Veeam Backup 10 0 Agent Management Guide
Veeam Backup 10 0 Agent Management Guide
Veeam Backup 10 0 Agent Management Guide
Version 10
Veeam Agent Management Guide
August, 2020
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Intended Audience
The guide is designed for anyone who wants to use Veeam Backup & Replication to automate data protection tasks
performed on Veeam Agent computers. It is primarily aimed at backup administrators and other IT professionals
managing Veeam Backup & Replication, but can also be helpful for Veeam Agent computer users. The document
assumes that you are familiar with basic concepts and operations that can be performed in Veeam Backup &
Replication, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows and Veeam Agent for Linux.
Related Documentation
The document should be regarded as a supplement to existing technical documentation for Veeam Backup &
Replication, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows and Veeam Agent for Linux. The complete set of documentation
for Veeam products can be found at https://www.veeam.com/documentation-guides-datasheets.html.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers the following Veeam Agent management capabilities:
• Automated deployment and management of Veeam Agents. You can set up Veeam Backup & Replication
to automatically discover computers that you want to protect with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
and/or Veeam Agent for Linux and install Veeam Agent on these computers. Once Veeam Agent is deployed
on protected computers, you can use the Veeam Backup & Replication console to administrate Veeam Agent
on multiple computers.
• Centralized configuration and management of Veeam Agent backup jobs on protected computers. You
can use the Veeam Backup & Replication console to create and manage Veeam Agent backup jobs on
computers in your infrastructure whose data you want to protect.
• Centralized management of backups created by Veeam Agent backup jobs. If you choose to create Veeam
Agent backups on a backup repository managed by the Veeam backup server, you can use the Veeam Backup
& Replication console to restore data from these backups.
• Distribution server
To learn more, see the Deployment section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
Veeam Backup & Replication is set up to automatically discover computers added to the inventory and deploy
Veeam Agents on these computers. To learn more, see Computers Discovery and Veeam Agent Deployment.
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you deploy and manage Veeam Agent on machines of the following types:
On every Windows machine added to the inventory, Veeam Backup & Replication installs the Veeam Installer
Service. The service performs the following tasks:
• Collects information about the protected computer and sends it to the Veeam backup server. The collected
data includes details on the computer type, platform, host name, guest OS, BIOS UUID, IP address, and
information about Veeam Agent (its presence on the machine, product version and license installed).
• Downloads Veeam Agent setup files from the distribution server and installs Veeam Agent on the protected
computer.
On Linux machines, Veeam Backup & Replication does not install additional components for Veeam Agent
deployment. Veeam Backup & Replication connects to a Linux computer via SSH and performs necessary operations
on the computer.
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows and Veeam Agent for Linux deployed on remote computers by Veeam Backup
& Replication operate in the managed mode. In this mode, all data protection and administration tasks are
performed by a backup administrator in Veeam Backup & Replication. In some scenarios, a user can also perform a
limited set of backup and disaster recovery tasks directly on a protected computer.
NOTE:
Starting from version 10a, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows 4.0.1
and Veeam Agent for Linux 4.0.1 on protected computers.
By default, the role of the distribution server is assigned to the backup server itself. However, you can deploy a
dedicated distribution server to reduce workload on the backup server. To deploy a distribution server, you need to
add a Windows-based server to Veeam Backup & Replication and select this server in the properties of a protection
group. To learn more, see Specify Discovery and Deployment Options.
A machine performing the role of the distribution server must meet the following requirements:
• The role of the distribution server can be assigned to a physical or virtual machine.
• You must add the machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication console as a managed server.
TIP:
If you have several Microsoft Windows and Linux computers with Veeam Agent installations managed by
Veeam Backup & Replication, you can centrally deploy a hotfix on all managed Veeam Agent computers. To
learn more, see Appendix A. Deploying Hotfix on Protected Computers.
Starting from version 10a, Veeam Backup & Replication deploys Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows 4.0.1 and
Veeam Agent for Linux 4.0.1 on protected computers. Veeam Agents 3.0 and later work with Veeam Backup &
Replication 10a as well. Thus, if you upgrade to Veeam Backup & Replication 10a from an earlier product version,
you do not need to upgrade Veeam Agents on protected computers immediately.
To deploy Veeam Agents, Veeam Backup & Replication needs to discover computers whose data you want to back
up. To enable discovery, you organize your computers into one or more protection groups. Protection group
settings define what Veeam Agent computers Veeam Backup & Replication will discover and how the discovery
process will run.
To start managing Veeam Agents in Veeam Backup & Replication, you need to create a protection group in the
inventory and specify computers that you want to protect with Veeam Agents in the protection group settings. You
can create one or more protection groups depending on the size and complexity of your infrastructure. Protection
groups appear under the Physical Infrastructure node in the Inventory view of the Veeam Backup & Replication
console.
NOTE:
• The Physical Infrastructure node is not available if the Veeam Cloud Connect service provider license is
installed on the backup server.
• If you want to manage only a small number of Veeam Agent computers in Veeam Backup & Replication
and do not want to create protection groups, you can add the necessary computers directly to a Veeam
Agent backup job. Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically include such computers to the
Manually Added protection group. To learn more, see Predefined Protection Groups.
Protection groups allow you to automate deployment and management of Veeam Agents on computers in your
infrastructure. When you configure a protection group, you can specify scheduling options for protected computers
discovery and Veeam Agent deployment. You do not need to perform administrative tasks individually for every
computer that you want to protect with Veeam Agent — Veeam Backup & Replication will perform the specified
operations automatically upon the defined schedule.
Veeam Backup & Replication connects to discovered computers using credentials of the account specified in the
protection group settings. You can specify a master account that Veeam Backup & Replication will use to connect to
all computers added to the protection group or specify separate accounts to connect to specific computers in the
protection group.
After you create a protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the rescan job session to connect to
computers added to the protection group and perform the required operations on these computers. To learn more,
see Rescan Job.
• Individual computers
You can organize individual computers into a protection group by specifying the necessary computers in the
protection group settings. This option is recommended for smaller environments that do not have Microsoft
Active Directory deployed.
o You can select individual Active Directory objects that you want to include in a protection group, for
example, selected organization units and/or computers.
o You can include in the protection group an entire domain or other Active Directory object (such as a
container or organization unit) and exclude specific child objects being part of this object, for example,
selected organization units and/or computers.
Manually Added
The Manually Added protection group contains individual computers added to Veeam Agent backup jobs
configured in Veeam Backup & Replication. This protection group is aimed for scenarios when you want to manage
a single Veeam Agent computer or a small number of Veeam Agent computers and do not want to create additional
protection groups. Veeam Backup & Replication automatically adds a computer to the Manually Added protection
group when you add this computer to a Veeam Agent backup job. To learn more, see Adding New Computers.
• For the Manually Added protection group, you can change only a limited number of settings:
o You can change discovery and deployment options. (Except for changing the distribution server. For the
Manually Added protection group, the role of the distribution server is always assigned to the backup
server.)
o You can remove computers from this protection group. For example, you may want to remove a
computer from a Manually Added protection group if you do not want to back up data of this computer
any longer, and you have removed this computer from a Veeam Agent backup job.
o You cannot change other settings, such as the name and type of this protection group.
• You cannot add the entire Manually Added protection group to a Veeam Agent backup job.
Unmanaged
The Unmanaged protection group acts as a filter to display unmanaged Veeam Agent computers, that is, computers
that meet the following conditions:
1. Have Veeam Agent deployed and configured directly from a Veeam Agent computer or with Veeam
Availability Console.
2. Run a Veeam Agent backup job targeted at a backup repository managed by Veeam Backup & Replication.
You cannot perform any operations with the Unmanaged protection group, as well as add computers included in
this group to a Veeam Agent backup job. However, you can move such computers to a protection group that you
created. To learn more, see Moving Unmanaged Computer to Protection Group.
After you move an unmanaged computer to a protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication will start managing
Veeam Agent running on this computer according to discovery settings specified in the properties of the protection
group. If the protection group is added to a Veeam Agent backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will add the new
computer to the job, too. You will no longer be able to manage Veeam Agent directly on the Veeam Agent
computer or from Veeam Availability Console.
The Out of Date protection group lets you update Veeam Agent on multiple computers at once. To learn more, see
Upgrading Veeam Agent on Multiple Computers.
Offline
The Offline protection group acts as a filter to display computers to which Veeam Backup & Replication could not
connect during the latest rescan session.
Untrusted
The Untrusted protection group acts as a filter to display Linux-based computers whose fingerprints were not
verified in Veeam Backup & Replication. For computers included in this protection group, you need to check and
validate SSH fingerprints. To learn more, see Validating SSH Fingerprints.
The rescan job itself is not displayed in the Veeam Backup & Replication console. However, you can start and stop
rescan job sessions manually for a specific protection group or individual computer in the inventory. This may be
helpful, for example, if new computers appeared in your infrastructure, and you want to discover these computers
without waiting for the next scheduled rescan job session start. To learn more, see Rescanning Protection Group
and Rescanning Protected Computer.
You can view statistics for currently running and already performed rescan job sessions. To learn more, see Viewing
Rescan Job Statistics.
1. Obtains settings specified for the protection group from the configuration database. The settings include a
list of computers to scan, an account for connecting to these computers, and so on.
4. If the automatic Veeam Agent deployment option is enabled in the protection group settings, Veeam Backup
& Replication also deploys Veeam Agent on discovered computers. As a part of this process, Veeam Backup &
Replication performs the following operations:
a. Veeam Installer Service running on the computer collects information about the computer and sends it to
Veeam Backup & Replication. The collected data includes details on the computer type, platform, host
name, guest OS, IP address, BIOS UUID, and information about Veeam Agent (its presence on the
machine, product version and license installed).
b. Veeam Backup & Replication uploads the Veeam Agent setup file from the distribution server to the
discovered computer.
• Backup job
The backup job that processes Veeam Agent computers runs on the backup server in the similar way as a
regular job for VM data backup. The backup job is intended for protected computers that have permanent
connection to the backup server, such as standalone servers and failover clusters. You can use the backup job
to create Veeam Agent backups in a backup repository or cloud repository.
In Veeam Backup & Replication, the backup job of this type is also referred to as the Veeam Agent backup
job managed by the backup server.
To learn more, see Backup Job.
• Backup policy
The backup policy describes configuration of individual Veeam Agent backup jobs that run on protected
computers. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the backup policy as a saved template and applies settings from
the backup policy to Veeam Agents that run on computers specified in the backup policy. The backup policy is
intended for protected computers that may have limited connection to the backup server, such as
workstations, laptops and so on. You can choose to create Veeam Agent backups in a backup repository,
cloud repository, network shared folder or on a local storage of a protected computer.
In Veeam Backup & Replication, the backup policy is also referred to as the Veeam Agent backup job
managed by Veeam Agent.
To learn more, see Backup Policy.
• Backup jobs and policies that process Microsoft Windows computers. For such Veeam Agent backup jobs,
Veeam Backup & Replication offers settings supported in Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows.
• Backup jobs and policies that process Linux computers. For such Veeam Agent backup jobs, Veeam Backup &
Replication offers settings supported in Veeam Agent for Linux.
If a protection group contains Microsoft Windows computers and Linux computers, you can add this protection
group to a Veeam Agent backup job intended for any of these types of protected computers. Veeam Backup &
Replication will automatically exclude computers of another type from the backup job and processes only those
computers that run an OS of the same type.
For example, if you add a protection group that contains Microsoft Windows and Linux computers to a Veeam
Agent backup job intended for Linux computers, Veeam Backup & Replication will exclude Microsoft Windows
computers from this backup job and process only Linux computers within the job.
• You can include a computer of the Server type in more than one backup job managed by the backup server or
more than one backup policy.
• You can include a computer of the Workstation type in one backup policy targeted at a local drive, network
shared folder or Veeam backup repository plus unlimited number of backup policies targeted at a Veeam
Cloud Connect repository.
• You cannot include the same computer in a backup job and backup policy simultaneously.
For a Veeam Agent backup job managed by the backup server, all job management tasks are performed on the
Veeam Backup & Replication side: Veeam Backup & Replication starts the job upon the defined schedule, allocates
backup infrastructure resources, and so on. Veeam Agent running on a protected computer operates under control
from Veeam Backup & Replication and performs data backup operations only, such as creating a volume snapshot,
reading the backed-up data and transferring backed-up data to the target location. To learn more, see How Veeam
Agent Backup Job Works.
To configure a backup job, you must launch the New Agent Backup Job wizard and select the Managed by backup
server option at the Job mode step of the wizard. For backup jobs of this type, Veeam Backup & Replication offers
settings similar to settings of a VM backup job, as well as settings specific for Veeam Agents. To learn more, see
Creating Veeam Agent Backup Jobs.
NOTE:
To manage a Veeam Agent backup job managed by the backup server, you can use the Veeam Backup &
Replication console only. On a computer added to a backup job of this type, the Veeam Agent user interface is
not available, and you cannot perform operations with Veeam Agent directly on the protected computer.
1. When you create a Veeam Agent backup job in Veeam Backup & Replication, Veeam Backup & Replication
saves the backup job settings in its database.
2. When a new backup job session starts, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the Veeam Backup Manager
process on the backup server. Veeam Backup Manager reads job settings from the configuration database and
creates a list of backup tasks to process. For every protected computer added to the job, Veeam Backup &
Replication creates a new task.
3. Veeam Backup Manager connects to the Veeam Backup Service. The Veeam Backup Service includes a
resource scheduling component that manages all tasks and resources in the backup infrastructure. The
resource scheduler checks what backup infrastructure resources are available, and assigns backup repository
to process job tasks.
4. Veeam Backup Manager connects to Veeam Transport Service on the backup repository. The Veeam Transport
Service, in its turn, starts Veeam Data Mover. A new instance of Veeam Data Mover is started for every job
task.
5. Veeam Backup Manager establishes a connection with Veeam Agent service that runs on the protected
computer and Veeam Data Mover that runs on the backup repository, and sets a number of rules for data
transfer, such as network traffic throttling rules and so on.
6. Veeam Agent service that runs on the protected computer and Veeam Data Mover that runs on the backup
repository establish a connection with each other for data transfer.
8. Veeam Backup & Replication requests Veeam Agent to create a VSS snapshot or volume snapshot, depending
on the type of OS running on the Veeam Agent computer. For Windows-based computers, Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows leverages Microsoft VSS technology to create a VSS snapshot. For Linux-based
computers, Veeam Agent for Linux uses the Veeam driver to create a volume snapshot.
9. Veeam Agent service that runs on the protected computer reads the backed-up data from the volume
snapshot and transfers the data to the backup repository. During incremental job sessions, the Veeam Agent
service uses CBT to retrieve only those data blocks that have changed since the previous job session. If CBT is
not available, the Veeam Agent service interacts with the target Veeam Data Mover on the backup repository
to obtain backup metadata, and uses this metadata to detect blocks that have changed since the previous job
session.
While transporting backed-up data, Veeam Agent running on a protected computer performs additional
processing. It filters out zero data blocks, blocks of swap files and blocks of excluded files and folders. Veeam
Agent compresses backed-up data and transports it to the target Veeam Data Mover.
Veeam Backup & Replication stores backed-up data to the backup file in the backup repository.
The backup policy describes configuration of individual Veeam Agent backup jobs that run on protected computers.
You can add one or more protection groups or individual computers to the backup policy and instruct Veeam Agent
to create backups in a Veeam backup repository, in a Veeam Cloud Connect repository, in a network shared folder or
on a local storage of a protected computer. In terms of the Veeam Agent management scenario, the backup policy
is also referred to as the Veeam Agent backup job managed by the Veeam Agent.
Veeam Backup & Replication uses the backup policy as a saved template and applies settings from the backup
policy to protected computers. The resulting Veeam Agent backup jobs run on protected computers in the similar
way as a regular backup job configured directly in Veeam Agent. All backup job management and data processing
tasks are performed by Veeam Agent itself. This allows Veeam Agent to create backups of your data even if a
connection to the backup server is unavailable. To learn more, see How Backup Policy Works.
To configure a backup policy, you must launch the New Agent Backup Job wizard and select the Managed by
agent option at the Job mode step of the wizard. For backup policies, Veeam Backup & Replication offers settings
similar to settings of a Veeam Agent backup job configured directly in Veeam Agent. To learn more, see Creating
Veeam Agent Backup Jobs.
NOTE:
For computers specified in the backup policy, in addition to managing backup settings and performing backup
tasks from the Veeam backup console, you can also perform selected operations directly on a protected
computer. In particular, you can use the Veeam Agent control panel to start the backup job manually and
monitor backup statistics. This allows you to create ad-hoc backups of your data in addition to backups
created upon schedule defined in the backup policy.
1. When you create a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication saves the backup policy settings in the
following locations on the backup server:
2. Once the backup policy is created, Veeam Backup & Replication immediately applies the backup policy to
Veeam Agents that run on protected computers:
a. Veeam Backup & Replication reads the list of computers and protection groups specified in the backup
policy and starts the discovery process for these computers.
b. During the discovery process, Veeam Backup & Replication connects to each computer in the backup
policy and uploads the XML file with backup policy settings to the target computer.
On Microsoft Windows computers, Veeam Backup & Replication creates the Veeam Agent backup
job using the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows Configurator.
On Linux computers, Veeam Backup & Replication creates the Veeam Agent backup job using the
Veeam Agent for Linux command line interface.
Settings of the created backup job are saved to the Veeam Agent database on the protected computer.
Veeam Backup & Replication regularly applies the backup policy to protected computers during rescan of
protection groups added to the backup policy. To learn more, see Backup Policy Application Methods.
3. The created Veeam Agent backup job runs on the protected computer in the similar way as a regular Veeam
Agent backup job configured directly on the Veeam Agent computer. To learn more, see the following
sections:
o How Backup Works section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide
o How Backup Works section in the Veeam Agent for Linux User Guide
Veeam Agent regularly checks whether job settings obtained from the backup policy are up-to-date and do
not differ from the current backup settings specified in the backup policy. If the settings differ, Veeam Agent
updates backup job settings in its database. To learn more, see Backup Policy Application Methods.
o At the time when Veeam Backup & Replication performs scheduled rescan of protection groups added to
the backup policy. Veeam Backup & Replication automatically rescans a protection group upon schedule
specified in the protection group settings.
• By Veeam Agent
The Veeam Agent service running on a protected computer regularly checks whether job settings obtained
from the backup policy are up-to-date and updates backup job settings, if necessary. Veeam Agent performs
the check operation according to the following rules:
o In case 6 or more hours pass since the previous check, Veeam Agent performs the check operation at the
time when the backup job starts upon schedule.
o In case 24 hours pass since the previous check, Veeam Agent immediately starts the check operation.
a. Connects to Veeam Backup & Replication and obtains from the Veeam Backup & Replication database
information about backup policies to which the Veeam Agent computer was added.
b. Compares obtained backup policy settings with backup job settings in the Veeam Agent database. If the
settings differ, Veeam Agent performs the following tasks:
If backup policy settings and Veeam Agent backup job settings do not match, Veeam Agent updates
backup job settings in its database.
If the protected computer was added to a new backup policy, Veeam Agent creates a new backup
job on the protected computer.
If the protected computer was removed from the backup policy, Veeam Agent removes the Veeam
Agent backup job on the protected computer.
TIP:
You can also apply the backup policy to protected computers manually, if needed. To learn more, see
Applying Backup Policy to Protected Computers.
In the Veeam Agent management scenario, the backup cache works in the similar way as in Veeam Agent operating
in the standalone mode. To learn more, see the Backup Cache section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
User Guide.
In addition to backup cache features and limitations listed in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide,
the following applies to Veeam Agent operating in the managed mode:
• You can specify backup cache settings in the properties of backup policies targeted at the following types of
backup location:
o Cloud repository
• To facilitate backup cache configuration on multiple Veeam Agent computers added to the backup policy, you
can instruct Veeam Agent to automatically select location for the backup cache on each computer. To learn
more, see How Automatic Backup Cache Placement Works.
With the Automatic selection option enabled in the backup cache settings, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
creates the backup cache according to the following rules:
1. Veeam Agent selects for the backup cache a non-system volume that has enough free space for the specified
backup cache quota (that is, maximum backup cache size) and has the largest amount of free space.
2. On the selected volume, Veeam Agent creates the backup cache in the Veeam Backup Cache folder.
• If the volume with the largest amount of free space is a system volume, Veeam Agent selects the volume that
has enough space for the backup cache quota and has the second largest amount of free space.
• If the system volume is the only volume that has enough space for the backup cache quota, Veeam Agent
creates the backup cache on the system volume.
• If no volumes have enough space for the backup cache quota, Veeam Agent selects the volume that has the
largest amount of free space.
• Once Veeam Agent creates the Veeam Backup Cache folder on a protected computer, Veeam Agent does not
change the location of this folder.
For example, the system volume is the only volume that has enough space for the backup cache quota at the
time when you create the backup policy. In this case, Veeam Agent creates the Veeam Backup Cache folder
on the system volume. After disk configuration changes on the computer, a non-system volume becomes able
to fit the backup cache quota. However, Veeam Agent will not move the Veeam Backup Cache folder to the
non-system volume.
• Veeam Agent does not create the backup cache on external, removable or virtual disks.
Note that Veeam Backup & Replication automatically deletes restore points from the backup cache on all
computers added to the backup policy after you perform one of the following operations:
• Change the target location for backup files in the backup policy settings.
• Change the backup mode for the backup policy to the File-level backup.
• Change backup cache location for the backup policy (in case it was specified manually).
You can also delete restore points from the backup cache manually in the Veeam backup console. To learn more,
see Clearing Backup Cache.
• Pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts executed on the Veeam Agent computer (for backup jobs that process
servers)
• Pre-job and post-job scripts executed on the backup server (for backup jobs managed by the backup server)
You can specify pre-freeze and post-thaw script settings at the Guest Processing step of the New Agent Backup
Job wizard. For details, see Backup Job and Snapshot Scripts.
During the backup job session, Veeam Backup & Replication uploads the scripts to each Veeam Agent computer
added to the backup job and executes them on these computers. The scripts run in the same way as in the
standalone version of Veeam Agent. To learn more, see the Backup Job Scripts section in the Veeam Agent for
Linux User Guide.
You can specify backup job script settings at the Guest Processing step of the New Agent Backup Job wizard. For
details, see Backup Job and Snapshot Scripts.
During the backup job session, Veeam Backup & Replication uploads the scripts to each Veeam Agent computer
added to the backup job and executes them on these computers. The scripts run in the same way as in the
standalone version of Veeam Agent. To learn more, see the Backup Job Scripts section in the Veeam Agent for
Linux User Guide.
Keep in mind that scripts of this type are supported for computers that run Veeam Agent for Linux 4.0 and later
only. Earlier versions of Veeam Agent for Linux do not run pre-job and port-job scripts obtained from the backup
server.
You can specify backup job script settings at the Storage step of the New Agent Backup Job wizard. For details,
see Script Settings.
During the backup job session, Veeam Backup & Replication executes the scripts on the backup server. The scripts
are executed on the backup server under the account under which the Veeam Backup Service runs (the local System
account or account that has the local Administrator permissions on the backup server).
3. Pre-freeze script
4. Post-thaw script
Getting Started
To back up Veeam Agent computer data to a cloud repository, you must complete the following steps:
1. Add the SP in the Veeam backup console. To do this, you must provide credentials of the tenant account that
you obtained from the SP. For details, see the Connecting to Service Providers section in the Veeam Cloud
Connect Guide.
2. Create Veeam Agent backup job or policy and specify a cloud repository as a target location for backup files.
For details, see Creating Veeam Agent Backup Jobs.
3. In case some Veeam Agent computer data becomes missing or corrupted, you can restore the necessary data
from the cloud. To learn more, see Restore Tasks with Veeam Agent Backups in Cloud Repository.
NOTE:
• In the Veeam Agent management scenario, you do not need to create subtenant accounts to connect
Veeam Agent computers to the Veeam Cloud Connect infrastructure on the SP side. To learn more, see
How It Works.
• If you plan to back up Veeam Agent computer data to the cloud using a backup policy, you must not
connect to the SP using credentials of a vCloud Director tenant account. Veeam Backup & Replication
does not support creating managed subtenant accounts for tenant accounts of this type.
• Veeam Agents must trust the TLS certificate obtained from the SP in the same way as Veeam Backup &
Replication. If you accept the certificate as trusted in Veeam Backup & Replication, Veeam Agents will
trust it automatically as well. If you set up the trust relationship on the Veeam backup server, you must
also do this on all Veeam Agent computers that you plan to back up to the cloud repository.
