This is an archive version of the document. To get the most up-to-date information, see the current version.

Step 6. Finalize Restore

After the wizard is closed, Veeam Backup & Replication opens the Veeam Backup browser with the file system tree of the restored VM. Note that names of the restored VM hard disks may differ from the original ones.

You can perform the following operations in the Veeam Backup browser:

After you finish restoring files, close the Veeam Backup browser.

Restoring Files to Original Location

To restore a file or folder to its original location, in the Veeam Backup browser right-click the file or folder and select one of the following commands:

Veeam Backup & Replication will add the RESTORED- prefix to the original file name and store the restored file in the same folder where the original file resides.

If the file with the RESTORED- prefix already exists in the original location, Veeam Backup & Replication will name the restored file in the following format: RESTORED-<filename>__YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS.

Step 6. Finalize RestoreImportant!

Restore to the original location may fail for the following reasons:

  • VMware Tools are not installed on the target VM.
  • Application-aware processing is not supported for the Microsoft Windows OS of the original VM.

To restore guest OS files in such situation, you can use 1-click file-level restore or copy files to the selected folder and then move them to their original location.

Step 6. Finalize Restore 

Saving Files to a New Location

To save restored files or folders on the local machine or in a network shared folder:

  1. Right-click the necessary file or folder in the file system tree or in the details pane on the right and select Copy To.
  2. Choose to preserve their original NTFS permissions or not:
  1. If prompted, in the Credentials window specify settings of the user account to access the destination location.

Step 6. Finalize Restore 

Launching Veeam Explorers

If you are restoring VM guest OS files of the virtualized Microsoft Active Directory Server, Microsoft Exchange Server, Microsoft SharePoint Server, Microsoft SQL Server or Oracle, you can launch a Veeam Explorer for the necessary application directly from the Veeam Backup browser.

To launch a Veeam Explorer, do the following:

  1. On the Home tab, click Application Items.
  2. Select the required application:
  1. In the opened Veeam Explorer, perform the necessary operations. For more information on Veem Explorers, see the Veeam Explorers User Guide.

Step 6. Finalize Restore 

Working with Microsoft Windows File Explorer

You can use Microsoft Windows File Explorer to work with restored files and folders. To use Microsoft Windows File Explorer, do the following:

  1. On the ribbon of the Veeam Backup browser, click Mount to Console to mount the VM disks to the Veeam Backup & Replication console.

The VM disks are mounted to the C:\VeeamFLR\<vmname>\<volume n> folder.

  1. To open Microsoft Windows File Explorer, do the following:

It is recommended that you use Microsoft Windows File Explorer only to view file content, not to restore files. For the file-level restore, use Veeam Backup browser. This browser has the following advantages:

  1. You can browse the VM guest OS file system ignoring the file system ACL settings.
  2. You can preserve permissions and ownership during file-level restore.

If you open the VM file system in the Microsoft Windows Explorer, these capabilities are not available. For more information, see Microsoft Docs.

Closing Veeam Backup Browser

You can browse to VM guest OS files only while the Veeam Backup browser is open. After the Veeam Backup browser is closed, Veeam Backup & Replication unmounts VM disks from the machine where the Veeam Backup & Replication console is installed and mount server (if you have restored VM guest OS files to the original location).

It is recommended that you close the Veeam Backup browser after you have finished restoring VM guest OS files. When the Veeam Backup browser is open, the backup file whose VM guest OS file system is displayed in the browser is locked in the backup repository. As a result, some scheduled operations that use this backup file may fail.

Veeam Backup & Replication checks if there is any activity in the Veeam Backup browser with an interval of 5 minutes. If the user or Veeam Backup & Replication components and services do not perform any actions for 30 minutes, Veeam Backup & Replication displays a warning that the Veeam Backup browser is to be closed in 5 minutes.

After the warning is displayed, you can perform one of the following actions: