Evitar puntos de restauracion automaticos

16/08/2006 - 19:53 por Daniel G. Samborski | Informe spam
Hola, he notado que al crear yo un punto de restauracion para realizar una
prueba de algun soft, y estas pruebas por lo general no las realizo en un
dia, a medida que se instalan y desinstalan otras cosas XP genera puntos de
restauracion de forma automaticas.
El tema es que llegado a un momento el punto que yo cree desaparece por ser
el mas viejo y quedan solo los mas nuevos.
Lo que quiero es, saber si hay alguna forma de que los puntos de
restauracion que yo creo no se borren por antigüedad y que solo los pueda
eliminar manualmente y si no se puede, saber si hay alguna forma de quitar
la parte automatica que crea estos puntos de restauracion.



Daniel.

Preguntas similare

Leer las respuestas

#1 Jose Gallardo
16/08/2006 - 20:05 | Informe spam
Me temo que no puedes. De aquí:

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/co...srwxp.mspx

Can I make System Restore permanently store a restore point so it is always available to restore to?
Answer: No, you cannot make System Restore store a restore point permanently to always restore back to. System Restores current architecture is unable to support this as it is a change base tracking tool and not an imaging or backup tool. Each restore point only stores changes to the system since the creation of the previous restore point to minimize space usage and improve performance and so all the restore points are associated to each other. Thus, restoring the machine from the current state to a previous state requires the availability of all restore points created in between to undo changes tracked inside them. For e.g. when a user wants to restore the machine from point D to a point A, System Restore will work through the changes made to the system and recorded in the change logs for each point C, then B and then A as these restore points collectively hold all the changes to the system since point A and so are needed to undo all the changes made to the system. It will then create a roadmap for recovery using these restore points and restore the system.
If a restore point was made a permanent restore point, space usage for storing the complete chain of restore points since the creation of the permanent restore point would in due course become very large and not be practical. System Restore also has an automatic restore point space-management feature that purges the oldest restore points to make room for new ones, so that a rolling safety net is always kept under the user, enabling the user to recover from recent undesirable changes. By Default any restore point older than 90 days will be purged automatically by System Restore.

Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User


"Daniel G. Samborski" wrote in message news:
Hola, he notado que al crear yo un punto de restauracion para realizar una
prueba de algun soft, y estas pruebas por lo general no las realizo en un
dia, a medida que se instalan y desinstalan otras cosas XP genera puntos de
restauracion de forma automaticas.
El tema es que llegado a un momento el punto que yo cree desaparece por ser
el mas viejo y quedan solo los mas nuevos.
Lo que quiero es, saber si hay alguna forma de que los puntos de
restauracion que yo creo no se borren por antigüedad y que solo los pueda
eliminar manualmente y si no se puede, saber si hay alguna forma de quitar
la parte automatica que crea estos puntos de restauracion.



Daniel.


Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#2 Daniel G. Samborski
16/08/2006 - 21:09 | Informe spam
Bueno, parece que debere seguir como hasta ahora...

Gracias por tu respuesta.


Daniel.

"Jose Gallardo" escribió en el mensaje
news:
Me temo que no puedes. De aquí:

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/co...srwxp.mspx

Can I make System Restore permanently store a restore point so it is always
available to restore to?
Answer: No, you cannot make System Restore store a restore point permanently
to always restore back to. System Restores current architecture is unable to
support this as it is a change base tracking tool and not an imaging or
backup tool. Each restore point only stores changes to the system since the
creation of the previous restore point to minimize space usage and improve
performance and so all the restore points are associated to each other.
Thus, restoring the machine from the current state to a previous state
requires the availability of all restore points created in between to undo
changes tracked inside them. For e.g. when a user wants to restore the
machine from point D to a point A, System Restore will work through the
changes made to the system and recorded in the change logs for each point C,
then B and then A as these restore points collectively hold all the changes
to the system since point A and so are needed to undo all the changes made
to the system. It will then create a roadmap for recovery using these
restore points and restore the system.
If a restore point was made a permanent restore point, space usage for
storing the complete chain of restore points since the creation of the
permanent restore point would in due course become very large and not be
practical. System Restore also has an automatic restore point
space-management feature that purges the oldest restore points to make room
for new ones, so that a rolling safety net is always kept under the user,
enabling the user to recover from recent undesirable changes. By Default any
restore point older than 90 days will be purged automatically by System
Restore.

Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User


"Daniel G. Samborski" wrote in
message news:
Hola, he notado que al crear yo un punto de restauracion para realizar una
prueba de algun soft, y estas pruebas por lo general no las realizo en un
dia, a medida que se instalan y desinstalan otras cosas XP genera puntos
de
restauracion de forma automaticas.
El tema es que llegado a un momento el punto que yo cree desaparece por
ser
el mas viejo y quedan solo los mas nuevos.
Lo que quiero es, saber si hay alguna forma de que los puntos de
restauracion que yo creo no se borren por antigüedad y que solo los pueda
eliminar manualmente y si no se puede, saber si hay alguna forma de quitar
la parte automatica que crea estos puntos de restauracion.



Daniel.


email Siga el debate Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
Ads by Google
Help Hacer una preguntaRespuesta Tengo una respuesta
Search Busqueda sugerida