How It Works
There are 2 scenarios for data backup to the cloud with Veeam Agent operating in the managed mode:
• Scenario 1: backup to the cloud with a backup job managed by the backup server. In this scenario, the backup
process is similar to the same process for VM backup to a cloud repository.
• Scenario 2: backup to the cloud with a backup policy. In this scenario, the backup process is similar to the
same process for Veeam Agent operating in the standalone mode.
1. The tenant adds the SP in the Veeam backup console on the tenant backup server.
2. The tenant creates a Veeam Agent backup job managed by the backup server. The backup job is targeted at a
cloud repository.
3. The backup job operates in the similar way as in the regular Veeam Cloud Connect Backup scenario. The
difference is that Veeam Backup & Replication processes Veeam Agent computer data instead of VM data. To
learn more about backup to a cloud repository, see the How Cloud Repository Works section in the Veeam
Cloud Connect Guide.
1. The tenant adds the SP in the Veeam backup console on the tenant backup server.
3. For each Veeam Agent computer added to the backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically
creates a managed subtenant account. To learn more, see the Managed Subtenant Account section in the
Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
4. Backup jobs that run on Veeam Agent computers added to the backup policy operate in the similar way as in
the standalone version of Veeam Agent. Veeam Agent connects to the SP under the managed subtenant
account and transfers the backed-up data to the cloud repository.
• Restore computer volumes from a Veeam Agent backup (for backups of Microsoft Windows machines only).
• Restore individual files and folders from a Veeam Agent backup (for backups of Microsoft Windows machines
only).
• Restore application items from a Veeam Agent backup with Veeam Explorers (for backups of Microsoft
Windows machines only).
• Export a specific restore point in a Veeam Agent backup to a full backup (VBK) file.
You cannot restore data from a Veeam Agent backup in the cloud repository to a VMware vSphere or Microsoft
Hyper-V VM, Amazon EC2 and Microsoft Azure.
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows supports data backup and restore for the following types of clusters:
o Microsoft SQL Server 2008 SP4 or newer (AlwaysOn Failover Cluster Instances and AlwaysOn
Availability Groups are supported.)
1. In Veeam Backup & Replication, create a protection group that includes Active Directory objects and add to
this protection group one of the following types of objects:
o Cluster account of the failover cluster whose data you want to back up
2. In Veeam Backup & Replication, configure a Veeam Agent backup job for a failover cluster. To add a failover
cluster to the backup job, do the following:
a. At the Job Mode step of the New Agent Backup Job wizard, select Failover cluster.
b. At the Computers step of the wizard, add to the job the cluster account that you added to a protection
group at the step 1. Alternatively, you can add to the job a container or protection group that includes
this cluster account.
To learn more, see Creating Agent Backup Job for Windows Computers.
IMPORTANT!
In case a backup task within a Veeam Agent backup job that processes a cluster completes unsuccessfully,
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will create full backup of all shared disks of the cluster.
• For a regular DAG, the backup job configuration procedure is the same as for any failover cluster. To learn
more, see Failover Cluster Backup.
• When you restore data of a failover cluster, make sure that the cluster is added to the Veeam Backup &
Replication inventory as part of a protection group.
• [For clusters with shared disks] Veeam Agent does not restore data of a disk witness. During volume restore
for shared disks of a cluster, the disk witness is not displayed at the Disk Mapping step of the Volume
Restore wizard. During file-level restore, the disk witness is not displayed in the Veeam Backup Browser.
• Backup of failover clusters is supported in Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows managed by Veeam Backup &
Replication only. You cannot process a failover cluster by Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows operating in
the standalone mode.
• Backup of CSV (Cluster Shared Volumes) is not supported. Cluster disks used as CSV are automatically
excluded from backup.
• Backup of Storage Replica log volumes is not supported. Such volumes are automatically excluded from
backup because of Microsoft VSS limitations. To learn more, see Microsoft Docs.
NOTE:
Veeam Backup & Replication does not support simultaneous processing of Microsoft SQL Server transaction
logs on SQL Server clustered instances with identical names. The limitation applies to clustered instances of
different failover clusters as well.
For example, you configure two backup jobs that process transaction logs of different clusters whose SQL
clustered instances have identical names. In case these backup jobs run simultaneously, transaction logs will
be processed only by the backup job that started first. The second backup job will not process transaction
logs.
1. If you have already been using Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows and/or Veeam Agent for Linux with
Veeam Backup & Replication, after you start managing this Veeam Agent with Veeam Backup & Replication,
Veeam Agent will start a new backup chain on a target location. You cannot continue the existing backup
chain that was created by Veeam Agent operating in the standalone mode.
2. You cannot map a Veeam Agent backup job or backup policy configured in Veeam Backup & Replication to a
Veeam Agent backup chain created by a standalone Veeam Agent on a backup repository.
Specification Requirement
OS Both 64-bit and 32-bit (where applicable) versions of the following operating
systems are supported1,2:
Each Veeam Agent computer that consumes a license installed in Veeam Backup &
Replication must have a unique BIOS UUID.
1
Running Veeam Agent on Insider versions of Microsoft Windows OS (both Client
and Server) is not supported.
2
Server Core installations of Microsoft Windows Server OSes can be backed-up only
by Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by the Veeam backup server.
3
Veeam CBT driver is supported only if Microsoft Windows update KB3033929 is
installed on the Veeam Agent computer.
4
Microsoft Windows 10 Education is supported starting from build 10586 and later.
File System Microsoft Windows FAT, NTFS, ReFS file systems are supported.
The supported file system must reside on a volume that is 64 TB or smaller, because
Veeam Agent uses the Microsoft Software Shadow Copy Provider to create a volume
shadow copy during the backup. To learn more about the limitation, see this
Microsoft article.
Microsoft SQL Microsoft SQL Server 2012 SP4 Express LocalDB Edition.
Database
Microsoft SQL Server is installed within the Veeam Agent deployment process only if
you added the target computer to the backup policy. To learn more, see Backup
Policy.
Software The following required 3rd party software is included in the Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows Redistributable. During the Veeam Agent deployment process,
Veeam Backup & Replication checks whether all prerequisite software is available on
the target computer. If some of the required software components are missing,
Veeam Backup & Replication will install missing software automatically.
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows works with only those hard drive types that are supported by the Microsoft
Windows OS. Thus, Veeam Agent supports the 512 bytes and 4 KB sector hard drives only. Other hard drive types
are not supported. To learn more, see this Microsoft article.
Specification Requirement
For virtual machines: Only full virtualization type is supported. Containers and
paravirtualized instances are not supported. OVM is supported with
limitations.
Both 64-bit and 32-bit versions of the following distributions are supported2:
• Debian 8.0 – 10.4
• Ubuntu 14.04, 16.04, 18.04, 19.10, 20.04
• RHEL 6.0 – 8.23
• CentOS 6.0 – 8.23
• Oracle Linux 6 – 8.2 (RHCK)3
• Oracle Linux 6 (starting from UEK R1) – Oracle Linux 8 (up to UEK R6)
• SLES 11 SP4, 12 SP1 – 15 SP1
• SLES for SAP 11 SP4, 12 SP1 – 15 SP1
• Fedora 30 – 32
• openSUSE Leap 15.2
• openSUSE Tumbleweed
1
As long as you use kernels supplied by your distribution. Consider the
following limitations:
2
For CentOS / RHEL 6.0 – 6.3, Fedora and openSUSE 11.3 – 13.2, 42.0 – 42.1,
Tumbleweed distributions, automatic Veeam Agent deployment from Veeam
Backup & Replication is not supported. You need to install Veeam Agent for
Linux directly on a target machine. For details, see the Installing Veeam
Agent for Linux section in the Veeam Agent for Linux User Guide.
After that, you can add this machine to the Veeam Backup & Replication
inventory and start managing Veeam Agent running on the machine.
3
RHEL / CentOS / Oracle Linux (RHCK) 6.10, 7.7, and 8.2 are supported up to
certain kernel versions. For details, see this Veeam KB article.
File System Veeam Agent for Linux supports consistent snapshot-based data backup for
the following file systems1:
The supported file system (except for Btrfs) can reside on a simple volume or
LVM2 volume. Btrfs is supported only if it resides directly on a physical device
with no additional abstraction layers (such as LVM, software RAID, dm-crypt
and so on) below or above it.
Data that reside in other file systems (including NFS and SMB shares) can be
backed up using the snapshot-less mode. For details, see the Snapshot-Less
File-Level Backup section in the Veeam Agent for Linux User Guide.
1
Consider the following:
• Veeam Agent for Linux does not back up volumes that reside on USB
devices and SD cards.
• Total size of all file systems included in a file-level backup must not
exceed 128 TB. Size of a file included in a file-level backup must not
exceed 16 TB.
• Each volume included in a backup must have a unique UUID.
• The veeamsnap module provides RAM-based changed block tracking
(CBT) mechanism. Every time the module is unloaded or Veeam Agent
for Linux computer is rebooted, CBT data is reset. As a result, Veeam
Agent reads the entire data added to the backup scope to detect what
blocks have changed since the last job session, and incremental backup
requires greater time.
• Backup of machines used as cluster nodes is not supported (that
includes backup of machines that use shared disks, clustered file
systems or clustered LVM).
• Certain limitations for EMC PowerPath configuration apply. To learn
more, see this Veeam KB article.
• BFQ I/O scheduler is not supported.
Software Important! Linux user account used to work with Veeam Agent for Linux must
have the /bin/bash shell set as the default shell.
• dkms2
• gcc2
• make2
• perl2
• linux-headers3 (for Debian-based systems)
• kernel-headers2,3 (for RedHat-based systems)
• kernel-devel2,3 (for RedHat-based systems)
• libudev
• libacl
• libattr
• lvm2
• libfuse
• libncurses54
• dmidecode5
• openssh-server
• openssh-clients
• libmysqlclient46
• libpq57
• python38
• efibootmgr (for UEFI-based systems)
• isolinux (for Debian-based systems)
• syslinux (for RedHat-based systems)
• btrfs-progs (for backup of Btrfs file system)
1
To install Veeam Agent for Linux packages on a target computer, Veeam
Backup & Replication uses the default package manager of the Linux
distribution running on this computer. During the installation process, the
package manager checks whether all prerequisite software is available on the
computer. If some of the required software components are missing, the
package manager will attempt to install the missing packages from a software
repository configured in the OS.
2
Does not apply to CentOS, RHEL, SLES distributions. For details, see the
Installing Veeam Agent for Linux section in the Veeam Agent for Linux User
Guide.
3
Package version varies according to the Linux kernel version that you use.
4
For openSUSE 15 and SLES 15 distributions, either of the following packages
is required: libncurses5 or libncurses6.
5
Required for Veeam Agent management — a valid BIOS UUID must be
obtainable either from dmidecode | grep -i uuid or from
/sys/class/dmi/id/product_uuid. Each Veeam Agent that consumes
a license installed in Veeam Backup & Replication must have a unique BIOS
UUID. If a valid UUID cannot be obtained, Veeam will generate it
automatically.
6
A package with the MySQL database client library is required to process
MySQL database system located on the Veeam Agent server. Package version
varies depending on the MySQL database system version that you use.
Backup Target
Backup can be performed to the following types of storage:
• Direct attached storage (DAS), such as USB, eSATA or Firewire external drives, and raw device mapping
(RDM) volumes
• Network Attached Storage (NAS) able to represent itself as an SMB (CIFS) share
• Network Attached Storage (NAS) able to represent itself as an NFS share (for backups of Linux machines
only)
• Veeam Agent should be able to establish a direct IP connection to the Veeam Backup & Replication server.
Thus, Veeam Agent cannot work with Veeam Backup & Replication that is located behind the NAT gateway.
• Domain names of all managed servers added to the Veeam backup infrastructure and machines you want to
back up must be resolvable into IPv4 addresses.
• Per-instance license. If you use a per-instance license in Veeam Backup & Replication, the number of servers
and workstations that you can process with Veeam Agents depends on the edition of Veeam Backup &
Replication and the number of instances in the license. For more information, see Veeam Licensing Policy.
• Per-socket license. If you use a perpetual per-socket license in Veeam Backup & Replication, the product
allows you to use up to 6 instances to process Veeam Agents. If the number of sockets in your license is less
than 6, you can use the number of instances that equals the number of sockets in the license. For example, if
the number of sockets in the license is 5, you can use 5 instances. If the number of sockets in the license is 7,
you can use 6 instances.
Note that you can use Veeam Agents to protect VMs residing on a virtualization host that consumes a per-
socket license. In this scenario, Veeam Agents will not consume instances in the license.
• Community edition. If you do not install a license in Veeam Backup & Replication, you can use the
Community edition of the product. The Community edition of Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to use
10 instances. Functionality available in the Community edition of Veeam Backup & Replication is the same as
in the Standard edition of the product.
For more information on Veeam Backup & Replication licensing, see the Licensing section in the Veeam Backup &
Replication User Guide.
3. On the Instances tab, clear the Allow unlicensed agents to consume instances check box.
4. Click Close.
Specification Requirement
Microsoft Active Directory The following versions of Microsoft Active Directory Domain Services servers
Domain Controllers (domain controllers) are supported:
Microsoft SQL Server The following versions of Microsoft SQL Server are supported:
Oracle Oracle Database versions 11g – 19c are supported for the following operating
systems (32-bit and 64-bit architecture):
Important notes:
Specification Requirement
• Oracle Database versions 11g to 19c are supported for all operating
Oracle
systems supported by Veeam Agent for Linux. To learn more, see
System Requirements.
• Automatic Storage Management (ASM) is not supported.
• Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) are not supported.
• Oracle Grid Infrastructure is not supported.
• Oracle Database Express Edition is not supported.
• SAP on Oracle is not supported.
• Oracle Database architectures with Data Guard and passive instances
are not supported.
• Configurations with multiple installations of Oracle Database and/or
multiple Oracle homes on the same server are not supported.
For information about ports that must be opened to ensure communication of the backup server with Veeam Cloud
Connect infrastructure components, see the Used Ports section in the Veeam Cloud Connect Guide.
In addition to general port requirements applicable to a Veeam backup server, the backup server used in the Veeam
Agent management scenario must have the following ports opened:
49152 to
65535
Distribution
(for Microsoft Dynamic RPC port range. For more
Server TCP
Windows information, see this Microsoft KB article.
2008 and
newer)
Linux server
Default range of ports used as data
performing
transmission channels. For every TCP
the role of a TCP 2500 to 3300
connection that a job uses, one port from
backup
this range is assigned.
repository
49152 to
65535
(for Microsoft Dynamic RPC port range. For more
Microsoft TCP
Windows information, see this Microsoft KB article.
Windows
2008 and
server
newer)
performing
the role of a
Veeam Agent backup
Default range of ports used as data
Computer repository
transmission channels. For every TCP
TCP 2500 to 3300
connection that a job uses,s one port from
this range is assigned.
49152 to
65535
(for Microsoft Dynamic RPC port range. For more
TCP
Windows information, see this Microsoft KB article.
2008 and
newer)
o To establish a secure connection between parties, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the default self-
signed certificate.
o Veeam Backup & Replication allows all new Linux hosts to establish a connection to the backup server.
You can use the default security settings or change them if needed. To learn more, see Configuring Security
Settings.
3. Add computers that you want to protect with Veeam Agents to the Veeam Backup & Replication inventory.
In Veeam Backup & Replication, computers that you want to protect with Veeam Agents are organized into
protection groups. You can use the Veeam Backup & Replication console to create one or more protection
groups that include individual computers, Microsoft Active Directory objects or list of computers imported
from a CSV file. To learn more, see Creating Protection Groups.
o Veeam Agent backup job managed by Veeam Agent, or Veeam Agent backup policy
7. In case of a disaster, you can restore data from a Veeam Agent backup.
To learn more, see Restoring Data from Veeam Agent Backups.
• To establish a secure connection between parties, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the default self-signed
certificate.
• Veeam Backup & Replication allows all computers that run a Linux OS to establish a connection to the backup
server.
You can change security settings if needed, for example, in case security regulations of your organization require
usage of a custom certificate and/or verification of Linux host fingerprints.
3. In the Certificate section, check information about the currently used certificate. By default, Veeam Backup
& Replication uses a self-signed TLS certificate generated during the Veeam Backup & Replication installation
process. If you want to use a custom certificate, click Install and specify a new certificate. To learn more, see
Managing TLS Certificates.
o Add all discovered hosts to the list automatically — with this option enabled, Veeam Backup &
Replication allows all discovered computers that run a Linux OS to connect to the backup server. This
scenario is recommended for demo environments only.
o Add unknown hosts to the list manually — with this option enabled, only the following Linux-based
computers can connect to the backup server:
Protected computers that have already established a connection to the backup server and have
their fingerprints stored in the Veeam Backup & Replication database. Veeam Backup & Replication
displays the number of such computers in the Trusted hosts field. You can export the list of
trusted Linux computers to a known_hosts file. To do this, click Export and specify a path to the
folder to save the file.
Protected computers specified in the known_hosts file imported to Veeam Backup & Replication.
To import a known_hosts file, click Import and specify a path to the folder where the file resides.
Protected computers added to the list of trusted hosts in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
To learn more, see Adding Computers to Trusted Hosts List.
5. Click OK.
• You can choose to keep the default self-signed TLS certificate generated by Veeam Backup & Replication.
• You can use Veeam Backup & Replication to generate a new self-signed TLS certificate. To learn more, see
Generating Self-Signed Certificates.
• You can select an existing TLS certificate from the certificates store. To learn more, see Importing Certificates
from Certificate Store.
• You can import a TLS certificate from a file in the PFX format. To learn more, see Importing Certificates from
PFX Files.
NOTE:
If you plan to use a certificate issued by your own Certificate Authority (CA), make sure that the certificate
meets the requirements. To learn more, see Using Certificate Signed by Internal CA.
To generate TLS certificates, Veeam Backup & Replication employs the RSA Full cryptographic service provider by
Microsoft Windows installed on the Veeam backup server. The created TLS certificate is saved to the Shared
certificate store. The following types of users can access the generated TLS certificate:
If you use a self-signed TLS certificate generated by Veeam Backup & Replication, you do not need to take any
additional actions to deploy the TLS certificate on a protected computer. When Veeam Backup & Replication
discovers a protected computer, a matching TLS certificate with a public key is installed on the protected computer
automatically. During discovery, Veeam Installer Service deployed on the protected computer retrieves the TLS
certificate with a public key from the backup server and installs a TLS certificate with a public key on the protected
computer.
NOTE:
When you generate a self-signed TLS certificate with Veeam Backup & Replication, you cannot include several
aliases to the certificate and specify a custom value in the Subject field. The Subject field value is taken from
the Veeam Backup & Replication license installed on the Veeam backup server.
4. At the Certificate Type step of the wizard, select Generate new certificate.
7. Click Finish. Veeam Backup & Replication will save the generated certificate in the Shared certificate store on
the Veeam backup server.
4. At the Certificate Type step of the wizard, choose Select certificate from the Certificate Store.
• Your organization uses a TLS certificate signed by a CA and you have a copy of this certificate in a file of PFX
format.
• You have generated a self-signed TLS certificate in the PFX format with a third-party tool and you want to
import it to Veeam Backup & Replication.
IMPORTANT!
The TLS certificate must pass validation on the Veeam backup server. In the opposite case, you will not be
able to import the TLS certificate.
4. At the Certificate Type step of the wizard, choose Import certificate from a file.
6. If the PFX file is protected with a password, specify the password in the field below.
7. At the Summary step of the wizard, review the certificate properties. Use the Copy to clipboard link to copy
and save information about the TLS certificate. You can use the copied information on a protected computer
to verify the TLS certificate with the certificate thumbprint.
In you want to use a certificate signed by your internal Certification Authority (CA), make sure that the following
requirements are met:
• Veeam Agents and Veeam Backup & Replication must trust the CA. That is, the Certification Authority
certificate must be added to the Trusted Root Certification Authority store on the Veeam backup server and
Veeam Agent computers.
• Certificate Revocation List (CRL) must be accessible from the Veeam backup server and Veeam Agent
computers.
• [For Linux-based Veeam Agent computers] OpenSSL version 1.0 or later must be installed on the Veeam
Agent computer.
1. The certificate subject must be equal to the fully qualified domain name of the Veeam backup server. For
example: vbrserver.domain.local.
o Digital Signature
o Certificate Signing
If you use Windows Server Certification Authority, it is recommended that you issue a Veeam Backup &
Replication certificate based on the built-in "Subordinate Certification Authority" template or templates
similar to it.
a. At the Request Certificates step of the Certificate Enrollment wizard, select a check box next to the
necessary certificate template and click Properties.
To start using the signed certificate, you must select it from the certificates store on the Veeam backup server. To
learn more, see Importing Certificates from Certificate Store.
After you specify the signed certificate in Veeam Backup & Replication, during the next backup job session Veeam
Agents will receive child certificates from the Veeam backup server.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and click Untrusted.
3. In the working area, Veeam Backup & Replication will display discovered computers that you can add to the
list of trusted hosts. Check fingerprints of the computers and add them to the list of trusted hosts in one of
the following ways:
o To add all computers at once to the list of trusted hosts, select the Untrusted node in the inventory
pane and click Trust All on the ribbon or right-click the Untrusted node and select Trust all.
TIP:
If you do not want to create protection groups, for example, if you plan to manage only a small number of
computers in your infrastructure, you can add the necessary computers directly to a Veeam Agent backup job.
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically add such computers to the Manually Added protection group.
To learn more, see Adding Computers to Backup Job and Protection Groups.
1. When Veeam Backup & Replication performs discovery of protected computers, Veeam Backup & Replication
connects to every computer added to the protection group. If you instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to
perform discovery immediately after the protection group is created, make sure that all computers added to
the protection group are powered on and may be accessed over the network. Otherwise, Veeam Backup &
Replication will be unable to connect to a protected computer and perform the required operations on this
computer.
2. A protection group that includes Microsoft Active Directory objects can include objects from one domain only.
To add to the inventory computers that reside in another domain, you need to create a separate protection
group and include in this protection group the necessary objects from that domain.
3. Veeam Backup & Replication automatically excludes from the protection scope Active Directory objects of the
Group type that exist in a parent Active Directory object (organization unit, container or entire domain)
specified in the protection group settings. To instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to process a group, you
must select this group explicitly in the protection group settings.
4. You cannot add and/or exclude universal and domain local groups to/from protection groups that include
Microsoft Active Directory objects. Only global groups are supported.
5. It is recommended that you do not add a computer to a protection group by specifying a dynamic IP address
assigned to this computer. If such computer receives another IP address from a DHCP server, Veeam Backup
& Replication will be unable to discover the computer and perform on this computer operations defined in the
protection group settings.
6. It is recommended that you do not add a computer to a protection group by specifying a public IP address
assigned to this computer. If you add such computer to a backup policy targeted at a cloud repository, the
name of the subtenant account created for the computer can contain the public IP address. This IP address
will be visible to the Veeam Cloud Connect service provider who has access to subtenant account settings.
7. It is recommended that you include each computer in one protection group only. For example, if you have
added an Active Directory container to a protection group, it is not recommended to add a computer that
exists in this container to another protection group. Adding computers to multiple protection groups with
different computer discovery and Veeam Agent deployment settings will result in additional load on the
backup server.
8. You can add a cluster only to a protection group that includes Microsoft Active Directory objects. You cannot
add clusters to protection groups that include individual computers or computers specified in a CSV file.
9. To deploy Veeam Installer Service and Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows on a protected computer, Veeam
Backup & Replication uses the administrative share (admin$) of the target computer. An account that you
plan to use to connect to a computer included in the protection group must have access to the administrative
share.
Note that in client Microsoft Windows OSes access to the administrative share is forbidden by default for
local accounts. You can enable this option with a registry key. For details, see this Microsoft KB article.
10. Veeam Backup & Replication does not support usage of a Linux account for which system settings modify
shell output results to connect to a computer included in the protection group. For example, this includes
Linux accounts with the modified PS1 shell variable.
• Open the Inventory view. Click the Physical Infrastructure node in the inventory pane and click Add Group
on the ribbon.
• Open the Inventory view. Click the Physical Infrastructure node in the inventory pane and click Create
Protection Group in the working area.
• Open the Inventory view. Right-click the Physical Infrastructure node in the inventory pane and select Add
protection group.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who added the protection group, date and time when the protection group was
created.
NOTE:
You can add a Microsoft failover cluster to a protection group based on Microsoft Active Directory objects
only. To do this, you must select the Microsoft Active Directory objects option and then add a cluster
account or an AD object containing this account at the Active Directory step of the wizard.
