BackupWrite function (winbase.h)
The BackupWrite function can be used to restore a file or directory that was backed up using BackupRead. Use the ReadFile function to get a stream of data from the backup medium, then use BackupWrite to write the data to the specified file or directory.
Syntax
BOOL BackupWrite(
[in] HANDLE hFile,
[in] LPBYTE lpBuffer,
[in] DWORD nNumberOfBytesToWrite,
[out] LPDWORD lpNumberOfBytesWritten,
[in] BOOL bAbort,
[in] BOOL bProcessSecurity,
[out] LPVOID *lpContext
);
Parameters
[in] hFile
Handle to the file or directory to be restored. To obtain the handle, call the CreateFile function. The SACLs are not restored unless the file handle was created with the ACCESS_SYSTEM_SECURITY access right. To ensure that the integrity ACEs are restored correctly, the file handle must also have been created with the WRITE_OWNER access right. For more information, see File security and access rights.
The handle must be synchronous (nonoverlapped). This means that the FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED flag must not be set when CreateFile is called. This function does not validate that the handle it receives is synchronous, so it does not return an error code for a synchronous handle, but calling it with an asynchronous (overlapped) handle can result in subtle errors that are very difficult to debug.
The BackupWrite function may fail if CreateFile was called with the flag FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING. In this case, the GetLastError function returns the value ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER.
[in] lpBuffer
Pointer to a buffer that the function writes data from.
[in] nNumberOfBytesToWrite
Size of the buffer, in bytes. The buffer size must be greater than the size of a WIN32_STREAM_ID structure.
[out] lpNumberOfBytesWritten
Pointer to a variable that receives the number of bytes written.
[in] bAbort
Indicates whether you have finished using BackupWrite on the handle. While you are restoring the file, specify this parameter as FALSE. After you are done using BackupWrite, you must call BackupWrite one more time specifying TRUE for this parameter and passing the appropriate lpContext. lpContext must be passed when bAbort is TRUE; all other parameters are ignored.
[in] bProcessSecurity
Specifies whether the function will restore the access-control list (ACL) data for the file or directory.
If bProcessSecurity is TRUE, you need to specify WRITE_OWNER and WRITE_DAC access when opening the file or directory handle. If the handle does not have those access rights, the operating system denies access to the ACL data, and ACL data restoration will not occur.
[out] lpContext
Pointer to a variable that receives a pointer to an internal data structure used by BackupWrite to maintain context information during a restore operation.
You must set the variable pointed to by lpContext to NULL before the first call to BackupWrite for the specified file or directory. The function allocates memory for the data structure, and then sets the variable to point to that structure. You must not change lpContext or the variable that it points to between calls to BackupWrite.
To release the memory used by the data structure, call BackupWrite with the bAbort parameter set to TRUE when the restore operation is complete.
Return value
If the function succeeds, the return value is nonzero.
If the function fails, the return value is zero, indicating that an I/O error occurred. To get extended error information, call GetLastError.
Remarks
This function is not intended for use in restoring files encrypted under the Encrypted File System. Use WriteEncryptedFileRaw for that purpose.
The data read from the backup medium must be substreams separated by WIN32_STREAM_ID structures.
The BACKUP_LINK stream type lets you restore files with hard links.
Requirements
Requirement | Value |
---|---|
Minimum supported client | Windows XP [desktop apps only] |
Minimum supported server | Windows Server 2003 [desktop apps only] |
Target Platform | Windows |
Header | winbase.h (include Windows.h) |
Library | Kernel32.lib |
DLL | Kernel32.dll |