Ransomware attackers specifically target and attempt to destroy backup systems to increase the probability of payment. Hardening your system is critical. Please ensure you have reviewed your platform security using the Security Hardening Checklist
Cohesity

COHESITY Documentation

Explore our documentation to get started, discover products & new features, access troubleshooting guides, register sources, platforms support.

Products
Data Security Alliance
Visit Cohesity.com
Demos
Support
Blogs
Developers
Partner Portals
Cohesity Community
© 2026 Cohesity, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use|
Privacy Policy|
Legal|
  1. Home
  2. Veritas NetBackup™ for Microsoft Exchange Server Administrator's Guide
  3. Performing restores of Exchange Server, mailboxes, and public folders
  4. About restoring Exchange database data
Veritas NetBackup™ for Microsoft Exchange Server Administrator's Guide

About restoring Exchange database data

Review the following information before you perform restores of Exchange Server:

  • The NetBackup for Exchange Agent supports a restore to the same Microsoft service pack (SP) or cumulative update (CU) on which the backup was originally created. Microsoft sometimes introduces database schema changes in SPs or CUs. If you restore to a different SP or CU level, the database server may not operate correctly.

  • When an administrator restores individual databases or transaction logs, the administrator should have a thorough working knowledge of Exchange Server databases, transaction logs, and utilities. If the correct files are not restored, the database(s) may fail to mount.

  • You must dismount databases before you restore them.

  • To restore full and incremental backups, you can restore backups in one of the following ways:

    • Restore all the backups in a single operation.

      The backup images must be of the same type. For example, you must restore full snapshot and a full VMware backups in separate restore jobs. You can, however, restore a full VMware backup and a differential snapshot in a single restore job.

      When you restore all the backups in a single operation, NetBackup performs a commit after the last incremental is restored.

    • Restore the full backups and incremental backups individually.

      When you restore the backups individually, deselect Commit after last backup set is restored for the full backup and all but the last incremental backup set. Select the following options when you restore the last incremental backup set: Commit after last backup set is restored and Mount database after restore.

  • If a restore job fails, check the temporary location (including subdirectories) to make sure log files from a previous restore job are deleted.

    NetBackup copies logs to the Exchange working directory. After the database is restored, Exchange applies the log files from the temporary location to the database, and then it applies the current log files. After the recovery is complete, Exchange deletes the log files from the temporary location.

  • A restore of Exchange Server files always overwrites existing files. (For example, if Pub.edb already exists on the target server, it is replaced with the copy from the backup.)

  • Review the information for existing transaction logs.

More Information

About existing Exchange Server transaction logs

Feedback

Was this page helpful?
Previous

About selecting a destination client for an Exchange restore operation

Next

About existing Exchange Server transaction logs

Feedback

Was this page helpful?