• Individual computers — select this option if you want to define a static protection scope by adding specific
computers to the protection group. This option is recommended for smaller environments that do not have
Microsoft Active Directory deployed. With this option selected, you will pass to the Computers step of the
wizard.
• Microsoft Active Directory objects — select this option if you want to add to the protection group one or
several Active Directory objects: entire domain, container, organization unit, group, computer or cluster.
Protection groups that include Active Directory containers and/or organization units are dynamic in their
nature. If a new computer is added to a container or organization unit that you have specified in the
protection group settings, during the next rescan session, Veeam Backup & Replication will discover this
computer and (optionally) deploy Veeam Agent on this computer. With this option selected, you will pass to
the Active Directory step of the wizard.
• Computers from CSV file — select this option if you want to add to the protection scope computers listed in
a CSV file that resides in a local folder on the backup server or in a network shared folder. As well as
protection groups that include Active Directory containers, protection groups of this type are also dynamic. If
a new computer appears in a CSV file after the protection job is created, within the next rescan session,
Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically update the protection group settings to include the added
computer. With this option selected, you will pass to the CSV File step of the wizard.
• Specify computers — if you have selected the Individual computers option at the Type step of the wizard.
• Specify Microsoft Active Directory objects — if you have selected the Microsoft Active Directory objects
option at the Type step of the wizard.
• Specify a CSV file — if you have selected the Computers from CSV file option at the Type step of the wizard.
Specifying Computers
The Computers step of the wizard is available if you have chosen the Individual computers option at the Type
step of the wizard.
At this step of the wizard, you can specify computers that you want to add to the protection group.
1. Click Add.
2. In the Add Computer window, in the Host name or IP address field, enter a full DNS name, NetBIOS name
or IP address of the computer that you want to add to the protection group.
3. From the Credentials list, select a user account that has administrative permissions on the computer that you
want to add to the protection group. Veeam Backup & Replication will use this account to connect to the
protected computer and perform the necessary operations on the computer: upload and install Veeam Agent,
and so on.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click Add on the right to
add credentials. For more information, see the Credentials Manager section in the Veeam Backup &
Replication User Guide.
4. Repeat steps 1–3 for every computer that you want to add to the protection group.
5. To check if Veeam Backup & Replication can communicate with computers added to the protection group,
click Test Now. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the specified credentials to connect to all computers in
the list.
If you chose to manually add Linux-based computers to the list of trusted hosts in Veeam Backup &
Replication, when you test credentials for an unknown Linux-based computer in the protection group settings,
the test operation will complete with the Failed status. This happens because Veeam Backup & Replication
cannot connect to the untrusted computer before you add this computer to the list of trusted hosts. To learn
more, see Adding Computers to Trusted Hosts List.
At this step of the wizard, you can select Active Directory objects that you want to add to the protection group. You
can add to a protection group the following types of Active Directory objects: domain, organization unit, container,
computer, cluster, or group.
2. In the Specify Domain window, specify settings of the domain whose objects you want to include in the
protection group:
a. In the Domain controller or domain DNS name field, type a name of the domain controller or domain
whose objects you want to include in the protection group.
b. In the Port field, specify a port number over which Veeam Backup & Replication must communicate with
the domain controller. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses port 389.
NOTE:
If you want to include a large number of computers in the protection group but do not want to use an
account with domain administrator permissions in the protection group settings, consider configuring a
protection group based on a list of computers imported from a CSV file. To learn more, see Select
Protection Group Type.
4. In the Add Objects window, select the necessary Active Directory object in the tree and click OK. You can
press and hold [CTRL] to select multiple objects at once.
To quickly find the necessary object, you can use the search field at the bottom of the Add Objects window.
a. Click the button to the left of the search field and select the necessary type of object to search for:
Everything, Computer, Cluster, Organization Unit, Container or Group.
1. In the Path to file field, click Browse and specify a path to a CSV file that contains a list of IP addresses or
domain names of computers that you want to add to the protection group. The CSV file can reside in a folder
on the local drive of the Veeam backup server or in a network shared folder accessible from the backup
server.
2. In the Computers field, review the list of IP addresses or domain names imported from the CSV file.
NOTE:
After you finish configuring the protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication will perform discovery of
computers listed in the CSV file upon schedule defined in the protection group settings. If Veeam Backup &
Replication is unable to read the CSV file (for example, after the file was moved or deleted from the specified
location), the rescan job will use the list of computers imported from the CSV file during the previous rescan
job session.
172.17.53.16,172.17.53.19,172.17.53.31,172.17.53.40
Alternatively, you can delimit IP addresses or domain names in the list with the newline character:
172.17.53.16
172.17.53.19
172.17.53.31
172.17.53.40
At this step of the wizard, you can specify which objects you want to exclude from the protection group. You can
exclude the following types of objects:
• All virtual machines — all VMs residing in the domain. You can select this option, for example, if you do not
want to protect VMs with Veeam Agents and want to back up VM data with Veeam Backup & Replication
instead.
• All computers that have been offline for over 30 days — all computers in the domain that have not logged on
to Active Directory for more than 30 days.
• Individual Active Directory objects — specific Active Directory objects: computers, clusters, groups,
organization units and/or containers. With this option selected, you must specify Active Directory objects that
you want to exclude from the protection group.
1. In the Exclude section, select the The following objects check box.
2. Click Add.
3. In the Add Objects window, select the necessary Active Directory object in the tree and click OK. You can
press and hold [CTRL] to select multiple objects at once.
To quickly find the necessary object, you can use the search field at the bottom of the Add Objects window.
1. Click the button to the left of the search field and select the necessary type of object to search for:
Everything, Computer, Cluster, Group, Organization Unit or Container.
At this step of the wizard, specify credentials to connect to computers included in the protection group:
1. If you want to use the same credentials for all computers in the protection group, select the necessary user
account from the Master account list. The account must have local administrator permissions on all
computers that you have added to the protection group.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click Add on the right to
add credentials. For more information, see the Credentials Manager section in the Veeam Backup &
Replication User Guide.
2. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses credentials specified in the Master account field for all
computers in the protection group. If some computer requires a different user account, do the following:
a. Select the Use custom credentials for the following objects check box,
b. Click Add next to the list of objects and select the necessary object in the Add Objects window:
If you configure a protection group that includes Active Directory objects, objects that you have
added to the protection group at the Active Directory step or the wizard are already displayed in
the Use custom credentials for the following objects list. In the Add Objects window, you can
also select child objects for which you want to specify custom credentials. For example, you may
want to specify separate credentials for different organization units, containers, groups or
individual computers within the entire domain added to the protection group.
If you configure a protection group that includes computers specified in a CSV file, you can select in
the Add Objects window one or more computers listed in a CSV file and add them to the Use
custom credentials for the following objects list.
c. In the Use custom credentials for the following objects list, select the necessary object, click Edit and
select custom credentials for the object. Credentials must be specified in the following format:
NOTE:
• Veeam Backup & Replication supports user account names in the SAM-Account-Name format
(DOMAIN\Username). The User-Principal-Name (UPN) format (username@domain) is not supported. If
you specify credentials in the UPN format, Veeam Backup & Replication will successfully connect to
computers added to the protection group during the Test Now operation. However, the subsequent
protection group rescan operations will fail.
• If you configure a protection group that includes dynamic Active Directory objects, such as domain,
organization unit, container or group, the master account or custom account specified for an object must
be a member of the DOMAIN\Administrators group.
• If you plan to back up Oracle databases that run on Linux-based machines, the account used to connect
to the machine must be a member of the oinstall group.
Veeam Backup & Replication regularly connects to protected computers according to the schedule defined in the
protection group settings. At this step of the wizard, you can define the discovery schedule and specify operations
that Veeam Backup & Replication must perform on discovered computers. You can also select which server in your
backup infrastructure should act as a distribution server for Veeam Agents.
1. In the Discovery section, define schedule for automatic computer discovery within the scope of the
protection group:
o To run the rescan job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Daily
at this time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the rescan job repeatedly throughout a day with a specific time interval, select Periodically
every. In the field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use
the time table to define the permitted time window for the rescan job. In the Start time within an hour
field, specify the exact time when the job must start.
o To run the rescan job continuously, select the Periodically every option and choose Continuously from
the list on the right. A new rescan job session will start as soon as the previous rescan job session
finishes.
NOTE:
You cannot create a protection group without defining schedule for automatic discovery. However, you
can disable automatic discovery for a specific protection group, if needed. To learn more, see Disabling
Protection Group.
2. In the Deployment section, from the Distribution server list, select a Microsoft Windows server that you
plan to use as a distribution server. Veeam Backup & Replication will use the distribution server to upload
Veeam Agent setup files to computers added to the protection group. By default, Veeam Backup &
Replication assigns the distribution server role to the backup server. To learn more, see Distribution Server.
3. If you want to instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically deploy Veeam Agents on all discovered
computers in the protection group, in the Deployment section, make sure that the Install backup agent
automatically check box is selected.
You can also choose to disable automated Veeam Agent installation. In this case, you will need to install
Veeam Agent on every computer included in the protection group and discovered by Veeam Backup &
Replication. To learn more, see Installing Veeam Agent.
NOTE:
Veeam Backup & Replication installs the Veeam Installer Service on every computer added to the
protection group even if the Install backup agent automatically check box is not selected in the
protection group settings.
4. If you want to instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to automatically upgrade Veeam Agent on discovered
computers when a new version of Veeam Agent appears on the distribution server, in the Deployment
section, make sure that the Auto-update backup agent check box is selected.
6. Select the Perform reboot automatically if required check box to allow Veeam Backup & Replication to
reboot a protected computer. In particular, the reboot operation is required as part of the Veeam CBT driver
installation process.
7. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the protection group. To learn more, see Specify Advanced
Protection Group Settings.
• Notification settings
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After you specify necessary settings for the protection group, you can save them as default settings. To do
this, click Save as Default at the bottom left corner of the Advanced Settings window. When you create a
new protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new
protection group.
• Network usage settings. You can limit bandwidth consumption and restrict network connections usage for
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows backup jobs. Limiting bandwidth consumption prevents jobs from
utilizing the entire bandwidth available in your environment and makes sure that enough traffic is provided
for other network operations. In addition to limiting bandwidth consumption, you can choose whether to
allow backup over metered connections and VPN connections. For Microsoft Windows workstations that run
Veeam Agent, you can also specify one or more wireless networks over which Veeam Agent is allowed to
perform backup.
To learn more, see the Restricting Network Connections Usage section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows User Guide.
• Throttling settings. You can instruct Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to throttle its activities during
backup. The throttling option can help you avoid situations when backup tasks performed by Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows consume all available hard disk resources and hinder work of other applications and
services on a protected computer. With throttling enabled, Veeam Backup & Replication sets low priority for
Veeam Agent components running on protected computers and engaged in the backup process. If this option
is not enabled, Veeam Agent components have normal priority.
• Security settings. You can allow user accounts that do not have administrative privileges on a Veeam Agent
computer to perform file-level restore on this computer.
Veeam Backup & Replication applies the specified settings to Veeam Agent that runs on a protected computer
added to a backup policy. Veeam Backup & Replication applies the settings during the protection group rescan
process. Settings are saved to the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows database on the protected computer.
These settings are not applied to protected computers added to a Veeam Agent backup job managed by the backup
server.
2. If you want to limit bandwidth consumption for Veeam Agent backup jobs, on the Agent for Windows tab, in
the Network section, select the Limit bandwidth consumption to check box. Then specify the maximum
speed for transferring backed-up data from the Veeam Agent computer to the target location.
NOTE:
• Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows disables backup over metered Internet connections only on
computers that run Microsoft Windows 8 and later. If the computer runs an earlier version of
Microsoft Windows, this option is not applicable.
• You must specify which connections are metered in Microsoft Windows. To learn more, see this
Microsoft webpage.
4. If you want to disable backup over VPN connections, select the Restrict VPN connections usage check box.
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will automatically detect VPN connections and will not perform backup
when the Veeam Agent computer is on such connection.
5. If you want to restrict usage of wireless networks for Veeam Agent running on Microsoft Windows
workstations, do the following:
a. Select the Restrict Wi-Fi usage to these networks only check box and click Add.
b. In the Wi-Fi Network window, specify the SSID of the Wi-Fi network over which Veeam Agent will be
allowed to perform backup, and click OK.
Veeam Backup & Replication will add the specified network to the list of allowed Wi-Fi networks. Backup
over other wireless networks will be disabled for Veeam Agent.
6. If you want to throttle Veeam Agent activities during backup, in the Backup I/O control section, make sure
that the Throttle agent activity on option is selected. Then select the type of computers on which to throttle
Veeam Agent backup activities: Workstations only, Servers only or All hosts.
If you do not want to throttle backup activities for Veeam Agent, select Do not throttle agent.
Notification Settings
You can specify email notification settings for the protection group. If you enable notification settings, Veeam
Backup & Replication will send a daily email report with protection group statistics to a specified email address. The
report contains cumulative statistics for rescan job sessions performed for the protection group within the last 24-
hour period.
NOTE:
Email reports with protection group statistics will be sent only if you configure global email notification
settings in Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see the Configuring Global Email Notification
Settings section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
After you enable notification settings for the protection group, in addition to reports sent according to the
global email notification settings, Veeam Backup & Replication will send reports with the protection group
statistics to email addresses specified in the protection group settings. This allows you to fine-tune email
notifications in Veeam Backup & Replication: while one or more backup administrators receive email
notifications according to the global settings, other backup administrators can receive reports for specific
protection groups only.
If you do not enable global email notification settings in Veeam Backup & Replication, notification settings for
the protection group will not be sent even if you enable them in the protection group settings.
3. Select the Send daily agent status report e-mail to the following recipients check box and specify a
recipient’s email address. You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
4. In the Send at field, specify the time when Veeam Backup & Replication must send the daily email report for
the protection group.
5. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
To receive a typical notification for the protection group, select Use global notification settings. In this
case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the protection group global email notification settings
specified for the backup server.
To configure a custom notification for the protection group, select Use custom notification settings
specified below. You can specify the following notification settings:
o In the Subject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the subject:
%FoundCount% — number of new computers discovered within the last 24-hour period.
%SeenCount% — number of computers in the protection group that were online for the last 24
hours. A computer is considered to be online if Veeam Backup & Replication successfully connected
to this computer during the last rescan session.
2. To start the rescan job after you close the wizard, make sure that the Run discovery when I click Finish
option is selected.
If you want to perform computer discovery later, you can clear the Run discovery when I click Finish check
box. In this case, the rescan job will start automatically upon the defined schedule. You can also start the
rescan job manually at any time you need. To learn more, see Starting Protection Group Discovery.
NOTE:
If you add a protection group that contains both Microsoft Windows computers and Linux computers to a
Veeam Agent backup job for Microsoft Windows computers, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
exclude Linux computers from this backup job. In the same way, if you add such protection group to a Veeam
Agent backup job for Linux computers, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically exclude Microsoft
Windows computers from this backup job.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and do one of the following:
For Microsoft Windows computers
o In the inventory pane, select the protection group that you want to add to the backup job and click Add
to Backup > Windows > name of the job on the ribbon.
o In the inventory pane, right-click the protection group that you want to add to the backup job and select
Add to backup job > Windows > name of the job.
For Linux computers
o In the inventory pane, select the protection group that you want to add to the backup job and click Add
to Backup > Linux > name of the job on the ribbon.
o In the inventory pane, right-click the protection group that you want to add to the backup job and select
Add to backup job > Linux > name of the job.
NOTE:
• You cannot change the type of a protection group when editing protection group settings.
• For the Manually Added protection group, you can change only a limited number of settings. In
particular, you can edit protected computers discovery and Veeam Agent deployment options (except
for changing the distribution server for the protection group). You can also remove from this protection
group computers that are no longer included in a Veeam Agent backup job.
• You cannot edit settings of default protection groups that act as filters used to display protected
computers of a specific type: Unmanaged, Out of Date, Offline and Untrusted.
3. In the inventory pane, select the protection group that you want to edit and click Edit Group on the ribbon or
right-click the protection group that you want to edit and select Properties.
During the rescan operation, Veeam Backup & Replication starts the rescan job in the same way as in case of
scheduled discovery. The rescan job connects to computers included in the protection group and performs on these
computers operations specified in the protection group settings. For example, if Veeam Backup & Replication is set
up to automatically install Veeam Agent on protected computers during discovery, you can use the rescan
operation to deploy Veeam Agent to computers that have appeared in the protection group after the previous
scheduled rescan job session finished.
3. In the inventory pane, select the necessary protection group and click Rescan on the ribbon or right-click the
protection group and select Rescan.
3. In the inventory pane, select the necessary protection group and click Location > <Location name> on the
ribbon or right-click the necessary protection group and select Location > <Location name>.
To learn more about locations, see the Locations section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
When you disable a protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication does not start the rescan job upon schedule
defined in the protection group settings. However, you can start the discovery process manually if needed. To learn
more, see Rescanning Protection Group.
Disabling a protection group does not affect processing of Veeam Agent computers included in this protection
group. If a protected computer is added to a Veeam Agent backup job, and the backup job is scheduled to start at
the time when the protection group is in the disabled state, the backup job will run as usual.
NOTE:
You cannot disable default protection groups that act as filters used to display protected computers of a
specific type: Unmanaged, Out of Date, Offline and Untrusted.
3. In the inventory pane, select the necessary protection group and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the
necessary protection group and select Disable.
3. In the inventory pane, select the necessary protection group and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the
necessary protection group and select Disable.
When you remove a protection group, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to remove Veeam Agents from
all protected computers included in this protection group, too. The protection group is removed permanently. You
cannot undo this operation.
Backups created for computers that were included in the removed protection group remain intact in the backup
location. You can delete this backup data manually later if needed.
NOTE:
• You cannot remove a protection group if the entire protection group or a separate computer included in
this protection group is added to a Veeam Agent backup job.
• You cannot remove default protection groups, such as Manually Added, Unmanaged, and so on.
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You can also remove separate computers from protection groups. To learn more, see Removing Computer
from Protection Group.
3. In the inventory pane, select the protection group that you want to remove and click Remove Group on the
ribbon or right-click the protection group and select Remove.
4. If you want to remove Veeam Agent deployed on protected computers, in the displayed window, select the
Uninstall Agents check box. With this option selected, Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the
protection group from the configuration database and, in addition, uninstall Veeam Agent and Veeam
Installer Service from every computer in the deleted protection group.
In Veeam Backup & Replication, you can create Veeam Agent backup jobs of the following types:
• The backup job that runs on the backup server in the similar way as a regular job for VM data backup. The
backup job is intended for protected computers that have permanent connection to the backup server. To
learn more, see Backup Job.
• The backup policy that describes configuration of individual Veeam Agent backup jobs that run on protected
computers. Veeam Backup & Replication uses the backup policy as a saved template and applies settings from
the backup policy to Veeam Agents that run on computers added to the backup policy. The backup policy is
intended for protected computers that may have limited connection to the backup server. To learn more, see
Backup Policy.
Veeam Backup & Replication lets you create backup jobs and policies for the following types of protected
computers:
• Microsoft Windows computers — computers protected with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
One protected computer may be processed with one or more Veeam Agent backup jobs. To learn more, see
Processing One Computer with Multiple Jobs and Policies.
• The Veeam Backup & Replication license must have a sufficient number of instances to process servers and/or
workstations that you plan to add to the Veeam Agent backup job.
• The target location where you plan to store backup files must have enough free space.
• Protection groups that you want to add to the job must be configured in advance.
• [For backup jobs targeted at the cloud repository] The Veeam Cloud Connect service provider must be added
in the Veeam backup console.
• [For Veeam Agent backup job managed by backup server] You can create Veeam Agent backups on a Veeam
backup repository and Veeam Cloud Connect repository. Other types of target locations are not supported.
• [For Veeam Agent backup job managed by Veeam Agent] You cannot save the backup of entire computer on
the local computer disk. Use an external hard drive or USB drive, network shared folder or backup repository
as a target location.
• Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows does not support file-level backup for backup jobs that include clusters.
• Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows does not back up data to which symbolic links are targeted. It only backs
up the path information that the symbolic links contain. After restore, identical symbolic links are created in
the restore destination.
• After you start managing a Veeam Agent computer with Veeam Backup & Replication, data backup for this
computer is performed by a backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication. Veeam Agent running on
the computer starts a new backup chain on a target location specified in the backup job settings. You cannot
continue the existing backup chain that was created by Veeam Agent operating in the standalone mode.
• You cannot map a Veeam Agent backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication to a Veeam Agent
backup chain created by a standalone Veeam Agent on a backup repository.
• The backup cache is supported only for Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by Veeam Agent.
• You cannot use a Microsoft OneDrive storage as a target for a Veeam Agent backup job configured in Veeam
Backup & Replication.
• Veeam Agent does not support creating transaction log backups in a cloud repository. You cannot enable
transaction log backup options in the properties of the backup job targeted at a cloud repository.
• Create a new backup job — in this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the New Agent Backup Job
wizard. You will be able to specify protection groups, individual Active Directory objects and/or Veeam Agent
computers to which the backup job settings must apply at the Computers step of the wizard.
• Add a protection group to a new backup job — in this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the New
Agent Backup Job wizard and add the selected protection group to the backup job. You will also be able to
change the list of Veeam Agent computers to which the backup job settings must apply at the Computers
step of the wizard.
• Add individual computers to a new backup job — in this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the
New Agent Backup Job wizard and add the selected computers to the backup job. You will also be able to
change the list of Veeam Agent computers to which the backup job settings must apply at the Computers
step of the wizard.
• Open the Home view. Select the Jobs node and click Backup Job > Windows computer on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view. Right-click the Jobs node and select Backup > Windows computer.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, right-click the protection group that you want
to add to the backup job and select Add to backup job > Windows > New job.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, select the protection group that you want to
add to the backup job and click Add to Backup > Windows > New job on the ribbon.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start the New Agent Backup Job wizard and add the protection group to the job.
You can add other protection groups and (or) individual computers to the job later on, when you pass through the
wizard steps.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, click the protection group whose computers
you want to add to the backup job. In the working area, select one or more computers that you want to add to
the job, right-click the selected computer and select Add to backup job > New job.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, click the protection group whose computers
you want to add to the backup job. In the working area, select one or more computers that you want to add to
the job and click Add to Backup > New job on the ribbon.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start the New Agent Backup Job wizard and add the selected computers to the
job. You can add other computers and (or) protection groups to the job later on, when you pass through the wizard
steps.
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• You can press and hold [CTRL] to select multiple computers at once.
• You can add an individual computer or protection group to a Veeam Agent backup job that is already
configured in Veeam Backup & Replication. To learn more, see Adding Computers to Backup Job and
Adding Protection Group to Backup Job.
1. Select the type of protected computers whose data you want to back up with Veeam Agents.
2. If you choose to back up data pertaining to servers, select the job mode.
The job mode defines the type of the created Veeam Agent backup job: the backup job (backup job managed
by the backup server) or backup policy (backup job managed by Veeam Agent).
• Workstation — select this option if you want to back up data pertaining to workstations or laptops. This
option is suitable for computers that reside in a remote location and may have limited connection to the
backup server.
For backup jobs that process workstations, Veeam Backup & Replication offers settings similar to the settings
of the backup job available in the Workstation edition of Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows. To learn more,
see Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
With this option selected, the backup job will be managed by Veeam Agent installed on the protected
computer — you do not need to select the job mode.
• Server — select this option if you want to back up data pertaining to standalone servers. This option is
suitable for computers that have permanent connection to the backup server.
For backup jobs that process servers, Veeam Backup & Replication offers settings similar to the settings of
the backup job available in the Server edition of Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows. To learn more, see
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
With this option selected, you can also select the job mode. To learn more, see Selecting Job Mode.
• Failover cluster — select this option if you want to back up data pertaining to a failover cluster.
For backup jobs that process failover clusters, Veeam Backup & Replication offers practically the same backup
job settings as for servers.
With this option selected, the backup job will be managed by the Veeam backup server — you do not need to
select the job mode.
• Managed by backup server — select this option if you want to configure the Veeam Agent backup job. With
this option selected, you will be able to add one or more individual computers and/or protection groups to
the job and instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to create Veeam Agent backups in a Veeam backup
repository or Veeam Cloud Connect repository. The Veeam Agent backup job will run on the backup server in
the similar way as a regular job for VM data backup. To learn more, see Backup Job.
