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Virtual Business Service-Availability User's Guide
Last Published:
2019-02-01
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.4.1)
Platform: AIX,Linux,Solaris,Windows
- Overview of Virtual Business Services
- Virtualization support in Virtual Business Services
- Supported operating systems for Virtual Business Services
- Installing and configuring Virtual Business Services
- Configuring a virtual business service
- Creating virtual business services
- Editing virtual business services
- Configuring dependencies for a virtual business service
- Managing Microsoft Failover Clustering from VBS
- Virtual Business Services operations
- Starting and stopping Virtual Business Services
- Tracking VBS operations
- Logs of a virtual business service
- Virtual Business Services security
- Fault management in Virtual Business Services
- Disaster recovery in Virtual Business Services
- Upgrading Virtual Business Services
- Appendix A. Command reference
- Appendix B. Troubleshooting and recovery
- Appendix C. Known issues and limitations
- Known issues and limitations
- Known issues and limitations
Viewing application recovery point and startup time of a VBS
Prerequisites:
To measure the application recovery point (AppRecoveryPoint) or startup time, VBS must contain a global service group with replication agent configured to compute the recovery point.
To view the current application recovery point and startup time of the VBS, run:
# vbssvc -showsla <vbs_name>
The command output resembles the following:
Name | StartUpTime | AppRecoveryPoint | ReplicationLagInfo |
Primary1:RepSg1 | 15 | 00:15:00 | Currently we compute Replication Lag only if all the devices are in COPY or PAIR state. |
Primary2:RepSg2 | 25 | 00:30:00 |
|
VCS NOTICE V-16-25-30308 Effective Recovery Point for the virtual business service PrimVBS = 00:30:00 VCS NOTICE V-16-25-30309 Effective Service StartUpTime for the virtual business service PrimVBS = 40 secs