User`s guide
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Similarly, in case of three machines, the ratio becomes 1.5:1; for four machines, it is 1.6:1. It 
approaches 2:1 as more such machines are backed up to the same vault. This means that you can 
buy, say, a 10-TB storage device instead of a 20-TB one. 
The actual amount of capacity reduction is influenced by numerous factors such as the type of data 
that is being backed up, the frequency of the backup, and the backups' retention period. 
2.12.6.6  Deduplication restrictions 
Block-level deduplication restrictions 
During a disk backup to an archive in a deduplicating vault, deduplication of a volume's disk blocks is 
not performed in the following cases: 
  If the volume is a compressed volume 
  If the volume's allocation unit size—also known as cluster size or block size—is not divisible by 
4 KB 
Tip: The allocation unit size on most NTFS and ext3 volumes is 4 KB and so allows for block-level 
deduplication. Other examples of allocation unit sizes allowing for block-level deduplication include 8 KB, 
16 KB, and 64 KB. 
  If you protected the archive with a password 
Tip: If you want to protect the data in the archive while still allowing it to be deduplicated, leave the archive 
non-password-protected and encrypt the deduplicating vault itself with a password, which you can do 
when creating the vault. 
Disk blocks that were not deduplicated are stored in the archive as they would be in a non-
deduplicating vault. 
File-level deduplication restrictions 
During a file backup to an archive in a deduplicating vault, deduplication of a file is not performed in 
the following cases: 
  If the file is encrypted and the In archives, store encrypted files in decrypted state check box in 
the backup options is cleared (it is cleared by default) 
  If the file is less than 4 KB in size 
  If you protected the archive with a password 
Files that were not deduplicated are stored in the archive as they would be in a non-deduplicating 
vault. 
Deduplication and NTFS data streams 
In the NTFS file system, a file may have one or more additional sets of data associated with it—often 
called alternate data streams. 
When such file is backed up, so are all its alternate data streams. However, these streams are never 
deduplicated—even when the file itself is. 










