I'm hoping that I'm just dense here and that everyone know how to do this: I'm restoring a backup from a ransonware infection. The folders within the share that were hit are numerous, but not all of the share was encrypted, 'cause we caught it about 1500 folders into the process and pulled the infected system off the network.
So - on a share of 225,000+ files, about 8700 were encrypted - these were all changed to *.thor. So what I'd like to do is
-delete anything with .thor extenion
-load up Veeam File Level Restore
-tell it to restore any file missing from last nights' backup, but to skip any file that's already there.
That doesn't seem to be a choice - I can overwrite the entire share, or I can "keep" files that are already in place and have Veeam restore those with "RESTORED" added to the beginning of the file name. That full overwrite will take hours and needlessly overwrite some files people have changed this morning; the "keep" option will put about 215000+ extra files into the share.
Is there a way to tell it "Go through the whole share (or the whole volume), restore missing files, and skip over anything that's already in place?"
-
- Influencer
- Posts: 15
- Liked: 2 times
- Joined: Oct 24, 2012 5:20 pm
- Contact:
-
- Product Manager
- Posts: 14417
- Liked: 1576 times
- Joined: Feb 04, 2013 2:07 pm
- Full Name: Dmitry Popov
- Location: Prague
- Contact:
Re: Restore files but skip some files
Hi NetAdMBC,
Start File Level Recovery and go to C:\VeeamFLR folder. They you can copy the files via regular windows browser with an option 'do not replace' on conflicts. That should work.
P.S. Are you sure that infection was cured completely? Maybe it’s better to use a Bare Metal Recovery option to restore all machine to the uninfected state. To save latest files you can back them up and restore later.
Start File Level Recovery and go to C:\VeeamFLR folder. They you can copy the files via regular windows browser with an option 'do not replace' on conflicts. That should work.
P.S. Are you sure that infection was cured completely? Maybe it’s better to use a Bare Metal Recovery option to restore all machine to the uninfected state. To save latest files you can back them up and restore later.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests