Vsphere Replication 81 Admin
Vsphere Replication 81 Admin
Vsphere Replication 81 Admin
Replication
Administration
vSphere Replication 8.1
VMware vSphere Replication Administration
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Contents
1 Updated Information 7
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
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vSphere Replication Administration
vSphere Replication Administration provides information about installing, configuring, and using
VMware vSphere Replication.
Intended Audience
This information is intended for anyone who wants to protect the virtual machines in their virtual
infrastructure by using vSphere Replication. The information is written for experienced Windows or Linux
system administrators who are familiar with virtual machine technology and data center operations.
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Updated Information 1
This vSphere Replication Administration document is updated with each release of the product or when
necessary.
This table provides the update history of the vSphere Replication Administration document.
Revision Description
22 JAN 2019 Updated the information in topic Configure vSphere Replication Network Settings.
18 OCT 2018 Updated the information in topic Order of Upgrading vSphere and vSphere Replication Components.
27 AUG 2018 n Updated the information in How the 5 Minute Recovery Point Objective Works.
n Updated the information in vSphere Replication Compatibility with Other Software.
13 JUL 2018 Updated the Prerequisites in topic Upgrade the vSphere Replication Appliance.
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Overview of
VMware vSphere Replication 2
VMware vSphere Replication is an extension to VMware vCenter Server that provides a hypervisor-based
virtual machine replication and recovery.
vSphere Replication is an alternative to storage-based replication. It protects virtual machines from partial
or complete site failures by replicating the virtual machines between the following sites:
n A replication solution that allows flexibility in the storage vendor selection at the source and target
sites.
You can use vSphere Replication with the vCenter Server Appliance or with a standard vCenter Server
installation. You can have a vCenter Server Appliance on one site and a standard vCenter Server
installation on the other.
With vSphere Replication, you can replicate virtual machines from a source data center to a target site
quickly and efficiently.
You can deploy additional vSphere Replication servers to meet your load balancing needs.
After you set up the replication infrastructure, you can choose the virtual machines to be replicated at a
different recovery point objective (RPO). You can enable the multi-point-in-time retention policy to store
more than one instance of the replicated virtual machine. After recovery, the retained instances are
available as snapshots of the recovered virtual machine.
You can use VMware vSAN datastores as target datastores and choose destination storage profiles for
the replica virtual machine and its disks when configuring replications.
Note vSAN is a fully supported feature of vSphere 5.5 Update 1 and later.
You can configure all vSphere Replication features in the Site Recovery user interface like managing
sites, registering additional replication servers monitoring and managing replications.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
n Site Recovery user interface that provides full functionality for working with vSphere Replication.
n A plug-in to the vSphere Web Client and vSphere Client that provides a user interface for
troubleshooting vSphere Replication health status and links to the Site Recovery standalone user
interface.
n Authenticates users and checks their permissions to perform vSphere Replication operations.
n A vSphere Replication server that provides the core of the vSphere Replication infrastructure.
The vSphere Replication appliance provides a virtual appliance management interface (VAMI). You can
use the VAMI to configure the appliance after deployment. For example, you can use the VAMI to change
the appliance security settings, change the network settings, or configure an external database. You can
deploy additional vSphere Replication Servers using a separate .ovf package.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
You use the Site Recovery client plug-in to perform all vSphere Replication actions.
n View the vSphere Replication status for all vCenter Server instances that are registered with the
same vCenter Single Sign-On.
n View a summary of the replication configuration parameters on the Summary tab of virtual machines
that are configured for replication.
n Reconfigure the replications of one or more virtual machines by selecting the VMs and using the
context menu.
The local site can be any site where vCenter Server supports a critical business need. The remote site
can be in another location, or in the same facility to establish redundancy. The remote site is usually
located in a facility that is unlikely to be affected by environmental, infrastructure, or other disturbances
that might affect the local site.
®
vSphere Replication has the following requirements for the vSphere environments at each site:
n The remote site must have hardware, network, and storage resources that can support the same
virtual machines and workloads as the local site.
n The remote site must have access to networks (public and private) comparable to the ones on the
local site, although not necessarily the same range of network addresses.
When you connect sites that are part of the same vCenter Single Sign-On domain, you must select the
remote site only, without providing authentication details, because you are already logged in.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
When you connect sites that belong to different vCenter Single Sign-On domains, the
vSphere Replication Management Server must register with the Platform Services Controller on the
remote site. You must provide authentication details for the remote site, including IP or FQDN of the
server where Platform Services Controller runs, and user credentials. See Configure vSphere Replication
Connections.
After connecting the sites, you can monitor the connectivity state between them in the Site Recovery user
interface.
When you configure a virtual machine for replication, the vSphere Replication agent sends changed
blocks in the virtual machine disks from the source site to the target site. The changed blocks are applied
to the copy of the virtual machine. This process occurs independently of the storage layer.
vSphere Replication performs an initial full synchronization of the source virtual machine and its replica
copy. You can use replication seeds to reduce the network traffic that is generated by data transfer during
the initial full synchronization.
During replication configuration, you can set a recovery point objective (RPO) and enable retention of
instances from multiple points in time (MPIT).
As administrator, you can monitor and manage the status of the replication. You can view information for
forward and reverse replications, local and remote site status, replication issues, and for warnings and
errors.
When you manually recover a virtual machine, vSphere Replication creates a copy of the virtual machine
connected to the replica disk, but does not connect any of the virtual network cards to port groups. You
can review the recovery and status of the replica virtual machine and attach it to the networks. You can
recover virtual machines at different points in time, such as the last known consistent state.
vSphere Replication presents the retained instances as ordinary virtual machine snapshots to which you
can revert the virtual machine.
vSphere Replication stores replication configuration data in its embedded database. You can also
configure vSphere Replication to use an external database.
You can replicate a virtual machine between two sites. vSphere Replication is installed on both source
and target sites. Only one vSphere Replication appliance is deployed on each vCenter Server. You can
deploy additional vSphere Replication Servers.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
vCenter vCenter
VR Appliance VR Appliance
VR Agent
(Further VR
NFC Service
Servers)
You can also replicate a virtual machine between datastores at the same vCenter Server. In that topology
one vCenter Server manages hosts at the source and at the target. Only one vSphere Replication
appliance is deployed on the single vCenter Server. You can add multiple Additional vSphere Replication
servers in a single vCenter Server to replicate virtual machines to other clusters.
To perform recovery, the vCenter Server managing the target datastore, the vSphere Replication
appliance, and any additional vSphere Replication Servers managing the replication must be up and
running.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
Site Recovery UI
VR Server VR Server
ESXi ESXi
ESXi ESXi
Network Network
FileCopy FileCopy
Cluster 1 Cluster 2
Replication
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
Source Site
vCenter
VR Appliance
Server
ESXi Replication
VR Agent
vCenter
VR Appliance
Server
Replicate
ESXi
Replication
VR Agent
ESXi ESXi
vCenter
VR Appliance
Server
Source Site
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
Compressing the replication data that is transferred through the network saves network bandwidth and
might help reduce the amount of buffer memory used on the vSphere Replication server. However,
compressing and decompressing data requires more CPU resources on both the source site and the
server that manages the target datastore.
Table 2‑1. Support for Data Compression Depending on Other Product Versions
ESXi Host that Manages the Target
Source ESXi host Datastore Data Compression Support
Earlier than 6.0 Any supported version vSphere Replication does not support
data compression for the source ESXi
host, so the option Enable network
compression for VR data is disabled in
the Configure Replication wizard.
6.0 Earlier than 6.0 The ESXi host on the source site sends
compressed data packets to the
vSphere Replication server on the target
site. The vSphere Replication server
searches the target site for ESXi 6.0
hosts that can decompress the data. If
no 6.0 hosts are available for the target
datastore, the vSphere Replication
server uses the resources of the
vSphere Replication appliance to
decompress the data, and sends the
uncompressed data to the ESXi host.
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When data compression is enabled, if both the source and the target ESXi hosts support data
compression, vMotion operations can be performed as usual. However, if the target ESXi host is earlier
than 6.0, vSphere Replication prevents vMotion from moving replication source VMs to that host because
it does not support data compression. This prevents DRS from performing automated vMotion operations
to hosts that do not support compression. Therefore, if you need to move a replication source VM to an
ESXi host earlier than 6.0, before you perform the vMotion operation, you must reconfigure the replication
to disable data compression.
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vSphere Replication System
Requirements 3
The environment in which you run the vSphere Replication virtual appliance must meet certain hardware
requirements.
vSphere Replication is distributed as a 64-bit virtual appliance packaged in the .ovf format. It is
configured to use a dual-core or quad-core CPU, a 13 GB and a 9 GB hard disk, and 8 GB of RAM.
Additional vSphere Replication servers require 716 MB of RAM.
You must deploy the virtual appliance in a vCenter Server environment by using the OVF deployment
wizard on an ESXi host.
vSphere Replication consumes negligible CPU and memory on the source host ESXi and on the guest
OS of the replicated virtual machine.
Note vSphere Replication can be deployed with either IPv4 or IPv6 address. Mixing IP addresses, for
example having a single appliance with an IPv4 and an IPv6 address, is not supported. To register as an
extension, vSphere Replication relies on the VirtualCenter.FQDN property of the vCenter Server. When
an IPv6 address is used for vSphere Replication, the VirtualCenter.FQDN property must be set to a
fully qualified domain name that can be resolved to an IPv6 address or to a literal address. When
operating with an IPv6 address, vSphere Replication requires that all components in the environment,
such as vCenter Server and ESXi hosts are accessible using the IPv6 address.
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vSphere Replication does not have a separate license as it is a feature of certain vSphere license
editions.
n vSphere Standard
n vSphere Enterprise
If you have the correct vSphere license, there is no limit on the number of virtual machines that you can
replicate by using vSphere Replication.
You cannot use vSphere Replication to replicate virtual machines on ESXi hosts that do not have the
correct vSphere license. If you install vSphere Replication on an ESXi host that does not have the correct
license and try to configure replication for virtual machines on that host, the replication fails with a
licensing error.
If you configure a virtual machine for replication on a host with the correct vSphere license and move it to
a host with an unsupported license, vSphere Replication stops replication of that virtual machine. You can
disable vSphere Replication on a configured virtual machine on the unlicensed host.
