However, over time, XYZ Corporation's infrastructure grew, and the IT team added more virtual machines, hosts, and even a new vCenter server. As the environment expanded, the company began to experience issues with their Veeam backups. Jobs were failing, and the IT team couldn't seem to pinpoint the cause.
XYZ Corporation, a mid-sized enterprise, had been using Veeam Backup & Replication to protect its virtual infrastructure for several years. The company's IT team had purchased a set of licenses for their VMware environment, which included a mix of virtual machines, ESXi hosts, and vCenter servers. The license key had been applied during the initial setup, and everything seemed to be working fine. veeam license key
One day, the IT team received a notification from Veeam that their license key was about to expire. Upon further investigation, they discovered that the license key had been applied incorrectly from the start. The key was only valid for a subset of their virtual infrastructure, leaving many critical VMs unprotected. XYZ Corporation, a mid-sized enterprise, had been using