• Managed by agent — select this option if you want to configure the backup policy. The backup policy
describes configuration of individual Veeam Agent backup jobs that run on protected computers, and acts as a
saved template. With this option selected, you will be able to add one or more individual computers and/or
protection groups to the backup policy, and instruct Veeam Agent to create backups on a local disk of a
protected computer, in a network shared folder, Veeam backup repository or Veeam Cloud Connect
repository. To learn more, see Backup Policy.
NOTE:
• The Managed by backup server option is available for servers and failover clusters. For failover
clusters, this is the only available option. This option is not available for workstations.
• The Managed by agent option is available for workstations and servers. For workstations, this is the
only available option. This option is not available for failover clusters.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created the job, date and time when the job was created.
You can add to the Veeam Agent backup job one or more protection groups and/or individual computers added to
inventory in the Veeam Backup & Replication console. You can also add to the job computers that are not added to
inventory yet. Veeam Backup & Replication will add such computers to the job and also add them to the Manually
Added protection group.
Jobs with protection groups are dynamic in their nature. If Veeam Backup & Replication discovers a new computer
in a protection group after the Veeam Agent backup job is created, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
update the job settings to include the added computer.
NOTE:
If you used the Add to backup job > Windows > New job option to launch the New Agent Backup Job wizard,
the Protected computers list will already contain computers that you have selected to add to the job. You
can remove some computers from the job or add new computers to the job, if necessary.
2. In the Select Objects window, select one or more protection groups and/or computers in the list and click
OK. You can press and hold [CTRL] to select multiple objects at once.
To quickly find the necessary object, use the search field at the bottom of the Select Objects window.
2. In the Add Computer window, in the Host name or IP address field, enter a full DNS name or IP address of
the computer that you want to add to the job.
3. From the Credentials list, select a user account that has administrative permissions on the computer that you
want to add to the job. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click
Add on the right to add credentials. For more information, see the Credentials Manager section in the Veeam
Backup & Replication User Guide.
1. In the Backup mode section, select the backup mode. You can select one of the following options:
o Entire computer — select this option if you want to create a backup of the entire computer image. When
you restore data from such backup, you will be able to recover the entire computer image as well as data
on specific computer volumes: files, folders, application data and so on. With this option selected, you
will pass to one of the following steps of the wizard:
Storage — if you have selected the Managed by backup server option at the Job Mode step of the
wizard.
Destination — if you have selected the Managed by agent option at the Job Mode step of the
wizard.
o Volume level backup — select this option if you want to create a backup of specific computer volumes,
for example, all volumes except the system one. When you restore data from such backup, you will be
able to recover data on these volumes only: files, folders, application data and so on. With this option
selected, you will pass to the Objects step of the wizard.
o File level backup — select this option if you want to create a backup of individual folders on your
computer. With this option selected, you will pass to the Objects step of the wizard.
2. [For entire computer backup] If you want to include in the backup one or more external USB drives, select the
Include external USB drives check box. With this option selected, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will
include in the backup all external USB drives that are connected to the Veeam Agent computer at the time
when the backup job starts. To learn more, see the Backup of External Drives section in the Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows User Guide.
• The File level backup option is not available if you have selected the Failover cluster option at the Job
Mode step of the wizard.
• File-level backup is typically slower than volume-level backup. Depending on the performance
capabilities of your computer and backup environment, the difference between file-level and volume-
level backup job performance may increase significantly. If you plan to back up all folders with files on a
specific volume or back up large amount of data, it is recommended that you configure volume-level
backup instead of file-level backup.
• Specify volumes to back up — if you have selected the Volume level backup option at the Backup Mode step
of the wizard.
• Specify folders to back up — if you have selected the File level backup option at the Backup Mode step of
the wizard.
At this step of the wizard, you must specify the backup scope — define what volumes you want to include in the
backup. The specified backup scope settings will apply to all computers that are added to the backup job. If a
specified volume does not exist on one or more computers in the job, the job will skip such volume on those
computers and back up only existing ones.
To specify the backup scope, in the Volumes to backup section, select check boxes next to necessary objects. You
can include the following data in the backup:
• Operating system — data pertaining to the OS installed on a protected computer. With this option enabled,
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will include in the backup scope the Microsoft Windows system partition
and boot partition of your computer. For GPT disks on Microsoft Windows 8.1, 10, 2012, 2012 R2, 2016 and
2019, Veeam Agent will additionally back up the recovery partition. To learn more, see the System State Data
Backup section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
• Individual volumes.
To specify individual volumes to back up:
b. In the Add Object window, type the drive letter of a volume that you want to back up, for example, C:\,
and click OK.
c. Repeat steps a–b for all volumes that you want to back up.
b. In the Add Object window, type the path to a folder that is an entry point to the mounted volume you
want to back up, for example, C:\Data, and click OK.
c. Repeat steps a–b for all mount points that you want to back up.
• If you include a system volume in the volume-level backup, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
automatically includes the System Reserved/UEFI or other system partitions in the backup too.
• Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows automatically adds to the list of exclusions the following Microsoft
Windows objects for all computer users: temporary files folder, Recycle Bin, Microsoft Windows
pagefile, hibernate file and VSS snapshot files from the System Volume Information folder.
In the file-level backup mode, you can create two types of backups:
• Hybrid backup that contains individual folders and specific volumes of your computer.
At this step of the wizard, you must specify the backup scope — define what folders with files or entire volumes you
want to include in the backup. The specified backup scope settings will apply to all computers that are added to the
backup job. If a specified object does not exist on one or more computers in the job, the job will skip such object on
those computers and back up existing ones.
• Personal files — user profile folder including all user settings and data. Typically, the user profile data is
located in the Users folder on the system disk, for example, C:\Users.
• Individual file system objects — folders, mount points, and volumes of a protected computer.
1. Select the The following file system objects check box and click Add.
2. In the Add Object window, type the path to a folder, mount point folder, or volume that you want to back
up, for example, D:\Reports or D:\, and click OK.
To specify the backup scope, you can use wildcards and system environment variables such as
%ProgramFiles% or %WinDir%. This may be useful, for example, in case computers added to the backup job
run different versions of Microsoft Windows OSes, and actual paths to directories that contain data of the
same type differ on these computers.
Consider the following:
o 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.
o Environment variables that contain multiple values (such as the %PATH% variable) are not supported.
o Environment variables that contain other environment variables are not supported.
3. Repeat steps 1–2 for all items that you want to back up.
• If you include a system volume in the file-level backup, Veeam Agent does not automatically include the
System Reserved/UEFI or other system partitions in the backup. These volumes are automatically
included in the backup only if you select the Operating system option to specify the backup scope.
• Veeam Agent automatically adds to the list of exclusions the following Microsoft Windows objects for
all computer users: temporary files folder, Recycle Bin, Microsoft Windows pagefile, hibernate file and
VSS snapshot files from the System Volume Information folder.
NOTE:
• If you select a mount point for backup, you cannot apply filters to files and folders that reside on the
mount point.
• If you select a volume for backup, you cannot apply filters to include or exclude files of a specific type
in/from the backup. You can only exclude specific folders that reside on the volume.
To configure a filter:
o If you include a specific folder in the file-level backup, in the Include masks field, specify file names
and/or masks for file types that you want to back up, for example, MyReport.pdf, *filename*,
*.docx. The resulting Veeam Agent backup will contain only selected files. Other files will not be
backed up.
You cannot specify include masks if you add an entire volume in the backup.
o In the Exclude masks field, specify files that you do not want to back up in the following ways:
If you include an entire volume in the file-level backup, in the Exclude masks field, specify paths
to folders that contain files that you do not want to back up. The resulting Veeam Agent backup
will contain all folders that reside on the backed-up volume except the files in the specified
folders.
For example, you include the D:\ volume in the backup and specify the
D:\Reports\OldReports folder in the Exclude masks field. The resulting backup will contain
all folders and files that reside on the volume except files that reside in the
D:\Reports\OldReports folder.
If you include a specific folder in the file-level backup, in the Exclude masks field, specify file
names and/or masks for file types that you do not want to back up, for example,
OldReports.rar, *.temp, *.tmp, *.back. The resulting Veeam Agent backup will contain all
files except files whose names match the specified names or masks.
3. Click Add.
4. Repeat steps 2–3 for each mask that you want to add.
You can also use system environment variables to specify include and exclude masks. In this case, you must
type the back slash (\) symbol in the beginning of the mask. For example: \%appdata%.
• To specify include and exclude masks, you can use only system environment variables — variables
defined for the Local System account on computers added to the backup job, and cannot use user
environment variables. For example, if you specify the \%appdata% exclude mask, Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows will exclude the
C:\Windows\system32\config\systemprofile\AppData\Roaming folder from the backup.
Application data directories for other user accounts (for example,
C:\Users\Administrator\AppData\Roaming) will not be excluded from the backup.
• You cannot use environment variables that contain multiple values or other environment variables to
specify include and exclude masks.
You can use a combination of include and exclude masks. 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.
At this step of the wizard, select a target location for backups created by Veeam Agents installed on protected
computers.
• Local storage — select this option if you want to save a backup on a removable storage device attached to a
protected computer or on a local drive of a protected computer. With this option selected, you will pass to
the Local Storage step of the wizard.
IMPORTANT!
• It is strongly recommended that you store backups in the external location like USB storage device or
shared network folder. You can also keep your backup files on the separate non-system local drive.
• If you select to store the backup on a local folder included in the backup scope, Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows will automatically exclude this folder from the backup.
• Shared folder — select this option if you want to save a backup in a network shared folder. With this option
selected, you will pass to the Shared folder step of the wizard.
• Veeam backup repository — select this option if you want to save a backup on a backup repository managed
by the Veeam backup server of which the Veeam Agent backup job is configured. With this option selected,
you will pass to the Backup Server step of the wizard.
• Veeam Cloud Connect repository — select this option if you want to save a backup on a cloud repository
exposed to you by the Veeam Cloud Connect service provider. With this option selected, you will pass to the
Storage step of the wizard.
• If you have selected the Managed by backup server mode at the Job Mode step of the wizard, you can
create Veeam Agent backups only on a backup repository managed by this Veeam backup server or on a cloud
repository exposed to you by a Veeam Cloud Connect service provider. Specify backup repository settings at
the Storage of the wizard.
• If you have selected the Managed by agent mode at the Job Mode step of the wizard, specify backup storage
settings at one of the following steps of the wizard:
o Local storage settings — if you have selected the Local storage option at the Destination step of the
wizard.
o Shared folder settings — if you have selected the Shared folder option at the Destination step of the
wizard.
o Veeam backup repository settings — if you have selected the Veeam backup repository option at the
Destination step of the wizard.
o Cloud repository settings — if you have selected the Veeam Cloud Connect repository option at the
Destination step of the wizard.
1. From the Backup repository list, select a backup repository where you want to store Veeam Agent backups.
You can select from the following types of backup repositories:
o Veeam backup repository configured on the backup server that will manage the created backup job.
o Cloud repository allocated to your tenant account by a Veeam Cloud Connect service provider.
When you select a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically checks how much free space
is available on the backup repository.
2. You can map the job to a specific backup stored on the backup repository. Backup job mapping can be helpful
if you have moved backup files to a new backup repository and want to point the job to existing backups on
this new backup repository. You can also use backup job mapping if the configuration database got corrupted
and you need to reconfigure backup jobs.
To map the job to a backup, click the Map backup link and select the backup on the backup repository.
Backups can be easily identified by job names. To find the backup, you can also use the search field at the
bottom of the window.
NOTE:
• Backup job mapping is available only for a Veeam Agent backup job managed by the backup
server.
• You cannot map a Veeam Agent backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication to a
backup chain that was created by Veeam Agent operating in the standalone mode.
o From the Retention policy list, select restore points and specify the number of restore points for which
you want to store backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication keeps
backup files created for 7 latest restore points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Backup &
Replication will remove the earliest restore points from the backup chain.
o From the Retention policy list, select days and specify the number of days for which you want to store
backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication keeps backup files for 7 days.
After this period is over, Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the earliest restore points from the
backup chain.
4. To use the GFS (Grandfather-Father-Son) retention scheme, select the Keep some periodic full backups
longer for archival purposes check box and click Configure. In the Configure GFS window, specify how
weekly, monthly and yearly full backups must be retained. To learn more, see the GFS Retention Policy
section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
5. If you want to archive backup files created with the backup job to a secondary destination (backup repository
or tape), select the Configure secondary destinations for this job check box. With this option enabled, the
New Agent Backup Job wizard will include an additional step — Secondary Target. At the Secondary Target
step of the wizard, you can link the backup job to the backup copy job or backup to tape backup job.
You can enable this option only if a backup copy job or backup to tape job is already configured on the backup
server.
6. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
1. In the Local folder field, type a path to a folder on a protected computer where backup files must be saved.
If the specified folder does not exist in the file system of a protected computer, Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows will create this folder and save the resulting backup file to this folder. If the volume on which the
specified folder must reside does not exist on a protected computer, Veeam Backup & Replication will not
apply the backup job settings to this computer.
IMPORTANT!
USB storage devices formatted as FAT32 do not allow storing files larger than 4 GB in size. For this
reason, it is recommended that you do not use such USB storage devices as a backup target.
o If you have selected the Workstation type at the Job Mode step of the wizard, in the Keep backups for
<N> days field, specify the number of days for which you want to store backup files in the target location
(excluding days when backups were not created). By default, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows keeps
backup files for 7 days. After this period is over, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will remove the
earliest restore points from the backup chain.
o If you have selected the Server type at the Job Mode step of the wizard, in the Restore points to keep
on disk field, specify the number of restore points for which you want to store backup files in the target
location. By default, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows keeps backup files created for 7 latest restore
points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will remove the earliest
restore points from the backup chain.
NOTE:
• For backups of workstations, the retention policy is the same as in the Workstation edition of
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
• For backups of servers, the retention policy is the same as in the Server edition of Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
To learn more, refer to the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
1. In the Shared folder field, type a UNC name of the network shared folder in which you want to store backup
files. Keep in mind that the UNC name always starts with two back slashes (\\).
2. If the network shared folder requires authentication, select the This share requires access credentials check
box and select from the list a user account that has access permissions on this shared folder. If you have not
set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click Add on the right to add credentials.
The user name must be specified in the DOMAIN\USERNAME format.
If you do not select the This share requires access credentials check box, Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows will connect to the shared folder using the NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM account of the computer where
the product is installed. You can use this scenario if the Veeam Agent computer is joined to the Active
Directory domain. In this case, you can simply grant Full Control access on the shared folder and underlying
file system to the computer account (DOMAIN\COMPUTERNAME$).
o If you have selected the Workstation type at the Job Mode step of the wizard, in the Keep backups for
<N> days field, specify the number of days for which you want to store backup files in the target location
(excluding days when backups were not created). By default, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows keeps
backup files for 7 days. After this period is over, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will remove the
earliest restore points from the backup chain.
NOTE:
• For backups of workstations, the retention policy is the same as in the Workstation edition of Veeam
Agent for Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
• For backups of servers, the retention policy is the same as in the Server edition of Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
To learn more, refer to the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
4. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
1. At the Backup Server step of the wizard, specify backup server settings.
2. At the Backup Repository step of the wizard, select the Veeam backup repository.
In the DNS name or external IP address field, review and change if necessary the name or IP address of the Veeam
backup server on which you configure the Veeam Agent backup job. The specified DNS name or IP address must be
accessible from Veeam Agent computers.
NOTE:
Veeam Backup & Replication does not automatically update information about the backup server in the
backup policy settings after migration of the configuration database. After you migrate configuration data to a
new location, you must specify the name or IP address of the new backup server in the properties of all backup
policies configured in Veeam Backup & Replication.
NOTE:
You cannot map a Veeam Agent backup job managed by Veeam Agent (backup policy).
1. From the Backup repository list, select a backup repository where you want to store created backups. When
you select a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically checks how much free space is
available on the backup repository.
o If you have selected the Workstation type at the Job Mode step of the wizard, in the Keep backups for
<N> days field, specify the number of days for which you want to store backup files in the target location
(excluding days when backups were not created). By default, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows keeps
backup files for 7 days. After this period is over, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will remove the
earliest restore points from the backup chain.
o If you have selected the Server type at the Job Mode step of the wizard, in the Restore points to keep
on disk field, specify the number of restore points for which you want to store backup files in the target
location. By default, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows keeps backup files created for 7 latest restore
points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will remove the earliest
restore points from the backup chain.
NOTE:
• For backups of workstations, the retention policy is the same as in the Workstation edition of Veeam
Agent for Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
• For backups of servers, the retention policy is the same as in the Server edition of Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
To learn more, refer to Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
3. If you want to archive backup files created with the backup job to a secondary destination (backup repository
or tape), select the Configure secondary destinations for this job check box. With this option enabled, the
New Agent Backup Job wizard will include an additional step — Secondary Target. At the Secondary Target
step of the wizard, you can link the backup job to the backup copy job or backup to tape backup job.
You can enable this option only if a backup copy job or backup to tape job is already configured on the backup
server.
NOTE:
Keep in mind that FQDN or IP addresses of Veeam Agent machines that you back up to the cloud repository
will be visible to the Veeam Cloud Connect service provider. To learn more, see Creating Protection Groups:
Before You Begin.
1. From the Backup repository list, select a cloud repository where you want to store created backups. The
Backup repository list displays cloud repositories allocated to your tenant account by the Veeam Cloud
Connect service provider. When you select a cloud repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically
checks how much free space is available on the repository.
o If you have selected the Workstation type at the Job Mode step of the wizard, in the Keep backups for
<N> days field, specify the number of days for which you want to store backup files in the target location
(excluding days when backups were not created). By default, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows keeps
backup files for 7 days. After this period is over, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will remove the
earliest restore points from the backup chain.
NOTE:
• For backups of workstations, the retention policy is the same as in the Workstation edition of
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
• For backups of servers, the retention policy is the same as in the Server edition of Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows operating in the standalone mode.
To learn more, refer to Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
3. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
• Backup settings
• Maintenance settings
• Storage settings
• Notification settings
• [For Veeam Agent jobs managed by the backup server] Script settings
TIP:
After you specify necessary settings for the Veeam Agent backup job, you can save them as default settings.
To do this, click Save as Default at the bottom left corner of the Advanced Settings window. When you
create a new backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new
job.
Backup Settings
To specify settings for a backup chain created with the backup job:
o Storage — if you have selected to save backup files in a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository.
o Local Storage — if you have selected to save backup files on a local storage of a Veeam Agent computer.
o Shared Folder — if you have selected to save backup files in a network shared folder.
2. If you want to periodically create synthetic full backups, on the Backup tab, select the Create synthetic full
backups periodically check box and click Days to schedule synthetic full backups on the necessary week
days.
3. If you want to periodically create active full backups, select the Create active full backups periodically
check box. Use the Monthly on or Weekly on selected days options to define scheduling settings.
• Before scheduling periodic full backups, you must make sure that you have enough free space on the
target location. For more information about periodic full backups, see the Active Full Backup and
Synthetic Full Backup sections in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
• If you schedule the active full backup and synthetic full backup on the same day, Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows will perform only active full backup. Synthetic full backup will be skipped.
Maintenance Settings
You can specify maintenance settings for a backup chain created with the Veeam Agent backup job. Maintenance
operations help make sure that the backup chain remains valid and consistent.
Maintenance settings are available for the following types of Veeam Agent backup jobs that process Microsoft
Windows computers:
o Storage — if you have selected to save backup files in a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository.
o Local Storage — if you have selected to save backup files on a local storage of a Veeam Agent computer.
o Shared Folder — if you have selected to save backup files in a network shared folder.
3. To periodically perform a health check for the latest restore point in the backup chain, in the Storage-level
corruption guard section, select the Perform backup files health check check box and specify the schedule
for the health check.
An automatic health check can help you avoid a situation where a restore point gets corrupted, making all
dependent restore points corrupted, too. If during the health check Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows or
Veeam Backup & Replication detect corrupted data blocks in the latest restore point in the backup chain (or
the restore point before the latest one if the latest restore point is incomplete), it will start the health check
retry and transport valid data blocks from the Veeam Agent computer to the target location. The transported
data blocks are stored to a new backup file or the latest backup file in the backup chain, depending on the
data corruption scenario.
For Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by the backup server, the health check process is similar to the one
for backup jobs that process VMs. For more information, see the Health Check for Backup Files section in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
For Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by Veeam Agent, the health check process is the same as for Veeam
Agent backup jobs configured directly on a Veeam Agent computer. For more information, see the Health
Check for Backup Files section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
4. [For backup jobs and policies targeted at a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository] Select the Remove
deleted items data after check box and specify the number of days for which you want to keep the backup
created with the backup job in the target location.
o For backup jobs managed by the backup server, deleted items retention policy is similar to retention
policy for deleted VMs. After you remove a protection group or individual computer from a Veeam Agent
backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will keep its data on the backup repository for the period that
you have specified. When this period is over, backup data of this computer will be removed from the
backup repository. For more information, see the Retention Policy for Deleted VMs section in the Veeam
Backup & Replication User Guide.
o For backup jobs managed by Veeam Agent, if Veeam Agent does not create new restore points for the
backup, the backup will remain in the target location for the period that you have specified. When this
period is over, the backup will be removed from the target location. For more information, see the
Retention Policy for Outdated Backups section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
By default, the deleted items data retention period is 30 days. Do not set the deleted items retention period
to 1 day or a similar short interval. In the opposite case, the backup job may work not as expected and remove
data that you still require.
NOTE:
The Remove deleted items data after option is not available if you configure a backup job managed by
Veeam Agent (backup policy) and have selected the Local storage or Shared folder option at the
Destination step of the wizard.
o For Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by the backup server, the compact operation is similar to the
compact operation performed for VM backup jobs. If the full backup file contains data blocks for deleted
items (protection groups or individual computers that were removed from the backup job), Veeam
Backup & Replication will remove these data blocks. For more information, see the Compact of Full
Backup File section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
o For Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by Veeam Agent, if the full backup file contains data blocks for
deleted drives, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will remove these data blocks. For more
information, see the Compact of Full Backup File section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User
Guide.
NOTE:
• If you want to periodically compact a full backup, you must make sure that you have enough free
space in the target location. For the compact operation, the amount of free space must be equal
to or more that the size of the full backup file.
• In contrast to the compact operation for a VM backup, during compact of a full Veeam Agent
backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform the data take out operation. If the full
backup file contains data for a machine that has only one restore point and this restore point is
older than 7 days, Veeam Backup & Replication will not extract data for this machine to a separate
full backup file.
o Storage — if you have selected to save backup files in a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository.
o Local Storage — if you have selected to save backup files on a local storage of a Veeam Agent computer.
o Shared Folder — if you have selected to save backup files in a network shared folder.
3. [For a failover cluster backup job] By default, Veeam Backup & Replication deduplicates failover cluster data
before storing it on the backup repository. Data deduplication provides a smaller size of the backup file but
may reduce the backup job performance. You can disable data deduplication if necessary, for example, if you
use a deduplication storage appliance as a backup repository. To disable data deduplication, clear the Enable
inline data deduplication check box.
NOTE:
The Enable inline data deduplication option is unavailable if you selected the Workstation or Server
option at the Job Mode step of the wizard.
4. From the Compression level list, select a compression level for the backup: None, Dedupe-friendly,
Optimal, High or Extreme.
5. In the Storage optimization section, select what type of backup target you plan to use: Local target (large
blocks), Local target, LAN target or WAN target. Depending on the chosen storage type, Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows will use data blocks of different size to optimize the size of backup files and job
performance.
• Data encryption settings for Veeam Agent backup jobs and backup policies configured in Veeam
Backup & Replication are stored to the Veeam Backup & Replication database. For backup jobs
and policies targeted at a Veeam backup repository, all data encryption operations are performed
in Veeam Backup & Replication, too. Encryption settings are passed to a Veeam Agent computer
only in case this computer is added to a backup policy targeted at a local drive of a protected
computer or at a network shared folder. Veeam Backup & Replication performs this operation
when applying the backup policy to a protected computer.
• If you change a password for data encryption for an existing backup policy targeted at a Veeam
backup repository without changing other backup policy settings, the process of applying the
backup policy to a protected computer completes with a notification informing that the backup
policy was not modified. This happens because data encryption settings for managed Veeam
Agents are saved to the Veeam Backup & Replication database and are not passed to a Veeam
Agent computer.
• If you enable encryption for an existing Veeam Agent backup, during the next job session Veeam
Agent for Microsoft Windows will create a full backup file. The created full backup file and
subsequent incremental backup files in the backup chain will be encrypted with the specified
password.
• Encryption is not retroactive. If you enable encryption for an existing backup job, Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows will encrypt the backup chain starting from the next restore point created
with this job.