For a list of all the ports that must be open for vSphere Replication, see
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2087769.
For the list of default ports that all VMware products use, see http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1012382.
To ensure successful virtual machine replication, you must verify that your virtual infrastructure respects
certain limits before you start the replication.
n You can only deploy one vSphere Replication appliance on a vCenter Server instance. When you
deploy another vSphere Replication appliance, during the boot process vSphere Replication detects
another appliance already deployed and registered as an extension to vCenter Server. You have to
confirm if you want to proceed with the new appliance and recreate all replications or shut it down and
reboot the old appliance to restore the original vSphere Replication extension thumbprint in
vCenter Server.
n Each newly deployed vSphere Replication appliance can manage a maximum of 2000 replications.
See http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2102453 for more information.
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n Upgraded vSphere Replication appliances that use the embedded vSphere Replication database
require additional configuration to enable the support of a maximum of 2000 replications. See
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2102463. No additional configuration is required for vSphere Replication
appliances that are configured to use an external database.
You can safely use vSphere Replication with certain vSphere features, such as vSphere vMotion. Some
other vSphere features, for example vSphere Distributed Power Management, require special
configuration for use with vSphere Replication.
Note You cannot upgrade VMware Tools in the vSphere Replication appliance.
vSphere vMotion Yes You can migrate replicated virtual machines by using vMotion. Replication
continues at the defined recovery point objective (RPO) after the migration is
finished.
vSphere Storage Yes You can move the disk files of a replicated virtual machine on the source site
vMotion using Storage vMotion with no impact on the ongoing replication.
vSphere High Yes You can protect a replicated virtual machine by using HA. Replication
Availability continues at the defined RPO after HA restarts a virtual machine.
vSphere Replication does not perform any special HA handling. You can
protect the vSphere Replication appliance itself by using HA.
vSphere Fault No vSphere Replication cannot replicate virtual machines that have fault
Tolerance tolerance enabled. You cannot protect the vSphere Replication appliance itself
with FT.
vSphere DRS Yes Replication continues at the defined RPO after resource redistribution is
finished.
vSphere Storage Yes On the source site, Storage DRS can move the disk files of replicated virtual
DRS machines with no impact on the ongoing replication.
On the target site, you must register the vSphere Replication appliance with
the vCenter Single Sign-On service to enable the communication between
Storage DRS and the vSphere Replication Management server. See Register
the vSphere Replication Appliance with vCenter Single Sign-On.
vSAN datastore Yes You can use vSAN datastores as the source and target datastore when
configuring replications.
Note vSAN is a fully supported feature of vSphere 5.5 Update 1 and later.
vSphere Yes vSphere Replication coexists with DPM on the source site.
Distributed Power vSphere Replication does not perform any special DPM handling on the
Management source site. You can disable DPM on the target site to allow enough hosts as
replication targets.
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Table 3‑1. Compatibility of vSphere Replication with Other vSphere Features (Continued)
Compatible with
vSphere Feature vSphere Replication Description
VMware vSphere Yes You can protect virtual machines that contain disks that use VMware vSphere
Flash Read Flash Read Cache storage. Since the host to which a virtual machine recovers
Cache might not be configured for Flash Read Cache, vSphere Replication disables
Flash Read Cache on disks when it starts the virtual machines on the
recovery site. vSphere Replication sets the reservation to zero. Before
performing a recovery on a virtual machine that is configured to use vSphere
Flash Read Cache, take note of the virtual machine's cache reservation from
the vSphere Web Client. After the recovery, you can migrate the virtual
machine to a host with Flash Read Cache storage and restore the original
Flash Read Cache setting on the virtual machine manually.
vSphere Replication is compatible with vCenter Server 6.0 U3 and later. vSphere Replication requires
ESXi 6.0 U3 or later. See the following documents for more information.
n For vSphere Replication interoperability with backup software when using VSS, see
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2040754.
n Browser compatibility at vSphere Client and vSphere Web Client Software Requirements in vSphere
Installation and Setup.
Storage and network bandwidth requirements can increase when using vSphere Replication. The
following factors play a role in the amount of network bandwidth vSphere Replication requires for an
efficient replication.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
n Between the host running the replicated virtual machine and the vSphere Replication server.
n Between the vSphere Replication server and a host with access to the replication target datastore.
Network-based storage is a concern when you are replicating virtual machines within a single vCenter
Server instance that shares the network for the levels of traffic listed. When you have two sites with a
vCenter Server instance on each site, the link speed between the two sites is the most important as it can
slow down replication traffic between the two sites.
Dataset Size
vSphere Replication might not replicate every virtual machine nor every VMDK file in the replicated virtual
machines. To evaluate the dataset size that vSphere Replication replicates, calculate the percentage of
the total storage used for virtual machines, then calculate the number of VMDKs within that subset that
you have configured for replication.
For example, you might have 2 TB of virtual machines on the datastores and usevSphere Replication to
replicate half of these virtual machines. You might only replicate a subset of the VMDKs and assuming all
the VMDKs are replicated, the maximum amount of data for replication is 1 TB.
vSphere Replication transfers blocks based on the RPO schedule. If you set an RPO of one hour,
vSphere Replication transfers any block that has changed in that hour to meet that RPO.
vSphere Replication only transfers the block once in its current state at the moment that
vSphere Replication creates the bundle of blocks for transfer. vSphere Replication only registers that the
block has changed within the RPO period, not how many times it changed. The average daily data
change rate provides an estimation of how much data vSphere Replication transfers or how often the
transfers occur.
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If you use volume shadow copy service (VSS) to quiesce the virtual machine, replication traffic cannot be
spread out in small sets of bundles throughout the RPO period. Instead, vSphere Replication transfers all
the changed blocks as one set when the virtual machine is idle. Without VSS, vSphere Replication can
transfer smaller bundles of changed blocks on an ongoing basis as the blocks change, spreading the
traffic throughout the RPO period. The traffic changes if you use VSS and vSphere Replication handles
the replication schedule differently, leading to varying traffic patterns.
If you change the RPO, vSphere Replication transfers more or less data per replication to meet the new
RPO.
Link Speed
If you have to transfer an average replication bundle of 4 GB in a one hour period, you must examine the
link speed to determine if the RPO can be met. If you have a 10Mb link, under ideal conditions on a
completely dedicated link with little overhead, 4GB takes about an hour to transfer. Meeting the RPO
saturates a 10Mb WAN connection. The connection is saturated even under ideal conditions, with no
overhead or limiting factors such as retransmits, shared traffic, or excessive bursts of data change rates.
You can assume that only about 70% of a link is available for traffic replication. This means that on a
10Mb link you obtain a link speed of about 3GB per hour. On a 100Mb link, you obtain a speed of about
30GB per hour.
If you have groups of virtual machines that have different RPO periods, you can determine the replication
time for each group of virtual machines. For example, you might have four groups with RPO of 15
minutes, 1 hour, 4 hours, and 24 hours. Factor in all the different RPOs in the environment, the subset of
virtual machines in your environment that is replicated, the change rate of the data within that subset, the
amount of data changes within each configured RPO, and the link speeds in your network.
Prerequisites
Examine how data change rate, traffic rates, and the link speed meet the RPO. Then look at the
aggregate of each group.
Procedure
1 Identify the average data change rate within the RPO by calculating the average change rate over a
longer period, then dividing it by the RPO.
2 Calculate how much traffic this data change rate generates in each RPO period.
For example, a data change rate of 100GB requires approximately 200 hours to replicate on a T1
network, 30 hours to replicate on a 10Mbps network, 3 hours on a 100Mbps network.
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Installing and Uninstalling
vSphere Replication 4
vSphere Replication uses the replication technologies included in ESXi with the assistance of virtual
appliances to replicate virtual machines between source and target sites.
The vSphere Replication appliance registers as an extension with the corresponding vCenter Server
instance. For example, on the source site, the vSphere Replication appliance registers with the
vCenter Server instance on the source site. Only one vSphere Replication appliance is allowed per
vCenter Server.
The vSphere Replication appliance contains an embedded vSphere Replication server that manages the
replication process. To meet the load balancing needs of your environment, you might need to deploy
additional vSphere Replication servers at each site. Additional vSphere Replication servers that you
deploy are themselves virtual appliances. You must register any additional vSphere Replication server
with the vSphere Replication appliance on the corresponding site.
The vSphere Replication appliance provides a virtual appliance management interface (VAMI). You can
use the VAMI to perform initial configuration and reconfigure the vSphere Replication database, network
settings, public-key certificates, and passwords for the appliances.
If you delete the vSphere Replication appliance before unregistering it from the vCenter Single Sign-On
server and the vCenter Server, a special procedure must be performed to clean up your environment. For
more information, see Unregister vSphere Replication from vCenter Server If the Appliance Was Deleted.
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n Unregister vSphere Replication from vCenter Server If the Appliance Was Deleted
Procedure
Procedure
1 Verify that you have vSphere and vSphere Web Client installations for the source and target sites.
2 In the vSphere Web Client, select the vCenter Server instance on which you are deploying
vSphere Replication, click Configure > Settings > Advanced Settings, and verify that the
VirtualCenter.FQDN value is set to a fully qualified domain name or a literal address.
Note vSphere Replication can be deployed with either IPv4 or IPv6 address. Mixing IP addresses,
for example having a single appliance with an IPv4 and an IPv6 address, is not supported. To register
as an extension, vSphere Replication relies on the VirtualCenter.FQDN property of the
vCenter Server. When an IPv6 address is used for vSphere Replication, the VirtualCenter.FQDN
property must be set to a fully qualified domain name that can be resolved to an IPv6 address or to a
literal address. When operating with an IPv6 address, vSphere Replication requires that all
components in the environment, such as vCenter Server and ESXi hosts are accessible using the
IPv6 address.
3 If you configure vSphere Replication in an IPv6 network, verify that the IPv6 address of the
vSphere Replication appliance, vCenter Server, the ESXi hosts, and an external database, if used,
are mapped to fully qualified domain names on the DNS server. Install the vSphere Replication
appliance by using FQDN and post installation, make sure that the VRM Host text box in the VAMI is
set to the FQDN of the vSphere Replication appliance. Do not use a static IPv6 address.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
What to do next
You deploy the vSphere Replication appliance by using the standard vSphere OVF deployment wizard.
