NETWORK ADMINISTRATIONSWindows server

Windows Server – Volume Shadow Copies (VSS)

An overview of first creating a new volume and then enabling Volume Shadow Copies (VSS) on your primary volume within the Windows operating system

Tools Used: VMware Workstation Pro 12.5.0
Minimum Requirements for the Lab:
Operating System: Windows Server 2016
Processor: 1.4Ghz 64-bit processor
RAM: 512 MB
Disk Space: 32 GB
Video: Super VGA (1024 x 768) or higher-resolution (optional)
Keyboard and Microsoft® mouse (or other compatible pointing device)
An Ethernet adapter capable of at least gigabit throughput

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windows server

Alice AUSTIN

Alice AUSTIN is studying Cisco Systems Engineering. He has passion with both hardware and software and writes articles and reviews for many IT websites.

6 thoughts on “Windows Server – Volume Shadow Copies (VSS)

  • Volume shadow copying saved a few of my customers asses 😂 corrupt database files…I would roll the file back to a previous date before it was corrupted 😎

  • Should the source drive and destination both have allocation unit of 16KB?

  • Is there any other guidance on when to use the larger allocation unit size like 32KB 64KB does it depend on the size of the files on the volume?

  • How do you delete a volume like this? I have malware that has created volume shadows for system reserved partitions that always come back even after clean formatting the physical disk using diskpart.

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