• [For backup policies targeted at a local drive, network shared folder or cloud repository] When
you enable data encryption for a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the specified
password to encrypt backups of all Veeam Agent computers added to the backup policy. A Veeam
Agent computer user can restore data from the backup of this computer without providing a
password to decrypt backup. To restore data from a backup of another computer in this backup
policy, a user must provide a password specified in the backup policy settings.
This scenario differs from the same scenario in earlier versions of Veeam Backup & Replication
where all backups created for Veeam Agent computers in the backup policy could be accessed
from any computer in the backup policy without providing a password.
To learn more about data encryption in Veeam Backup & Replication, see the Data Encryption section in
the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
• Managed by backup server. To learn more, see Notification Settings for Veeam Agent Backup Job.
• Managed by agent. To learn more, see Notification Settings for Backup Policy.
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when the job
completes successfully.
SNMP traps will be sent if you specify global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and configure
software on recipient's machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see the Specifying SNMP
Settings section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive
notifications about the job completion status by email. In the field below, specify a recipient’s email address.
You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in Veeam Backup &
Replication. For more information, see the Configuring Global Email Notification Settings section in Veeam
Backup & Replication User Guide.
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case, Veeam
Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the backup
server.
o To configure a custom notification for the job, select Use custom notification settings specified below.
You can specify the following notification settings:
In the Subject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %ObjectCount% (number of
machines in the job) and %Issues% (number of machines in the job that have been processed with
the Warning or Failed status).
Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if the job completes successfully, completes with a warning or fails.
Select the Suppress notifications until the last retry check box to receive a notification about the
final job status. If you do not enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will send one
notification per every job retry.
NOTE:
Email reports with backup policy statistics will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see the Configuring Global Email Notification Settings
section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
After you enable notification settings for the backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication will send reports
with the backup policy statistics to email addresses specified in global email notification settings and email
addresses specified in the backup policy settings.
o Storage — if you have selected to save backup files in a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository.
o Local Storage — if you have selected to save backup files on a local storage of a Veeam Agent computer.
o Shared Folder — if you have selected to save backup files in a network shared folder.
3. Select the Send daily e-mail report to the following recipients check box and specify a recipient’s email
address in the field below. You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
4. In the Send at field, specify the time when Veeam Backup & Replication must send the email notification for
the backup policy. Veeam Backup & Replication will send the report daily at the specified time.
5. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive a typical notification for the backup policy, select Use global notification settings. In this
case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the backup policy global email notification settings
specified for the backup server.
In the Subject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %ObjectCount% (number of
machines in the backup policy) and %Issues% (number of machines in the backup policy that have
been processed with the Warning or Failed status).
Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if the job completes successfully, completes with a warning or fails.
Script Settings
You can specify script settings for the job if you have selected the Managed by backup server mode at the Job
Mode step of the wizard.
3. If you want to execute custom scripts before and/or after the backup job, select the Before the job and After
the job check boxes and click Browse to choose executable files from a local folder on the backup server. The
scripts are executed on the backup server.
o If you select the Run scripts every <N> backup session option, specify the number of the backup job
sessions after which the scripts must be executed.
o If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, click Days and specify week days on
which the scripts must be executed.
NOTE:
Custom scripts that you define in the advanced job settings relate to the backup job itself, not the OS
quiescence process on protected computers. To add pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for Veeam Agent
computer OS quiescence, use the Guest Processing step of the wizard.
At the Secondary Target step of the wizard, you can link the Veeam Agent backup job to a backup to tape or
backup copy job. As a result, the backup job will be added as a source to the backup to tape or backup copy job.
Backup files created with the backup job will be archived to tape or copied to the secondary backup repository
according to the secondary jobs schedule. For more information, see the Linking Backup Jobs to Backup Copy Jobs
and Linking Backup Jobs to Backup to Tape Jobs sections in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
The backup to tape job or backup copy job must be configured beforehand. You can create these jobs with an empty
source. When you link the Veeam Agent backup job to these jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
update the linked jobs to define the Veeam Agent backup job as a source for these jobs.
To link jobs:
1. Click Add.
2. From the jobs list, select a backup to tape or backup copy job that must be linked to the Veeam Agent backup
job. You can link several jobs to the backup job, for example, one backup to tape job and one backup copy
job. To quickly find the job, use the search field at the bottom of the wizard.
1. Selected the Managed by agent mode at the Job Mode step of the wizard.
2. Selected the Veeam backup repository or Veeam Cloud Connect repository option at the Destination step
of the wizard.
2. In the Maximum size field, specify the size for the backup cache.
When defining the size of the backup cache, assume the following:
o Each full backup file may consume about 50% of the backed-up data size.
o Each incremental backup file may consume about 10% of the backed-up data size.
3. In the Location section, specify where Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will create the backup cache. You
can select from the following options:
o Automatic selection — select this option if you want to let Veeam Agent pick a location for the backup
cache automatically. On every computer added to the backup policy, Veeam Agent will detect a volume
with the largest amount of free disk space and create the backup cache in the Veeam Backup Cache
folder on this volume. To learn more, see Backup Cache.
o Manual selection — select this option if you want to specify a location for the backup cache manually. If
you select this option, in the Folder field, specify a path to the folder on a protected computer in which
backup files must be stored.
For a Veeam Agent backup job that includes Windows-based computers, you can enable the following guest OS
processing settings:
• Application-aware processing
• File indexing
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, make sure that the Enable application-aware processing check
box is selected.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Applications section, make sure that the Enable application-aware processing
check box is selected.
You can clear this check box, for example, if you want to disable application-aware processing for a specific
computer added to the backup job as a part of a protection group.
[For Microsoft SQL Server] If you disable application-aware processing, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
will still enumerate Microsoft SQL Server databases during the backup process. With application-aware
processing disabled, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows does not include information about databases in
the backup. However, you can use Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SQL to locate a database file in the backup
and restore the database.
5. [For Microsoft Exchange, Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle] In the Transaction logs section, specify if Veeam
Agent for Microsoft Windows running on a protected computer must process transaction logs or copy-only
backups must be created.
o Select Process transaction logs with this job if you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to
process transaction logs.
[For Microsoft Exchange] With this option selected, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will wait for
backup to complete successfully, and then trigger truncation of transaction logs. If the backup job fails,
the logs will remain untouched until the next backup job session.
[For Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle] You will have to specify settings for database log handling on the
SQL and Oracle tabs of the Processing Settings window. For more information, see Microsoft SQL
Server Transaction Log Settings and Oracle Archived Log Settings.
o Select Perform copy only if you use another tool to maintain consistency of the database state. Veeam
Agent for Microsoft Windows will create a copy-only backup. The copy-only backup preserves the chain
of full/differential backup files and transaction logs. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.
• [For Microsoft Exchange] Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows performs truncation of Microsoft
Exchange transaction logs only if all disks that contain the Microsoft Exchange database are included in
a volume-level backup job.
• [For Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle] If both Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle Server are installed on
one guest OS, and log backup is enabled for both applications, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will
back up only Oracle transaction logs. Microsoft SQL Server transaction logs will not be processed.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, make sure that the Enable application-aware processing check
box is selected.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
4. In the Transaction logs section, select Process transaction logs with this job.
By default, the Use guest credentials option is selected in the list. With this option selected, Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows will connect to the Microsoft SQL Server under the account that you have specified for
the protected computer in the protection group settings.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click Add on the right to
add credentials.
7. Specify how transaction logs must be processed. You can select one of the following options:
o Select Truncate logs to truncate transaction logs after successful backup. Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows will wait for the backup to complete successfully and then truncate transaction logs. If the
backup job fails, the logs will remain untouched until the next backup job session.
o Select Do not truncate logs to preserve transaction logs. When the backup job completes, Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows will not truncate transaction logs.
It is recommended that you enable this option for databases that use the Simple recovery model. If you
enable this option for databases that use the Full or Bulk-logged recovery model, transaction logs may
grow large and consume all disk space. In this case, the database administrator must take care of
transaction logs him-/herself.
o Select Backup logs periodically to back up transaction logs with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows.
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will periodically copy transaction logs to the backup location and
store them together with the image-level backup. During the backup job session, transaction logs will be
truncated.
For more information, see the Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle Logs Backup section in the Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
If you have selected to back up transaction logs with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, you must specify
settings for transaction logs backup:
1. In the Backup logs every <N> minutes field, specify the frequency for transaction logs backup. By default,
transaction logs are backed up every 15 minutes. The maximum log backup interval is 480 minutes.
2. In the Retain log backups section, specify retention policy for transaction logs stored in the backup location.
o Select Until the corresponding image-level backup is deleted to apply the same retention policy for
image-level backups and transaction log backups.
o Select Keep only last <N> days of log backups to keep transaction logs for a specific number of days.
By default, transaction logs are kept for 15 days. If you select this option, you must make sure that
retention for transaction logs is not greater than retention for the image-level backup. For more
information, see the Retention for Database Log Backups section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows User Guide.
Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows automatically excludes its configuration database from application-
aware processing during backup. Transaction logs for the configuration database are not backed up.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, make sure that the Enable application-aware processing check
box is selected.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
4. In the Transaction logs section, select Process transaction logs with this job.
7. In the Archived logs section, specify if Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows must delete archived logs on the
Oracle database:
o Select Do not delete archived logs if you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to preserve
archived logs. When the backup job completes, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will not delete
archived logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases for which the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned
off. If the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned on, archived logs may grow large and consume all disk space. In
this case, the database administrator must take care of archived logs him-/herself.
o Select Delete logs older than <N> hours or Delete logs over <N> GB if you want Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows to delete archived logs that are older than <N> hours or larger than <N> GB. Veeam
Agent for Microsoft Windows will wait for the backup to complete successfully and then trigger archived
logs truncation via Oracle Call Interface (OCI). If the backup job fails, the logs will remain untouched
until the next successful backup job session.
8. To back up Oracle archived logs with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows, select the Backup log every <N>
minutes check box and specify the frequency for archived logs backup. By default, archived logs are backed
up every 15 minutes. The minimum log backup interval is 5 minutes. The maximum log backup interval is 480
minutes.
o Select Until the corresponding image-level backup is deleted to apply the same retention policy for
Veeam Agent backups and archived log backups.
o Select Keep only last <n> days of log backups to keep archived logs for a specific number of days. By
default, archived logs are kept for 15 days. If you select this option, you must make sure that retention
for archived logs is not greater than retention for the Veeam Agent backups. For more information, see
the Retention for Database Log Backups section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, make sure that the Enable application-aware processing check
box is selected.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
By default, the Use guest credentials option is selected in the list. With this option selected, Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows will connect to the SharePoint application under the account that you have specified
for the protected computer in the protection group settings.
1. At the Guest Processing step, make sure that the Enable application-aware processing check box is
selected.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
By default, the Use guest credentials option is selected in the list. With this option selected, Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows will run pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts under the account that you have specified
for the protected computer in the protection group settings.
6. In the Script processing mode section, specify the scenario for scripts execution:
o Select Require successful script execution if you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to stop the
backup process if the script fails.
o Select Ignore script execution failures if you want to continue the backup process even if script errors
occur.
7. In the Pre-freeze script and Post-thaw script fields, click Browse to choose executable files from a local
folder on the backup server. During the backup job session, Veeam Backup & Replication will upload the
scripts to Veeam Agent computers added to the job and execute them on these computers. Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows supports scripts in the EXE, BAT and CMD format.
File Indexing
You can instruct the backup job to create an index of files and folders on the protected computer OS during backup.
If you enable the file indexing option, you will be able to search for individual files inside Veeam Agent backups and
perform 1-click restore in Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager.
File system indexing is optional. If you do not enable this option in the backup job settings, you will still be
able to perform 1-click restore from the backup created with such backup job. For more information, see the
Preparing for File Browsing and Restore section in the Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager User Guide.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the Enable guest file system indexing check box.
2. Click Indexing.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
o Select Index everything if you want to index all files within the backup scope that you have specified at
the Backup mode step of the wizard. Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will index all files that reside:
On the volumes that you have specified for backup (for volume-level backup)
In the folders that you have specified for backup (for file-level backup)
o Select Index everything except if you want to index all files on the protected computer OS except those
defined in the list. By default, system folders are excluded from indexing. You can add or delete folders
using the Add and Remove buttons on the right. You can also use system environment variables to form
the list, for example: %windir%, %Program Files% and %Temp%.
o Select Index only following folders to define folders that you want to index. You can add or delete
folders to index using the Add and Remove buttons on the right. You can also use system environment
variables to form the list, for example: %windir%, %Program Files% and %Temp%.
NOTE:
If you configure a backup policy, after you click Apply at the Schedule step of the wizard, Veeam Backup &
Replication will immediately apply the backup policy to protected computers.
1. Select the Daily at check box and use the fields on the right to specify time and days when the backup job
must start:
o Everyday — select this option to start the job at specific time daily.
o On week-days — select this option to start the job at specific time on week-days.
o On these days — select this option to start the job at specific time on selected days.
You can leave the Daily at check box unchecked to configure the backup job without daily schedule. In this
case, you will be able to use the backup job to perform backup automatically at specific events.
2. If you have selected the On these days option, click the Days button and clear check boxes for the days when
the job must not start.
3. Select the action that Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows must perform in case the protected computer is
powered off at the time when the scheduled backup job must start.
o Backup once powered on — select this option if you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to start
the scheduled backup job when the protected computer is powered on.
o Skip backup — select this option if you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows not to start the
scheduled backup job when the computer is powered on. Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will
perform backup at the next scheduled time.
4. If you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to perform a finalizing action after the backup job completes
successfully, select the necessary action:
o Keep running — select this option if the computer must keep on working.
o Sleep — select this option if you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to bring the computer to the
standby mode.
o Shutdown — select this option if you want Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows to shut down the
computer.
5. In the At the following events section, specify settings for events that trigger the backup job launch:
o Select the Lock check box if you want to start the backup job when the user locks the Veeam Agent
computer.
o Select the Log off check box if you want to start the backup job when the user working with the
computer performs a logout operation.
o Select the When backup target is connected check box if you want to start the backup job when the
backup storage becomes available (for example, when the computer connects to a local network and the
target shared folder is accessible).
o Select the Eject removable storage once backup is completed check box if you want Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows to unmount the storage device after the backup job completes successfully. With this
option selected, backup files on the removable storage will be protected from encrypting ransomware,
such as CryptoLocker.
o Use the Back up no more often than every <N> <time units> field to restrict the frequency of backup
job sessions. Specify a minutely, hourly or daily interval between the backup job sessions.
The Back up no more often than every <N> <time units> option is applied only to job sessions started at
specific events. Daily backups are performed according to defined schedule regardless of the time
interval specified for this setting.
If the power scheme on the Veeam Agent computer does not allow using wake up timers, Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows will not be able to wake your computer from sleep for backup. You can manually change
the power scheme settings on the Veeam Agent computer. To do this, navigate to Control Panel > All Control
Panel Items > Power Options > Edit Plan Settings.
1. Select the Run the job automatically check box. If this check box is not selected, you will have to start the
backup job manually to create backup.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Daily at this
time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. Use the fields on the right to
configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a specific time interval, select Periodically every. In the
field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use the time
table to define the permitted time window for the job. In the Start time within an hour field, specify the
exact time when the job must start.
A repeatedly run job is started by the following rules:
The defined interval always starts at 12:00 AM. For example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-
hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00 AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is over, the job will start
immediately and then run by the defined schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours from
9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first run at 9:00 AM, when the denied
period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the Periodically every option and choose Continuously from the list
on the right. A new backup job session will start as soon as the previous backup job session finishes.
o [For Managed by backup server mode only] To chain jobs, use the After this job field. In the common
practice, jobs start one after another: when job A finishes, job B starts and so on. If you want to create a
chain of jobs, you must define the time schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest of the jobs in
the chain, select the After this job option and choose the preceding job from the list.
• The After this job option is not available if you have selected the Managed by agent option at
the Job Mode step of the wizard.
• The After this job function will automatically start a job if the first job in the chain is started
automatically by schedule. If you start the first job manually, Veeam Backup & Replication will
display a notification. You will be able to choose whether Veeam Backup & Replication must start
the chained job as well.
3. In the Automatic retry section, define whether Veeam Backup & Replication or Veeam Agent for Microsoft
Windows (depending on the selected job mode) must attempt to run the backup job again if the job fails for
some reason. Enter the number of attempts to run the job and define time intervals between them. If you
select continuous backup, Veeam Backup & Replication or Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will retry the
job for the defined number of times without any time intervals between the job runs.
a. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box and click Window.
b. In the Time Periods window, define the allowed hours and prohibited hours for backup.
If the job exceeds the allowed window, it will be automatically terminated. In this case, data transport
and backup chain transformation processes are stopped. Keep in mind that this behavior differs from a
VM backup job where backup window affects data transport process and heath check operations only.
IMPORTANT!
[For backup policy] The backup window does not affect the process of uploading backup files from the
backup cache to the target storage. If Veeam Agent creates one or more backup files in the backup
cache, and then the backup target becomes available, Veeam Agent uploads backup files to the target
location immediately, regardless of the specified backup window.
2. [For backup job managed by backup server] Select the Run the job when I click Finish check box if you want
to start the job right after you finish working with the wizard.
• The Veeam Backup & Replication license must have a sufficient number of instances to process servers and/or
workstations that you plan to add to the Veeam Agent backup job.
• The target location where you plan to store backup files must have enough free space.
• Protection groups that you want to add to the job must be configured in advance.
• [For backup jobs targeted at the cloud repository] The Veeam Cloud Connect service provider must be added
in the Veeam backup console.
• [For Veeam Agent backup job managed by backup server] You can create Veeam Agent backups on a Veeam
backup repository and Veeam Cloud Connect repository. Other types of target locations are not supported.
• [For Veeam Agent backup job managed by Veeam Agent] You cannot save the backup of entire computer on
the local computer disk. Use an external hard drive or USB drive, network shared folder or backup repository
as a target location.
• After you start managing a Veeam Agent computer with Veeam Backup & Replication, data backup for this
computer is performed by a backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication. Veeam Agent running on
the computer starts a new backup chain on a target location specified in the backup job settings. You cannot
continue the existing backup chain that was created by Veeam Agent operating in the standalone mode.
• You cannot map a Veeam Agent backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication to a Veeam Agent
backup chain created by a standalone Veeam Agent on a backup repository.
• Veeam Agent does not support creating transaction log backups in the cloud repository. You cannot enable
transaction log backup options in the properties of the backup job targeted at the cloud repository.
• Create a new backup job — in this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the New Agent Backup Job
wizard. You will be able to specify protection groups, individual Active Directory objects and/or Veeam Agent
computers to which the backup job settings must apply at the Computers step of the wizard.
• Add a protection group to a new backup job — in this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the New
Agent Backup Job wizard and add the selected protection group to the backup job. You will also be able to
change the list of Veeam Agent computers to which the backup job settings must apply at the Computers
step of the wizard.
• Add individual computers to a new backup job — in this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will launch the
New Agent Backup Job wizard and add the selected computers to the backup job. You will also be able to
change the list of Veeam Agent computers to which the backup job settings must apply at the Computers
step of the wizard.
• Open the Home view. Select the Jobs node and click Backup Job > Linux computer on the ribbon.
• Open the Home view. Right-click the Jobs node and select Backup > Linux computer.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, right-click the protection group that you want
to add to the backup job and select Add to backup job > Linux > New job.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, select the protection group that you want to
add to the backup job and click Add to Backup > Linux > New job on the ribbon.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start the New Agent Backup Job wizard and add the protection group to the job.
You can add other protection groups and (or) individual computers to the job later on, when you pass through the
wizard steps.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, click the protection group whose computers
you want to add to the backup job. In the working area, select one or more computers that you want to add to
the job, right-click the selected computer and select Add to backup job > New job.
• Open the Inventory view. In the Physical Infrastructure node, click the protection group whose computers
you want to add to the backup job. In the working area, select one or more computers that you want to add to
the job and click Add to Backup > New job on the ribbon.
Veeam Backup & Replication will start the New Agent Backup Job wizard and add the selected computers to the
job. You can add other computers and (or) protection groups to the job later on, when you pass through the wizard
steps.
TIP:
• You can press and hold [CTRL] to select multiple computers at once.
• You can add an individual computer or protection group to a Veeam Agent backup job that is already
configured in Veeam Backup & Replication. To learn more, see Adding Computers to Backup Job and
Adding Protection Group to Backup Job.
1. Select the type of protected computers whose data you want to back up with Veeam Agents.
2. If you choose to back up data pertaining to servers, select the job mode.
The job mode defines the type of the created Veeam Agent backup job: the backup job (backup job managed
by the backup server) or backup policy (backup job managed by Veeam Agent).
• Workstation — select this option if you want to back up data pertaining to Linux-based workstations or
laptops. This option is suitable for computers that reside in a remote location and may have limited
connection to the backup server.
For backup jobs that process workstations, Veeam Backup & Replication offers settings similar to the job
settings available in Veeam Agent for Linux operating in the Workstation mode. To learn more, see Veeam
Agent for Linux User Guide.
With this option selected, the backup job will be managed by Veeam Agent installed on the protected
computer — you do not need to select the job mode.
• Server — select this option if you want to back up data pertaining to Linux-based servers. This option is
suitable for computers that have permanent connection to the backup server.
For backup jobs that process servers, Veeam Backup & Replication offers settings similar to the job settings
available in Veeam Agent for Linux operating in the Server mode. To learn more, see Veeam Agent for Linux
User Guide.
With this option selected, you can also select the job mode. To learn more, see Selecting Job Mode.
• Managed by backup server — select this option if you want to configure the Veeam Agent backup job. With
this option selected, you will be able to add one or more individual computers and/or protection groups to
the job and instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to create Veeam Agent backups in a Veeam backup
repository or Veeam Cloud Connect repository. The Veeam Agent backup job will run on the backup server in
the similar way as a regular job for VM data backup. To learn more, see Backup Job.
• Managed by agent — select this option if you want to configure the backup policy. The backup policy
describes configuration of individual Veeam Agent backup jobs that run on protected computers, and acts as a
saved template. With this option selected, you will be able to add one or more individual computers and/or
protection groups to the backup policy, and instruct Veeam Agent to create backups on a local disk of a
protected computer, in a network shared folder, Veeam backup repository or Veeam Cloud Connect
repository. To learn more, see Backup Policy.
2. In the Description field, provide a description for future reference. The default description contains
information about the user who created the job, date and time when the job was created.
You can add to the Veeam Agent backup job one or more protection groups and/or individual computers added to
inventory in the Veeam Backup & Replication console. You can also add to the job computers that are not added to
inventory yet. Veeam Backup & Replication will add such computers to the job and also add them to the Manually
Added protection group.
Jobs with protection groups are dynamic in their nature. If Veeam Backup & Replication discovers a new computer
in a protection group after the Veeam Agent backup job is created, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
update the job settings to include the added computer.
NOTE:
If you used the Add to backup job > Linux > New job option to launch the New Agent Backup Job wizard, the
Protected computers list will already contain computers that you have selected to add to the job. You can
remove some computers from the job or add new computers to the job, if necessary.
2. In the Select Objects window, select one or more protection groups and/or computers in the list and click
OK. You can press and hold [CTRL] to select multiple objects at once.
To quickly find the necessary object, use the search field at the bottom of the Select Objects window.
2. In the Add Computer window, in the Host name or IP address field, enter a full DNS name or IP address of
the computer that you want to add to the job.
3. From the Credentials list, select a user account that has administrative permissions on the computer that you
want to add to the job. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click
Add on the right to add credentials. For more information, see the Credentials Manager section in the Veeam
Backup & Replication User Guide.
1. In the Backup mode section, select the backup mode. You can select one of the following options:
o Entire computer — select this option if you want to create a backup of the entire computer image. When
you restore data from such backup, you will be able to recover the entire computer image as well as data
on specific computer volumes: files, directories, application data and so on. With this option selected,
you will pass to one of the following steps of the wizard:
Storage — if the Managed by backup server option was selected at the Job Mode step of the
wizard.
Destination — if the Managed by agent option was selected at the Job Mode step of the wizard.
o Volume level backup — select this option if you want to create a backup of specific computer volumes,
for example, the system volume. When you restore data from such backup, you will be able to recover
data on these volumes only: files, directories, application data and so on. With this option selected, you
will pass to the Objects step of the wizard.
o File level backup — select this option if you want to create a backup of individual directories on your
computer. With this option selected, you will pass to the Objects step of the wizard.
