148 Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2009This is the number of processors of the new virtual machine. In most cases it is set to one. The resultof assignment of more than one processor to the machine is not guaranteed. The number of virtualprocessors may be limited by the host CPU configuration, the virtualization product and the guestoperating system. Multiple virtual processors are generally available on multi-processor hosts. Amulticore host CPU or hyperthreading may enable multiple virtual processors on a single-processorhost.6.3.6.5. File destinationTo specify a destination:1. Select a location to recover the backed up files to:o Original location - files and folders will be recovered to the same path(s) as they are in thebackup. For example, if you have backed up all files and folders inC:\Documents\Finance\Reports\, the files will be recovered to the same path. If the folderdoes not exist, it will be created automatically.o New location - files will be recovered to the location that you specify in the tree. The files andfolders will be recovered without recreating a full path, unless you clear the Recover withoutfull path check box.2. Click OK.ExclusionsSet up exclusions for the specific types of files you do not wish to be overwritten during recovery.To specify which files and folders to exclude:Set up any of the following parameters:• Exclude all hidden files and foldersSelect this check box to skip files and folders with the Hidden attribute. If a folder is Hidden, all ofits contents — including files that are not Hidden — will be excluded.• Exclude all system files and foldersSelect this check box to skip files and folders with the System attribute. If a folder is System, all ofits contents — including files that are not System — will be excluded.You can view file or folder attributes in the file/folder properties or by using the attrib command. For moreinformation, refer to the Help and Support Center in Windows.• Exclude files matching the following criteriaSelect this check box to skip files whose names match any of the criteria — called file masks — inthe list; use the Add, Edit, Remove and Remove All buttons to create the list of file masks.You can use one or more wildcard characters * and ? in a file mask:The asterisk (*) substitutes for zero or more characters in a file name; for example, the file maskDoc*.txt yields files such as Doc.txt and Document.txtThe question mark (?) substitutes for exactly one character in a file name; for example, the filemask Doc?.txt yields files such as Doc1.txt and Docs.txt — but not the files Doc.txt or Doc11.txt