Important If you use the HTML5-based vSphere Client to deploy the OVF virtual appliance, the
deployment succeeds, but the vSphere Replication fails to start.
Note vSphere Replication can be deployed with either IPv4 or IPv6 address. Mixing IP addresses, for
example having a single appliance with an IPv4 and an IPv6 address, is not supported. To register as an
extension, vSphere Replication relies on the VirtualCenter.FQDN property of the vCenter Server. When
an IPv6 address is used for vSphere Replication, the VirtualCenter.FQDN property must be set to a
fully qualified domain name that can be resolved to an IPv6 address or to a literal address. When
operating with an IPv6 address, vSphere Replication requires that all components in the environment,
such as vCenter Server and ESXi hosts are accessible using the IPv6 address.
Prerequisites
Download the vSphere Replication ISO image and mount it on a system in your environment.
Procedure
4 Provide the location of the OVF file from which to deploy the vSphere Replication appliance, and click
Next.
n Select URL and provide the URL to deploy the appliance from an online URL.
n If you downloaded and mounted the vSphere Replication ISO image on a system in your
environment, select Local file > Browse and navigate to the \bin directory in the ISO image,
and select the vSphere_Replication_OVF10.ovf, vSphere_Replication-system.vmdk, and
vSphere_Replication-support.vmdk files.
5 Accept the name, select or search for a destination folder or data center for the virtual appliance, and
click Next.
You can enter a new name for the virtual appliance. The name must be unique within each
vCenter Server virtual machine folder.
6 Select a cluster, host, or resource pool where you want to run the deployed template, and click Next.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
9 Select the number of vCPUs for the virtual appliance and click Next.
Note Selecting higher number of vCPUs ensures better performance of the vSphere Replication
Management Server, but might slow down the replications that run on ESXi host systems that have 4
or less cores per NUMA node. If you are unsure what the hosts in your environment are, select 2
vCPUs.
10 Select a destination datastore and disk format for the virtual appliance and click Next.
11 Select a network from the list of available networks, set the IP protocol and IP allocation, and click
Next.
vSphere Replication supports both DHCP and static IP addresses. You can also change network
settings by using the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) after installation.
12 On the Customize template page, enter one or more NTP server host names or IP addresses.
13 Set the password for the root account for the customized template, and click Next.
15 Power on the vSphere Replication appliance. Take a note of the IP address of the appliance and log
out of the vSphere Web Client.
What to do next
Register the vSphere Replication appliance with the vCenter Single Sign-On service.
After you deploy the vSphere Replication appliance, you use the Virtual Appliance Management Interface
(VAMI) to register the endpoint and the certificate of the vSphere Replication Management Server with the
vCenter Lookup Service, and to register the vSphere Replication solution user with the vCenter Single
Sign-On administration server.
If you do not register vSphere Replication with vCenter Single Sign-On on the target site,
vSphere Replication cannot operate as expected. In addition, storage DRS does not detect the replicated
data that vSphere Replication stores on the target site and might destroy it.
Prerequisites
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n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
n Verify that the vSphere Replication management server is synchronized with the time of the Single
Sign-On server.
Procedure
2 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
4 In the LookupService Address text box, enter the IP address or domain name of the server where
the lookup service runs.
5 Enter the credentials of a user with administrator privileges to vCenter Single Sign-On.
Site Recovery appears on the Home tab of the vSphere Web Client or the vSphere Client.
What to do next
Note If you registered the vSphere Replication appliance with vCenter Single Sign-On as part of the
upgrade procedure, all existing connections will turn into Connection issue status. See Reconfigure the
Connection to a Remote Site.
If you competed this procedure as part of the installation process, you can configure connections between
the source and target sites.
Perform an optional reconfiguration of the vSphere Replication appliance by using the VAMI. You can
install a certificate, change the appliance root password, change the trust policy, or configure
vSphere Replication to use an external database.
Before you can begin using vSphere Replication, you must register the vSphere Replication appliance
with the vCenter Lookup Service and the Single Sign-On administration server in the environment.
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After the registration, in the vSphere Web Client or vSphere Client, when you click Site Recovery, you
can see the list of vCenter Server instances in the Single-Sign On domain and the status of
vSphere Replication on each vCenter Server instance. If you have Site Recovery Manager deployed in
your environment, you can also see the status of Site Recovery Manager. You can change the
configuration of each vSphere Replication appliance by clicking the Configure icon next to the status
icon.
The following table lists the vSphere Replication states that you can observe, their meanings, and what
you can do to change a state back to normal.
Not installed The vSphere Replication extension is not If a vSphere Replication appliance is
registered in the vCenter Server deployed on this vCenter Server, restart
Extension Manager. the appliance or the vSphere Replication
The vSphere Replication appliance is Management service on the appliance.
either not deployed or the 1 Use a supported browser to log in to
vSphere Replication extension has been the vSphere Replication VAMI as the
deleted from the vCenter Server root user.
Extension Manager.
The URL for the VAMI is https://vr-
appliance-address:5480.
2 On the Configuration tab, click
Save and Restart Service.
Not compatible There is a vSphere Replication appliance Install vSphere Replication 8.0 or later.
with earlier version than 8.0, registered
in the vCenter Server.
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Not accessible The vSphere Replication Management n Verify that the vSphere Replication
Server is not accessible. appliance exists on the vCenter
The vSphere Replication extension is Server.
registered in the vCenter Server n Verify that the vSphere Replication
Extension Manager, but the appliance is powered on.
vSphere Replication appliance is missing n Restart the VRM service.
or powered off, or the a Click the Configure icon.
vSphere Replication Management
b On the VR tab, click
service is not running.
Configuration and restart the
You cannot manage existing replications, VRM service.
or configure new replications to this
server .
If the source and target vCenter Server instances use the same vCenter Single Sign-On domain, the
connection is considered local. vSphere Replication uses the vCenter Single Sign-On service on the local
site to authenticate with each vCenter Server in the vCenter Single Sign-On domain.
If the source and the target vCenter Server instances use different vCenter Single Sign-On domains, the
connection is considered remote. The vSphere Replication Management Server on the source site
registers with the Platform Services Controller of the remote vCenter Single Sign-On domain.
You can use vSphere Replication to replicate virtual machines between ESXi hosts that the same
vCenter Server manages. In this case, you deploy only one vSphere Replication appliance and do not
need to connect the local and remote sites.
You can configure a connection on either site on which you have installed a vSphere Replication
appliance. If you are using an untrusted certificate, certificate warnings might appear during the process.
You can also set up a connection between two sites while you configure a replication between them.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have installed vSphere Replication at the local and remote sites.
n If you plan to configure a remote connection, obtain the IP address or domain name of the server
where the PSC runs. The address appears in the LookupService Address text box on the
Configuration tab under VR in the vSphere Replication VAMI on the remote site.
Procedure
1 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
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2 On the Site Recovery home page, click the New Site Pair button.
4 Enter the address of the Platform Services Controller for the vSphere Replication Management
Server on the second site, provide the user name and password, and click Next.
5 Select the vCenter Server and the services you want to pair, and click Next.
6 On the Ready to complete page, review the pairing settings, and click Finish.
The local and the remote sites are connected. The pair appears under on the home page of the
Site Recovery user interface.
The following table lists the states that you can observe, their meanings, and what you can do to change
a state back to normal. You can view the states by clicking View Details for a site pair in the
Site Recovery user interface.
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The states of connections to target sites appear in the Site Recovery user interface.
For reconnecting to cloud sites, see topic Reconnect to a Cloud Provider Site in the vSphere Replication
for Disaster Recovery to Cloud documentation.
If the source and the target vCenter Server instances use different vCenter Single Sign-On domains, the
connection is considered remote. The vSphere Replication Management Server on the source site
registers with the Platform Services Controller of the remote vCenter Single Sign-On domain. To establish
a connection to a remote site, you provide the address of the vCenter Server and the
Platform Services Controller, and enter the credentials of a user that has the VRM remote.VRM
Server.Manage VRM privilege assigned. If the Platform Services Controller address changes or there is
a change in the certificate, the connection status changes to Not connected and you must reconnect the
two sites.
Note You cannot use the Reconfigure Site Pair action to add a missing pairing or a pairing that was
manually broken with Break Site Pair. If your site pair is missing a pairing, you must use New Site Pair
to configure it.
Prerequisites
Verify that the vCenter Server and the vSphere Replication Management Server on the local site are up
and running, and that the Not connected status is not caused by a network problem.
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 From the list of target sites, select the connection that indicates Not connected status.
6 Enter the PSC address and the credentials of a user that has the VRM remote.Manage VRM
privilege assigned, and click Next.
Note If you upgraded from an earlier vSphere Replication version, the text box for the
Platform Services Controller address may be automatically populated with the IP address of the
target vSphere Replication Management server. In this case, you must replace it with the address of
the Platform Services Controller on the target site before providing the credentials.
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7 Select a vCenter Server on the second site, select vSphere Replication from the list of services, and
click Next.
Prerequisites
Procedure
4 In the vSphere Web Client, power off and delete the vSphere Replication appliance.
What to do next
Note If a vSphere Replication appliance is deleted before all replications that it manages are stopped,
target datastores remain tagged with the com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks tag. If a target datastore that is
tagged with com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks is part of a datastore cluster where Storage DRS is enabled,
some operations, like Enter maintenance mode, might not succeed when the vSphere Replication
Management server is missing. To prevent errors, you must remove the tags from all target datastores
that were used for replications by the deleted vSphere Replication appliance. See Search and Remove
the vSphere Replication Tag from Target Datastores.
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If a target datastore that is tagged with com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks is part of a datastore cluster where
Storage DRS is enabled, some operations, like Enter maintenance mode, might not succeed when the
vSphere Replication Management server is missing.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Use the vSphere Web Client to log in to the target vCenter Server.
2 In the search text box on the upper right, enter com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks and search for the tag.
The list of users and groups that have permissions to manage the com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks tag
appears.
The list of datastores that have the com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks tag assigned appears.
5 In the Remove Tag dialog box, select the row that contains com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks and click
Remove.
