Application & Database/SQL Data Recovery Capabilities
Data Recovery is most commonly associated with damage due to fires, floods, or other physical damage to a disk or drive. However, Unistal offers solutions to many other common (and not so common) causes of data loss. Take a look at the different solutions we offer:
Causes of Data Loss in Databases
- Backup files not recognizable by database engine
- Database locked as 'suspect' preventing access
- Deleted or dropped tables
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- Accidentally deleted records
- Corrupted database files and devices
- Damaged individual data pages
- Accidentally overwritten database files & devices
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Supported Applications & Databases
Productivity Applications
- Microsoft® Office, including all versions of Word®, Excel® and Powerpoint®
- Mail Server and Client Applications
- Microsoft Exchange® and Outlook®
- Applications conforming to the UNIX mbox format such as Eudora and Netscape
- Standard Databases
- Microsoft Access® up to 2000
- All xbase products such as dbase, Foxpro
- RDBMS Relational Databases
- Microsoft SQL Server 6.0, 6.5, 7.0 and 2000
- Oracle Lite , 7.x, 8.x and 9.x
- Sybase SQL Server, Sybase SQL Anywhere
- Gupta SQL Anywhere
- MySQL
- PostgreSQL
Supported Operating Systems, Platforms, and File systems
Windows XP Professional and Home with NTFS, FAT32 or FAT16 file systems using standalone basic partitions or dynamic spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
Windows 2000 Professional and Server with NTFS, FAT32 or FAT16 file systems using standalone basic partitions or dynamic spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
Windows NT Workstation and Server with NTFS or FAT16 file systems using standalone, spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
Windows ME, 98, 95 with FAT32 or FAT16 file systems
MS-DOS and variants using 12 or 16 bit FAT file systems
Compressed volume managers including Stacker, DoubleSpace and DriveSpace
OS/2 with FAT and HPFS file systems
Novell NetWare with FAT and NSS file systems using standalone, spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
UNIX on Intel and Non-Intel platforms , including:
- SCO Open Server and Xenix
- UnixWare from Novell and SCO
- Solaris on Intel platforms, Sun/SPARC equipment, with UFS and VERITAS VXFS file systems
- Linux with EXT2FS,XFS,REISERFS and JFS file systems on standalone and RAID volumes
- BSD-based systems such as FreeBSD, Open BSD and Net BSD, BSDI, Lynx OS
- QNX
- HPUX on Hewlett-Packard workstations with HFS and VERITAS VXFS file systems on standalone and LVMvolumes
- IRIX on SGI workstations with EFS and XFS file systems
- VMS and OpenVMS running on Compaq and DEC equipment using ODS file system
- AIX on IBM RS/6000 with jfs file systems on LVM volume
Apple Macintosh:
- OS 9 with HFS and HFS+ file systems
- OS X with HFS, HFS+ and UNIX UFS file systems
All Macintosh hardware using SCSI, IDE and FireWire interfaces, including software RAID driver such as So