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What is data restore?

Data restore is the process of copying backup data from secondary storage and restoring it to its original location or a new location. A restore is performed to return data that has been lost, stolen or damaged to its original condition or to move data to a new location.

Several circumstances lead to the need for a data restore. One is human error, where data is accidentally deleted or damaged. Other circumstances include malicious attacks where data is exposed, stolen or infected; power outages; human-made or natural disasters; equipment theft, malfunctions or failures; or firmware corruption.

Data restore makes a usable copy of the data available to replace lost or damaged data and ensures the data backup is consistent with the state of the data at a specific point in time before the damage occurred.

Types of data loss and hardware damage

Data restore operations are almost always initiated in response to a data loss event. Such events, however, vary in scope. There are any number of circumstances that can lead to data loss, including the following:

The best way for an organization to avoid losing data as a result of these types of events and to ensure business continuity is to create a comprehensive backup strategy that's designed to create backup copies of its data. Backups can be written to a backup device residing on premises, to cloud storage, to tape drives or even to an external drive. Regardless of the medium, it's important to ensure data is being backed up. After all, initiating a restore operation is impossible if there's no backup data to restore.

Preparing for a data restore

Data restoration is part of the overall data management process and is contingent on having a system in place to produce a good copy of the data being protected by traditional backup, snapshots or continuous data protection (CDP). Without a reliable protection copy, there's nothing usable to restore.

Typical data backup arrangement.

Both local and off-site backups can be used in a data backup strategy.

When preparing for data restoration, an organization should consider the following points:

Methods of restoring data

Where backup data is stored affects the ease with which it can be restored. Some common backup locations include the following:

Data restore techniques

The approach used to restore data depends on what information was lost or damaged, how much data was affected, how the incident happened, the software used to create the data backup, the backup target media and other factors. Some backup software lets users restore lost files themselves. Data recovery software and services can retrieve accidentally deleted files that aren't backed up from the hard drive.

More complicated data loss or damage requires IT to restore backup files from disk, tape or other backup media using various techniques, including the following:

Mobile backup and restore

Backing up and restoring mobile data from smartphones, tablets and laptops poses specific challenges. Traditional backup software often assumes that devices being backed up have a permanent location, a consistently good connection to the corporate network and adequate bandwidth. But mobile devices frequently don't have access to these capabilities.

Enterprise file sync and share (EFSS) services protect data on mobile devices by copying files to the cloud or on-premises storage. EFSS lets users access these files on other desktop and mobile devices, but it's not a true backup and doesn't allow for the rollback of data to a particular point in time should the device fail, if the device is lost or stolen, or if data on it is damaged or destroyed.

Most Android devices and all Apple iOS devices have native, image-based backup, but that leaves the responsibility for backing up these devices with users. An endpoint backup product that supports mobile devices and incorporates file sync and sharing is one way to handle this. As with all enterprise data backup and data restore procedures, the key to smooth data restoration on mobile devices is to have a consistent, tested backup process and data recovery tools in place so that data can be restored quickly and easily when necessary.

Typical scenarios where mobile backups can be helpful include the following:

Data restore vendors and products

Numerous backup vendors offer products for backing up and restoring an organization's data. These products vary widely in terms of price, scope and capabilities. Examples of the available products include the following:

Preparation is vital to prevent data loss and resume operations quickly and efficiently after a natural disaster. Learn how to perform critical backups and prevent data loss.

This was last updated in August 2023

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