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Bare Metal Recovery (BMR) refers to the process of restoring an entire system, including operating system, applications, configurations, drivers, and data onto a new or empty machine with no pre-installed software.
In other words, the target system starts from bare hardware, and everything needed to run is recovered from a backup image.
Unlike file-level recovery, which only restores selected files or folders, bare metal recovery rebuilds the whole system environment in one operation. This makes it a critical capability for modern IT infrastructures, especially in scenarios where systems must be brought back online quickly and reliably.
Creating BMR follows a structured process designed to rebuild a complete system from scratch by using a full system image.
Usually, you will need to create a complete system that includes all critical components of a system. Then use a bootable recovery media to boot the target hardware. Start the recovery process and wait for it to be finished.
Below are the steps to backup and implement bare metal recovery:
Step 1. Install Windows Server Backup
Run “Server Manager”. And click “Add Roles and Features” under the Manage Tab > choose “Role-based or feature based installation” > Select the destination server. > Select the “Windows Server Backup” feature. Then follow the wizard to complete the installation.
Step 2. Create a bare metal backup
On the Server Manager, select “Tools” > “Windows Server Backup”. Then set “Backup Schedule” or choose “Backup Once” > choose “Full Server” or choose “Customize” > “Bare metal Recovery”.
And follow the instructions to set other backup settings and complete the backup.
Step 3. Prepare a recovery media
Prepare a bootable medium containing the restoration software. It will be used to access backup and boot the target server.
Step 4. Boot the bare hardware
Insert the recovery media and power on the computer. Press the BIOS/UEFI key (usually F2, F10, F12, DEL) once you see the logo screen. > Navigate to Boot Menu and choose the recovery media as the first boot device.
Step 5. Restore
Restore the server backup to the server and wait for the process to get finished.
In enterprise environments, bare metal recovery go beyond basic system restoration. It requires reliability, scalability, and support for complex infrastructures.
Info2Soft’s i2Backup provides enterprise-grade bare metal recovery capabilities designed for business-critical systems. With i2Backup, organizations can:
By combining centralized management, flexible recovery options, and strong system compatibility, i2Backup helps enterprises implement bare metal recovery as part of a comprehensive backup and disaster recovery strategy.
For organizations that demand fast recovery, minimal data loss, and high operational continuity, professional bare metal recovery solutions like Info2Soft i2Backup are essential.
There are two other common recovery concepts you may be confused about: File-level and image recovery. Below are the main differences.
File-level recovery focuses on restoring individual files or folders. It is simple and fast for minor data loss but cannot rebuild an entire system.
Image recovery restores a system image, usually to similar hardware, and is often used for system rollback or cloning.
Bare metal recovery, by contrast, is designed for full system rebuilds on new or empty hardware, making it ideal for disaster recovery and ransomware response.
| Feature/Method | Bare Metal Recovery | File-Level Recovery | System Image Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|
| OS & Apps | √ | × | √ |
| Full System | √ | × | √ |
| Hardware Flexibility | √(Modern Tools) | N/A | Based on tool |
| Ransomware Resilience | √ | × | Based on tool |
| Speed | Fast | Fast | Slower than the other recovery types |
When to use each method:
Bare metal recovery is a critical capability for modern backup and disaster recovery strategies. By restoring an entire system to bare hardware. It enables organizations to recover quickly from hardware failures, ransomware attacks, and major system outages.