This is the fundamental  concept, we backup in a certain was so that if
there is a data failure we can restore. If you need to restore a system
to a particular date,and you use incremental backups The first part of
the restoration is to get the backup file that we first complete as it
contains every file. The next setup is to get hold of the incremental
backup of the point in times the original full backup files were taken
and when it is run it will over-right all files from base line full
functionality to current required date.

The expression "we backup so that we CAN restore" is covered more
precisely in data security.  The expression is based upon the issue if
you are not correctly backing up you you can Never recover and hence the
money you put into back is useless. The expression is timeless and
covered in detail in data centre which have to be able to loose all data
and then restore to a designated point in time.
Scott
:-)
Carlos E. R. wrote:
>
> The Wednesday 2007-05-16 at 08:36 +1000, Registration Account wrote:
>
> > You only back or-order to restore - How do you fully restore and
> > incremental backup if you loose the first file?
> > Scott
>
> Sorry, I don't understand what you say :-?
>
> What is "back or-order to restore"?
>
>

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