My understanding is that when you restore a library it will restore it into the library you currently have open.
That is unfortunate - and in my mind - a poor design or programming decision. The entire library concept - as I understand it - should be like containers - each library has it's own unique attributes , paths, settings and so on.
So if you have the default library open (as you would on a new install) and then restore WHS Music, then your default library is now WHS Music. So then just go into library manager and rename it to WHS Music.
Well - what it should do is - restore the WHS Music library as it's own entity and leave the default (currently blank) library completely alone. I do not want the attributes of the WHS Music library (or any other library) to pollute the default library or vice versa. When I actually switch libraries via the File->Library process - I was under the assumption that I was actually switching "containers" and the interface should react based upon the setting of the library loaded.
Even better - upon a new install - at first startup - there should be a dialog presented that offers several choices:
1. Create a new default library
2. Restore an existing backup and make it the new default library
This would make me very happy in that I have no use for the default and would rather just have Library Manager be populated with my current restored libraries.
If you want to restore another library, you need to create a new one first, open it and then do the restore.
That makes no sense. I shouldn't have to "create" anything on a restore. The restore itself should "create" the restored entity and place it on the Library menu. Then I can switch to it and presumably have all of it's unique attributes load up.
The reason you got both libraries restored will be because you restored the settings as well, and your settings would have included your library definitions pointing to your libraries on the WHS.
Yep. I get that part now. I would like to make a suggestion that this be changed. Each "library" - ESPECIALLY when being backed up - with settings or without - should act as a standalone container that does not jump boundaries or attach itself to any open library. This could be a disaster if one took a backup that had 10 libraries with hundreds of settings and restored that to an install - thinking that only a single library would be coming in.
The backup routine itself even uses the name of the library being backed up - but as I have seen...backing up a specific one drags along ALL the settings and attributes of every library - which should be clearly spelled out via the interface.
Cheers,
VP