NTbackup
This page is from Microsoft
Updated: January 21, 2005
Perform backup operations at a command prompt or from a batch
file using the ntbackup command followed by various
parameters.
Syntax
ntbackup backup [systemstate]"@FileName.bks" /J{"JobName"}
[/P {"PoolName"}] [/G {"GUIDName"}]
[/T { "TapeName"}] [/N {"MediaName"}]
[/F {"FileName"}] [/D {"SetDescription"}]
[/DS {"ServerName"}] [/IS {"ServerName"}]
[/A] [/V:{yes | no}] [/R:{yes
| no}] [/L:{f | s | n}] [/M
{BackupType}] [/RS:{yes | no}] [/HC:{on
| off}]
Parameters
systemstate
Specifies that you want to back up the System State
data. When you select this option, the backup type
will be forced to normal or copy.
@FileName.bks
Specifies the name of the backup selection file (.bks
file) to be used for this backup operation. The at
(@) character must precede the name of the backup
selection file. A backup selection file contains
information on the files and folders you have
selected for backup. You have to create the file
using the graphical user interface (GUI) version of
Backup.
/J {"JobName"}
Specifies the job name to be used in the backup
report. The job name usually describes the files and
folders you are backing up in the current backup
job.
/P {"PoolName"}
Specifies the media pool from which you want to use
media. This is usually a subpool of the Backup media
pool, such as 4mm DDS. If you select this you cannot
use the /A, /G, /F, or /T
command-line options.
/G {"GUIDName"}
Overwrites or appends to this tape. Do not use this
switch in conjunction with /P.
/T {"TapeName"}
Overwrites or appends to this tape. Do not use this
switch in conjunction with /P.
/N {"MediaName"}
Specifies the new tape name. You must not use /A
with this switch.
/F {"FileName"}
Logical disk path and file name. You must not use
the following switches with this switch: /P /G /T.
/D {"SetDescription"}
Specifies a label for each backup set.
/DS {"ServerName"}
Backs up the directory service file for the
specified Microsoft Exchange Server.
/IS {"ServerName"}
Backs up the Information Store file for the
specified Microsoft Exchange Server.
/A
Performs an append operation. Either /G or
/T must be used in conjunction with this switch.
Do not use this switch in conjunction with /P.
/V:{yes | no}
Checks for disk errors that might have occurred when
files were being copied to a tape. This could
substantially increase the time it takes to perform
a backup.
/R:{yes | no}
Restricts access to this tape to the owner or
members of the Administrators group.
/L:{f | s | n}
Specifies the type of log file: f=full, s=summary,
n=none (no log file is created).
/M {BackupType}
Specifies the backup type. It must be one of the
following: normal, copy, differential, incremental,
or daily.
/RS:{yes | no}
Backs up the migrated data files located in Remote
Storage. The /RS command-line option is not
required to back up the local Removable Storage
database (that contains the Remote Storage
placeholder files). When you backup the %systemroot%
folder, Backup automatically backs up the Removable
Storage database as well.
/HC:{on | off}
Uses hardware compression, if available, on the tape
drive.
/M {BackupType}
Specifies the backup type. It must be one of the
following: normal, copy, differential, incremental,
or daily.
/?
Displays help at the command prompt.
Remarks
- You cannot restore files from the command line using the
ntbackup command.
- The following command-line options default to what you have
already set using the graphical user interface (GUI) version of
Backup unless they are changed by a command-line option: /V
/R /L /M /RS /HC. For example, if hardware compression is
turned on in the Options dialog box in Backup, it will be
used if /HC is not specified on the command line.
However, if you specify /HC:off at the command line, it
overrides the Option dialog box setting and compression
is not used.
- If you have Windows Media Services running on your computer,
and you want to back up the files associated with these
services, see "Running Backup with Windows Media Services" in
the Windows Media Services online documentation. You must follow
the procedures outlined in the Windows Media Services online
documentation before you can back up or restore files associated
with Windows Media Services.
- You can only back up the System State data on a local
computer. You cannot back up the System State data on a remote
computer
- If you are using Removable Storage to manage media, or you
are using the Remote Storage to store data, then you should
regularly back up the files that are in the following folders:
Systemroot\System32\Ntmsdata
Systemroot\System32\Remotestorage
This ensures that all Removable Storage and Remote Storage
data can be restored.
Examples
Following are four examples of how you can use the ntbackup
command.
To perform a normal backup
The following example performs a normal backup named "My Job 1"
of the remote share \\iggy-multi\c$. This example pulls a tape
from the Backup media pool, and name the tape "Command Line
Backup 1." The description of the backup job is "Command Line
Functionality." The backup is verified after the backup job is
complete, access is not restricted to the owner/administrator,
the logging level is set to summary only, Remote Storage data is
not backed up, and hardware compression is enabled.
ntbackup backup \\iggy-multi\c$ /m normal /j "My Job 1" /p
"Backup" /n "Command Line Backup 1" /d "Command Line
Functionality" /v:yes /r:no /l:s /rs:no /hc:on
To perform a copy backup
The following example performs a copy backup named "My Job 2" of
the local drive D:\. The backed up files and folders are
appended to the tape named "Command Line Backup 1." All other
options default to those specified in the Backup program.
ntbackup backup d:\ /j "My Job 2" /a /t "Command Line
Backup 1" /m copy
To perform a backup using the backup type specified in Backup
The following example performs a backup using the backup type
that is specified in the Backup program. It uses the backup
selection file named Commandline.bks, located in the C:\Program
Files\Windows NT\ntbackup\data\ directory to choose which files
to backup. The backup job is named "My Job 3" and it overwrites
the tape named "Command Line Backup 1" with the new name
"Command Line Backup 2."
ntbackup backup
"@C:\Program Files\Windows NT\ ntbackup\data\commandline.bks" /j
"My Job 3" /t "Command Line Backup 1" /n "Command Line Backup 2"
To perform a backup to a file from the command line
The following examples show how to perform a backup to a file
from the command line. All three examples use the Backup
program's default values for the backup type, verification
setting, logging level, hardware compression, and any other
restrictions. The first example shows how to backup
\\iggy-multi\d$ to the file D:\Backup.bkf. The second example
shows how to append the same backup to the same file. The third
example shows how to overwrite the file with the same backup. In
all three examples a complete UNC name could be substituted for
the drive letter (that is, instead of d:\backup.bkf, the user
could specify \\iggy-multi\d$\backup.bkf as the backup
destination).
ntbackup backup \\iggy-multi\d$ /j "Command
Line Backup 4" /f "D:\backup.bkf"
ntbackup backup \\iggy-multi\d$ /j "Command Line Backup 5"
/f "D:\backup.bkf" /a
ntbackup backup \\iggy-multi\d$ /j "Command Line Backup 6"
/f "D:\backup.bkf"
Formatting legend
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Parameter that can be repeated several times in a
command line |
Between brackets ([]) |
Optional items |
Between braces ({}); choices separated by pipe (|).
Example: {even|odd} |
Set of choices from which the user must choose only
one |
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