Acronis K/Backup & Recovery 10 Srv+5 Workst/DE KIT33100124739 Benutzerhandbuch
Produktcode
KIT33100124739
76
Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2009
Post-recovery command
To specify a command/executable file to be executed after the recovery is completed
1. In the Command field, type a command or browse to a batch file.
2. In the Working directory field, specify a path to a directory where the command/batch file will be
executed.
3. In the Arguments field, specify the command execution arguments, if required.
4. If successful execution of the command is critical for you, select the Fail the task if the command
execution fails check box. In case the command execution fails, the task run result will be set to
Failed.
When the check box is not selected, the command execution result does not affect the task
execution failure or success. You can track the command execution result by exploring the log or
the errors and warnings displayed on the Dashboard.
Failed.
When the check box is not selected, the command execution result does not affect the task
execution failure or success. You can track the command execution result by exploring the log or
the errors and warnings displayed on the Dashboard.
5. Click Test command to check if the command is correct.
Keep in mind that the path to the batch file and the working directory you specify must exist and be accessible
from the managed machine after the recovery is completed.
from the managed machine after the recovery is completed.
3.3.2.2.
Recovery priority
This option is effective for both Windows and Linux operating systems.
This option is not available when operating under the bootable media.
The priority of a process running in a system determines the amount of CPU and system resources
allocated to that process. Decreasing the recovery priority will free more resources for other
applications. Increasing the recovery priority might speed up the recovery process by requesting the
operating system to allocate more resources to the application that will perform the recovery.
However, the resulting effect will depend on the overall CPU usage and other factors like disk I/O
speed or network traffic.
allocated to that process. Decreasing the recovery priority will free more resources for other
applications. Increasing the recovery priority might speed up the recovery process by requesting the
operating system to allocate more resources to the application that will perform the recovery.
However, the resulting effect will depend on the overall CPU usage and other factors like disk I/O
speed or network traffic.
The preset is: Normal.
To specify the recovery process priority
Select one of the following:
•
Low – to minimize resources taken by the recovery process, leaving more resources to other
processes running on the machine
processes running on the machine
•
Normal – to run the recovery process with normal speed, allocating resources on a par with other
processes
processes
•
High – to maximize the recovery process speed by taking resources from the other processes.
3.3.2.3.
File-level security
This option is effective only for recovery from file-level backup of Windows files.
This option defines whether to recover NTFS permissions for files along with the files.