# FAQ ## When is it appropriate to use Ark instead of etcd's built in backup/restore? Etcd's backup/restore tooling is good for recovering from data loss in a single etcd cluster. For example, it is a good idea to take a backup of etcd prior to upgrading etcd istelf. For more sophisticated management of your Kubernetes cluster backups and restores, we feel that Ark is generally a better approach. It gives you the ability to throw away an unstable cluster and restore your Kubernetes resources and data into a new cluster, which you can't do easily just by backing up and restoring etcd. Examples of cases where Ark is useful: * you don't have access to etcd (e.g. you're running on GKE) * backing up both Kubernetes resources and persistent volume state * cluster migrations * backing up a subset of your Kubernetes resources * backing up Kubernetes resources that are stored across multiple etcd clusters (for example if you run a custom apiserver) ## Will Ark restore my Kubernetes resources exactly the way they were before? Yes, with some exceptions. For example, when Ark restores pods it deletes the `nodeName` from the pod so that it can be scheduled onto a new node. You can see some more examples of the differences in [pod_restorer.go](https://github.com/heptio/ark/blob/master/pkg/restore/restorers/pod_restorer.go)