↑
Back to Top
What are the main features and advantages of AOMEI Centralized Backupper Server & Devices?
Central Control – Manages server and device backups from one console.
Automated Backup – Schedules protection tasks with less manual effort.
Remote Deployment – Installs backup clients across networks quickly and easily.
Flexible Recovery – Restores files, systems, and disks when needed.
Group Management – Applies backup plans across organized endpoints efficiently.
Digital Reliability – Supports stable long-term protection for expanding infrastructures.
Central Console – Remotely manage backups for all networked Windows computers
System Backup – Protects Windows system drives on PCs and servers
Disk Backup – Images complete disks or selected partitions automatically
File Backup/Sync – Scheduled file and folder protection with filter options
Core Capacity – Backs up Microsoft SQL Server 2005 through 2019
Important – VMware and Hyper-V virtual machine backup not included
AOMEI Centralized Backupper Server & Devices is a central management console that controls AOMEI Backupper agents on Windows servers and workstations across the local network. It is the edition for mixed environments, because one product covers both server endpoints and PC endpoints from a single dashboard.
One Dashboard – No separate backup configuration on each machine
Mixed Coverage – Servers and workstations protected under one license
Remote Deployment – Install client agents over LAN without desk visits
Network Storage – Store images centrally on NAS or shares
Scheduled Automation – Backup tasks run unattended on defined schedules
Central Restore – Recover failed clients directly from the console
It lets an administrator create, schedule, and monitor backup jobs for every Windows computer in the LAN from one console instead of configuring each machine individually. The console pushes tasks to AOMEI Backupper agent software installed on the client machines, covering system backup, disk backup, partition backup, file backup, file sync, and Microsoft SQL Server backup. Partition backup handles NTFS and FAT32 natively, while ReFS, Ext2/3, and exFAT volumes are captured in sector-by-sector mode. In practice this means one IT person can keep system images of an office full of PCs plus the file server current without walking to a single desk.
The software functions are identical across all three editions; only the licensing scope differs. The Devices edition licenses Windows PC endpoints, the Server edition licenses machines running Windows Server, and Server & Devices covers both endpoint types under one license. If your network contains even one Windows Server machine alongside regular workstations, Server & Devices is the edition that protects everything without buying a second product.
| Coverage | Devices | Server | Server & Devices |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central console | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Windows PC clients | ✓ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Windows Server clients | ✕ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Backup features | Identical | Identical | Identical |
According to the official user manual, backup images created through the central console are saved to network locations such as a network share or NAS, not to local drives of the client machines. This is a deliberate design: keeping all images on one central storage target means a failed workstation can be restored even if its own disk is dead. Before deploying, plan enough capacity on your NAS or file share, because system and disk images from many endpoints accumulate there. The backup scheme settings can automatically delete old backups to keep that storage under control.
Yes, the console can back up Microsoft SQL Server databases on any connected client, with official support for SQL Server versions 2005 through 2019. Backups can run as scheduled full or differential jobs, and the SQL backup settings include optional encryption plus three selectable compression levels (none, normal, high). For a small company running an accounting or ERP database on SQL Server, this removes the need for separate database backup scripts. Restores are triggered from the same console, which shortens recovery when a database becomes corrupted.
The console detects available computers in the LAN automatically and can remotely install the client agent using administrator credentials, or you can add machines manually by IP address or NetBIOS name. Clients in different subnets can be managed by enabling IP Segments Management in the settings and defining the legal IP ranges to scan. Agents can also be uninstalled remotely from the console, so the full client lifecycle is handled without visiting each machine. Grouping controlled computers lets you apply one backup task to a whole department at once.
AOMEI Centralized Backupper manages physical Windows machines only; agentless backup of VMware ESXi or Hyper-V virtual machines is not included and is handled by the separate AOMEI Cyber Backup product. There are no agents for macOS or Linux endpoints, so mixed-OS networks need an additional tool for non-Windows machines. Backup destinations are limited to network storage, which means a working share or NAS is a practical requirement, and console and clients must be reachable over the LAN. If your environment is mostly virtualized, evaluate AOMEI Cyber Backup instead of this product.
Official documentation lists support for Windows client systems from XP through current desktop versions and Windows Server releases from 2003 through 2022, including Small Business Server editions. Both 32-bit and 64-bit systems, MBR and GPT disks, and UEFI boot are supported.
No, according to AOMEI the price already includes the license for the central management console and the agent installations used on the client computers. You install the console on one Windows PC or server and deploy agents to the endpoints covered by your plan.
Yes, restores are started from the central console, and because images are stored on network storage they remain available even if the original computer's disk has failed. This makes the product usable for replacing a dead workstation, not only for rolling back files.
| Operating Systems |
Windows 11: Home / Pro / Education / Enterprise |
| Processor | 1 GHz x86 or compatible CPU |
| Memory RAM | 256 MB |
| Hard Disk | 300 MB available disk space for installation |
| Display | Standard display compatible with the respective operating system |
| Special Features | Centralized web console for Windows endpoints Disk backup System backup Partition backup File backup Automatic backup Incremental backup Granular recovery Backup cleanup retention policy Cloud Archive to Amazon S3 Backup to local path, external storage, NAS drive, network share, and AWS S3 Agent-based backup for Windows PCs and servers |
| Note | Requires deployment on one Windows server or control computer within the LAN. Managed Windows devices require the AOMEI client or agent workflow depending on product generation. Web console supports Google Chrome 29, Mozilla Firefox 23, and Microsoft Edge 25 or higher. |