Disaster Recovery Procedure for Exchange 2000 or 2003
Details:
The Windows 2000 or 2003 server must be recovered first.
For more information, see the Disaster Recovery chapter in the Backup Exec
Administrator's Guide. If a hard copy of the Backup Exec Administrator's
Guide is unavailable, the complete manual in PDF format can found on the Backup
Exec CD at this location:
%CDROM Drive
Letter%:\WINNT\INSTALL\<languages\docs.
- Section
1 is the Administrator's Manual (beadmin.pdf).
- Section
2 is the Options Manual (addons.pdf).
- The
beadmin.pdf (Administrator's manual) for version 8.5 and 8.6 can be
downloaded from the Related Documents section
below.
Note: Make sure to restore all
of the Exchange 2000 and 2003 files that existed on all disk partitions.
After the Windows 2000 server disaster recovery procedure is complete
(after the last reboot), the Exchange 2000 or 2003
server can be
recovered. If Intelligent Disaster Recovery was purchased, see the Backup Exec
Intelligent Disaster Recovery Option for directions on using Intelligent
Disaster Recovery to recover the Exchange Server. The following procedures
describe the manual recovery process.
Note: The Service Pack
that was applied to the installation of Microsoft Exchange during the backup
will need to match the Service Pack that is currently installed on the Microsoft
Exchange application when you attempt to restore the information
store.
To perform disaster recover for an Exchange 2000 or 2003
Server:
Note: Transaction logs that are present on the system
before the databases are restored may interfere with the recovery process and
prevent the database from being mounted after the
recovery.
1. If the transaction logs were not excluded from the file system
backups, then these must be removed from the Exchange server before continuing
with the recovery. Delete all log files (*LOG) from the transaction log
directories that were configured on the server being recovered.
For
example, to delete the transaction log directories installed at the default
location, type the following:
C:\Program
Files\Exchsrvr\mdbdata>del *.log
NOTE - If the Exchange
2000 or 2003 sever was configured with additional storage groups, delete the log
files from the other transaction log directories as well.
2. From the Services console, verify the Microsoft
Exchange Information Store Service is started
3. To configure
the mailbox stores and public stores to be overwritten, follow the steps
below:
a.
Open the Exchange System Manager and connect to the Exchange 2000
server
b.
Expand Servers, expand the server
name, and then expand First Storage Group
c.
Right-click on the mailbox store to be restored, click on Dismount Store
(Figure 1)
d.
Right-click the mailbox store and select Properties (Figure
2)
e.
Select the Database tab
f.
Select the option This database can be overwritten by a restore (Figure
2) and click OK
g.
Repeat steps c to f for additional mailbox stores and the public
store
Figure
1
Figure
2
Figure
3
4. Start Backup Exec
5. Catalog the media that
contains the latest Full, Incremental, and Differential backups of the Microsoft
Exchange 2000 or 2003 storage groups that are to be recovered
6. Select
the latest full backups of the storage groups for restore
Note: If the Exchange
2000 server being recovered contains the Site Replication Service (SRS) or Key
Management Service (KMS), then select those databases for restore as
well.
7. Select all subsequent incremental storage group
backups. If differential backups are to be restored, only the most recent
differential storage group backups need to be selected.
8. Click the
Exchange tab, and clear the
No Loss Restore selection (Figure
3)
Figure
4
Explanation of No Loss
Restore: (Do not delete existing log files): When the No loss Restore
option is selected, the existing transaction logs on the Exchange 2000 server
are preserved. Transaction logs from the storage media are then restored and
added to the existing set of transaction logs on the Exchange 2000 server. When
the restore operation finishes, Exchange 2000 automatically updates its
databases with the uncommitted transactions found in the existing and
newly-restored transaction logs. This option is selected by default. If No
Loss Restore is cleared, only the restored log files will be applied to the
database.
Caution: If restoring
individual databases into a storage group, the No loss Restore option
should be selected. If this option is not selected, log files for the entire
storage group will be deleted.
9. Enter a location where the associated log and patch
files are to be kept until the database is restored in the field Temporary
location for log and patch files (Figure 4). After the database is restored,
the log and patch files in the temporary location are applied to the database.
After the restore is complete, the log and patch files are automatically deleted
from the temporary location (including any sub-directories).
Note: Make sure the
temporary location for log and patch files is empty before starting a restore
job. If a restore job fails, check the temporary location (including any
sub-directories) to make sure any previous log and patch files from a previous
restore job were
deleted.
Figure
5
10.
If the selection contains the last backup set to be restored, select
Commit
after restore completes (Figure 5).
Do not select this option if
backup sets still exist to restore. If the option
Commit after restore
completes is selected when an intermediate backup is being applied, the job
cannot continue to restore backups and it must restart the restore operation
from the beginning.
Figure
6
11. If the database is to be immediately available to users after the
recovery, select
Mount database after restore (Figure 6).
This
option is only available if
Commit after restore completes is
selected.
Figure
7
12. Click
OK, then click
Run Now. The recovery procedure is
complete.
13. After completing the restore, it is recommended that a full
backup of the restored databases be performed.
Products Applied:
Backup Exec for Windows Servers 10.0, 10.0 5484, 10d (10.1), 10d (10.1) 5629, 11d (11.0), 11d (11.0) 6235, 11d (11.0) 7170, 11d (11.0) 7170 SP2, 9.1, 9.1 4691
Subjects:
Backup Exec for Windows Servers
Operating System: Restore
Languages:
English (US)
Operating Systems:
Windows 2000Advanced Server, Server
Windows Server 2003
Enterprise Server, Standard Server