2. [For file-level backup] If you want to perform backup in the snapshot-less mode, select the Backup directly
from live file system check box. With this option selected, Veeam Agent for Linux will not create a snapshot
of a backed-up volume during backup. This allows Veeam Agent to back up data residing in file systems that
are not supported for snapshot-based backup with Veeam Agent for Linux. To learn more, see the Snapshot-
Less File-Level Backup section in the Veeam Agent for Linux User Guide.
File-level backup is typically slower than volume-level backup. Depending on the performance capabilities of
your computer and backup environment, the difference between file-level and volume-level backup job
performance may increase significantly. If you plan to back up all folders with files on a specific volume or
back up large amount of data, it is recommended that you configure volume-level backup instead of file-level
backup.
• Specify volumes to back up — if you have selected the Volume level backup option at the Backup Mode step
of the wizard.
• Specify directories to back up — if you have selected the File level backup option at the Backup Mode step of
the wizard.
At this step of the wizard, you must specify the backup scope — define what volumes you want to include in the
backup. The specified backup scope settings will apply to all computers that are added to the backup job. If a
specified volume does not exist on one or more computers in the job, the job will skip such volumes on those
computers and back up only existing ones.
1. In the Objects to backup field, click Add and select the type of object that you want to include in the
backup: Device, Mount point, LVM or BTRFS.
2. In the Add Object window, specify the object that you want to back up and click OK.
You can specify the following objects to back up:
o Block devices. You can include in the backup scope all volumes on a computer disk or individual volumes
of a protected computer:
To include all volumes on a computer disk in the backup, type the path to a block device that
represents the disk whose volumes you want to back up. For example: /dev/sda.
To include a specific volume of a protected computer in the backup, type the path to a block device
that represents the volume that you want to back up. For example: /dev/sda1.
NOTE:
If you include a block device in the backup, and this block device is a physical volume assigned to
an LVM volume group, Veeam Agent will include the whole LVM volume group in the backup.
o Mount points. You can include in the backup scope individual volumes of a protected computer. Type the
path to a mount point of the volume that you want to back up. For example: / or /home.
o LVM volumes. You can include in the backup scope entire LVM volume groups or individual LVM logical
volumes of a protected computer. Type the path to a mount point or a block device that represents the
volume group or logical volume that you want to back up. For example: /dev/vg or /dev/vg/lv1.
o Btrfs subvolumes. You can include in the backup scope all Btrfs subvolumes of a Btrfs storage pool or
specific Btrfs subvolumes.
To include all subvolumes of a Btrfs pool in the backup, type the path to a block device that
represents the Btrfs pool. For example: /dev/sda1.
To include a specific Btrfs subvolume in the backup, type the path to a mount point of this
subvolume. For example: /sub1.
If you have created several system partitions, for example, a separate partition for the /boot directory, make sure
that you include all of these partitions in the backup. Otherwise, Veeam Agent for Linux does not guarantee that
the OS will boot properly when you attempt to recover from such backup.
At this step of the wizard, you must specify the backup scope — define what directories with files you want to
include in the backup. The specified backup scope settings will apply to all computers that are added to the backup
job. If a specified directory does not exist on one or more computers in the job, the job will skip such folder on
those computers and back up existing ones.
2. In the Add Object window, type the path to a directory that you want to back up, for example,
/home/user01, and click OK.
3. Repeat steps 1–2 for all directories that you want to back up.
To configure a filter:
o In the Include masks field, specify file names and/or masks for file types that you want to back up, for
example, Report.pdf or *filename*. Veeam Agent for Linux will create a backup only for selected
files. Other files will not be backed up.
o In the Exclude masks field, specify file names and/or masks for file types that you do not want to back
up, for example, OldReports.tar.gz or *.odt. Veeam Agent for Linux will back up all files except
files of the specified type.
3. Click Add.
4. Repeat steps 2–3 for each mask that you want to add.
You can use a combination of include and exclude masks. Note that exclude masks have a higher priority than
include masks. For example, you can specify masks in the following way:
Veeam Agent for Linux will include in the backup all files of the PDF format that do not contain draft in their
names.
At this step of the wizard, select a target location for backups created by Veeam Agents installed on protected
computers.
• Local storage — select this option if you want to save a backup on a removable storage device attached to a
protected computer or on a local drive of a protected computer. With this option selected, you will pass to
the Local Storage step of the wizard.
IMPORTANT!
It is recommended that you store backups in the external location like USB storage device or shared network
folder. You can also keep your backup files on the separate non-system local drive.
• Shared folder — select this option if you want to save a backup in a network shared folder. With this option
selected, you will pass to the Shared folder step of the wizard.
• Veeam backup repository — select this option if you want to save a backup on a backup repository managed
by a Veeam backup server. With this option selected, you will pass to the Backup Server step of the wizard.
• Veeam Cloud Connect repository — select this option if you want to save a backup on a cloud repository
exposed to you by the Veeam Cloud Connect service provider. With this option selected, you will pass to the
Storage step of the wizard.
• If you have selected the Managed by backup server mode at the Job Mode step of the wizard, you can
create Veeam Agent backups on a backup repository managed by this Veeam backup server. Specify Veeam
backup repository settings at the Storage of the wizard.
• If you have selected the Managed by agent mode at the Job Mode step of the wizard, specify backup storage
settings at one of the following steps of the wizard:
o Local storage settings — if you have selected the Local storage option at the Destination step of the
wizard.
o Shared folder settings — if you have selected the Shared folder option at the Destination step of the
wizard.
o Veeam backup repository settings — if you have selected the Veeam backup repository option at the
Destination step of the wizard.
o Cloud repository settings — if you have selected the Veeam Cloud Connect repository option at the
Destination step of the wizard.
Specify settings for the target backup repository managed by the same backup server that manages the Backup
Job:
1. From the Backup repository list, select a backup repository where you want to store Veeam Agent backups.
You can select from the following types of backup repositories:
o Veeam backup repository configured on the backup server that will manage the created backup job.
o Cloud repository allocated to your tenant account by a Veeam Cloud Connect service provider.
When you select a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically checks how much free space
is available on the backup repository.
2. You can map the job to a specific backup stored on the backup repository. Backup job mapping can be helpful
if you have moved backup files to a new backup repository and want to point the job to existing backups on
this new backup repository. You can also use backup job mapping if the configuration database got corrupted
and you need to reconfigure backup jobs.
To map the job to a backup, click the Map backup link and select the backup on the backup repository.
Backups can be easily identified by job names. To find the backup, you can also use the search field at the
bottom of the window.
NOTE:
• Backup job mapping is available only for a Veeam Agent backup job managed by the backup
server.
• You cannot map a Veeam Agent backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication to a
backup chain that was created on a backup repository by Veeam Agent operating in the
standalone mode.
o From the Retention policy list, select restore points and specify the number of restore points for which
you want to store backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication keeps
backup files created for 7 latest restore points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Backup &
Replication will remove the earliest restore points from the backup chain.
o From the Retention policy list, select days and specify the number of days for which you want to store
backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Backup & Replication keeps backup files for 7 days.
After this period is over, Veeam Backup & Replication will remove the earliest restore points from the
backup chain.
4. To use the GFS (Grandfather-Father-Son) retention scheme, select the Keep some periodic full backups
longer for archival purposes check box and click Configure. In the Configure GFS window, specify how
weekly, monthly and yearly full backups must be retained. To learn more, see the GFS Retention Policy
section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
5. If you want to archive backup files created with the backup job to a secondary destination (backup repository
or tape), select the Configure secondary destinations for this job check box. With this option enabled, the
New Agent Backup Job wizard will include an additional step — Secondary Target. At the Secondary Target
step of the wizard, you can link the backup job to the backup copy job or backup to tape backup job.
You can enable this option only if a backup copy job or backup to tape job is already configured on the backup
server.
6. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
1. In the Local folder field, type a path to a folder on a protected computer where backup files must be saved.
If the specified folder does not exist in the file system of a protected computer, Veeam Agent for Linux will
create this folder and save the resulting backup file to this folder. If the volume on which the specified folder
must reside does not exist on a protected computer, Veeam Backup & Replication will not apply the backup
job settings to this computer.
IMPORTANT!
USB storage devices formatted as FAT32 do not allow storing files larger than 4 GB in size. For this
reason, it is recommended that you do not use such USB storage devices as a backup target.
2. In the Restore points to keep on disk field, specify the number of restore points for which you want to store
backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Agent for Linux keeps backup files created for 7 latest
restore points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Agent for Linux will remove the earliest restore points
from the backup chain.
3. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
1. In the File share type section, select the type of a network shared folder:
o SMB — to connect to a network shared folder using the SMB (CIFS) protocol.
2. In the Shared folder field, type a name of the network shared folder in which you want to store backup files.
o [For an NFS shared folder] Specify a name of the network shared folder in the SERVER://DIRECTORY
format.
o [For an SMB shared folder] Specify a UNC name of the network shared folder. Keep in mind that the UNC
name always starts with two back slashes (\\).
3. [For an SMB shared folder] If the network shared folder requires authentication, select the This share
requires access credentials check box and select from the list a user account that has access permissions on
this shared folder. If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click Add
on the right to add credentials. The user name must be specified in the DOMAIN\USERNAME format.
4. In the Restore points to keep on disk field, specify the number of restore points for which you want to store
backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Agent for Linux keeps backup files created for 7 latest
restore points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Agent for Linux will remove the earliest restore points
from the backup chain.
5. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
1. At the Backup Server step of the wizard, specify backup server settings.
2. At the Backup Repository step of the wizard, select the Veeam backup repository.
In the DNS name or external IP address field, review and change if necessary the name or IP address of the Veeam
backup server on which you configure the Veeam Agent backup job. The specified DNS name or IP address must be
accessible from the network to which Veeam Agent computers are connected.
NOTE:
Veeam Backup & Replication does not automatically update information about the backup server in the
backup policy settings after migration of the configuration database. After you migrate configuration data to a
new location, you must specify the name or IP address of the new backup server in the properties of all backup
policies configured in Veeam Backup & Replication.
1. From the Backup repository list, select a backup repository where you want to store created backups. When
you select a backup repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically checks how much free space is
available on the backup repository.
2. In the Restore points to keep on disk field, specify the number of restore points for which you want to store
backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Agent for Linux keeps backup files created for 7 latest
restore points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Agent for Linux will remove the earliest restore points
from the backup chain.
3. If you want to archive backup files created with the backup job to a secondary destination (backup repository
or tape), select the Configure secondary destinations for this job check box. With this option enabled, the
New Agent Backup Job wizard will include an additional step — Secondary Target. At the Secondary Target
step of the wizard, you can link the backup job to the backup copy job or backup to tape backup job.
You can enable this option only if a backup copy job or backup to tape job is already configured on the backup
server.
4. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
NOTE:
Keep in mind that FQDN or IP addresses of Veeam Agent machines that you back up to the cloud repository
will be visible to the Veeam Cloud Connect service provider. To learn more, see Creating Protection Groups:
Before You Begin.
1. From the Backup repository list, select a cloud repository where you want to store created backups. The
Backup repository list displays cloud repositories allocated to your tenant account by the Veeam Cloud
Connect service provider. When you select a cloud repository, Veeam Backup & Replication automatically
checks how much free space is available on the repository.
2. In the Restore points to keep on disk field, specify the number of restore points for which you want to store
backup files in the target location. By default, Veeam Agent for Linux keeps backup files created for 7 latest
restore points. After this number is exceeded, Veeam Agent for Linux will remove the earliest restore points
from the backup chain.
3. Click Advanced to specify advanced settings for the backup job. To learn more, see Specify Advanced Backup
Settings.
• Backup settings
• Maintenance settings
• Storage settings
• Notification settings
• [For Veeam Agent jobs managed by the backup server] Script settings
TIP:
After you specify necessary settings for the Veeam Agent backup job, you can save them as default settings.
To do this, click Save as Default at the bottom left corner of the Advanced Settings window. When you
create a new backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically apply the default settings to the new
job.
Backup Settings
To specify settings for a backup chain created with the backup job:
o Storage — if you have selected to save backup files in a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository.
o Local Storage — if you have selected to save backup files on a local storage of a Veeam Agent computer.
o Shared Folder — if you have selected to save backup files in a network shared folder.
2. [For Veeam Agent jobs managed by the backup server] If you want to periodically create synthetic full
backups, on the Backup tab, select the Create synthetic full backups periodically check box and click Days
to schedule synthetic full backups on the necessary week days.
3. If you want to periodically create active full backups, select the Create active full backups periodically
check box. Use the Monthly on or Weekly on selected days options to define scheduling settings.
• Before scheduling periodic full backups, you must make sure that you have enough free space on the
target location.
• If you schedule the active full backup and synthetic full backup on the same day, Veeam Backup &
Replication will perform only active full backup. Synthetic full backup will be skipped.
Maintenance Settings
You can specify maintenance settings for a backup chain created with the Veeam Agent backup job. Maintenance
operations help make sure that the backup chain remains valid and consistent.
Maintenance settings are available for the following types of Veeam Agent backup jobs that process Linux
computers:
• Backup job managed by Veeam Agent (backup policy). For backup jobs of this type, maintenance settings are
available only if the job is targeted at a Veeam backup repository.
3. [For backup jobs managed by the backup server] To periodically perform a health check for the latest restore
point in the backup chain, in the Storage-level corruption guard section select the Perform backup files
health check check box and specify the time schedule for the health check.
An automatic health check can help you avoid a situation where a restore point gets corrupted, making all
dependent restore points corrupted, too. If during the health check Veeam Backup & Replication detects
corrupted data blocks in the latest restore point in the backup chain (or the restore point before the latest
one if the latest restore point is incomplete), it will start the health check retry and transport valid data
blocks from the protected computer to the Veeam backup repository. The transported data blocks are stored
to a new backup file or the latest backup file in the backup chain, depending on the data corruption scenario.
For more information, see the Health Check for Backup Files section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User
Guide.
4. Select the Remove deleted items data after check box and specify the number of days for which you want
to keep the backup created with the backup job in the target location.
o For backup jobs managed by the backup server, deleted items retention policy is similar to retention
policy for deleted VMs. After you remove a protection group or individual computer from a Veeam Agent
backup job, Veeam Backup & Replication will keep its data on the backup repository for the period that
you have specified. When this period is over, backup data of this computer will be removed from the
backup repository. For more information, see the Retention Policy for Deleted VMs section in the Veeam
Backup & Replication User Guide.
o For backup jobs managed by Veeam Agent, if Veeam Agent does not create new restore points for the
backup, the backup will remain in the target location for the period that you have specified. When this
period is over, the backup will be removed from the target location. For more information, see the
Veeam Agent for Linux User Guide.
By default, the deleted items data retention period is 30 days. Do not set the deleted items retention period
to 1 day or a similar short interval. In the opposite case, the backup job may work not as expected and remove
data that you still require.
5. [For backup jobs managed by the backup server] To periodically compact a full backup, select the
Defragment and compact full backup file check box and specify the schedule for the compact operation.
During the compact operation, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a new empty file and copies to it data
blocks from the full backup file. As a result, the full backup file gets defragmented and the speed of reading
and writing from/to the backup file increases.
If the full backup file contains data blocks for deleted items (protection groups or individual computers),
Veeam Backup & Replication will remove these data blocks. For more information, see the Compact of Full
Backup File section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
• If you want to periodically compact a full backup, you must make sure that you have enough free
space in the target location. For the compact operation, the amount of free space must be equal
to or more that the size of the full backup file.
• In contrast to the compact operation for a VM backup, during compact of a full Veeam Agent
backup file, Veeam Backup & Replication does not perform the data take out operation. If the full
backup file contains data for a machine that has only one restore point and this restore point is
older than 7 days, Veeam Backup & Replication will not extract data for this machine to a separate
full backup file.
Storage Settings
To specify storage settings for the backup job:
o Storage — if you have selected to save backup files in a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository.
o Local Storage — if you have selected to save backup files on a local storage of a Veeam Agent computer.
o Shared Folder — if you have selected to save backup files in a network shared folder.
3. From the Compression level list, select a compression level for the backup: None, Dedupe-friendly,
Optimal, High or Extreme.
5. To encrypt the content of backup files, select the Enable backup file encryption check box. In the Password
field, select a password that you want to use for encryption. If you have not created the password
beforehand, click Add or use the Manage passwords link to specify a new password. For more information,
see the Password Manager section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
If the backup server is not connected to Veeam Backup Enterprise Manager, you will not be able to restore
data from encrypted backups in case you lose the password. Veeam Backup & Replication will display a
warning about it. For more information, see the Decrypting Data Without Password section in the Veeam
Backup & Replication User Guide.
• Data encryption settings for Veeam Agent backup jobs and backup policies configured in Veeam Backup
& Replication are stored to the Veeam Backup & Replication database. For backup jobs and policies
targeted at a Veeam backup repository, all data encryption operations are performed in Veeam Backup
& Replication, too. Encryption settings are passed to a Veeam Agent computer only in case this
computer is added to a backup policy targeted at a local drive of a protected computer or at a network
shared folder. Veeam Backup & Replication performs this operation when applying the backup policy to
a protected computer.
• If you change a password for data encryption for an existing backup policy targeted at a Veeam backup
repository without changing other backup policy settings, the process of applying the backup policy to a
protected computer completes with a notification informing that the backup policy was not modified.
This happens because data encryption settings for managed Veeam Agents are saved to the Veeam
Backup & Replication database and are not passed to a Veeam Agent computer.
• If you enable encryption for an existing Veeam Agent backup, during the next job session Veeam Agent
for Linux will create a full backup file. The created full backup file and subsequent incremental backup
files in the backup chain will be encrypted with the specified password.
• Encryption is not retroactive. If you enable encryption for an existing backup job, Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows will encrypt the backup chain starting from the next restore point created with this
job.
• [For backup policies targeted at a local drive, network shared folder or cloud repository] When you
enable data encryption for a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the specified password to
encrypt backups of all Veeam Agent computers added to the backup policy. A Veeam Agent computer
user can restore data from the backup of this computer without providing a password to decrypt backup.
To restore data from a backup of another computer in this backup policy, a user must provide a
password specified in the backup policy settings.
This scenario differs from the same scenario in earlier versions of Veeam Backup & Replication where all
backups created for Veeam Agent computers in the backup policy could be accessed from any computer
in the backup policy without providing a password.
To learn more about data encryption in Veeam Backup & Replication, see the Data Encryption section in the
Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
• Managed by backup server. To learn more, see Notification Settings for Veeam Agent Backup Job.
• Managed by agent. To learn more, see Notification Settings for Backup Policy.
3. Select the Send SNMP notifications for this job check box if you want to receive SNMP traps when the job
completes successfully.
SNMP traps will be sent if you specify global SNMP settings in Veeam Backup & Replication and configure
software on recipient's machine to receive SNMP traps. For more information, see the Specifying SNMP
Settings section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
4. Select the Send email notifications to the following recipients check box if you want to receive
notifications about the job completion status by email. In the field below, specify a recipient’s email address.
You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
Email notifications will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in Veeam Backup &
Replication. For more information, see the Configuring Global Email Notification Settings section in Veeam
Backup & Replication User Guide.
o To receive a typical notification for the job, select Use global notification settings. In this case, Veeam
Backup & Replication will apply to the job global email notification settings specified for the backup
server.
o To configure a custom notification for the job, select Use custom notification settings specified below.
You can specify the following notification settings:
In the Subject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %ObjectCount% (number of
machines in the job) and %Issues% (number of machines in the job that have been processed with
the Warning or Failed status).
Select the Notify on success, Notify on warning and/or Notify on error check boxes to receive
email notification if the job completes successfully, completes with a warning or fails.
Select the Suppress notifications until the last retry check box to receive a notification about the
final job status. If you do not enable this option, Veeam Backup & Replication will send one
notification per every job retry.
NOTE:
Email reports with backup policy statistics will be sent if you configure global email notification settings in
Veeam Backup & Replication. For more information, see the Configuring Global Email Notification Settings
section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
After you enable notification settings for the backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication will send reports
with the backup policy statistics to email addresses specified in global email notification settings and email
addresses specified in the backup policy settings.
o Storage — if you have selected to save backup files in a Veeam backup repository or cloud repository.
o Local Storage — if you have selected to save backup files on a local storage of a Veeam Agent computer.
o Shared Folder — if you have selected to save backup files in a network shared folder.
3. Select the Send daily e-mail report to the following recipients check box and specify a recipient’s email
address in the field below. You can enter several addresses separated by a semicolon.
4. You can choose to use global notification settings or specify custom notification settings.
o To receive a typical notification for the backup policy, select Use global notification settings. In this
case, Veeam Backup & Replication will apply to the backup policy global email notification settings
specified for the backup server. Veeam Backup & Replication will send the email report containing
backup policy statistics at 8:00 AM daily.
o To configure a custom notification for the backup policy, select Use custom notification settings
specified below. You can specify the following notification settings:
In the Send report at field, specify the time when Veeam Backup & Replication must send the
email notification for the backup policy. Veeam Backup & Replication will sent the report daily at
the specified time.
In the Subject field, specify a notification subject. You can use the following variables in the
subject: %Time% (completion time), %JobName%, %JobResult%, %ObjectCount% (number of
machines in the backup policy) and %Issues% (number of machines in the backup policy that have
been processed with the Warning or Failed status).
Script Settings
You can specify what scripts Veeam Backup & Replication will execute on the backup server before and after the
backup job session. This option is available if you have selected the Managed by backup server mode at the Job
Mode step of the wizard.
o If you select the Run scripts every <N> backup session option, specify the number of the backup job
sessions after which the scripts must be executed.
o If you select the Run scripts on the selected days only option, click Days and specify week days on
which the scripts must be executed.
TIP:
• Custom scripts that you define in the advanced job settings relate to the backup job itself, not the OS
quiescence process on protected computers. To add pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts for Veeam Agent
computer OS quiescence, use the Guest Processing step of the wizard.
• You can also specify what scripts will be executed on a Veeam Agent computer before and/or after the
backup job session. To learn more, see Backup Job and Snapshot Scripts.
At the Secondary Target step of the wizard, you can link the Veeam Agent backup job to a backup to tape or
backup copy job. As a result, the backup job will be added as a source to the backup to tape or backup copy job.
Backup files created with the backup job will be archived to tape or copied to the secondary backup repository
according to the secondary jobs schedule. For more information, see Linking Backup Jobs to Backup Copy Jobs and
Linking Backup Jobs to Backup to Tape Jobs in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
The backup to tape job or backup copy job must be configured beforehand. You can create these jobs with an empty
source. When you link the Veeam Agent backup job to these jobs, Veeam Backup & Replication will automatically
update the linked jobs to define the Veeam Agent backup job as a source for these jobs.
To link jobs:
1. Click Add.
2. From the jobs list, select a backup to tape or backup copy job that must be linked to the Veeam Agent backup
job. You can link several jobs to the backup job, for example, one backup to tape job and one backup copy
job. To quickly find the job, use the search field at the bottom of the wizard.
• Application-aware processing
• File indexing
NOTE:
• Application-aware processing and database processing options are available if you have selected the
Server option at the Job Mode step of the wizard.
• Application-aware processing and database processing options are available if you have selected the
Entire computer or Volume level backup option at the Backup Mode step of the wizard.
• Available script settings depend on the options that you have selected at the Job Mode and Backup
Mode steps of the wizard. To learn more, see Backup Job and Snapshot Scripts.
• Veeam Agent for Linux does not support processing of multiple database systems on one Veeam Agent
computer.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the Enable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Applications section, specify the behavior scenario for application-aware
processing:
o Select Require successful processing if you want Veeam Agent for Linux to process databases. With this
option selected, if an error occurs when processing a database, Veeam Agent for Linux will stop the
backup process.
If you select this option, you will need to specify database processing settings. For more information, see
Oracle Processing Settings, MySQL Processing Settings and PostgreSQL Processing Settings.
o Select Try application processing, but ignore failures if you want Veeam Agent for Linux to process
databases. With this option selected, if an error occurs when processing a database, Veeam Agent for
Linux will not stop the backup process. Instead, Veeam Agent for Linux will skip this database and
proceed to the next one. Information about the skipped database will be displayed in a warning message
in the job session statistics. After the backup process completes, you will be able to restore data from the
backup and restore databases that were successfully processed during backup.
If you select this option, you will need to specify database processing settings. For more information, see
Oracle Processing Settings, MySQL Processing Settings and PostgreSQL Processing Settings.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the Enable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Applications section, select Require successful processing or Try application
processing, but ignore failures.
By default, the Use guest credentials option is selected in the list. With this option selected, Veeam Agent
for Linux will connect to the Oracle database under the account that you have specified for the protected
computer in the protection group settings.
