Backing up a view
The contents of views, unlike that of VOBs, can usually be reconstructed easily. With the exception of changes to checked-out versions and other view-private files, the contents of any view can be recovered by re-creating the view. Regular backups of views can still be important, especially if users are not in the habit of checking in their work regularly.
About this task
Backing up a view is similar to backing up a VOB, but
simpler:
- Views do not have multiple storage pools. A dynamic view has a single private storage area, its .s subdirectory. Unless the view storage is on a host running Linux or the UNIX system, where it may be implemented as a symbolic link to a remote host, or on a NAS device, this directory must be local to the host where the view server runs. Element versions loaded into a snapshot or Web view reside in a single directory and its subdirectories (there is no .s directory).
- Do not make partial backups of a view storage directory or snapshot view directory. All the data in these directories is important, especially modified checked-out files and other view-private files, which are not recorded in the VOB.
Attention: Any utility you use to back up a view
storage directory must be able to back up files that are open for
writing. View database files are typically held open for write while HCL
VersionVault is
running, even if the view is inactive or read-only. A backup that
skips these files has limited value, if any. Unless your backup software
is known to capture files open for write access (something many Windows® utilities cannot do), you must stop HCL
VersionVault on
the view host before performing a backup.
A snapshot or Web view may have a view storage directory that is in a different location, perhaps on a separate host, from the directory where the downloaded files are stored. (Web views almost always have this configuration.) You must back up both directories.