When disks on a server are faulty or their data is lost, you can use a backup to restore the server to its state when the backup was created.
The current server data will be overwritten by the data captured at the time of backup. The restoration cannot be undone.
Servers will be shut down during restoration, so you are advised to perform a restoration during off-peak hours.
If the number of disks to be restored is greater than the number of disks that were backed up, restoration may cause data inconsistency.
For example, if the Oracle data is scattered across multiple disks and only some of them are restored, data inconsistency may occur and the application may fail to start.
You can view the restoration status in the backup list. When the backup enters the Available state and no new restoration tasks failed, the restoration is successful. The resource is restored to the state when that backup was created.
For details about how to view failed restoration tasks, see Managing Tasks.
If you use a cloud server backup to restore a logical volume group, you need to attach the logical volume group again.
Due to Window limitations, data disks may fail to be displayed after a Windows server is restored. If this happens, manually bring these data disks online. For details, see Data Disks Are Not Displayed After a Windows Server Is Restored.