NOTE:
Veeam Agent for Linux always uses the root account to connect to the Oracle database. This includes
the following cases:
• An Oracle account with the SYSDBA rights is selected in the Specify Oracle account with
SYSDBA privileges list, and the database is set to use database authentication.
• A non-root OS account added to the group that owns Oracle database files is selected in the
Specify Oracle account with SYSDBA privileges list, and the database is set to use
authentication by the operating system.
Thus, to perform database processing successfully, the root account must always have privileges to
connect to the Oracle database system.
7. In the Archived logs section, specify if Veeam Agent for Linux must delete archived logs on the Oracle
database:
o Select Do not delete archived logs if you want Veeam Agent for Linux to preserve archived logs. When
the backup job completes, Veeam Agent for Linux will not delete archived logs.
It is recommended that you select this option for databases for which the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned
off. If the ARCHIVELOG mode is turned on, archived logs may grow large and consume all disk space. In
this case, the database administrator must take care of archived logs him-/herself.
o Select Delete logs older than <N> hours or Delete logs over <N> GB if you want Veeam Agent for
Linux to delete archived logs that are older than <N> hours or larger than <N> GB. Veeam Agent for
Linux will wait for the backup job to complete successfully and then trigger archived logs truncation via
Oracle Call Interface (OCI). If the backup job fails, the logs will remain untouched until the next
successful backup job session.
8. [For Veeam Agent jobs managed by the backup server] To back up Oracle archived logs with Veeam Agent for
Linux, select the Backup log every <N> minutes check box and specify the frequency for archived logs
backup. By default, archived logs are backed up every 15 minutes. The minimum log backup interval is 5
minutes. The maximum log backup interval is 480 minutes.
o Select Until the corresponding image-level backup is deleted to apply the same retention policy for
Veeam Agent backups and archived log backups.
o Select Keep only last <n> days to keep archived logs for a specific number of days. By default, archived
logs are kept for 15 days. If you select this option, you must make sure that retention for archived logs is
not greater than retention for the Veeam Agent backups. The maximum time period to keep archived
logs is 60 days.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the Enable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Applications section, select Require successful processing or Try application
processing, but ignore failures.
o SELECT for all tables. If the account does not have the SELECT privilege for the table, Veeam Agent will
not be able to access the table metadata. Thus, Veeam Agent will not process the table. To learn more,
see MySQL documentation.
o LOCK TABLES. If the account does not have this privilege, Veeam Agent will not process tables based on
the MyISAM storage engine.
If you have not set up credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click Add on the right to
add credentials.
By default, the User from password file option is selected in the list. With this option selected, Veeam Agent
for Linux will connect to the MySQL database under the account specified in the password file on the Veeam
Agent computer. The default location for the password file is /root/.my.cnf. For information about the
password file format, see the Preparing Password File for MySQL Processing section in the Veeam Agent for
Linux User Guide.
7. If you want to specify a custom path to the password file, specify a full path in the Password file path field.
Specifying relative paths is not supported.
For information on how Veeam Agent for Linux processes the MySQL database system, see the MySQL Backup
section in the Veeam Agent for Linux User Guide.
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the Enable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. On the General tab, in the Applications section, select Require successful processing or Try application
processing, but ignore failures.
6. To specify a user account that Veeam Agent for Linux will use to connect to the PostgreSQL database, select
the account from the Specify PostgreSQL account with superuser privileges list. If you have not set up
credentials beforehand, click the Manage accounts link or click Add on the right to add credentials.
Note that if you plan to select the peer authentication method at the step 7 of this procedure, you can add a
user account in the Credentials Manager without specifying the password for the account.
By default, the Use guest credentials option is selected in the list. With this option selected, Veeam Agent
will connect to the PostgreSQL database under the account that you have specified for the protected
computer in the protection group settings.
7. In the The specified user is field, specify how Veeam Agent for Linux will connect to the PostgreSQL
database:
o Select Database user with password if the account that you specified at the step 6 is a PostgreSQL
account, and you entered the password for this account in the Credentials Manager.
o Select Database user with password file if the password for the account that you specified at the step 6
is defined in the .pgpass configuration file on the Veeam Agent computer. For information about the
.pgpass file format, see the Password File for PostgreSQL Processing section in the Veeam Agent for
Linux User Guide.
o Select System user without password if you want Veeam Agent to use the peer authentication method.
In this case, Veeam Agent will apply the Veeam Agent computer OS account as the PostgreSQL account.
• Backup job scripts — pre-job and post-job scripts that run on the Veeam Agent computer before and after
the backup job session.
• Snapshot scripts — pre-freeze and post-thaw scripts that run on the Veeam Agent computer before and after
the volume snapshot is created.
Veeam Backup & Replication offers 2 scenarios for specifying script settings:
a. You selected the Server option at the Job Mode step of the wizard.
b. You did not select the Backup directly from live file system option at the Backup Mode step of the
wizard.
o If you selected the Server option at the Job Mode step of the wizard and selected the Backup directly
from live file system option at the Backup Mode step of the wizard.
o If you selected the Workstation option at the Job Mode step of the wizard.
TIP:
You can also specify custom scripts that will be executed on the backup server before and/or after the backup
job session. To learn more, see Script Settings.
1. At the Guest Processing step, select the Enable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. [For an entire computer backup or volume-level backup job] In the Processing Settings window, click the
Scripts tab.
NOTE:
For a file-level backup job, application-aware processing and database processing options are not available,
and no tabs are displayed in the Processing Settings window.
6. In the Job scripts section, specify custom scripts that you want to execute before and/or after the backup job
session. To do this, in the Pre-job script and Post-job script fields, click Browse and choose executable files
from a local folder on the backup server.
7. In the Snapshot scripts section, specify custom scripts that you want to execute before Veeam Agent for
Linux creates a snapshot of the backed-up volume and/or after the snapshot is created. To do this, in the
Pre-freeze script and Post-thaw script fields, click Browse and choose executable files from a local folder
on the backup server.
1. At the Guest Processing step, select the Enable application-aware processing check box.
2. Click Applications.
3. In the displayed list, select a protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
4. In the Processing Settings window, select the Enable script execution check box.
5. In the Pre-job script and Post-job script fields, click Browse to choose executable files from a local folder
on the backup server.
File Indexing
To specify file indexing options:
1. At the Guest Processing step of the wizard, select the Enable guest file system indexing check box.
2. Click Indexing.
3. In the displayed list, select the protection group or individual computer and click Edit.
To define custom settings for a computer added as a part of a protection group, you must include the
computer to the list as a standalone object. To do this, click Add and choose the computer whose settings
you want to customize. Then select the computer in the list and define the necessary settings.
o Select Index everything if you want to index all files within the backup scope that you have specified at
the Backup mode step of the wizard. Veeam Agent for Linux will index all files that reside:
On the volumes that you have specified for backup (for volume-level backup)
In the directories that you have specified for backup (for file-level backup)
o [For volume-level backup only] Select Index only following folders to define directories that you want
to index. You can add or delete directories to index using the Add and Remove buttons on the right.
NOTE:
You can specify a custom indexing scope only in for a volume-level backup job. For a file-level backup job that
processes Linux-based computers, only the Index everything option is available.
1. Select the Run the job automatically check box. If this check box is not selected, you will have to start the
backup job manually to create backup.
o To run the job at specific time daily, on defined week days or with specific periodicity, select Daily at this
time. Use the fields on the right to configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job once a month on specific days, select Monthly at this time. Use the fields on the right to
configure the necessary schedule.
o To run the job repeatedly throughout a day with a specific time interval, select Periodically every. In the
field on the right, select the necessary time unit: Hours or Minutes. Click Schedule and use the time
table to define the permitted time window for the job. In the Start time within an hour field, specify the
exact time when the job must start.
A repeatedly run job is started by the following rules:
The defined interval always starts at 12:00 AM. For example, if you configure to run a job with a 4-
hour interval, the job will start at 12:00 AM, 4:00 AM, 8:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 4:00 PM and so on.
If you define permitted hours for the job, after the denied interval is over, the job will start
immediately and then run by the defined schedule.
For example, you have configured a job to run with a 2-hour interval and defined permitted hours from
9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. According to the rules above, the job will first run at 9:00 AM, when the denied
period is over. After that, the job will run at 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
o To run the job continuously, select the Periodically every option and choose Continuously from the list
on the right. A new backup job session will start as soon as the previous backup job session finishes.
o [For backup job managed by backup server] To chain jobs, use the After this job field. In the common
practice, jobs start one after another: when job A finishes, job B starts and so on. If you want to create a
chain of jobs, you must define the time schedule for the first job in the chain. For the rest of the jobs in
the chain, select the After this job option and choose the preceding job from the list.
NOTE:
• The After this job option is not available if you have selected the Managed by agent option at the Job
Mode step of the wizard.
• The After this job function will automatically start a job if the first job in the chain is started
automatically by schedule. If you start the first job manually, Veeam Backup & Replication will display a
notification. You will be able to choose whether Veeam Backup & Replication must start the chained job
as well.
3. In the Automatic retry section, define whether Veeam Backup & Replication or Veeam Agent for Linux
(depending on the selected job mode) must attempt to run the backup job again if the job fails for some
reason. Enter the number of attempts to run the job and define time intervals between them. If you select
continuous backup, Veeam Backup & Replication or Veeam Agent for Linux will retry the job for the defined
number of times without any time intervals between the job runs.
a. Select the Terminate job if it exceeds allowed backup window check box and click Window.
b. In the Time Periods window, define the allowed hours and prohibited hours for backup. If the job
exceeds the allowed window, it will be automatically terminated.
NOTE:
If you configure a backup policy, after you click Apply at the Schedule step of the wizard, Veeam Backup &
Replication will immediately apply the backup policy to protected computers.
2. [For backup job managed by backup server] Select the Run the job when I click Finish check box if you want
to start the job right after you finish working with the wizard.
After you create a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication immediately connects to protected computers added
to the backup policy and applies settings specified in the policy to configure the Veeam Agent backup job on each
computer.
• For a Veeam Agent backup jobs managed by the backup server, Veeam Backup & Replication allows you to
perform a set of operations similar to a regular backup job for VM data backup. To learn more, see Managing
Veeam Agent Backup Jobs.
• For a Veeam Agent backup job managed by Veeam Agent, or backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication
allows you to perform a set of operations similar to a regular Veeam Agent backup job configured on a Veeam
Agent computer. To learn more, see Managing Veeam Agent Backup Policies.
Starting Jobs
To start a job:
3. In the working area, select the Veeam Agent backup job and click Start on the ribbon or right-click the job
and select Start.
Stopping Jobs
You can stop a Veeam Agent backup job in one of the following ways:
• Stop job immediately. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a new restore point only for
those computers in the job that have already been processed by the time you stop the job.
• Stop job gracefully. In this case, Veeam Backup & Replication will produce a new restore point only for those
computers in the job that have already been processed and for computers that are being processed at the
moment.
3. In the working area, select the Veeam Agent backup job and click Stop on the ribbon or right-click the job and
select Stop. In the displayed window, click Immediately.
3. In the working area, right-click the job and select Stop. In the displayed window, click Gracefully.
To retry a job:
3. In the working area, select the Veeam Agent backup job and click Retry on the ribbon or right-click the job
and select Retry.
3. In the working area, select the Veeam Agent backup job and click Active Full on the ribbon or right-click the
job and select Active Full.
NOTE:
• You cannot change the type of protected computers added to the job and the job mode (that is, change
a Veeam Agent backup job to a backup policy and vice versa).
• If you want to specify another backup repository as a target for backups created by the job, you must
delete backups from the old repository or move backups to the new repository prior to changing a
backup repository in the job settings.
• [For Veeam Agent backup jobs for Linux computers] You cannot change the backup mode from file-level
to volume-level and vice versa.
3. In the working area, select the job and click Edit on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Edit.
4. Complete the steps of the Edit Agent Backup Job wizard to change the job settings as required.
To disable a job:
3. In the working area, select the job and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Disable.
To enable a disabled job, select it in the list and click Disable on the ribbon once again.
3. In the working area, select the job and click Clone on the ribbon or right-click the job and select Clone.
4. After a job is cloned, you can edit all its settings, including the job name.
NOTE:
The job cloning functionality is available only in the Enterprise and Enterprise Plus editions of Veeam Backup
& Replication.
To remove a job:
3. In the working area, select the Veeam Agent backup job and click Delete on the ribbon or right-click the job
and select Delete.
• Start and stop Veeam Agent backup jobs on computers added to the backup policy.
3. In the working area, select the backup policy and click Apply configuration on the ribbon or right-click the
policy and select Apply configuration.
When you start the backup process for a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication applies the policy to Veeam
Agent computers and sends a command to start backup jobs on these computers.
When you stop the backup process for a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication does not apply the policy to
Veeam Agent computers and immediately sends a command to stop backup jobs on these computers.
Veeam Backup & Replication does not check whether connection to Veeam Agent computers is active at the time
when the command is sent. Keep in mind that the start or stop operation will be performed only on those
computers that received the command from the backup server.
Starting Backup
To start backup on Veeam Agent computers added to the backup policy:
3. In the working area, select the backup policy and click Start backup on the ribbon or right-click the job and
select Start backup.
TIP:
You can also start a Veeam Agent backup job directly on a protected computer from the Veeam Agent user
interface.
3. In the working area, select the backup policy and click Stop backup on the ribbon or right-click the job and
select Stop backup. In the displayed window, click Yes.
When you start active full backup for a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication applies the policy to Veeam
Agent computers and sends a command to perform active full backup on these computers. Veeam Backup &
Replication does not check whether connection to Veeam Agent computers is active at the time when the command
is sent. Keep in mind that the active full backup operation will be performed only on those computers that received
the command from the backup server.
To perform active full backup on Veeam Agent computers added to the backup policy:
3. In the working area, select the backup policy and click Active Full on the ribbon or right-click the job and
select Active full.
When you perform the clear cache operation, Veeam Backup & Replication applies the policy to Veeam Agent
computers and sends a command to delete restore points from the backup cache on these computers. Veeam
Backup & Replication does not check whether connection to Veeam Agent computers is active at the time when the
command is sent. Keep in mind that the operation will be performed only on those computers that received the
command from the backup server.
To clear the backup cache on Veeam Agent computers added to the backup policy:
3. In the working area, press and hold the [CTRL] key, right-click the backup policy and select Clear cache.
NOTE:
• You cannot change the type of protected computers added to the job and the job mode (that is, change
a Veeam Agent backup job to a backup policy and vice versa).
• [For Veeam Agent backup jobs for Linux computers] You cannot change the backup mode from file-level
to volume-level and vice versa.
• If you change a password for data encryption without changing other backup policy settings, the process
of applying the backup policy to a protected computer completes with a notification informing that the
backup policy was not modified. This happens because data encryption settings for managed Veeam
Agents are saved to the Veeam Backup & Replication database and are not passed to a Veeam Agent
computer.
3. In the working area, select the backup policy and click Edit on the ribbon or right-click the policy and select
Edit.
4. Complete the steps of the Edit Agent Backup Job wizard to change the job settings as required.
• Veeam Backup & Replication does not apply backup policy settings to Veeam Agent computers.
• Veeam Agent running on a protected computer does not create backups on the backup repository.
If a user of a protected computer starts the Veeam Agent backup job manually or if the job starts by schedule,
the job session will fail and report the "The job has been disabled by the Veeam Backup & Replication
administrator" error. To let Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows store backups to the backup repository
again, you must enable the disabled policy and apply it to protected computers. To learn more, see Applying
Backup Policy to Protected Computers.
NOTE:
Disabling a backup policy does not affect performance of Veeam Agent backup jobs if a local drive or network
shared folder is specified as a target location for backups in the policy settings.
3. In the working area, select the Veeam Agent backup policy and click Disable on the ribbon or right-click the
policy and select Disable.
To enable a disabled policy, select it in the list and click Disable on the ribbon once again.
3. In the working area, select the backup policy and click Clone on the ribbon or right-click the backup policy
and select Clone.
4. After a backup policy is cloned, you can edit all its settings, including the job name.
NOTE:
The backup policy cloning functionality is available only in the Enterprise and Enterprise Plus editions of
Veeam Backup & Replication.
3. In the working area, select the Veeam Agent backup policy and click Delete on the ribbon or right-click the
policy and select Delete.
You can move a computer from the Unmanaged protection group to a new protection group or protection group
that you have already created.
• When you move an unmanaged computer to a new protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication creates the
protection group and adds the computer to this group. In the protection group settings, you can define
discovery and deployment options according to which Veeam Backup & Replication will process the added
computer.
• When you move an unmanaged computer to an already existing protection group, Veeam Backup &
Replication adds this computer to the protection group and starts processing the computer according to
discovery and deployment settings defined in the properties of the protection group. Veeam Backup &
Replication discovers the added computer, checks whether Veeam Agent running on the computer needs
upgrade and upgrades Veeam Agent if needed.
NOTE:
• You can move an unmanaged computer only to a protection group that includes individual computers.
• After you move a computer to a protection group, data backup for this computer will be performed by a
backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication. Veeam Agent running on the computer will start
a new backup chain on a target location specified in the backup job settings. The original backup job
configured on the Veeam Agent computer will be removed in Veeam Agent, and you will not be able to
continue the backup chain created with this job.
• You cannot map a Veeam Agent backup job configured in Veeam Backup & Replication to a backup chain
that was created on a backup repository by Veeam Agent operating in the standalone mode.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select the Unmanaged node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Move to > New protection group on the ribbon
or right click the computer and select Move to > New protection group.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select the Unmanaged node.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Move to > name of the protection group on the
ribbon or right click the computer and select Move to > name of the protection group.
2. In the inventory pane, in the Physical Infrastructure node, select a protection group whose computers you
want to add to a Veeam Agent backup job and do one of the following:
o In the working area, select the computer that you want to add to the job and click Add to Backup >
name of the job on the ribbon.
o In the working area, right-click the computer that you want to add to the job and select Add to backup
job > name of the job.
NOTE:
• You can add a computer to a Veeam Agent backup job configured for computers of the same platform.
For example, you can add a Linux computer only to a Veeam Agent backup job for Linux computers.
• You can also add a specific protected computer to a new backup job. To learn more, see Creating Veeam
Agent Backup Jobs.
Quick backup can be performed for computers that meet the following requirements:
• A protected computer is added to a Veeam Agent backup job managed by the backup server.
• A full backup file for the protected computer exists on the backup repository configured in the backup
infrastructure.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select a protection group that contains
the protected computer that you want to back up.
3. In the working area, select one or more computers and click Quick Backup on the ribbon or right-click the
computers and select Quick backup.
Veeam Backup & Replication will trigger a Veeam Agent backup job to create a new incremental restore point for
selected computers. Details of a running quick backup task are displayed in the job session window.
NOTE:
If a computer for which you want to perform quick backup is added to more than one Veeam Agent backup
job, Veeam Backup & Replication will trigger only the job that created the latest restore point for this
computer.
• Host name
• IP address
• Operating system
• CBT driver version (for computers running a Microsoft Windows Server OS)
3. In the working area, select the computer and click Details on the ribbon or right-click the computer and
select Details.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select the necessary protection group.
3. In the working area, select the computer and click Rescan on the ribbon or right-click the computer and
select Rescan.
To learn more about the Veeam Recovery Media, see the Veeam Recovery Media section in the Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows User Guide.
• A full backup file of one of the following backup types was created for the protected computer on the target
location by a Veeam Agent backup job:
o Volume-level backup of the computer OS data (created with the Operating system option selected in the
backup job settings) or computer system volume
o File-level backup of the computer OS data created with the Operating system option selected in the
backup job settings
NOTE:
By default, you cannot create a Veeam Recovery Media for a failover cluster with Cluster Shared Volumes
(CSV). You can enable creation of a Veeam Recovery Media for such clusters with a registry key. For more
information, contact Veeam Customer Support.
• The removable storage device must be inserted into a corresponding slot on the computer or connected to
the computer.
• The removable storage device must have enough capacity to store the created recovery image. On average,
the size of the created recovery image without manually loaded drivers is 500 MB.
• During the recovery image creation, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows formats the removable storage
device. If you have important information on the device, create a copy of this data in some other location.
CD/DVD/BD Scenario
• An empty or re-writable CD/DVD/BD must be inserted into a CD/DVD/BD drive on the computer.
• The CD/DVD/BD must have enough capacity to store the created recovery image. On average, the size of the
created recovery image without manually loaded drivers is 500 MB.
• [For RW CD/DVD/BD] During the recovery image creation, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows erases
information on the CD/DVD/BD. If you have important information on the CD/DVD/BD, create a copy of this
data in some other location.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select a protection group that contains
the necessary protected computer.
3. In the working area, select the computer and click Recovery Media on the ribbon or right-click the computer
and select Agent > Create recovery media.
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You can also launch the Create Recovery Media wizard from the Backups node in the Home view of the
Veeam backup console. To learn more, see Creating Recovery Media from Backup.
• Recovery image on a removable storage device. You can create a recovery image on a USB drive, SD card and
so on. Veeam Backup & Replication displays all removable storage devices currently attached to the backup
server. Select the necessary one in the list.
• Recovery image on an optical disk. You can create a recovery image on a CD, DVD or BD. Veeam Backup &
Replication displays all CD, DVD and BD drives available on the backup server. Select the necessary one in the
list.
• ISO file with the recovery image. You can create a recovery image in the ISO file format and save the resulting
file locally on the backup server.
NOTE:
When you create a recovery image from the Veeam backup console, you cannot specify additional recovery
media options in the same way as when you create a recovery image on the Veeam Agent computer. In this
scenario, the recovery image is created with default settings: Veeam Backup & Replication includes network
connection settings and hardware drivers installed on the Veeam Agent computer in the recovery image.
In the Specify folder to create recovery media image in field, specify a real path to the folder where you want to
save the created recovery image, and the ISO file name. When you create Veeam Recovery Media using the Veeam
Backup & Replication console, you can save the ISO file on the local drive of the Veeam backup server only. Thus,
the recovery image will always be available should Veeam Agent computer volumes get corrupted or the computer
fail to start.
Veeam Backup & Replication will collect data necessary for recovery image creation and write the resulting
recovery image to the specified target.
If you want to interrupt the process of recovery image creation, click Cancel or close the wizard window.
• The protected computer must be powered on and able to be connected over the network.
• The required version of Veeam Agent must be available on the distribution server.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select the necessary protection group.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Install Agent on the ribbon or right-click the
computer and select Agent > Install backup agent.
• The protected computer must be powered on and able to be connected over the network.
• The required version of Veeam Agent must be available on the distribution server.
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During the protected computers discovery process, Veeam Backup & Replication checks the version of Veeam
Agent running on a protected computer and the version of Veeam Agent available on the distribution server. If
a newer version of Veeam Agent becomes available on the distribution server, and automatic upgrade of
Veeam Agent is disabled for a protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication puts a computer to the Upgrade
required state.
In addition, Veeam Backup & Replication includes computers that require upgrade of Veeam Agent in the Out
of Date protection group. You can upgrade Veeam Agent on all computers that require upgrade at once. To
learn more, see Upgrading Veeam Agent on Multiple Computers.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select the necessary protection group.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Upgrade on the ribbon or right-click the
computer and select Agent > Upgrade.
2. In the inventory pane, in the Physical Infrastructure node, select the Out of Date protection group and click
Upgrade on the ribbon or right-click the Out of Date protection group and select Upgrade.
Before you install the Veeam CBT driver, check the following prerequisites:
• The protected computer on which you want to install the driver must run a Microsoft Windows Server OS.
• The protected computer on which you want to install the driver must be powered on and able to be
connected over the network.
IMPORTANT!
• Prior to installing the Veeam CBT driver on a computer running Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1,
make sure that update KB3033929 is installed in the OS.
The update adds SHA-2 code signing support for Microsoft Windows 7 and Microsoft Windows Server
2008 R2 that is required for verification of the Veeam CBT driver signature. Without this update
installed, the OS running on a protected computer will fail to boot after you install the Veeam CBT
driver. To learn more, see this Microsoft KB article.
• Do not install the Veeam CBT driver on a computer running Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1,
2012 or 2012 R2 if one or more volumes on this computer are encrypted with Microsoft BitLocker (or
other encryption tool), or if you plan to use Microsoft BitLocker to encrypt volumes on this computer.
Concurrent operation of Microsoft BitLocker and Veeam CBT driver may result in driver failures and may
prevent the OS from starting.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select a protection group that contains
the computer on which you want to install the driver.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Install Driver on the ribbon or right-click the
computer and select Agent > Install driver.
