Any additional feedback? Note This content is written by a Microsoft customer support engineer, and is intended for experienced administrators and systems architects who are looking for deeper technical explanations of features and solutions in Windows Server R2 than topics on TechNet usually provide. Submit and view feedback for This product This page. View all page feedback. In this article. Restore-CARoleService : The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process.
We recommend you consider modern backup options like the ones listed above, as they're easier to manage and non-destructive. If you've used Backup and Restore in Windows 7, consider moving your content to a cloud-based backup. To learn more about recovery, see Recovery options in Windows Windows 10 More Need more help? Join the discussion. Was this information helpful? Yes No. Thank you! To view individual files, use the Browse for files option.
To search the contents of the backup, select Search , type all or part of a file name, and then select Search. Tip: If you're searching for files or folders associated with a specific user account, you can improve search results by typing the location of the file or folder in the Search for box. You can restore files from a backup that was created on another computer running Windows Vista or Windows 7.
Choose Select another backup to restore files from , and then follow the steps in the wizard. If you're restoring files from a backup that was made on another computer, the files will be restored in a folder under the user name that was used to create the backup. If the user names are different, you'll need to navigate to the folder where the files are restored.
For example, if your user name was Molly on the computer that the backup was made on but your user name is MollyC on the computer that the backup is being restored on, the restored files will be saved in a folder labelled Molly.
Select the Start button, then select Computer. Double-click the Users folder. You will see a folder for each user account. Double-click the folder for the user name that was used to create the backup. The restored files will be in the various folders based on where they were located originally. After you restore your computer from a system image backup, there may be newer versions of some of your files in a file backup that you want to restore.
To restore files from a file backup that was created after the system image backup was created, follow these steps. Additionally, Backup and Restore creates a system image that you can use to restore Windows if your system is not functioning properly.
Introduced with the release of Windows 8, File History became the primary backup tool for the operating system. And, even though Backup and Restore is available in Windows 10, File History is still the utility Microsoft recommends for backing up files. File History is significantly different from Backup and Restore in that its primary purpose is to allow you to back up personal files rather than creating a complete system image. Once you select a drive to use for the backups, File History will store copies of the files and update them automatically as needed.
In addition to simple user-file backups, File History also retains previous versions of your files so you can access or restore them if needed. Nonetheless, there are several critical limitations with the native Windows backup utilities that you should consider before trusting all your data to them. Here are a few:. While File History allows you to restore individual files, Backup and Restore does not.
Consequently, if you want to recover files from a backup file set, you must restore them all or none at all. Backup and Restore lets you create a system image each time you perform a backup. However, you can only store one backup at a time on the destination drive.
Therefore, if you want to store multiple system image backups, you must back up to multiple destination drives. Additionally, system images only include drives with files required for Windows to run. Both Backup and Restore and File History allow you to store backups on local drives.
However, neither one of the utilities includes a way to back up files online or to the cloud. If you want to upload backup files created with the utilities to the cloud, you must do so manually using a separate application or Web service. For many years, Windows users have used Windows System Restore to rollback changes or restore Windows system files when problems occur. With recent release and updates of Windows 10, though, Microsoft seems to have disabled the feature.
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