Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions 7.4 HA and DR Solutions Guide for Microsoft Exchange 2010 - Windows
- Section I. Introduction and Concepts
- Introducing Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions for Microsoft Exchange Server
- How VCS monitors storage components
- Introducing the VCS agent for Exchange 2010
- Introducing Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions for Microsoft Exchange Server
- Section II. Configuration Workflows
- Configuring high availability for Exchange Server with InfoScale Enterprise
- Reviewing the HA configuration
- Reviewing a standalone Exchange Server configuration
- Reviewing the Replicated Data Cluster configuration
- Reviewing the disaster recovery configuration
- Disaster recovery configuration
- Notes and recommendations for cluster and application configuration
- Configuring disk groups and volumes for Exchange Server
- About managing disk groups and volumes
- Configuring the cluster using the Cluster Configuration Wizard
- Using the Solutions Configuration Center
- Configuring high availability for Exchange Server with InfoScale Enterprise
- Section III. Deployment
- Installing Exchange Server 2010
- Configuring Exchange Server for failover
- Configuring the service group in a non-shared storage environment
- Configuring campus clusters for Exchange Server
- Configuring Replicated Data Clusters for Exchange Server
- Setting up the Replicated Data Sets (RDS)
- Configuring a RVG service group for replication
- Configuring the resources in the RVG service group for RDC replication
- Configuring the RVG Primary resources
- Adding the nodes from the secondary zone to the RDC
- Verifying the RDC configuration
- Deploying disaster recovery for Exchange Server
- Reviewing the disaster recovery configuration
- Setting up your replication environment
- Configuring replication and global clustering
- Configuring the global cluster option for wide-area failover
- Possible task after creating the DR environment: Adding a new failover node to a Volume Replicator environment
- Testing fault readiness by running a fire drill
- About the Fire Drill Wizard
- About post-fire drill scripts
- Prerequisites for a fire drill
- Preparing the fire drill configuration
- Running a fire drill
- Deleting the fire drill configuration
- Section IV. Reference
- Appendix A. Using Veritas AppProtect for vSphere
- Appendix B. Troubleshooting
- Appendix A. Using Veritas AppProtect for vSphere
About the Fire Drill Wizard
Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions (SFW HA) provides a Fire Drill Wizard to help you set up and run a fire drill on a disaster recovery environment. You launch the Fire Drill Wizard from the Solutions Configuration Center.
The Fire Drill Wizard tests the fault readiness of a disaster recovery configuration by mimicking a failover from the primary site to the secondary site. The wizard does this without stopping the application at the primary site and disrupting user access.
The Fire Drill Wizard supports conducting a fire drill for a disaster recovery site that uses Volume Replicator (Volume Replicator) or that uses Hitachi TrueCopy or EMC SRDF hardware replication.
In the Hitachi TrueCopy or EMC SRDF environments, the Fire Drill Wizard supports only the Gold configuration. For the Silver or Bronze configuration, you must manage (create, restore, delete) the fire drill configurations and run the fire drills manually. For further information about the Gold, Silver, and Bronze configurations, refer to the following documents:
Cluster Server Hardware Replication Agent for Hitachi TrueCopy Configuration Guide
Cluster Server Hardware Replication Agent for EMC SRDF Configuration Guide
Note:
After upgrading to 6.0.1 or later, the existing fire drill service groups will not be usable. In a Hitachi TrueCopy or EMC SRDF environment, you must manually edit the existing fire drill service groups. In a Volume Replicator environment, you must use the Fire Drill Wizard to re-create them. For more information, see the Veritas InfoScale Installation and Upgrade Guide.