6 Repeat steps 4 and 5 for all datastores that are assigned the com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks tag.
The procedures on removing the permissions for a solution user and on removing a solution user from the
vCenter Single Sign-On domain are documented in the vSphere 6.5 Security document. See topics
Remove Permissions and Delete vCenter Single Sign-On Solution Users.
Prerequisites
Procedure
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2 In the extensionList property, click the link for the com.vmware.vcHms extension key to check the key
details.
3 Verify that the displayed data is for a vSphere Replication appliance that is already lost.
5 Enter com.vmware.vcHms for the extension key value, and click Invoke Method.
6 Verify that the result displays void and not an error message.
An error message might appear if the specified extension is not registered, or if an unexpected
runtime error occurs.
8 Refresh the ExtensionManager page and verify that the extensionList entry does not include
com.vmware.vcHms.
9 Remove the permissions for the HMS solution user from all vCenter Server instances in the Single
Sign-On domain.
10 Remove the HMS solution user from the vCenter Single Sign-On domain.
What to do next
Note If a vSphere Replication appliance is deleted before all replications that it manages are stopped,
target datastores remain tagged with the com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks tag. If a target datastore that is
tagged with com.vmware.vr.HasVrDisks is part of a datastore cluster where Storage DRS is enabled,
some operations, like Enter maintenance mode, might not succeed when the vSphere Replication
Management server is missing. To prevent errors, you must remove the tags from all target datastores
that were used for replications by the deleted vSphere Replication appliance. See Search and Remove
the vSphere Replication Tag from Target Datastores.
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Configuring the Customer
Experience Improvement
Program 5
When you choose to participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program (CEIP), VMware
receives anonymous information to improve the quality, reliability, and functionality of VMware products
and services.
n Join or Leave the Customer Experience Improvement Program in the vSphere Web Client
Details regarding the data collected by CEIP and the purposes for which it is used by VMware are
available at the Trust & Assurance Center at http://www.vmware.com/trustvmware/ceip.html.
To join or leave the CEIP for this product, see Join or Leave the Customer Experience Improvement
Program in the vSphere Web Client.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 On the vSphere Web Client Home page, under Administration, click Customer Experience
Improvement Program.
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Isolating the Network Traffic of
vSphere Replication 6
You can isolate the network traffic of vSphere Replication from all other traffic in a data center's network.
Isolating the replication traffic helps you ensure that sensitive information is not routed to the wrong
destination, and helps you enhance the network performance in the data center, because the traffic that
vSphere Replication generates does not impact other types of traffic. You isolate the network traffic to the
vSphere Replication Server by dedicating a VMKernel NIC on each ESXi host on the primary site that
sends data to the vSphere Replication Server. See Set Up a VMkernel Adapter for vSphere Replication
Traffic on a Source Host.
If you are using a distributed network switch, you can take advantage of the vSphere Network I/O Control
feature to set limits or shares for incoming and outgoing replication traffic on each ESXi host. The feature
allows you to manage the network resources that vSphere Replication uses.
By default, the vSphere Replication appliance has one VM network adapter that is used for various traffic
types.
n Management traffic between vSphere Replication Management Server and vSphere Replication
Server.
n Replication traffic from the source ESXi hosts to the vSphere Replication Server.
You can add network adapters to the vSphere Replication appliance and use the VAMI to configure a
separate IP address to use for each traffic type.
In the combined vSphere Replication appliance, the IP address that is used for management traffic
between the vSphere Replication Management Server and vSphere Replication Server is localhost
127.0.0.1. Therefore, you do not need to add network adapters for this type of traffic.
When the vSphere Replication Management Server and the vSphere Replication Server run on separate
appliances, you can specify a non-localhost IP address to be used by the vSphere Replication
Management Server.
Note After the IP address of the vSphere Replication server on the target site changes, you must
manually reconfigure replications on the source site to point to the new IP address.
In addition you must configure static routes on each ESXi host at the source site with how to
communicate with the target site and the reverse. See http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2001426. For replications
to flow in the opposite direction, you must configure reverse routes on the target site ESXi hosts.
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n Create a VM Network Adapter to Use for Incoming Replication Traffic on the Combined vSphere
Replication Appliance
n Create VM Network Adapters to Isolate the Network Traffic of an Additional vSphere Replication
Server
Perform this procedure for every ESXi host that is used as a replication source, and for which you want to
isolate the replication traffic.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Replication virtual appliance is deployed and registered with the
vCenter Server.
n For distributed network switches, verify that you have a port group that you can dedicate to the new
VMkernel adapter.
Procedure
2 Click the Configure tab and under Networking, select VMkernel adapters.
3
Click the Add host networking icon .
4 On the Select connection type page, select VMkernel Network Adapter and click Next.
5 On the Select target device page, select a port group or a standard switch and click Next.
6 On the Port properties page, under VMkernel port settings, configure the IP settings and TCP/IP
stack to comply with your environment.
Note vSphere Replication requires that all components in your environment, such as
vCenter Server, ESXi hosts, and the vSphere Replication appliance use the same IP version, IPv4 or
IPv6.
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8 Apply the IP settings, click Next, and Finish to complete the wizard.
The VMkernel adapter that you created for outgoing vSphere Replication traffic appears in the list of
adapters. The outgoing replication data from the ESXi host is sent to the vSphere Replication server
through this adapter.
What to do next
You can add a vNIC to the vSphere Replication appliance and use the VAMI to configure an IP address to
use for incoming replication data.
Perform this procedure for every ESXi host that is used as replication target, and for which you want to
isolate the replication traffic.
Prerequisites
n For distributed network switches, verify that you have a port group that you can dedicate to the new
VMkernel adapter.
Procedure
2 Click the Configure tab and under Networking, select VMkernel adapters.
3
Click the Add host networking icon .
4 On the Select connection type page, select VMkernel Network Adapter and click Next.
5 On the Select target device page, select a port group or a standard switch and click Next.
6 On the Port properties page, under VMkernel port settings, configure the IP settings and TCP/IP
stack to comply with your environment.
Note vSphere Replication requires that all components in your environment, such as
vCenter Server, ESXi hosts, and the vSphere Replication appliance use the same IP version, IPv4 or
IPv6.
7 Under Available services, select vSphere Replication NFC traffic and click Next.
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8 Apply the IP settings, click Next, and Finish to complete the wizard.
The VMkernel adapter that you tagged for NFC traffic appears in the list of adapters. The
vSphere Replication Server routes the replication data to the adapter, and the ESXi host saves the data
to a datastore.
The IP address that is used for vSphere Replication management traffic is localhost 127.0.0.1. Because
the default VM network adapter is used for different types of traffic, you can add a second adapter to the
appliance, and configure vSphere Replication to use the second adapter only for incoming replication
traffic.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Replication virtual appliance is deployed and registered with the
vCenter Server.
Procedure
1 Power off the vSphere Replication appliance and edit the VM Hardware settings to add a new VM
NIC.
c From the drop-down menu, select the VM Network to which you want to connect the new VM
network adapter.
d Expand the properties of the new network adapter to verify that Connect At Power On is
selected.
e From the Adapter Type drop-down menu, select the network adapter type.
f (Optional) Assign a MAC address automatically or enter a specific MAC address manually.
g Click OK.
3 From the Summary tab of the vSphere Replication appliance, take a note of the IP address of the
new network adapter.
You can click View all XX IP addresses to check the IP address of the new NIC.
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6 In the IP Address for Incoming Storage Traffic text box, enter the IP address of the new network
adapter that you added.
The vSphere Replication appliance uses the IP address that you assigned only for incoming replication
traffic.
Because the default VM network adapter is used for different types of traffic, you can add network
adapters to the appliance, and configure vSphere Replication to use a separate adapter for each traffic
type.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have deployed the vSphere Replication Server appliance in your environment and that
it is registered as a vSphere Replication Server in the vSphere Web Client.
n Verify that you have at least one additional vSphere Replication server in your environment.
Procedure
1 Power off the vSphere Replication appliance and edit the VM Hardware settings to add a new VM
NIC.
c From the drop-down menu, select the VM Network to which you want to connect the new VM
network adapter.
d Expand the properties of the new network adapter to verify that Connect At Power On is
selected.
e From the Adapter Type drop-down menu, select the network adapter type.
f (Optional) Assign a MAC address automatically or enter a specific MAC address manually.
g Click OK.
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4 From the Summary tab of the vSphere Replication appliance, take note of the IP address of the new
network adapters.
You can click View all XX IP addresses to check the IP addresses of the new NICs.
5 Use a supported browser to log in to the VAMI of an additional vSphere Replication server.
7 Enter the IP addresses of the new VM NICs that you want to use to isolate the network traffic of
vSphere Replication.
Option Description
IP Address for Incoming Storage The IP address of a VM NIC to be used by the vSphere Replication Server for
Traffic incoming replication data.
IP Address for VRMS Management The IP address of a VM NIC to be used by the vSphere Replication Management
Traffic Server to manage the vSphere Replication Server.
Separate NICs handle the different types of traffic that vSphere Replication generates.
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Deploying Additional
vSphere Replication Servers 7
Depending on replication traffic, you might need to deploy one or more additional vSphere Replication
servers.
You can deploy multiple vSphere Replication servers to route traffic from source hosts to target
datastores without traveling between different sites managed by the same vCenter Server.
Important If you use the HTML5-based vSphere Client to deploy the OVF virtual appliance, the
deployment succeeds, but the vSphere Replication fails to start.
For information about the loads that a vSphere Replication management server and a
vSphere Replication server can support, see http://kb.vmware.com/s/article/2102453.
Prerequisites
n Deploy vSphere Replication servers on a network that allows them to communicate with the
vSphere Replication appliances on the source and target sites.
n Verify that the vSphere Replication servers can communicate with the ESXi Server instances on the
source site that hosts the replicated virtual machines.
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Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Web Client on the site where you want to deploy the additional
vSphere Replication server.
3 Right-click on a data center, host or cluster, and select Deploy OVF Template.
4 Provide the location of the OVF file from which to deploy the additional vSphere Replication server,
and click Next.
n Select URL and provide the URL to deploy the appliance from an online URL.
n If you downloaded and mounted the vSphere Replication ISO image on a system in your
environment, select Local file > Browse and navigate to the \bin directory in the ISO image,
and select the vSphere_Replication_AddOn_OVF10.ovf, vSphere_Replication-
system.vmdk, and vSphere_Replication-support.vmdk files.
5 Accept the name, select or search for a destination folder or data center for the virtual appliance, and
click Next.
You can enter a new name for the virtual appliance. The name must be unique within each
vCenter Server virtual machine folder.
6 Select a cluster, host, or resource pool where you want to run the deployed template, and click Next.
8 Select a destination datastore and disk format for the virtual appliance and click Next.
10 Enter a password for the appliance that is at least eight characters long.
What to do next
When the OVF file has deployed, register the vSphere Replication server with the vSphere Replication
appliance.
Note You can register additional vSphere Replication servers that run within the same vSphere
environment.
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Prerequisites
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
6 From the list, select a virtual machine that is a working vSphere Replication server and click Select.
The newly registered vSphere Replication server appears in the list of vSphere Replication servers.
The following table lists the states that you can observe, their meanings, and what you can do to change
a state back to normal.
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A vSphere Replication server does not require additional configuration through the virtual appliance
management interface (VAMI) after deployment. To increase security, you can change the root password
of the vSphere Replication server and install a new certificate. Using a self-signed certificate provides the
benefit of public-key based encryption and authentication, although using such a certificate does not
provide the level of assurance offered when you use a certificate signed by a certificate authority.
You can also reconfigure the network settings for the vSphere Replication server virtual appliance.
Note vSphere Replication can be deployed with either IPv4 or IPv6 address. Mixing IP addresses, for
example having a single appliance with an IPv4 and an IPv6 address, is not supported. To register as an
extension, vSphere Replication relies on the VirtualCenter.FQDN property of the vCenter Server. When
an IPv6 address is used for vSphere Replication, the VirtualCenter.FQDN property must be set to a
fully qualified domain name that can be resolved to an IPv6 address or to a literal address. When
operating with an IPv6 address, vSphere Replication requires that all components in the environment,
such as vCenter Server and ESXi hosts are accessible using the IPv6 address.
Prerequisites
You deployed an optional vSphere Replication server in addition to the vSphere Replication appliance,
and the server is powered on.
Procedure
1 Use a supported browser to log in to the VAMI of the additional vSphere Replication Server that you
deployed.
Use the root password that you set when you deployed the vSphere Replication server.
Option Action
Upload an existing SSL certificate Click Choose File next to the Upload PKCS#12 (*.pfx) file text box to browse for
an existing certificate, and click Upload and Install.
4 (Optional) Click Security to change the Super User password for the vSphere Replication server.
Option Action
Set static or DHCP IPv4 or IPv6 n Click Address, and select DHCP, Static, or None for IPv4 addresses.
addresses n Select Auto, DHCP, or Static for IPv6 addresses. If you select Static, enter
the default gateway and DNS server addresses to use.
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Option Action
Configure proxy server Click Proxy, select the Use a proxy server check box, and enter the proxy
server address and port number.
Save Settings If you do not click Save Settings, changes are discarded.
Note After the IP address of the vSphere Replication server on the target site changes, you must
manually reconfigure replications on the source site to point to the new IP address.
6 (Optional) Select VRS > Configuration > Restart to restart the vSphere Replication service.
7 (Optional) Select the System tab and click Reboot to reboot the vSphere Replication server
appliance.
Prerequisites
Verify that the vSphere Replication server that you want to unregister does not serve any replications,
otherwise the operations will fail.
Procedure
1 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
2 On the Site Pair tab, select Replication Servers and find the vSphere Replication server in the list.
If you have both vSphere Replication and Site Recovery Manager installed, Replication Servers is
located on the Site Pair tab, under Configure.
4 In the Hosts and Clusters view of the vSphere Client, power off and delete the vSphere Replication
server virtual machine.
Prerequisites
Make sure that no replications are using the embedded server. Stop the replications or move them to a
different server.
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Procedure
You can now unregister the embedded vSphere Replication server from the vSphere Replication user
interface.
What to do next
Rebooting vSphere Replication does not automatically register the embedded server. To restore the
default behavior to register automatically the embedded vSphere Replication server, enter:
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Upgrading vSphere Replication 8
You upgrade the vSphere Replication appliance and any additional vSphere Replication servers by using
a downloaded ISO image.
The downloadable ISO image is the only means of upgrading from vSphere Replication 6.1.2 or 6.5.1 to
vSphere Replication 8.1. You cannot upgrade vSphere Replication from version 6.1.2 or 6.5.1 to version
8.1 by using vSphere Update Manager or the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) of the
vSphere Replication appliance. After you have installed vSphere Replication 8.1 or upgraded to version
8.1 by using the ISO image, you can use the VAMI or Update Manager to install later 8.1.x update
releases.
After you upgrade vSphere Replication to version 8.1, you can no longer use the old vSphere Replication
plug-in to manage the updated vSphere Replication sites. You must use the new standalone
vSphere Replication user interface and plug-in instead.
You use Update Manager, the VAMI, or the ISO file to install an update release of vSphere Replication,
for example upgrade 5.5.0 to 5.5.1.
These examples of upgrade and update scenarios are not exhaustive. For the full list of supported
upgrade paths, see the Compatibility Matrices for vSphere Replication 8.1 at
https://docs.vmware.com/en/vSphere-Replication/8.1/rn/vsphere-replication-compat-matrix-8-1.html.
n You can upgrade vSphere Replication 6.1.2 or 6.5.1 to 8.1 by using the ISO file for
vSphere Replication 8.1.
n You cannot upgrade vSphere Replication 6.1.2 or 6.5.1 to 8.1 by using Update Manager or the VAMI.
n You can upgrade vSphere Replication 5.5.0 to 5.5.1 by using Update Manager, the VAMI, or the ISO
file.
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n Update the vCenter Server IP Address in the vSphere Replication Management Server
You can upgrade all components of one of your sites before upgrading all components on the other site. It
is best practice to upgrade the vSphere Replication components before the Platform Services Controller
and the vCenter Server components.
An alternative strategy is to upgrade the vSphere Replication components on both sites before upgrading
the Platform Services Controller appliances and vCenter Server components.
1 Upgrade any additional vSphere Replication server deployments on the protected site.
3 (Optional) Upgrade the Platform Services Controller and all components of vCenter Server on the
protected site.
5 Upgrade any additional vSphere Replication server deployments on the recovery site.
7 (Optional) Upgrade the Platform Services Controller and all components of vCenter Server on the
recovery site.
10 (Optional) Upgrade the virtual hardware and VMware Tools on the virtual machines on the ESXi
hosts.
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1 Upgrade any additional vSphere Replication server deployments on the protected site.
3 Upgrade any additional vSphere Replication server deployments on the recovery site.
5 (Optional) Upgrade the Platform Services Controller and all components of vCenter Server on the
protected site.
6 (Optional) Upgrade the Platform Services Controller and all components of vCenter Server on the
recovery site.
10 (Optional) Upgrade the virtual hardware and VMware Tools on the virtual machines on the ESXi
hosts.
You must deploy your additional vSphere Replication servers before the vSphere Replication
Management Server. If you deploy the vSphere Replication Management Server before the additional
servers, you must restart the management server after you complete the upgrade procedure of the
additional servers.
Important If you use the HTML5-based vSphere Client to deploy the OVF virtual appliance, the
deployment succeeds, but the vSphere Replication fails to start.
Prerequisites
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n If the vSphere Replication version that you run is not supported for direct upgrade to
vSphere Replication 8.1, upgrade your vSphere Replication instance to a supported version. For
example, to upgrade vSphere Replication 6.0 to 8.1, you must first upgrade 6.0 to 6.1.2, and then
upgrade 6.1.2 to 8.1. See the interoperability matrix at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/sim/interop_matrix.php for solution upgrade paths for
vSphere Replication.
Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Web Client on the site where you want to upgrade vSphere Replication.
3 Right-click on a data center, host or cluster, and select Deploy OVF Template.
4 Provide the location of the OVF file from which to deploy the vSphere Replication server, and click
Next.
n Select URL and provide the URL to deploy the appliance from an online URL.
n If you downloaded and mounted the vSphere Replication ISO image on a system in your
environment, select Local file > Browse and navigate to the \bin directory in the ISO image,
and select the vSphere_Replication_Migrate_AddOn_OVF10.ovf, vSphere_Replication-
system.vmdk, and vSphere_Replication-support.vmdk files.
5 Accept the name, select or search for a destination folder or data center for the virtual appliance, and
click Next.
You can enter a new name for the virtual appliance. The name must be unique within each
vCenter Server virtual machine folder.
6 Select a cluster, host, or resource pool where you want to run the deployed template, and click Next.
8 Select a destination datastore and disk format for the virtual appliance and click Next.
9 Select a network from the list of available networks, set the IP protocol and IP allocation, and click
Next.
vSphere Replication supports both DHCP and static IP addresses. You can also change network
settings by using the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) after installation.
10 Set the password for the root account for the customized template, and click Next.
11 Review the binding to the vCenter Extension vService and click Next.
15 Enter the IP address of the additional vSphere Replication server that you want to upgrade.
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16 Enter the root password of the additional vSphere Replication server that you want to upgrade.
What to do next
n Upgrade the vSphere Replication appliance. See Upgrade the vSphere Replication Appliance.
Important If you use the HTML5-based vSphere Client to deploy the OVF virtual appliance, the
deployment succeeds, but the vSphere Replication fails to start.
Prerequisites
n If the vSphere Replication version that you run is not supported for direct upgrade to
vSphere Replication 8.1, upgrade your vSphere Replication instance to a supported version. For
example, to upgrade vSphere Replication 6.0 to 8.1, you must first upgrade 6.0 to 6.1.2, and then
upgrade 6.1.2 to 8.1. See the interoperability matrix at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/sim/interop_matrix.php for solution upgrade paths for
vSphere Replication.
n Verify that there is DNS and IP connectivity between the new vSphere Replication appliance and the
old vSphere Replication appliance.
n Verify that there is DNS and IP connectivity between the new vSphere Replication appliance and the
vCenter Server.
n Verify that the new vNIC configuration is identical to the one on the existing vSphere Replication
appliance.
n Verify that the vSphere Replication appliance can access port 443 of the ESXi that hosts the old
appliance.
n Verify that the vSphere Replication appliance has an OVF environment or context. See KB article
Checking and Restoring the OVF Context of the vSphere Replication Appliance (2106709).
Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Web Client on the site where you want to upgrade vSphere Replication.
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3 Right-click on a data center, host or cluster, and select Deploy OVF Template.
Note You must deploy your additional vSphere Replication servers before the vSphere Replication
appliance.
4 Provide the location of the OVF file from which to deploy the vSphere Replication server, and click
Next.
n Select URL and provide the URL to deploy the appliance from an online URL.
n If you downloaded and mounted the vSphere Replication ISO image on a system in your
environment, select Local file > Browse and navigate to the \bin directory in the ISO image,
and select the vSphere_Replication_OVF10.ovf, vSphere_Replication-system.vmdk, and
vSphere_Replication-support.vmdk files.
5 Accept the name, select or search for a destination folder or data center for the virtual appliance, and
click Next.
You can enter a new name for the virtual appliance. The name must be unique within each
vCenter Server virtual machine folder.
6 Select a cluster, host, or resource pool where you want to run the deployed template, and click Next.
9 Select the number of vCPUs for the virtual appliance and click Next.
Note Selecting higher number of vCPUs ensures better performance of the vSphere Replication
appliance, but might slow down the replications that run on ESXi host systems that have 4 or less
cores per NUMA node. If you are unsure what the hosts in your environment are, select 2 vCPUs.
10 Select a destination datastore and disk format for the virtual appliance and click Next.
11 Select a network from the list of available networks, set the IP protocol and IP allocation, and click
Next.
vSphere Replication supports both DHCP and static IP addresses. You can also change network
settings by using the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) after installation.
12 On the Customize template page, enter one or more NTP server host names or IP addresses.
13 Set the password for the root account for the customized template, and click Next.
14 Review the binding to the vCenter Extension vService and click Next.
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18 Select Upgrade.
Option Description
Continue Continue with the deployment of a new vSphere Replication appliance. After
successful deployment, you must register the vSphere Replication appliance to
the vCenter Server from the VAMI. As a result, you can no longer use the existing
replications. You must create new ones.
Shutdown Shut down the machine if you do not want to proceed with the upgrade.
Upgrade Continue with the upgrade of the vSphere Replication appliance. During the
upgrade process, the existing configuration of the vSphere Replication appliance
is migrated to the new vSphere Replication appliance. After successful upgrade,
all replications continue working.
19 Enter the root password of the vSphere Replication appliance that you want to upgrade.
21 Enter the credentials of a user with administrator privileges to vCenter Single Sign-On.
What to do next
n If your infrastructure uses more than one vSphere Replication Server, you must upgrade all
vSphere Replication Server instances to version 8.1 on the protected and the recovery site.
Important If the vSphere Replication appliance that you upgraded uses the embedded database, you
must apply additional configuration to enable the support of up to 2000 replications. See
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2102463. No additional configuration is required for vSphere Replication
appliances that are configured to use an external database.
Important If you use the HTML5-based vSphere Client to deploy the OVF virtual appliance, the
deployment succeeds, but the vSphere Replication fails to start.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Web Client, right-click the vSphere Replication appliance virtual machine and select
Open Console.
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3 Right-click the vSphere Replication virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
5 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select CD/DVD Drive > Datastore ISO File.
8 Select the option to connect at power-on and follow the prompts to add the CD/DVD drive to the
vSphere Replication virtual machine.
12 Click Settings, select Use CDROM Updates, and click Save Settings.
15 After the updates install, click the System tab and click Reboot.
16 After the vSphere Replication appliance reboots, log in to the VAMI and repeat the steps to register
the vSphere Replication appliance with vCenter Single Sign-On.
This registers the vSphere Replication appliance in the Lookup Service and vCenter Single Sign-On
or updates an existing vSphere Replication registration.
17 Log out of the vSphere Web Client, clear the browser cache, and log in again to see the upgraded
appliance.
What to do next
n If your infrastructure uses more than one vSphere Replication Server, you must upgrade all
vSphere Replication Server instances to version 8.1 on the on-premises site.
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Important If the vSphere Replication appliance that you upgraded uses the embedded database, you
must apply additional configuration to enable the support of up to 2000 replications. See
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2102463. No additional configuration is required for vSphere Replication
appliances that are configured to use an external database.
To update the vCenter Server certificate, see vSphere Replication is Inaccessible After Changing vCenter
Server Certificate.
If vCenter Server uses a static IP address, it preserves the IP address by default after upgrade. If the
vCenter Server uses a DHCP address that changed during the upgrade, and the vSphere Replication
Management Server is configured to use the vCenter Server IP address and not FQDN, update the IP
address in the vSphere Replication Management Server.
Prerequisites
Verify that the vCenter Server and vSphere Replication components are upgraded. For more information,
see Order of Upgrading vSphere and vSphere Replication Components.
Procedure
1 Power off the vSphere Replication appliance and power it on to retrieve the OVF environment.
3 On the Configuration tab, enter the new IP address of the vCenter Server.
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Reconfigure the
vSphere Replication Appliance 9
If necessary, you can reconfigure the vSphere Replication appliance settings by using the virtual
appliance management interface (VAMI).
You provide the settings for the vSphere Replication appliance in the Deploy OVF wizard when you
deploy the appliance. If you selected automatic configuration of the appliance using an embedded
database, you can use the vSphere Replication appliance immediately after deployment. If necessary you
can modify the configuration settings of the vSphere Replication appliance after you deploy it.
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The general settings of the vSphere Replication appliance include the name and IP address of the
vSphere Replication appliance, the address, and port of the vCenter Server instance to which it connects,
and an administrator email address. You can change the general settings from the default values in the
virtual appliance management interface (VAMI).
For example, you can reconfigure the address of the vSphere Replication appliance if you did not specify
a fixed IP address when you deployed the appliance, and DHCP changes the address after deployment.
Similarly, you can update the address of the vCenter Server instance if the address changes after
deployment.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
2 (Optional) Review and confirm the browser security exception to proceed to the login page.
3 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
5 In the VRM Host text box, enter the address of the vSphere Replication appliance or click Browse to
select an IP address from a list.
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6 In the LookupService Address text box, enter the Platform Services Controller address to use with
this installation.
You must use the same address format that you used when you installed vCenter Server. For
example, if you used a fully qualified domain name during installation, you must use that FQDN. If
you used an IP address, you must use that IP address.
7 In the SSO Administrator text box, enter a Platform Services Controller administrator email address.
vSphere Replication generates a standard SSL certificate when the appliance first boots and registers
with vCenter Server. The vSphere Replication self-signed certificate expires after five years from the first
boot of the appliance. The default certificate policy uses trust by thumbprint.
You can change the SSL certificate, for example if your company's security policy requires that you use
trust by validity and thumbprint or a certificate signed by a certification authority. You change the
certificate by using the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) of the vSphere Replication
appliance. For information about the SSL certificates that vSphere Replication uses, see vSphere
Replication Certificate Verification and Requirements When Using a Public Key Certificate with vSphere
Replication.
See vSphere Replication Certificate Verification for details of how vSphere Replication handles
certificates.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
2 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
3 (Optional) Click the VR tab and click Security to review the current SSL certificate.
4 Click Configuration.
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5 (Optional) To enforce verification of a certificate validity, select the Accept only SSL certificates
signed by a trusted Certificate Authority check box.
Option Action
Generate a self-signed certificate Click Generate and Install. Using a self-signed certificate provides trust by
thumbprint only and might not be suitable for environments that require high
levels of security. You cannot use a self-signed certificate if you selected Accept
only SSL certificates signed by a trusted Certificate Authority.
Upload a certificate Click Choose File to select a PKCS#12 certificate and click Upload and Install.
Public key certificates must meet certain requirements. See Requirements When
Using a Public Key Certificate with vSphere Replication.
You changed the SSL certificate and optionally changed the security policy to use trust by validity and
certificates signed by a certificate authority.
Note If you change a certificate on one of the source or target sites, the connection status to this site
changes to Connection issue. In the vSphere Web Client, you can check the list of target sites under
vSphere Replication on the Manage tab, and reconnect the sites.
All communication between vCenter Server, the local vSphere Replication appliance, and the remote
vSphere Replication appliance goes through a vCenter Server proxy at port 80. All SSL traffic is
tunnelled.
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vSphere Replication can trust remote server certificates either by verifying the validity of the certificate
and its thumbprint or by verifying the thumbprint only. The default is to verify by thumbprint only. You can
activate the verification of the certificate validity in the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) of
the vSphere Replication appliance by selecting the option Accept only SSL certificates signed by a
trusted Certificate Authority when you upload a certificate.
Thumbprint Verification vSphere Replication checks for a thumbprint match. vSphere Replication
trusts remote server certificates if it can verify the the thumbprints through
secure vSphere platform channels or, in some rare cases, after the user
confirms them. vSphere Replication only takes certificate thumbprints into
account when verifying the certificates and does not check certificate
validity.
Verification of vSphere Replication checks the thumbprint and checks that all server
Thumbprint and certificates are valid. If you select the Accept only SSL certificates
Certificate Validity signed by a trusted Certificate Authority option, vSphere Replication
refuses to communicate with a server with an invalid certificate. When
verifying certificate validity, vSphere Replication checks expiration dates,
subject names and the certificate issuing authorities.
In both modes, vSphere Replication retrieves thumbprints from vCenter Server. vSphere Replication
refuses to communicate with a server if the automatically determined thumbprint differs from the actual
thumbprint that it detects while communicating with the respective server.
You can mix trust modes between vSphere Replication appliances at different sites. A pair of
vSphere Replication appliances can work successfully even if you configure them to use different trust
modes.
vSphere Replication can only import and use certificates and private keys from a file in the PKCS#12
format. Sometimes these files have a .pfx extension.
n The certificate must be issued for the same server name as the value in the VRM Host setting in the
VAMI. Setting the certificate subject name accordingly is sufficient, if you put a host name in the VRM
Host setting. If any of the certificate Subject Alternative Name fields of the certificate matches the
VRM Host setting, this will work as well.
n vSphere Replication checks the issue and expiration dates of the certificate against the current date,
to ensure that the certificate has not expired.
