When you recover from such backup, you will be able to restore the following components: For backed-up volume: the entire volume and individual files and folders on this volume. For backed-up folders: folders that you have selected to back up, and files in these folders. View all results across Veeam. Back to document search. I want to report a typo.
Note that exclude masks have a higher priority than include masks. For example, you can specify masks in the following way:. The resulting Veeam Agent backup will contain all files of the PDF format that do not contain draft in their names.
In this article. In the file-level backup mode, you can create two types of backups: File-level backup that includes individual folders on your computer.
Hybrid backup that contains individual folders and specific volumes of your computer. You can include the following data in the backup: Operating system — data related to the OS installed on a protected computer. Personal files — data related to user profiles. Individual file system objects — folders, mount points, and volumes of a protected computer. To specify individual folders to back up: Select the The following file system objects check box and click Add.
Consider the following: You can use only system environment variables — variables defined for the Local System account on computers added to the backup job. User-dependent environment variables are not supported. Environment variables that contain other environment variables are not supported. Repeat steps 1—2 for all items that you want to back up. But, I have found this introduces a limitation when configuring File History backup that prevents you from adding new folders outside of the default, pre-defined locations.
From the Windows settings backup window, start by clicking on the plus sign next to Add a Drive. A small window will pop up, and Windows will do a quick search for any existing, attached drives to choose.
Select the folder or drive where you want back up files to, this will automatically turn on File History backup. If you want to backup to a different folder from this list, jump down to the next step.
Here you can change the default hourly backup interval to a range of every 10 minutes to once a day. Next, you will find the retention option on how long you would like to keep file versions. Forever is selected by default and can be modified, allowing until space is needed or a range of 1 month to up to 2 years. Next, you will see the option to add a folder with the same plus sign you saw when adding a drive above. Selecting this will open a Windows File Explorer browser to choose your additional folders.
Now, if a folder is already on the list, you can select the item and hit remove at the bottom of the more options window. A great thing about the File History restore is you have a couple of simple-to-use options to launch the restore wizard and get the files you need quickly.
The first option is to open Windows File Explorer and navigate to the folder location where the file you want to restore is located. Next, on the top ribbon under the Home tab, you will see history, click here to launch the File History recovery wizard for this location. You may also select the file directly and right-click and select restore previous versions.
Now that the File History recovery wizard is open, locate the file s and folder s you would like to restore and click the green undo icon. This will restore them to the original location. If you right-click on this icon, you can select restore to, which will bring up a new File Explorer window to pick the destination.
The main difference here is it does not matter which way you launch it — you have the same options in configuring the image-level backup.
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