Can I Continue to Work While Doing Pc Back Up

  1. #1

    Do you use your computer while it's running a full local backup?


    I have Easeus todo backup, I never use my computer while it's running a full backup because I think it might cause a problem with the backup.

    I can't find any info on this subject.

    • System One
    • System Two

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Dell 3671
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 21H2
    CPU: Intel i3-9100
    Memory: DDR4 16gb
    Graphics Card: GEFORCE 1650
    Monitor(s) Displays: TCL 50" 4k
    Hard Drives: Samsung 860 EVO 1TB, Seagate Firecuda 2TB, Samsung 850 500GB
    Antivirus: Kaspersky

    Computer Type: Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: HP Notebook 15-dy1071wm
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 2004
    CPU: i7-1065G7
    Memory: DDR4 3200 16gb
    Graphics Card: Intel Iris Plus Graphics
    Hard Drives: Silicon Power 1TB - NVMe M.2
    Antivirus: Webroot Complete


  2. #2


    CannonRebel said:

    ....I can't find any info on this subject.

    Look up Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS). This is used to take a 'snapshot' of the system when the backup starts. This means you can continue to use the PC without altering what will be backed up. However, you may well find the PC is a bit too slow to be of practical use while a backup is in progress.

    Shadow Copy - Wikipedia

    • System One
    • System Two

    Computer Type: Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Toshiba Satellite L750
    OS: 10 Home x64 (21H2) (10 Pro on 2nd pc)
    CPU: Intel Pentium B950 @2.10GHz
    Memory: 4GB
    Internet Speed: 50Mbps down, 10Mbps up
    Browser: IE/Edge/Firefox
    Antivirus: Defender
    Other Info: ...other laptops include: Dell Latitude E7270, 6th gen i7, 16GB RAM, Windows 10 Pro. Dell Latitude 5410, 10th gen i7, 32GB RAM, Windows 11 Pro. main use is to run Hyper-V VMs including XP, W7, W8.1, W10 & W11

    Computer Type: Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Samsung R519
    OS: 10 Pro x86 (21H1, 20H2, 2004, 1909, 1903, 1809, 1803, 1709, 1703, 1607, 1511, 1507), 7 Pro x86
    CPU: Intel Celeron T3100 1.9GHz
    Memory: 4GB
    Other Info: Test/support machine - uses multiple Macrium images to switch OS.


  3. #3


    Thank you Bree, that article is quite helpful. Yes it does slow down my computer, but I see they provide a resource control for the backup speed, low, med, and high usage.
    • System One
    • System Two

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Dell 3671
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 21H2
    CPU: Intel i3-9100
    Memory: DDR4 16gb
    Graphics Card: GEFORCE 1650
    Monitor(s) Displays: TCL 50" 4k
    Hard Drives: Samsung 860 EVO 1TB, Seagate Firecuda 2TB, Samsung 850 500GB
    Antivirus: Kaspersky

    Computer Type: Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: HP Notebook 15-dy1071wm
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 2004
    CPU: i7-1065G7
    Memory: DDR4 3200 16gb
    Graphics Card: Intel Iris Plus Graphics
    Hard Drives: Silicon Power 1TB - NVMe M.2
    Antivirus: Webroot Complete


  4. #4


    I don't use my PC while running backups although as has been pointed out, you certainly can if you wish. With an SSD it only takes a couple of minutes to run and so there is no hardship there.

    I also usually make the backup after a restart which ensures that all files are in a 'known' stable state (that's the best way I can explain that) as occasionally there can be files/processes 'hanging' and that need a shutdown/restart to complete their process. It shouldn;t really make any difference... I just feel happier with backups made from a known and 'quiet' state.

    • My Computer

    Computer Type: Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Dell Vostro 3750 17.3" Laptop
    OS: W10 pro x64 20H2 Build 19042.610
    CPU: Intel i5
    Memory: 8Gb
    Graphics Card: Dell with Intel on board
    Sound Card: Realtek
    Mouse: HP Z4000
    PSU: Magnese Ultra Slim
    Hard Drives: Crucial Micron 250Gb SSD
    Internet Speed: 70Mbs down/20+Mbs up
    Browser: Edge
    Antivirus: Defender


  5. #5


    I use Uranium Backup which is normal desktop software and I continue working as it doesn't much strain on the system.
    • System One
    • System Two

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Self Built
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
    CPU: Ryzen 9 3900x
    Motherboard: Asus Strix x570-E
    Memory: Corsair Dominator Platinum [email protected]
    Graphics Card: Asus Strix 3080 Ti OC
    Sound Card: Creative Soundblaster AE-5
    Monitor(s) Displays: Samsung Odyssey G7 32" Curved Gaming Monitor, IIYAMA XUB2792QSU-W1 27"
    Screen Resolution: [email protected], [email protected]
    Keyboard: Corsair K70 RGB Mk 2 SE Rapid Fire
    Mouse: Corsair M65 Elite
    PSU: Corsair RM850x
    Case: Corsair Crystal 680x
    Cooling: Corsair H100i Se Platinum
    Hard Drives: Samsung 980 Pro 1 Tb (OS), Samsung 970 Pro 1 Tb (games), Samsung 860 Evo 1Tb (data), Samsung 860 Evo 4 Tb (games), Crucial MX500 1Tb (photos), WD MyCloud Mirror 6Tb NAS.
    Internet Speed: 58/12 Mbps
    Browser: Microsoft Edge
    Antivirus: Windows Defender + Malwarebytes
    Other Info: Corsair Virtuoso RGB Headset, Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 Tablet. Creative T6300 5.1 Speakers