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n If you use your own certificate authority, for example one that you create and manage with the
OpenSSL tools, you must add the fully qualified domain name or IP address to the OpenSSL
configuration file.
n If the fully qualified domain name of the appliance is VR1.example.com, add subjectAltName =
DNS: VR1.example.com to the OpenSSL configuration file.
n If you use the IP address of the appliance, add subjectAltName = IP: vr-appliance-ip-
address to the OpenSSL configuration file.
n vSphere Replication accepts MD5 and SHA1 signatures, but VMware recommends that you use
SHA256 signatures.
n vSphere Replication does not accept RSA or DSA certificates with 512-bit keys. vSphere Replication
requires at least 1024-bit keys. VMware recommends using 2048-bit public keys. vSphere Replication
shows a warning if you use a 1024-bit key.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
2 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
5 Enter the new password in the New Password and the Confirm New Password text boxes.
The password must be a minimum of eight characters. vSphere Replication does not support blank
passwords.
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The keystore passwords might be stored in an access restricted configuration file. vSphere Replication
has the following keystores:
Procedure
1 To change the password for the hms-keystore.jks keystore, open the remote console of your
vSphere Replication virtual machine and log in as root.
The following command is a long, single command and must be run at once. There are breaks in the
command for better visibility. Verify that the command returns a success message.
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# reboot
9 On the VR tab, click Configuration, and click Save and Restart Service.
What to do next
If you want to change the truststore passwords of the vSphere Replication appliance, see Change the
Truststore Passwords of the vSphere Replication Appliance.
Procedure
1 To change the password for the hms-truststore.jks keystore, open the remote console of your
vSphere Replication virtual machine and log in as root.
The following command is a long, single command and must be run at once. There are breaks in the
command for better visibility. Verify that the command returns a success message.
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What to do next
If you want to change the keystore passwords of the vSphere Replication appliance, see Change the
Keystore Passwords of the vSphere Replication Appliance.
Note vSphere Replication can be deployed with either IPv4 or IPv6 address. Mixing IP addresses, for
example having a single appliance with an IPv4 and an IPv6 address, is not supported. To register as an
extension, vSphere Replication relies on the VirtualCenter.FQDN property of the vCenter Server. When
an IPv6 address is used for vSphere Replication, the VirtualCenter.FQDN property must be set to a
fully qualified domain name that can be resolved to an IPv6 address or to a literal address. When
operating with an IPv6 address, vSphere Replication requires that all components in the environment,
such as vCenter Server and ESXi hosts are accessible using the IPv6 address.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
2 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
IPv4 DHCP DHCP is not recommended if the IP address of the appliance might change if it reboots.
IPv4 Static With a static IPv4 address, you can modify the IP settings, DNS settings, netmask, and host
name information.
IPv4 None Disabling IPv4 addresses forces the use of IPv6 addresses only.
IPv6 Auto Automatic assignment of IPv6 addresses is not recommended if the IP address of the
appliance might change if it reboots.
IPv6 DHCP DHCP is not recommended if the IP address of the appliance might change if it reboots.
IPv6 Static With a static IPv6 address, you can modify the IP address and the address prefix.
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Note After the IP address of the vSphere Replication server on the target site changes, you must
manually reconfigure replications on the source site to point to the new IP address.
a To use a proxy server, select the Use a proxy server check box.
b Enter a proxy server name in the HTTP Proxy Server text box.
Note If you modified the IP address of the vSphere Replication appliance, after saving the settings,
the VAMI page becomes unresponsive and you must close it.
What to do next
If you modified the IP address of the vSphere Replication appliance, you must update and verify certain
settings:
n Update the general vSphere Replication settings. See Reconfigure General vSphere Replication
Settings.
n Verify that the IP Address for Incoming Storage Traffic value is updated with the new IP address.
n Verify that the appliance certificate is valid for the new IP address. You must verify the certificate if
you have activated the verification of the certificate validity.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
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2 Enter the root user name and password for the server.
4 Click Information.
You can review information about vSphere Replication, and reboot or shutdown the appliance.
Option Description
Shutting down the vSphere Replication appliance stops configured replications and prevents you from
configuring a replication of new virtual machines and modifying existing replication settings.
Option Description
System Time Zone Time zones are available from the drop-down menu
Prerequisites
n Verify that the remote console of your vSphere Replication virtual machine is open and that you use
root credentials.
n Verify that the status of the NTP service of your vSphere Replication server is running.
Procedure
server your_NTP_server_IP_address_or_name
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5 Run the service ntp reload command to reload the NTP configuration.
Your vSphere Replication server is synchronized with the new NTP server.
Each vSphere Replication appliance requires its own database. If the database at either site is corrupted,
vSphere Replication does not function. vSphere Replication cannot use the vCenter Server database
because it has different database schema requirements. However, if you do not use the embedded
vSphere Replication database, you can use the vCenter Server database to create and support an
external vSphere Replication database.
You might need to use an external database to improve performance or load balancing, for easier backup,
or to meet your company's database standards.
Note vSphere Replication server inside the vSphere Replication appliance uses its own embedded
database and config files. Configuring VRMS to use external database does not provide protection of
losing the vSphere Replication appliance or any additional vSphere Replication Server appliance.
If you reinitialize the database after you deploy vSphere Replication, you must go to the
vSphere Replication virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) to reconfigure vSphere Replication to
use the new database connection.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
n You must create and configure the external database before you connect it to vSphere Replication.
See vSphere Replication Supported Databases for the configuration requirements for each supported
type of database.
Procedure
2 (Optional) Review and confirm the browser security exception to proceed to the login page.
3 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
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5 Select Manual configuration to specify a configuration or select Configure from an existing VRM
database to use a previously established configuration.
6 In the DB text boxes, provide information about the database for vSphere Replication to use.
Option Setting
DB Host IP address or fully qualified domain name of the host on which the database server is running.
DB user name User name for the vSphere Replication database user account that you create on the database server.
DB Password Password for the vSphere Replication database user account that you create on the database server.
Advanced users can fine-tune other database properties by modifying the URL, for example if you
use a named instance of SQL Server.
You configured vSphere Replication to use an external database instead of the database that is
embedded in the vSphere Replication appliance.
Automated migration between the embedded database and any external databases is not supported in
any direction. If you must configure an external database, you must manually migrate the data or
manually recreate all replications.
You can configure vSphere Replication to use one of the supported external databases.
n Microsoft SQL
n Oracle
External vPostgreSQL databases are not supported. vSphere Replication supports the same database
versions as vCenter Server. For supported database versions, see the VMware Product Interoperability
Matrixes at http://partnerweb.vmware.com/comp_guide2/sim/interop_matrix.php?.
You use SQL Server Management Studio to create and configure an SQL Server database for
vSphere Replication.
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This information provides the general steps that you must perform to configure an SQL Server database
for vSphere Replication. For instructions about how to perform the relevant steps, see the SQL Server
documentation.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Select Mixed Mode Authentication when you create the database instance.
The vSphere Replication appliance and the database server run on different hosts, so you must use
mixed mode authentication and not Windows Authentication.
If you intend to use dynamic TCP ports, you must use a named instance of SQL Server.
Option Action
Static TCP port Set the TCP port to the default of 1433.
Dynamic TCP port a Use a named instance of SQL Server. You can only use dynamic ports with a
named instance of SQL Server.
b Select the Show DB URL check box in the virtual appliance management
interface (VAMI) of the vSphere Replication appliance.
c Modify the DB URL value. Replace port=port_number with
instanceName=instance_name in the URL.
d Use the PortQuery command from a remote machine to check that the port
on which the SQL Server Browser service runs is not blocked by a firewall.
The SQL Server Browser runs on port 1434. Enter the PortQuery command
in a terminal window.
5 Verify that the firewall on the database server permits inbound connections on the TCP port.
7 Create the vSphere Replication database and set the vSphere Replication security login as the
database owner.
Because the vSphere Replication security login is the database owner, it maps to the database user
dbo and uses the dbo schema.
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You create and configure an Oracle Server database for vSphere Replication by using the tools that
Oracle Server provides.
This information provides the general steps that you must perform to configure an Oracle Server
database for vSphere Replication. For instructions about how to perform the relevant steps, see the
Oracle documentation.
Procedure
3 If they are not selected already, select the CONNECT and RESOURCE roles.
The vSphere Replication appliance includes an embedded vPostgreSQL database. The embedded
database is preconfigured for use with vSphere Replication and is enabled if you accept the default
Performs initial configuration of the appliance using an embedded database option when you
deploy the vSphere Replication appliance. If you reconfigured vSphere Replication to use an external
database after deployment, you can switch to the embedded database. After switching databases, you
must manually configure replications again as the replication management data is not migrated to the
database. You can use the reset feature in the embedded database to drop replications, site connections
and external vSphere Replication registrations.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
2 (Optional) Review and confirm the browser security exception to proceed to the login page.
3 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
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You configured vSphere Replication to use the embedded vSphere Replication database.
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vSphere Replication Roles and
Permissions 10
You can use any predefined roles or clone an existing role, and add or remove privileges from it based on
your needs.
n Assign VRM Virtual Machine Recovery User Role and Perform a Recovery Operation
For information about how to assign roles, see Assigning Roles in the vSphere Web Client in vSphere
Security.
Note When assigning permissions with no propagation, make sure that you have at least Read-only
permission on all parent objects.
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VRM n View replications. VRM remote.View VR vCenter Server root folder with
replication n Cannot change replication VRM remote.View VRM propagation, at source site
viewer parameters. (forward replications) and target
VRM datastore mapper.View
site (reverse replications).
Host.vSphere Replication.Manage
Alternatively, vCenter Server
replication
root folder without propagation
Virtual machine.vSphere
on both sites and virtual
Replication.Monitor replication
machine without propagation
on the source site.
