Your data might have been offloaded there. It uses storage system snapshots as a source for backups and recovery of VMware VMs with disks residing on storage volumes.
![veeam backup restore veeam backup restore](https://helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backup/cloud/images/guest_files_restore_point_agent.png)
If this is the case the only thing you can do is wait. Restoring a Backup Access the system where data is being restored to and run the Veeam File Level Restore or Volume Restore application depending on what type. As already outlined below by u/FuelcellCruiser it might very well be the provider. Most people will see the Veeam Recovery Media only as a bootable device to perform a bare metal recovery. Everything on those volumes and partitions will be overwritten.
#VEEAM BACKUP RESTORE FREE#
3-6 mb/s is expected for Guest OS file restore to the same location, because of the overhead, but not for Entire VM restore or VM files restore that would be much faster. Veeam Endpoint Backup FREE will perform partition re-allocation if needed and restore the necessary data from the backup.
![veeam backup restore veeam backup restore](https://helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backup/qsg_vsphere/images/full_vm_restore_launch.png)
If you are in doubt, open a ticket with Veeam Support. You will need to get the "pex" from the restore logs to know for sure. Right-click the Veeam Agent icon in the system tray. You can start a backup job on the source machine using the Veeam Backup Agent. The restore will not show the bottleneck in the GUI as u/FuelcellCruiser wrote below. Before we continue with the section on restore procedures, make sure you performed the final backup of your machine.Well I read OP's problem and the other comments and would like to add these additional info's: