ā07-10-2015 11:36 AM - edited ā03-17-2019 03:36 AM
Hello
I have a problem to do a restore on a CUCMBE version 10.5. in a virtualized environment.
Upon restore me send your message "security password is different from the one used for backup or the encrypted password has-been tampered With. Restore will halt"
And attempt to reset the password security with the procedure pwrecosery
pwreset
s choice
But is sending the same error.
ā07-10-2015 12:22 PM
You have to change the security password on the system you want to discard to make it match the security password that was used on the backup:
https://supportforums.cisco.com/document/65041/how-reset-passwords-cucm
I just hope you remember the security password from the backup because thats the backup's encryption key.
ā07-10-2015 01:00 PM
thak you
But that the problem does not know the password
ā07-10-2015 01:59 PM
Well, unfortunately, you are doomed.
Here's a quote from this page:
Note Be aware that your backup .tar files are encrypted by a randomly generated password. This password is then encrypted by using the cluster security password and gets saved along with the backup .tar files. You must remember this security password or take a backup immediately after the security password change/reset.
ā07-10-2015 02:04 PM
Shawm thanks.
The problem that I have been following a change tajeta LSI in the UCSC-220, after which the service DB not raise the TAC asked us to perform various procedures, but never managed to lift the service DB and at both the virtual machine of CUCM.
TAC asked to create a new virtual mauina to CUCM and on that do the restore from a backup that had the first CUCM nates of failure.
With this background prodecimiento to restore the wizard you think that works?
ā07-10-2015 02:08 PM
I don't think you're getting this, there is NO way to change the pwd of the backup.
The pwreset procedure you're trying WILL NOT WORK, because that will only affect the system on which you use it, AND THE NEW BACKUPS YOU TAKE ON THAT SYSTEM.
If you don't know the pwd that was used IN THE OLD SYSTEM from which that backup was taken, there is absolutely nothing to do, no procedure to recover that.
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