NOTE:
To enable the CBT driver after installation, you need to reboot the computer. To learn more, see Rebooting
Protected Computer.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select a protection group that contains
the computer on which you want to uninstall the driver.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Uninstall Driver on the ribbon or right-click the
computer and select Agent > Uninstall driver.
NOTE:
To complete the driver uninstallation process, you need to reboot the computer. To learn more, see Rebooting
Protected Computer.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select a protection group that contains
the computer that requires reboot. The computer that requires reboot is displayed in the Reboot required
status in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Reboot on the ribbon or right-click the
computer and select Agent > Reboot.
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You can also reboot a computer with a different status than the Reboot required status. To do this, press and
hold the [CTRL] key, right-click the necessary computer and select Agent > Reboot.
2. In the inventory pane, expand the Physical Infrastructure node and select the necessary protection group.
3. In the working area, select the necessary computer and click Uninstall All Components on the ribbon or
right-click the computer and select Agent > Uninstall all components.
NOTE:
• If automatic installation of Veeam Agent is enabled in the protection group settings, after you remove
Veeam Agent from a selected computer, Veeam Backup & Replication will install Veeam Agent on this
computer during the next rescan job session started by schedule.
• Prerequisite components installed and used by Veeam Agent are not removed during the uninstall
process. To remove the remaining components, use the Microsoft Windows Control Panel on the
computer from which you uninstalled Veeam Agent.
When you remove a computer from a protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication removes records about the
computer from the Veeam backup console and configuration database but does not uninstall Veeam Agent from the
computer. You can remove Veeam Agent from the computer in advance, before you remove the computer from the
protection group. To learn more, see Uninstalling Veeam Agent.
Alternatively, you can remove a computer from a protection group, and then uninstall Veeam Agent from this
computer. Note that in this case you will have to uninstall Veeam Agent using the Microsoft Windows control panel
directly on the Veeam Agent computer.
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You can also remove entire protection groups from the Veeam Backup & Replication inventory. When you
remove a protection group, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to uninstall Veeam Agents from all
protected computers included in this protection group. To learn more, see Removing Protection Group.
The process of removing a computer from a protection group differs depending on the type of the protection group
that contains the computer you want to remove.
• For a protection group that contains individual computers, edit the protection group and remove the
necessary computer at the Computers step of the Edit Protection Group wizard. To learn more, see Editing
Protection Group Settings.
You can also use this option to remove a computer from the Manually Added protection group. This
protection group contains computers that you add directly to a Veeam Agent backup job. To learn more, see
Removing Computer from "Manually Added" Protection Group.
• For a protection group that contains Active Directory objects, edit the protection group and remove the
necessary computer account at the Active Directory step of the Edit Protection Group wizard.
Alternatively, if the protection group contains a container, organization unit, group or entire domain, you can
exclude the computer at the Exclusions step of the wizard. To learn more, see Exclude Objects from
Protection Group.
• For a protection group that contains computers listed in a CSV file, remove the record about the necessary
computer from the CSV file. During subsequent rescan of the protection group, Veeam Backup & Replication
will remove the computer from the protection group.
Backups created for computers that were removed from a protection group remain intact in the backup location.
You can delete this backup data manually later if needed.
To remove a computer from the Manually Added protection group, you must edit this protection group and remove
the computer at the Computers step of the Edit Protection Group wizard. To learn more, see Editing Protection
Group Settings.
NOTE:
You cannot remove a computer from the Manually Added protection group if this computer is added to a
Veeam Agent backup job.
You can perform the following data restore tasks with Veeam Agent backups in Veeam Backup & Replication:
• Restore a Veeam Agent backup to a Hyper-V VM (for backups of Microsoft Windows machines only).
• Restore application items from a Veeam Agent backup with Veeam Explorers.
• Export a specific restore point in a Veeam Agent backup to a full backup (VBK) file.
• For a Microsoft Windows computer, you can create the Veeam Recovery Media with the Veeam backup
console. To learn more, see Creating Veeam Recovery Media.
• For a Linux computer, you can download the Veeam Recovery Media from the Veeam website or create a
custom Veeam Recovery Media. To learn more, see the Veeam Recovery Media section in the Veeam Agent
for Linux User Guide.
The process of data restore with the Veeam Recovery Media in the Veeam Agent management scenario does not
differ from the same process on a computer that runs Veeam Agent operating in the standalone mode.
• For information on data restore with the Veeam Recovery Media on a Microsoft Windows computer, see the
Restoring from Veeam Recovery Media section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows User Guide.
• For information on data restore with the Veeam Recovery Media on a Linux computer, see the Restoring from
Veeam Recovery Media section in the Veeam Agent for Linux User Guide.
The procedure of instant recovery for a Veeam Agent computer practically does not differ from the same procedure
for a VM. To learn more about instant VM recovery, see the Instant VM Recovery section in the Veeam Backup &
Replication User Guide.
The procedure of instant recovery for a Veeam Agent computer practically does not differ from the same procedure
for a VM. The main difference from instant VM recovery is that you do not need to select the recovery mode,
because Veeam Agent computers are always restored to a new location. To learn more about instant VM recovery,
see the Instant VM Recovery section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
The procedure of restore to Microsoft Azure from a Veeam Agent backup practically does not differ from the same
procedure for a VM backup. To learn more about restore to Microsoft Azure, see the Restore to Microsoft Azure
section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
The procedure of restore to Amazon EC2 from a Veeam Agent backup practically does not differ from the same
procedure for a VM backup. To learn more about restore to Amazon EC2, see the Restore to Amazon EC2 section in
the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
If data on a computer volume gets corrupted, you can restore this volume from the backup. For volume-level
restore, you can use backups that were created at the volume level. File-level backups cannot be used for volume
restore.
When you perform volume-level restore, Veeam Backup & Replication restores the entire content of the volume. It
retrieves from the backup data blocks pertaining to a specific volume and copies them to the necessary location.
Note that you cannot browse the volume in the backup and select individual application items, files and folders for
restore. For granular file-level restore, you can use the File-Level Restore option.
A volume can be restored to its original location or new location. If you restore the volume to its original location,
Veeam Backup & Replication overwrites data on the original volume. If you restore the volume to a new location,
and the target disk contains any data, Veeam Backup & Replication overwrites data in the target location with data
retrieved from the backup.
A volume can be restored to a new location that has greater or less space than the size of the volume in the backup.
Depending on the amount of free disk space on target location, you can select either to shrink or to extend the
volume during restore. To learn more, see the Volume Resize section in the Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows
User Guide.
• The volume-level backup from which you plan to restore data must be successfully created at least once.
• A computer on which you want to restore a volume must be added to the Veeam Backup & Replication
inventory and run Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows operating in the managed mode.
• You can restore volumes only from backups created with Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows.
• You cannot restore a system volume to a system volume of the original Veeam Agent computer or another
computer.
• You cannot restore a volume to a volume on which the Microsoft Windows swap file is hosted.
• Open the Home tab and click Restore > Agent > Volume restore > Volume restore. In this case, you will be
able to select a backup of the necessary Veeam Agent computer at the Backup step of the wizard.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click the Backups node. In the working area, expand the
necessary Veeam Agent backup, select the necessary computer in the backup and click Restore Volumes on
the ribbon or right-click the computer and select Volume restore.
In this case, you will pass immediately to the Restore Point step of the wizard.
To quickly find the necessary backup, use the search field at the bottom of the window: enter a backup name or a
part of it in the search field and click the Start search button on the right or press [ENTER].
In the list of backups, Veeam Backup & Replication displays only volume-level backups created with Veeam Agent
for Microsoft Windows. File-level backups and backup created with Veeam Agent for Linux are not displayed.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication uses the latest restore point. However, you can select any valid restore
point to recover volumes to a specific point in time.
Veeam Backup & Replication displays restore points for volume-level backups only. For example, if you have run 3
job sessions to create a backup of all computer volumes and then changed the backup scope to file-level backup,
Veeam Backup & Replication will display only 3 restore points in the list.
IMPORTANT!
It is strongly recommended that you change disk mapping settings only if you have experience in working with
Microsoft Windows disks and partitions. If you make a mistake, your computer data may get corrupted.
1. In the Destination hosts field, specify the target computer where you want to restore volumes. By default,
Veeam Backup & Replication restores volumes to their original location. If you want to restore volumes from
the backup to another computer, click Choose and select the necessary computer. You can restore volumes
only to computers that are added to the Veeam Backup & Replication inventory and run Veeam Agent for
Microsoft Windows.
2. In the Disk mapping section, select check boxes next to volumes that you want to restore from the backup.
By default, Veeam Backup & Replication restores volumes to their initial location and maps the restored
volumes automatically. If the initial location is unavailable, a volume is restored to a disk of the same or
larger size. If you want to map the restored volume to another computer disk, at the bottom of the wizard
click Customize disk mapping.
NOTE:
If Veeam Backup & Replication cannot map a volume automatically, Veeam Backup & Replication will
prompt you to perform disk mapping manually. To proceed to the Disk Mapping window, click Yes.
o Right-click the target disk on the left and select the necessary disk layout:
Apply Backup Layout — select this option if you want to apply to disk the settings that were
used on your computer at the moment when you performed backup.
Apply Disk Layout — select this option if you want to apply to the current disk settings of
another disk.
Erase — select this option if you want to discard the current disk settings.
4. [For restore with volume resize] You can resize a volume mapped by Veeam Backup & Replication to a target
computer disk. To resize a volume, right-click it in the Disk Mapping window and select Resize. With this
option selected, you will pass to the Volume Resize window.
NOTE:
If you map a backup volume that is larger than the amount of available space on the target disk, Veeam
Backup & Replication will prompt you to shrink the restored volume. After you agree and click OK, Veeam
Backup & Replication will prepare to shrink the volume to the size of available disk space.
NOTE:
By default, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows displays volume size in megabytes (MB). This allows you to
specify the desired size for the volume precisely. You can also choose to display volume size in gigabytes (GB).
This may be helpful when you need to resize volumes on larger computer disks and want to simplify disk size
calculations.
When you use GB as a volume size unit, you can specify volume size with integral numbers, for example, 1 GB,
60 GB or 200 GB, but not 0,8 GB, 60,5 GB or 200,7 GB. However, if the maximum volume size is in fact
greater than the displayed value for less than 1 GB, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will automatically
add the exceeding amount of disk space to the extended volume. For example, if the maximum volume size is
60,2 GB, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will display this size as 60 GB. When you specify 60 GB as a
desired volume size, Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows will extend the volume to 60,2 GB.
To resize a volume:
b. [For volume shrink] Right-click unallocated disk space and select what volume from the backup you want
to place on the computer disk. If the selected volume is larger than the amount of unallocated disk
space, Veeam Backup & Replication will prompt you to shrink the restored volume.
2. In the Volume Resize window, select the volume size unit and specify the desired size for the restored
volume.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Scan the restored disk for malware prior to
performing the recovery check box.
2. Select the Scan the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue volume scan after
the first malware threat is found. For information on how to view results of the antivirus scan, see the
Viewing Antivirus Scan Results section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
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If you do not want to display the Restore Reason step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this
page again check box.
2. Click Finish to start the recovery process. Veeam Backup & Replication will perform partition re-allocation
operations if necessary, restore the necessary volume data from the backup and overwrite volume data on
the target computer with the restored data.
• To restore files and folders from a backup of a Linux machine, you must have a VMware vSphere or Microsoft
Hyper-V virtualization host added to the Veeam backup infrastructure. When you start the file-level restore
procedure, Veeam Backup & Replication will use this host to deploy a helper appliance — a helper VM
required to mount Linux machine disks from the backup. To learn more about adding a virtualization server,
see Adding VMware vSphere Servers and Adding Microsoft Hyper-V Servers.
It is recommended that you add a vCenter Server and not a standalone ESXi host in the Veeam backup
console. If Veeam Backup & Replication is set up to deploy a helper appliance on a standalone ESXi host,
after Veeam Backup & Replication removes the helper appliance, the helper VM will be displayed in vCenter
as orphaned.
• Before you start file-level restore from a backup of a failover cluster, make sure that the cluster is added to a
protection group in the Veeam Backup & Replication inventory. The failover cluster may be not present in the
inventory, for example, in the following cases:
o The original protection group that contained the cluster was removed from Veeam Backup & Replication.
o You want to restore cluster data from a backup created on another backup server and imported in the
Veeam backup console.
In this case, add the failover cluster whose data you want to restore to a protection group.
• Microsoft Exchange
• Microsoft SharePoint
• Oracle
• Oracle
The procedure of application-item restore from a Veeam Agent backup does not differ from the same procedure for
a VM backup. To learn more, see the Restoring Application Items section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User
Guide.
During disks restore, Veeam Backup & Replication creates standard virtual disks that can be used by VMware
vSphere and Microsoft Hyper-V VMs.
• When you restore a disk in the VMDK format, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a pair of files that make up
the VM virtual disk: a descriptor file and file with the virtual disk content.
• When you restore a disk in the VHD/VHDX format, Veeam Backup & Replication creates a file of the VHD or
VHDX format.
You can save converted disks locally on any server added to the backup infrastructure or place disks on a datastore
connected to an ESXi host (for VMDK disk format only). VMDK disks can be restored as thin provision and thick
disks:
Veeam Backup & Replication supports batch disk restore. For example, if you choose to restore 2 computer disks,
Veeam Backup & Replication will convert them to 2 virtual disks and store these disks in the specified location.
To restore disks and convert them to the VMDK, VHD or VHDX format, use the Export Disk wizard.
• Open the Home tab and click Restore > Agent > Volume restore > Export disk. In this case, you will be able
to select a backup of the necessary Veeam Agent computer at the Backup step of the wizard.
• Open the Home view. In the inventory pane, click the Backups node. In the working area, expand the
necessary Veeam Agent backup, select the necessary computer in the backup and click Export Disks on the
ribbon or right-click a computer in the backup and select Export disk content as virtual disks.
In this case, you will pass immediately to the Restore Point step of the wizard.
1. From the Server list, select a server on which the resulting virtual disks must be saved. If you plan to save the
disks in the VMDK format on a datastore, select an ESXi host to which this datastore is connected.
2. In the Path to folder field, specify a folder on the server or datastore where the virtual disks must be placed.
o VMDK — select this option if you want to save the resulting virtual disk in the VMware VMDK format.
o VHD — select this option if you want to save resulting virtual disk in the Microsoft Hyper-V VHD format.
o VHDX — select this option if you want to save resulting virtual disk in the Microsoft Hyper-V VHDX
format (supported by Microsoft Windows Server 2012 and later).
NOTE:
If you have selected to store the resulting virtual disk to a datastore, you will be able to save the virtual disk in
the VMDK format only. Other options will be disabled.
At this step of the wizard, you can instruct Veeam Backup & Replication to perform secure restore — scan restored
disk data with antivirus software before restoring the disk. To learn more about secure restore, see the Secure
Restore section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
1. At the Secure Restore step of the wizard, select the Scan the restored disk for malware prior to
performing the recovery check box.
2. Select the Scan the entire image check box if you want the antivirus software to continue disk scan after the
first malware threat is found. For information on how to view results of the antivirus scan, see the Viewing
Antivirus Scan Results section in the Veeam Backup & Replication User Guide.
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If you do not want to display the Restore Reason step of the wizard in future, select the Do not show me this
page again check box.
2. Click Finish to start the restore procedure and exit the wizard.
Creating the Veeam Recovery Media for a computer in a backup does not differ from creating the Veeam Recovery
Media for a protected computer in the Veeam Backup & Replication inventory. To learn more, see Creating Veeam
Recovery Media.
3. In the working area, expand the Veeam Agent backup, select the necessary computer in the backup and click
Recovery Media on the ribbon or right-click the computer and select Create recovery media.
NOTE:
• You can use the Veeam Backup & Replication console to remove backups created by Veeam Agent
backup jobs on the Veeam backup repository. Backups created on a local drive of a protected computer
or in a network shared folder are not displayed in the Veeam backup console.
• The Remove from configuration operation is not available for backups created on the Veeam Cloud
Connect repository.
• The Remove from configuration operation is not available for backups of failover clusters.
You can remove an entire backup related to a Veeam Agent backup job or remove specific child backups — backups
related to individual computers in the backup.
o To remove the entire backup related to the Veeam Agent backup job or policy, select the backup and
click Remove from > Configuration on the ribbon or right-click the backup and select Remove from
configuration.
o To remove a backup of a specific computer in the Veeam Agent backup job or policy, expand the parent
backup, select the necessary computer and click Remove from > Configuration on the ribbon or right-
click the computer and select Remove from configuration.
NOTE:
You can use the Veeam Backup & Replication console to remove backups created by Veeam Agent backup jobs
on the Veeam backup repository. Backups created on a local drive of a protected computer or in a network
shared folder are not displayed in the Veeam Backup & Replication console.
You can remove an entire backup related to a Veeam Agent backup job or remove specific child backups — backups
related to individual computers in the backup.
o To remove the entire backup related to the Veeam Agent backup job or policy, select the backup and
click Remove from > Disk on the ribbon or right-click the backup and select Delete from disk.
o To remove a backup of a specific computer in the Veeam Agent backup job or policy, expand the parent
backup, select the necessary computer and click Remove from > Disk on the ribbon or right-click the
computer and select Delete from disk.
• Backup location
You can view summary information for the following types of Veeam Agent backups:
• Backup of a separate protected computer in the Veeam Agent backup job (child backup)
3. In the working area, select the backup and click Properties on the ribbon or right-click the backup and select
Properties.
3. In the working area, expand the parent backup, select the necessary child backup and click Properties on the
ribbon or right-click the child backup and select Properties.
In addition to overall rescan job statistics, the statistics window provides information on each protected computer
processed within the rescan job session. To view the processing progress for a specific computer, select it in the list
on the left.
You can also view statistics for any performed rescan job session. To view rescan job statistics, do one of the
following:
• Open the Inventory view. In the inventory pane, select the necessary protection group and click Statistics on
the ribbon or right-click the protection group and select Statistics.
• Open the History view. In the inventory pane, select the System node. In the working area, select the
necessary rescan job session and click Statistics on the ribbon or right-click the rescan job session and select
Statistics.
2. In the inventory pane, select the necessary protection group and click Report on the ribbon or right-click the
protection group and select Report.
• Cumulative session statistics: details of the session performance, including the number of protected
computers in the protection group and the number of newly discovered computers.
• Detailed statistics for every protected computer processed within the session: DNS name, IP address and
operating system of the protected computer, list of warnings and errors (if any).
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You can also set up Veeam Backup & Replication to send reports automatically by email. To learn more, see
Enabling Email Reporting.
3. In the working area, double-click the necessary Veeam Agent backup job. Alternatively, you can select the
necessary Veeam Agent backup job and click Statistics on the ribbon or right-click the job and select
Statistics.
3. In the working area, select the necessary job and click Report on the ribbon or right-click the job and select
Report.
• Cumulative session statistics: session duration details, details of the session performance, amount of read,
processed and transferred data, backup size, compression and deduplication ratios.
• Detailed statistics for every protected computer processed within the session: processing duration details,
backup data size, amount of read and transferred data, list of warnings and errors (if any).
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You can also set up Veeam Backup & Replication to send reports automatically by email. To learn more, see
Enabling Email Reporting.
• After you create a backup policy, Veeam Backup & Replication applies the backup policy to protected
computers. In the policy statistics window, Veeam Backup & Replication displays information about policy
application process and results. This information remains in the policy statistics window until the first Veeam
Agent backup job session is performed on computers included in the backup policy.
• After the Veeam Agent backup job session statistics becomes available in Veeam Backup & Replication, this
statistics appears in the policy statistics window. The job session statistics becomes available in Veeam
Backup & Replication at a different time depending on what target for backup files is selected in the backup
policy settings:
o If a Veeam Agent backup job whose settings are defined by the backup policy creates backup files on a
Veeam backup repository, backup job session statistics is available in Veeam Backup & Replication on
real-time basis.
o If a Veeam Agent backup job creates backup files on a local drive of a Veeam Agent computer, in a
network shared folder or in a Veeam Cloud Connect repository, backup job session results are not passed
to Veeam Backup & Replication in real time. Statistics for such backup sessions becomes available in
Veeam Backup & Replication later, after rescan of a protection group that contains computers added to
the backup policy. This process happens regularly upon the discovery schedule defined in the protection
group settings.
• Veeam Backup & Replication regularly applies the backup policy to protected computers. This operation is
performed during automatic rescan of a protection group that contains computers added to the backup
policy. If the application process completes with a warning or an error, Veeam Backup & Replication displays
information about the application process results in the policy statistics window. Information about
successful application of the backup policy is not displayed in the statistics window between two backup
sessions.
Veeam Backup & Replication displays statistics for backup policies in a different way than for Veeam Agent backup
jobs managed by the backup server. The main differences are the following:
• For backup policies, Veeam Backup & Replication does not display the job progress bar. You can monitor
backup progress only for individual machines in the backup policy.
• Detailed statistics include the number of Veeam Agent computers specified in the backup policy settings, the
number of computers to which settings of the backup policy are applied, and the number of computes that
have no connection to the backup server at the time when the Veeam Agent backup job is performed.
• You can use the Errors, Warnings and/or Success buttons at the bottom of the job statistics window to view
details on operations that failed, completed with a warning or completed successfully during a Veeam Agent
job session performance.
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In addition to backup policy statistics, Veeam Backup & Replication displays individual backup session
statistics for each computer in the backup policy. You can view these statistics in the Last 24 Hours node of
the Home view and in the History view of the Veeam backup console.
3. In the working area, double-click the necessary Veeam Agent backup policy. Alternatively, you can select the
necessary Veeam Agent backup policy and click Statistics on the ribbon or right-click the backup policy and
select Statistics.
3. In the working area, select the necessary backup policy and click Report on the ribbon or right-click the
backup policy and select Report.
• Cumulative session statistics: details on the number of protected computers specified in the backup policy
settings, the number of computers to which settings of the backup policy are applied, and the number of
disconnected computes, details of the session performance, amount of read, processed and transferred data.
• Detailed statistics for every protected computer processed within the session: processing duration details,
backup data size, amount of read and transferred data, list of warnings and errors (if any).
TIP:
You can also set up Veeam Backup & Replication to send reports automatically by email. To learn more, see
Enabling Email Reporting.
In addition, you can enable and configure custom notification settings for a specific protection group, Veeam Agent
backup job or backup policy. This may be useful if you want to change subject, notification rules or list of recipients
for some reports.
You can specify custom notification settings for a specific protection group. To learn more, see Notification
Settings.
You can specify custom notification settings for a specific Veeam Agent backup job. To learn more, see the
following sections:
• Notification Settings for Veeam Agent Backup Job (for Microsoft Windows computers)
• Notification Settings for Veeam Agent Backup Job (for Linux computers)
You can specify custom notification settings for a specific backup policy. To learn more, see the following sections:
• A Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows hotfix is an updated Veeam Agent setup archive that addresses a
certain issue in the product.
• A Veeam Agent for Linux hotfix is a set of updated Veeam Agent packages that addresses a certain issue in
the product.
• To mitigate an existing issue in the product. In this case, a hotfix is provided by Veeam Customer Support.
• [For Veeam Agent for Linux hotfix] To add support of a new Linux distribution version to the product. In this
case, a hotfix is available in the Veeam software repository.
If you have several Microsoft Windows and Linux computers with Veeam Agent installations managed by Veeam
Backup & Replication, you can centrally deploy a hotfix on all managed agents.
1. Check that protected computers are powered on and can be connected over the network.
2. Check that automatic Veeam Agent deployment options are enabled in the protection group settings:
c. In the inventory pane, select the protection group that contains computers with an outdated Veeam
Agent installed and click Edit Group on the ribbon or right-click the protection group that you want to
edit and select Properties.
a. If you plan to deploy a Veeam Agent for Microsoft Windows hotfix, you will need to place the hotfix to a
folder on the backup server.
b. If you plan to deploy a Veeam Agent for Linux hotfix, you will need to place the hotfix to a folder on the
distribution server specified for the protection group.
Each protection group can have a different distribution server, so you need to place the hotfix on the
distribution server of each protection group that contain Veeam Agent computers on which you need to
deploy a hotfix.
1. Obtain hotfix from Veeam Customer Support or download it from the Veeam software repository.
2. Save hotfix to one of the following locations depending on the type of OS that runs on a protected computer:
o If you deploy a hotfix for Microsoft Windows computers with Veeam Agent installations, save the Veeam
Agent setup archive to the following folder on the backup server:
c. In the inventory pane, select the necessary protection group and click Rescan on the ribbon or right-click
the protection group and select Rescan.