Automateand accelerate Active Directory recovery. Ransomware is today's most disruptive cyber threat, and Active Directory is increasingly in its crosshairs. QuestRecovery Manager for Active Directory Disaster Recovery Edition slashes AD forest recovery time from days or weeks to just hours, giving you peace of mind that an AD disaster will not become a business disaster.
Quest Professional Services ensure your Active Directory recovery plan is in place quickly and validates your forest recovery model. Whether your team lacks the technical expertise, does not have the manpower or just does not have time to configure, test and deploy your solution, our subject matter experts help you through this process using our tested implementation methodology.
These figures apply only if the Active Directory domains managed byRecovery Manager for Active Directory include 1 million objects orless. Increase RAM size by 512 MB for every additional 1 millionobjects.
NOTE Additional storage space is required for abackup repository, at least the size of the backed-up ActiveDirectorydatabase file (Ntds.dit) and the SYSVOL folder plus 40MB for thetransaction log files.
NOTE: Microsoft .NET 4.8 is not required to beinstalled on the systems where the Forest Recovery and Backup agentsare to be installed. The Secure Storage Agent does use .NET and it isrecommended to install 4.8 on the Secure Storage system, but the agentwill work with older versions.
If any prerequisite software is not installed, the Setup programautomatically installs it for you before installing Recovery Managerfor Active Directory. If the prerequisite software to be installedisnot included in this release package, it is automaticallydownloaded.
Continuous recovery: From version 10.0.1, Recovery Manager forActive Directory together with Change Auditor can restore thedeletedobject(s) and continuously restores the last change (if any) thatwasmade to the object attributes after creating the backup, using thedata from the Сhange Auditor database.
RecoveryManager Plus, the enterprise application backup and recovery component of AD360, can help you overcome any disaster caused by unwanted changes in your IT environment. Back up your AD, Azure Active Directory, Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, Exchange, and Zoho WorkDrive environments from a single console and restore any object, site, or mailbox whenever you need it.
Assign predefined technician roles such as admin, operator, or auditor to users, or create your own roles based on your specific needs, and give users the rights to perform specific functions in the product.
The rollback feature gives you the prowess to undelete an Active Directory object, negate any accidents and reinstate the Active Directory to the point of your choice and do all this without shutting down or restarting your domain controller.
A complete high availability and disaster recovery strategy requires dependable data backup, restore, and recovery procedures. Oracle Recovery Manager (RMAN) provides a comprehensive foundation for efficiently backing up and recovering the Oracle database. It is designed to work intimately with the server, providing block-level corruption detection during backup and restore. RMAN optimizes performance and space consumption during backup with file multiplexing and backup set compression, and integrates with Oracle Secure Backup, as well as third party media management products, for tape backup.
RMAN takes care of all underlying database procedures before and after backup or restore, freeing dependency on OS and SQL*Plus scripts. It provides a common interface, via command line and Enterprise Manager, for backup tasks across different host operating systems and offers features not available through user-managed methods, such as parallelization of backup/restore data streams, backup files retention policy, and detailed history of all backups.
RMAN is also used to facilitate migrations on-premises and to the Oracle Cloud. For complete details related to Oracle Cloud migration with RMAN visit the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure documentation for Migrations Databases to the Cloud.
The computer should boot from recovery partition to open you various recovery options. Note, that F11 option will only work if the recovery partition is there (not deleted) and intact. From there, you have prenty of options to choose from.
I see your warranty period has expired - you will need to replace the faulty HDD - buy it on your own. There are variety of options - vendors you can choose from - you need 2.5 inches SATA III. You can get it online or from PC retail store.
