Volume Replicator 7.4.2 Administrator's Guide - Windows
- Understanding Volume Replicator
- About Volume Replicator
- Basic Volume Replicator terms
- Building blocks of Volume Replicator
- Understanding replication in the Volume Replicator environment
- Modes of replication
- Understanding data flow in Volume Replicator asynchronous mode
- Managing data during failure and recovery
- Replication concepts
- About using Volume Replicator as a disaster recovery tool
- Understanding how Volume Replicator logs writes to the Replicator Log
- Understanding replication settings for a Secondary
- Measures to protect log overflow and replication latency
- Pausing the replication
- Synchronizing the Secondary
- Understanding Volume Replicator support for FlashSnap
- About Synchronized Snapshots
- Understanding Bunker replication
- Understanding Volume Replicator Support for TCP Multi-Connection
- About Volume Replicator memory monitoring and control support
- About Volume Replicator Graphs
- Setting up replication
- Security considerations for Volume Replicator
- Setting up replication using the Setup Replicated Data Set wizard
- Setting up the Bunker RVG for replication
- Using the VEA Console for Volume Replication Operations
- Monitoring replication
- Interpreting the information in the Volume Replicator views
- Monitoring replication using the VEA console
- Checking replication performance using vxrlink stats
- Administering Volume Replicator
- Adding volumes
- Administering the RVG
- Administering replication
- Managing checkpoints
- Pausing replication using Volume Replicator
- Creating snapshots for the data volumes
- Creating synchronized snapshots using the VSS Snapshot wizard
- Administering Bunker replication
- Performing disaster recovery operation
- Deleting Volume Replicator objects
- Accessing data on Secondary host
- Performing automated system recovery (ASR)
- Alternative methods to synchronize the Secondary faster
- Obtaining statistical information through Volume Replicator Graphs
- Using the command line interface
- Administering the RDS using the vxrds command
- Resizing the data volumes
- Displaying the network statistics for the RLINK
- Administering the RVGs using the vxrvg command
- Displaying information using the vxprint command
- Creating snapshots using the vxsnap command
- Administering replicated volumes using the vxvol command
- Displaying and changing replication ports using the vrport command
- Administering the RVG using the vxedit
- Administering the RVG using the vxassist command
- Tuning Volume Replicator
- Examples: Using the command line
- Example 1: Setting up replication using the command line interface
- Example 3: Using Bunker node for disaster recovery
- Example 4: Using synchronized snapshots to restore data
- Configuring Volume Replicator in a VCS environment
- Components of a VCS cluster
- Illustrating a highly available Volume Replicator setup
- How the agents work
- Configuring the agents
- Working with existing replication service groups
- Configuring Volume Replicator with Hyper-V
- Advanced settings in Volume Replicator
- Troubleshooting Volume Replicator
- Recommendations and checks
- Recovering from problems in a firewall or NAT setup
- Recovering from problems during replication
- Error when configuring the VxSAS Service
- Operation time-out errors
- Problems when configuring Volume Replicator in a VCS environment
- Problems when setting performance counters
- Appendix A. Services and ports
- Appendix B. Using the vxrsync utility
- Appendix C. VR Advisor (VRAdvisor)
Configuring the agents
This section explains how you can cover replication under a cluster.
Before that, you must first create the application service group for the application whose data Volume Replicator is replicating. The following figure illustrates a typical configuration after the application service group has been created using the application-specific wizard.
For more information about creating the application service group, see Cluster Server Administrator's Guide.
You can create the replication service group using the Volume Replicator agent configuration wizard to cover replication under a cluster. However, the replication setup must exist before it can be covered under a cluster. Create a Replicated Data Set (RDS) using an IP address that is available in the setup.
For a cluster setup you need to set the Primary and Secondary to a virtual IP address. The Volume Replicator agent configuration wizard creates the resource for this IP address. Currently however, the resource for this is not created. Therefore you need to use the Change Replication Settings wizard to set the replication IP to a non-existent virtual IP. When using the Volume Replicator Agent Configuration Wizard you can specify this IP for which the resource is then created.
Use the Volume Replicator agent configuration wizard to create the replication service group along with the IP resource for replication. Using this wizard you can specify the IP address used in the existing replication setup to create the corresponding IP resource in the replication service group, when necessary. If you already have an IP resource created then you can choose to use this resource by either copying or linking to the resource.
After the replication service group has been created, the RVG resource must be dependent on the IP address of the local host that is used for replication. In some cases, it is possible that an RVG uses more than one IP on the local host, for replication. This is especially true if the RVG is a Primary with more than one Secondary and different IPs on the Primary are used to create RLINKs to each Secondary. In this case, a resource should be present for each of these IPs in the replication service group. The resource for this Primary RVG should then depend on each of the IP resources.
The following table lists the procedures and description related to agent configuration.
Table: Procedures and related description for agent configuration.
Procedure | Description |
---|---|
Creating the application service group | You must first create the application service group. After creating it on the Primary, take the application service group offline before creating it on the Secondary. For more information, see Cluster Server Administrator's Guide. |
Taking the application group offline | Before creating the replication service group, take the application service group offline, but make sure that the disk group is imported. |
Setting up Replication | Use the setup RDS wizard. |
Changing the Primary and Secondary IP | Use the Change Replication Settings option from the Secondary to change the Primary and Secondary IP to one that is intended for replication and currently does not have any resources created. |
Creating RLINKs between each pair of Secondaries | If your setup has multiple Secondary hosts, the RLINKs are automatically created when a Secondary is added to the RDS. |
Running the Volume Replicator agent configuration wizard | Run the Volume Replicator agent configuration wizard. See Creating the replication service group. For a setup using multiple IP addresses for replication, run the wizard in the modify mode to create the IP resources for each of these IPs and make the VvrRvg resource dependent on each of them. See Modifying an existing resource in the replication service group. |
Note:
The VCS NIC resource can be duplicated because it is possible that other IP resources excluding the replication IP addresses share the same NIC resource.