Hi,
Ok, but is it best practice for jobs that you don’t use anymore to keep them in Veeam in a disabled state? If I delete the job, it’s backup files move to the ‘orphaned’ node. Background retention still processes those orphaned backup files (https://helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backu ... ml?ver=120) , so why don’t health checks do the same?
This way you can temporarily disable the job and stop health checks also, instead of going through the jobs one by one.
Ok, but is it best practice for jobs that you don’t use anymore to keep them in Veeam in a disabled state? If I delete the job, it’s backup files move to the ‘orphaned’ node. Background retention still processes those orphaned backup files (https://helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backu ... ml?ver=120) , so why don’t health checks do the same?
This way you can temporarily disable the job and stop health checks also, instead of going through the jobs one by one.
Statistics: Posted by FrancWest — Aug 19, 2024 1:53 pm







