-In version 1.37.30 and greater, you can turn on Microsoft's Volume
-Shadow Copy Service (VSS).
-
-Microsoft added VSS to Windows XP and Windows 2003. From the perspective of
-a backup-solution for Windows, this is an extremely important step. VSS
-allows Bacula to backup open files and even to interact with applications like
-RDBMS to produce consistent file copies. VSS aware applications are called
-VSS Writers, they register with the OS so that when Bacula wants to do a
-Snapshot, the OS will notify the register Writer programs, which may then
-create a consistent state in their application, which will be backed up.
-Examples for these writers are "MSDE" (Microsoft database
-engine), "Event Log Writer", "Registry Writer" plus 3rd
-party-writers. If you have a non-vss aware application (e.g.
-SQL Anywhere or probably MySQL), a shadow copy is still generated
-and the open files can be backed up, but there is no guarantee
-that the file is consistent.
+Microsoft added VSS to Windows XP and later systems. From the perspective
+of a backup-solution for Windows, this is an extremely important step. VSS
+allows Bacula to backup open files and even to interact with applications
+like RDBMS to produce consistent file copies. VSS aware applications are
+called VSS Writers, they register with the OS so that when Bacula wants to
+do a Snapshot, the OS will notify the register Writer programs, which may
+then create a consistent state in their application, which will be backed
+up. Examples for these writers are "MSDE" (Microsoft database engine),
+"Event Log Writer", "Registry Writer" plus 3rd party-writers. If you have
+a non-vss aware application (e.g. SQL Anywhere or probably MySQL), a
+shadow copy is still generated and the open files can be backed up, but
+there is no guarantee that the file is consistent.