Restore data using a recovery database
Applies to: Exchange Server 2013
A recovery database (RDB) is a special kind of mailbox database that allows you to mount and extract data from a restored mailbox database as part of a recovery operation. RDBs allow you to recover data from a backup or copy of a database without disrupting user access to current data.
You can restore a mailbox database into the RDB by using a backup application or by copying a database and its log files into the RDB folder structure. Then you can use the New-MailboxRestoreRequest cmdlet to extract data from the recovered database. Once extracted, the data can then be exported to a folder or merged into an existing mailbox.
For additional management tasks related to RDBs, see Recovery databases.
What do you need to know before you begin?
Estimated time to complete this task: 1 minute, plus the time it takes to put the database into a clean shutdown state and to extract the data.
You need to be assigned permissions before you can perform this procedure or procedures. To see what permissions you need, see the "Mailbox recovery" entry in the Recipients Permissions topic.
Some backup applications have the ability to restore Exchange data directly to a recovery database. Windows Server Backup can restore only file-level backups to a recovery database. It can't be used to restore application-level backups to a recovery database.
The database and log files containing the recovered data must be restored or copied into the RDB folder structure. Do not rename the .edb files.
The database must be in a clean shutdown state. If the previously restored database is in a dirty shutdown state. You must use Eseutil /R to put restored databases into a clean shutdown state. If you're running Exchange 2019 and utilizing an MCDB, you must use Eseutil /R /i
Use the Shell to recover data using a recovery database
Copy a recovered database and its log files, or restore a database and it log files, to the location you'll use for your recovery database.
Use Eseutil to bring that database into a clean shutdown state. In the following example, EXX is the log generation prefix for the database (for example, E00, E01, E02, and so on).
Eseutil /R EXX /l <RDBLogFilePath> /d <RDBEdbFolder>
The following example illustrates a log generation prefix of E01 and a recovery database and log file path of E:\Databases\RDB1:
Eseutil /R E01 /l E:\Databases\RDB1 /d E:\Databases\RDB1
Create a recovery database. Give the recovery database a unique name, but use the name and path of the database file for the EdbFilePath parameter, and the location of the recovered log files for the LogFolderPath parameter.
New-MailboxDatabase -Recovery -Name <RDBName> -Server <ServerName> -EdbFilePath <RDBPathandFileName> -LogFolderPath <LogFilePath>
The following example illustrates creating a recovery database that will be used to recover DB1.edb and its log files, which are located at E:\Databases\RDB1.
New-MailboxDatabase -Recovery -Name <RDBName> -Server <ServerName> -EdbFilePath "E:\Databases\RDB1\DB1.EDB" -LogFolderPath "E:\Databases\RDB1"
Restart the Microsoft Exchange Information Store service:
Restart-Service MSExchangeIS
Mount the recovery database:
Mount-database <RDBName>
Verify that the mounted database contains the mailbox(es) you want to restore:
Get-MailboxStatistics -Database <RDBName> | ft -auto
Use the New-MailboxRestoreRequest cmdlet to restore a mailbox or items from the recovery database to a production mailbox.
The following example restores the source mailbox that has the MailboxGUID 1d20855f-fd54-4681-98e6-e249f7326ddd on mailbox database DB1 to the target mailbox with the alias Morris.
New-MailboxRestoreRequest -SourceDatabase DB1 -SourceStoreMailbox 1d20855f-fd54-4681-98e6-e249f7326ddd -TargetMailbox Morris
The following example restores the content of the source mailbox that has the display name Morris Cornejo on mailbox database DB1 to the archive mailbox for Morris@contoso.com.
New-MaiboxRestoreRequest -SourceDatabase DB1 -SourceStoreMailbox "Morris Cornejo" -TargetMailbox Morris@contoso.com -TargetIsArchive
Periodically check the status of the Mailbox restore request using Get-MailboxRestoreRequest.
Once the restore has a status of Completed, remove the restore request using Remove-MailboxRestoreRequest. For example:
Get-MailboxRestoreRequest -Status Completed | Remove-MailboxRestoreRequest
How do you know this worked?
To verify that you've successfully recovered the mailbox data, open the target mailbox in Outlook or Outlook Web App and verify that the recovered data is present.
Tip
Having problems? Ask for help in the Exchange forums. Visit the forums at Exchange Server.