse inc process coupled with 31 day retention policy delete and create a new inc/full or will the original backup remain intact?
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Re: What should happen to VBK files
Once the specified retention is reached, the oldest points will be automatically deleted. For more information, kindly, see the corresponding section of our User Guide.Thanks.
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Re: What should happen to VBK files
Yes I can see that, I guess I was asking is if the backup is re- enabled after several months disabled....will it create a incremental file based on the differences since the 2 month old full and merge to create a new full.....or will it delete the old full (because it's older that 31 retentions) and perform a new full backup (which will mean more network traffic?
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Re: What should happen to VBK files
The retention setting specifies the number of restore points to keep, not the number of days. If you simply start the job on a day when an ordinary incremental run should be performed (according to the job schedule), it will create incremental backup based on the latest backup file available.
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Re: What should happen to VBK files
Thanks, just wanted to check, and the active backup vbk file is exactly the same as a reversed inc vbk file?foggy wrote:The retention setting specifies the number of restore points to keep, not the number of days. If you simply start the job on a day when an ordinary incremental run should be performed (according to the job schedule), it will create incremental backup based on the latest backup file available.
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Re: What should happen to VBK files
Yep, both are full backups. Thanks.
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Re: What should happen to VBK files
Yes, the only difference is in how they are created: active full is created by capturing entire data from production VMs, while with reverse incremental full backup is created synthetically by injecting incremental changes into previous full backup.
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