Acronis true image echo マニュアル

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127                                                                                 Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2009 
 
Chapter 13.  Working with a virtual 
environment 
Virtual machine technologies provide a powerful tool to help accelerate the development, 
testing, deployment and support of PC applications.  
As with physical machines, virtual machine (VM) data needs to be backed up periodically 
to prevent its loss due to hardware failure or human errors. Since more and more 
organizations choose running their business processes in a virtual environment, they need 
a solution to perform the data backup and restore on virtual machines. This chapter 
covers how Acronis True Image Echo Workstation can be used in virtual and 
heterogeneous environments.  
13.1  Backing up data on virtual machines 
virtual machine is an emulated computer running within a host operating system. The 
software that emulates the computer is called the virtualization software. The most 
popular types of virtualization software are VMware Server and VMware Workstation, 
Microsoft Virtual Server and Microsoft Virtual PC, Citrix XenServer and Parallels 
Workstation.  
Generally, a virtual machine can be treated: 
1. As a physical computer (when it is online). Most Acronis True Image Echo Workstation 
features and settings are applicable to a VM. The backup procedure is almost the same 
(see details in 
).  
2. As a set of files that change in line with the VM state. The files represent the VM 
configuration, storage, memory or other parameters. The files can be backed up with 
both imaging and file-level backup.  
However, backing up the running VM files can prevent us from restoring the virtual 
system to a consistent point-in-time state. The issue is somewhat like backing up a 
database. (The classic example is the Active Directory database, which seldom can be 
recovered to a usable state.) Therefore, integration with dedicated tools available from 
VM vendors is advisable.  
With the current version of Acronis True Image Echo Workstation, it is advisable that you 
treat online virtual computers that need to be backed up, as physical machines.  
Stop or suspend the virtual machine if you plan to back up the virtual machine files. Since 
the virtual disk file changes from session to session and therefore will be always included 
in the backup, incremental or differential backups are not appropriate in this case. An 
incremental backup size will be almost equal to a full backup size. 
13.2  Recovering data on virtual machines 
A virtual disk can be restored from its image (.tib file), previously created with Acronis 
True Image Echo Workstation just as physical disk can be recovered.  
If the virtual machine cannot start, boot it into Acronis rescue environment using physical 
bootable media or RIS server, or by adding the bootable media ISO to the virtual 
machine. Another option is to create a new virtual machine with same configuration and 
disk size as the imaged machine and recover data to this disk.