If you do not want to do this on your own, please bring the computer (or ship it) to HP Authorized Service Center where the technicians will do this for you. I guess it will be for a fee. If you are not sure where such a center is located, check these or contact HP for assistance in finding the nearest one for you:
IF your computer originally came with Windows preinstalled by HP (a.k.a. OEM Windows), then you need to use HP recovery media - DVDs or USB pen drive you have previously created or recovery media purchased from HP. Some general info >> -en/document/c00006110
I was trying to back-up my files before triggering the system restore. It asked me what types of files to back-up, then scanned the computer for these files and was finalizing the files for back-up; then suddenly an error message showed up saying something like "No storage device detected. Make sure the removable disc drive is connected to computer". But I have both a blank DVD sitting in the optical drive and a USB drive attached!!!!!!
I was expecting the system to ask me where to save these backed-up files but no such question was asked and this nonsense error message appeared out of nowhere. Apparently the recovery manager couldn't see my DVD or USB drive?
The HP Recovery Manager installed on my notebook may be somewhat diffeerent than the one you referred to since I coudln't find any "Advanced Options" button. What I am seeing is a three-column layout: on the left: Microsoft system rescue/system recovery/Minimized image recovery; in the middle: Run computer check-up; on the right column: File Backup.
The file backup option in my recovery manager runs the following three steps: 1) Creating backup files; 2) Finalizing the backup files; and 3) "Where do you want to save the backup files?" Note that it doesn't give me the option of choosing from the different destination device (USB, CD/DVD etc.) like you have mentioned, but showed the error message ("No device available for the backup, make sure the removable disk is connected") even before I can see the "where do you want to save the backup files" sign.
However, I do need to bug you more for additional superb guidance: Recall my original problem was start-up failure with a blue-screen and blinking cursor (F8 failed to bring up the safe-mode). After saving all my files, I tried to use the HP Recovery manager to reset the system. I tried both the factory restore and the minimized image recovery (thhe second and third option after the Microsoft restore). Both ran smoothly and were able finish, but after restarting the computer, I am still stuck with the same blue-screen with blinking cursor issue.
I may have to correct myself in the description of the issue. It could be a "black"screen, not a "blue"-screen, with a blinking cursor at the upper-left corner. The color wasn't really blue at all and another person would easily call it a black-screen.
I actually already ran the F10 diagnostics tests on the hard-disc and the memory right after the crash. The hard-disc test proceeded EXACTly like you have described and passed without detecting any errors. So was the memory test. However, this was done before I used the recovery manager's minimized image recovery option to reset the computer.
Thanks again for your wisdom, Cloud. The link you referred to sounds very similar to my problem, and I will definitely try the rescue route establishd by that thread. Will keep you posted of the result (I am currently out of town but will be back home in 2-days).
Forgot to include a critical intel in my earlier posting: before the final irreversible crash, there were some earlier crashes that resulted in error messages on the screen. I was too stupid to note that down but just tried to choose the easy way out for a quick restart. Before the last crash happened, the screen flashed some error message from my Norton anti-virus program, but I was again too lazy to take a note of it. Then catastrophe struck and this time no easy way out.......
Since the two HP recovery partition based reset options failed, should I buy the recovery disc from HP and try that route? I completely forgot to create my own recovery disc earlier s now have to order one. Do you think if that may still work?
I've encountered something very disturbing. AutoCAD 2018 crashed this morning. Upon restarting AC the drawing recovery manager presents itself. I review the file it has for me to determine which file it has on hand that may contain the most current graphics. The only files showing up were the original .dwg file and the .bak file. Understanding from experience that the most current file will be listed first among the files it has on hand to offer, which show up under the drawing file name. typically .sv$, .dwg, .bak.
As you wrote that SV$ was not created because it had not enough time to start autosave I would more expect that the drawing recovery manager might find a *recover.dwg file that get's (sometimes, not always) created after a crash. Because if that file can be repaired it is newer by default than the SV$ file.
Hey Alfred, thank you for the reply. I'm in agreement with your statement regarding the Drawing Recovery Manager (DRM) not being responsible for creating or not creating sv$ files, but only to report them if they exist.
all I know is that when i opened the .dwg file it was glaringly obvious the significant graphics lost. Disappointed in that I immediately went in search of the sv$ file and found it. Up to date graphics and all.
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