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Self Built
    OS: Windows 10 Pro Insider 64-bit/Geruda Linux Plasma
    CPU: Ryzen 5600x
    Motherboard: Asus Strix B550-E
    Memory: Corsair Dominator Platinum [email protected]
    Graphics Card: Gigabyte RTX2070 Super Gaming OC
    Sound Card: Creative Soundblaster AE-5
    Monitor(s) Displays: Asus XG43VQ Ultrawide
    Screen Resolution: [email protected]
    Keyboard: Corsair K70 RGB MK.2 Low Profile Rapidfire
    Mouse: Glorious Model D
    PSU: Corsair RM750i
    Case: Fractal Define R6
    Cooling: Scythe Mugen 5 rev B and Corsair QL fans
    Hard Drives: Aorus Gen 4 NVMe 1 Tb (Windows Insider), Samsung 850 Pro 512Gb (data), Samsung 850 Evo 1Tb (files), Samsung 850 Evo 2Tb (games), Blu-ray player
    Internet Speed: 58/12 Mbps
    Browser: Microsoft Edge
    Antivirus: Windows Defender + Malwarebytes


  6. #6


    Hi there
    presumably if you need a system image then it doesn't make sense to use the machine while running a local backup on it -- whether or not shadow volume etc is on. Anything persistent such as data changes etc are unlikely to be copied to the backup -- it's possibly OK to use things like email (if IMAP or not stored locally on your machine) but seriously people backups on decent machines these days with sensible sized partitions (always separate OS from data and other partitions) only take around 15 mins or so -- so you have to ask yourself is it worth risking "contaminating" the backup.

    You can always do something else while the backup is running -- take the dog into the garden, have some beer etc etc etc.

    Cheers
    jimbo

    • My Computer

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    OS: Windows / Linux : Arch Linux


  7. #7


    Best way ( far out THE best !) is making your backups with boot-CD/ SD-card , "outside" Windows , so reboot and start your backup first , before going into Windows.................this way you dont interfere !
    Always make my backups this way , it NEVER failed ( saved my ass many times also !)
    • My Computer

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    OS: Windows 10 Pro x64
    Motherboard: ASUS Z97-K
    Memory: 32GB


  8. #8


    pietcorus2 said:

    Best way ( far out THE best !) is making your backups with boot-CD/ SD-card , "outside" Windows , so reboot and start your backup first , before going into Windows.................this way you dont interfere !
    Always make my backups this way , it NEVER failed ( saved my ass many times also !)

    LOL, don't they though!
    • System One
    • System Two

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: Dell 3671
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 21H2
    CPU: Intel i3-9100
    Memory: DDR4 16gb
    Graphics Card: GEFORCE 1650
    Monitor(s) Displays: TCL 50" 4k
    Hard Drives: Samsung 860 EVO 1TB, Seagate Firecuda 2TB, Samsung 850 500GB
    Antivirus: Kaspersky

    Computer Type: Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: HP Notebook 15-dy1071wm
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 2004
    CPU: i7-1065G7
    Memory: DDR4 3200 16gb
    Graphics Card: Intel Iris Plus Graphics
    Hard Drives: Silicon Power 1TB - NVMe M.2
    Antivirus: Webroot Complete


  9. #9


    I did a backup today with Acronis, while also watching the Wimbledon final and surfing the web. Can't see how that'd effect anything negatively.
    • My Computer

    Computer Type: PC/Desktop
    OS: Windows 10
    CPU: i5-7600
    Memory: 32GB
    Graphics Card: GTX 2060


  10. #10


    I have set Macrium to run a backup when I'm not using it.
    • My Computer

    Computer Type: Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number: PC Specialist Optimus VII V17-960 Gaming Laptop
    OS: Windows 10 Pro 64bit
    CPU: 6th Gen Intel Core i7-6700HQ Quad Core processor.
    Memory: 16GB HyperX IMPACT 1600MHz SODIMM DDR3 (2 x 8GB)
    Graphics Card: NVIDIA� GeForce� GTX 960M - 2.0GB DDR5 Video RAM - DirectX� 12
    Sound Card: Intel 2 Channel High Def. Audio + SoundBlaster� Cinema 2 & Realtek
    Monitor(s) Displays: Optimus Series: 17.3" Matte Full HD IPS LED Widescreen (1920x1080)
    Screen Resolution: Full HD IPS display (1920 x 1080).
    Keyboard: Logitech K800 wireless keyboard
    Mouse: Logitech M705 wireless mouse
    Cooling: STANDARD THERMAL PASTE FOR SUFFICIENT COOLING
    Hard Drives: 4TB HD (internal) & 1x 6TB external HD.
    Internet Speed: Upto 100Mbps - 110Mbps actual speed.
    Browser: Edge
    Antivirus: Windows Defender & MalwareBytes pro.


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Source: https://www.tenforums.com/backup-restore/136482-do-you-use-your-computer-while-its-running-full-local-backup.html

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