Backup at a hypervisor level includes the following main features and capabilities.
Backup of entire machines or individual disks or volumes.
During backup, a virtual machine can be running, stopped, suspended, or switching between the three states.
Recovery of entire machines, individual disks or volumes to a new or existing virtual machine.
A virtual machine has to be stopped during the recovery to this machine. By default, the software stops the machine automatically.
Recovery of individual files and folders to a network share, FTP or SFTP server.
Backup and recovery of clustered virtual machines.
A backup plan is executed no matter which host the machine is running on.
An agent can simultaneously back up as many as 10 virtual machines. The exact number is defined by the user.
An agent can convert a disk-level backup to a virtual machine of the corresponding type: VMware ESX(i) or Microsoft Hyper-V. Conversion of an incremental backup updates the machine instead of creating it from scratch.
Applies to VMware vSphere only
Protect your virtual environment with as many agents as you want, from one agent for each host to one agent for each machine. The management server evenly distributes virtual machines among the agents running within each host. Or, you can bind the agents with the machines manually.
Applies to VMware vSphere only
Just include virtual machines in a backup plan. The agents will be deployed and configured in the background if you allowed this when configuring integration with the vCenter Server.
Applies to VMware vSphere only
Add a dedicated virtual disk to Agent for VMware (Virtual Appliance) and do backups directly to this storage, omitting LAN.
Perform faster incremental and differential backups of ESX(i) virtual machines without using VMware CBT.
Back up and recover virtual machines that use Unified Extensible Hardware Interface (UEFI). Convert a UEFI-based physical machine to a virtual machine that uses the same boot firmware.
Back up and recover virtual machine templates in the same way as normal ESX(i) virtual machines.