Wildcard Type; Must Match; Cannot Match - HP BB118BV - StorageWorks Data Protector Express Package User Manual

Hp data protector express user's guide and technical reference (bb116-90040, february 2007)
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You can use this filter to instruct Data Protector Express to select files according to the number of
versions that exist in the catalog. You might, for example, instruct Data Protector Express to restore all of
the files for which there is only one version. When you set Range type to At most and Maximum
versions to 1, Data Protector Express only restores those files with a single version.
Note, however, that having multiple versions of a file does not ensure that the selected versions reflect the
latest changes to the file. If it was modified after the last time you backed it up, your latest version may
not match the file's current form.
To specify a filter that sorts files according to their number of versions, click on the Browse button next
to the Version range field and then select the appropriate criteria in the Versions Range window that
appears.
Select which wildcard format you wish to use from the list box. You can use any of the following
formats:
character extension, e.g., filename.txt.
characters, e.g., Monday_backup.txt.
Data Protector Express lets you use wildcard matches to include files. Only files that match the wildcard
indicated in the Must match field are included in the restore set. For example, if you enter *.exe, Data
Protector Express will only restore those files with the .exe file extension.
You can specify multiple wildcards by separating each with a semicolon (no spaces). For example, if you
enter *.exe;*.doc in the Must match field, Data Protector Express selects all files that have either the
.exe extension or the .doc extension.
This wildcard field works just like the Must match field except that it excludes any files that match the
wildcards. You can specify multiple wildcards by separating them with a semicolon (no spaces); if you
Uses the default wildcard format for your operating system.
Uses the 11-character name format with the eight-character primary name and the three-
Use the Macintosh native format.
Network File System
File Transfer Access and Management
Uses the 256-character name format with a long primary name and an extension with multiple

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