Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Use Central Administration to export a site, list, or document library in SharePoint Server 2010

Follow below steps to export a site, list, or document library by using Central Administration
  • In Central Administration, on the Home page > Backup and Restore.
  • On the Backup and Restore page > Granular Backup > click Export a site or list.
  • On the Site or List Export page,
  • In the Site Collection section, select the site collection from the Site Collection list, and then select the site from the Site list.
  • If you are exporting a list, skip this step, Select the list or document library from the List list.
  • In the File Location section,
  • In the Filename box, type the UNC path of the shared folder and the file to which you want to export the list or document library.
  • The file name must use the .cmp extension.
  • If the file already exists and you want to use this file, select the Overwrite existing files check box.
  • Otherwise, specify a different file name.
  • If you want to export all the security and permissions settings with the list or library, in the Export Full Security section, select the Export full security check box.
  • If you want to specify which version of the list or library to export, select one of the following versions from the Export versions list:
  • All Versions
  • Last Major
  • Current Version
  • Last Major and Last Minor
  • Click Start Export.
  • You can view the status of all backup jobs at the top of the Granular Backup Job Status page.
  • You can view the status of the current backup job in the Content Export section of the page.
  • The status page updates every 30 seconds automatically.
  • You can manually update the status details by clicking Refresh. Backup and recovery are Timer service jobs. Therefore, it may take several seconds for the backup to start.

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The opinions expressed on this blog are the personal views of Pratik's SharePoint Blog, and do not represent or reflect the viewpoints or policies of any past, present, or future employer, colleague, or customer, or any other entity. The posts on this blog are provided ‘as is’ with no warranties, express or implied, and confer no rights. Use of information contained within this blog, including specific technical steps mentioned herein, is at your own risk. References to specific software products, processes, resources, or companies do not imply any endorsement.