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With Rapid Recovery 6.1.1.137 Can I back up folders, instead of entire drives?

 I know with Appassure only entire drives could be backed up. Has that changed? I have drives that I do not need to back up in their entirety. I am now running Rapid Recovery 6.1.1.137. I cannot find an answer for this in the knowledge base.

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  • Hi chris.rodgers:
    Emte makes a good point re backup of SQL servers under heavy load.

    However, the msdn KB he mentions is not really helpful in your case as it only allows excluding files from VSS quescing. However, the blocks pertaining to those files that were marked as changed will continue to be subjected to back up attempts. The approach in the KB works when you create persistent VSS snapshots (without a backup application).

    Rapid Recovery backs up complete volumes only so, if you have specific sets of data that need to be backed up separately, you need to set them up on separate volumes. You can mount these volumes as injunction points so they are presented as folders in the Windows GUI and, as such you do not need to assign drive letters, which if enabled, may complicate excessively your setup.

    This approach works best on virtual machines as increasing a volume size on an as needed basis may be easier than in a physical environment.
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  • Hi chris.rodgers:
    Emte makes a good point re backup of SQL servers under heavy load.

    However, the msdn KB he mentions is not really helpful in your case as it only allows excluding files from VSS quescing. However, the blocks pertaining to those files that were marked as changed will continue to be subjected to back up attempts. The approach in the KB works when you create persistent VSS snapshots (without a backup application).

    Rapid Recovery backs up complete volumes only so, if you have specific sets of data that need to be backed up separately, you need to set them up on separate volumes. You can mount these volumes as injunction points so they are presented as folders in the Windows GUI and, as such you do not need to assign drive letters, which if enabled, may complicate excessively your setup.

    This approach works best on virtual machines as increasing a volume size on an as needed basis may be easier than in a physical environment.
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