VRM virtual n View replications. Datastore.Browse Datastore vCenter Server root folder with
machine n Manage datastores. VRM remote.View VR propagation on both sites.
replication Alternatively, vCenter Server
n Configure and unconfigure VRM remote.View VRM
user root folder without propagation
replications. VRM datastore mapper.Manage
on both sites, virtual machine
n Manage and monitor VRM datastore mapper.View
without propagation on the
replications. Host.vSphere Replication.Manage source site, source datastores
n View defined storage replication without propagation on the
capabilities and storage Virtual machine.vSphere source site.
profiles. Replication.Configure replication
Requires a corresponding user Virtual machine.vSphere
with the same role on the target Replication.Manage replication
site and additionally
Virtual machine.vSphere
vSphere Replication target
Replication.Monitor replication
datastore user role on the target
Profile-driven storage .Profile-
datacenter, or datastore folder or
driven storage view
each target datastore.
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VRM Incorporates all VRM remote.Manage VR vCenter Server root folder with
administrator vSphere Replication privileges. VRM remote.View VR propagation on both sites.
VRM Generate, retrieve, and delete log VRM remote.View VR vCenter Server root folder on
diagnostics bundles. VRM remote.View VRM both sites.
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VRM target Configure and reconfigure Datastore.Browse datastore Datastore objects on target site,
datastore user replications. Datastore.Low level file operations or datastore folder with
Used on target site in combination propagation at target site, or
with the VRM virtual machine target datacenter with
replication user role on both sites. propagation.
VRM virtual Recover virtual machines. Datastore.Browse datastore Secondary vCenter Server root
machine Datastore.Low level file operations folder with propagation.
recovery user Alternatively, secondary
Host.vSphere Replication.Manage
replication vCenter Server root folder
without propagation, target
Virtual machine.Configuration.Add
datastore without propagation,
existing disk
target virtual machine folder
Virtual machine.Configuration.Add
with propagation, target host or
or remove device
cluster with propagation.
Virtual machine.Interaction.Power
On
Virtual machine.Interaction.Device
connection
Virtual machine.Inventory.Register
Resource.Assign virtual machine to
resource pool
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have two sites connected and replication configured between them.
n Verify that you have another user account for each site.
Procedure
2 Select vCenter > Permissions and assign the VRM replication viewer role with the propagate
option to this user.
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4 Log in as the user with the assigned VRM replication viewer role.
The user with the VRM replication viewer role cannot perform modifications on the configured replication,
nor on the replication sites. The following error message appears when this user tries to run an operation:
Permission to perform this operation was denied.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have another user account for each site.
Procedure
2 Select vCenter > Permissions and assign to this user the VRM virtual machine replication user
role with the propagate option.
4 On the target site, select the datastore to store your replica files, and select Manage > Permissions.
5 Edit the assigned permission and assign the VRM target datastore user role.
6 Log in as that user on the source site, select the virtual machine, and click Configure Replication to
start the configuration wizard.
7 Select the target site and enter the same user credentials.
9 For the target location, select the datastore to which you granted permission.
Selecting a datastore for which the user lacks the Target datastore user role results in the error
message Permission to perform this operation was denied.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have two sites connected and replication configured between them.
n Verify that you have another user account for the target site apart from the Administrator user.
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Procedure
2 Select vCenter > Permissions and assign to a different user account the VRM virtual machine
recovery user role with the propagate option.
4 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
5 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
8 Click the Recover icon and follow the prompts to finish the recovery.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have another user account to which you can assign the modified privileges.
Procedure
3 Select the VRM Administrator role and click the Clone role action icon.
4 In the cloned role, deselect the VRM Remote > VR Server > Manage VR Server privilege.
7 Select the user that must have the privileges defined by the selected role.
8 Select the cloned VRM Administrator role from the Assigned Role drop-down menu.
Trying to register a vSphere Replication server results in the error message Permission to perform
this operation was denied.
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You can replicate virtual machines from a source site to a target site with vSphere Replication.
You can set a recovery point objective (RPO) to a certain time interval depending on your data protection
needs. vSphere Replication applies all changes made to virtual machines configured for a replication at
the source site to their replicas at the target site. This process reoccurs periodically to ensure that the
replicas at the target site are not older than the RPO interval that you set. See How the Recovery Point
Objective Affects Replication Scheduling.
To replicate a virtual machine using vSphere Replication, you must deploy the vSphere Replication
appliance at the source and target sites. A vSphere Replication infrastructure requires one
vSphere Replication appliance at each site.
The source and target sites must be connected if you want to configure replications. You cannot perform
replications if one of the sites is in the Not Connected state. See vSphere Replication Site Connection
States.
vSphere Replication does not support the recovery of multiple virtual machines from the same workflow.
Each recovery workflow is for an individual virtual machine.
You can configure replications for powered-off virtual machines, but the data synchronization begins when
the virtual machine is powered on. While the source virtual machine is powered off, the replication
appears in Not active status.
n How vSphere Replication Synchronizes Data Between vCenter Server Sites During Initial
Configuration
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n Configure Replication
n Reconfiguring Replications
The RPO value affects replication scheduling, but vSphere Replication does not adhere to a strict
replication schedule. For example, when you set the RPO to 15 minutes, you instruct vSphere Replication
that you can tolerate losing the data for up to 15 minutes. This does not mean that data is replicated
every 15 minutes.
If you set an RPO of x minutes, and the RPO is not violated, the latest available replication instance can
never reflect a state that is older than x minutes. A replication instance reflects the state of a virtual
machine at the time the synchronization starts.
Assume that during replication configuration you set the RPO to 15 minutes. If the synchronization starts
at 12:00 and it takes five minutes to transfer to the target site, the instance becomes available on the
target site at 12:05, but it reflects the state of the virtual machine at 12:00. The next synchronization can
start no later than 12:10. This replication instance is then available at 12:15 when the first replication
instance that started at 12:00 expires.
If you set the RPO to 15 minutes and the replication takes 7.5 minutes to transfer an instance,
vSphere Replication transfers an instance all the time. If the replication takes more than 7.5 minutes, the
replication encounters periodic RPO violations. For example, if the replication starts at 12:00 and takes 10
minutes to transfer an instance, the replication finishes at 12:10. You can start another replication
immediately, but it finishes at 12:20. During the time interval 12:15-12:20, an RPO violation occurs
because the latest available instance started at 12:00 and is too old.
The replication scheduler tries to satisfy these constraints by overlapping replications to optimize
bandwidth use and might start replications for some virtual machines earlier than expected.
To determine the replication transfer time, the replication scheduler uses the duration of the last few
instances to estimate the next one.
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vSphere Replication 8.1 displays the 5 minute RPO setting when the target and the source site use
VMFS 6.0, VMFS 5.x, NFS 4.1, NFS 3, VVOL, or vSAN 6.2 Update 3 storage and later.
If you are using different datastore types between the source and the target site, you can use the 5
minute RPO setting .
The 5 minute RPO requires the source host to be ESXi 6.0 or later for vSAN, and ESXi 6.5 for other
supported datastores.
The 5 minute RPO can be applied to a maximum of 100 VMs on VMFS 6.0, VMFS 5.x, NFS 4.1, NFS 3,
and vSAN 6.2 Update 3 storage and later. The maximum for VVOL datastore is 50 VMs.
Note RPO lower than 15 minutes is not supported when you select the OS quiescing option.
For example, you can configure the retention of 3 instances per day for the last 5 days.
After you recover a replicated virtual machine, the retained replicas appear as snapshots of the virtual
machine in the vSphere Web Client. The list of snapshots includes the retained instances according to the
retention policy that you set, and the latest instance. By the example above, the list will contain 15
snapshots and the latest saved instance of the virtual machine, or a total of 16 snapshots. You can use
the snapshots to revert to an earlier state of the recovered virtual machine.
Administrators cannot configure the precise time when replica instances are created, because the
retention policy is not directly related to replication schedule and RPO. As a consequence, replications
with the same retention policy might not result in replicas retained at the same time instants.
When the age of the latest replication instance approaches the RPO interval, vSphere Replication starts a
sync operation to create a new instance on the target site. The replication instance reflects the state of
the virtual machine at the time the synchronization starts. If no retention policy is configured, when the
new instance is created, the previous instance expires and the vSphere Replication Server deletes it.
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When the age of the latest instance approaches the RPO interval, vSphere Replication starts creating a
new replica instance. The start time of the sync operation is the time of the new instance. When the sync
operation completes, vSphere Replication assesses the existing replica instances to determine which
ones to keep:
1 The granularity of the retention policy is determined based on the replication settings. For example, if
you configured vSphere Replication to keep 3 instances for the last 1 day, it means that you want to
keep 3 replica instances that are relatively evenly distributed over 24 hours. This equals
approximately 1 instance in an 8-hour interval, or the granularity of this retention policy is 8 hours.
2 The time of the last saved instance is rounded down to the nearest slot time. If the granularity is 8
hours, the slot times are 0:00, 8:00, and 16:00.
3 The instances that are between the nearest slot time and the last saved instance are traversed. Let
us assume that the time of the last saved instance is 10:55. Following our example, the nearest slot
time is 8:00 o'clock. Let us also assume that the RPO is 1 hour, and each sync operation takes 5
minutes to complete. Between 8:00 o'clock and 10:55, the slot contains an 8:55 instance, and a 9:55
instance.
4 The earliest instance that is newer than the nearest slot time is saved, and the rest of the instances in
this slot are deleted, except for the latest created instance that vSphere Replication always keeps.
Following our example, the 8:55 instance is saved, and the 9:55 instance is deleted. The 10:55
instance is the latest created instance, so it is also saved.
5 The slot time is decremented by the granularity of the retention policy and a check is performed for
the earliest instance between the beginning of the current slot and the beginning of the previous slot.
If the slot contains expiring instances, they are deleted.
6 The number of slots that contain saved instances is analyzed. If the number of slots with saved
instances is higher than the number of slots determined by the retention policy, the oldest saved
instance expires and is deleted. The last saved instance is not included in this count. In our example,
if we had an instance saved for the interval 8:00 - 16:00 o'clock of the previous day, that instance
would be deleted.
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The number of replication instances that vSphere Replication keeps depends on the configured retention
policy, but also requires that the RPO period is short enough for these instances to be created. Because
vSphere Replication does not verify whether the RPO settings will create enough instances to keep, and
does not display a warning message if the instances are not enough, you must ensure that you set
vSphere Replication to create the instances that you want to keep. For example, if you set
vSphere Replication to keep 6 replication instances per day, the RPO period must not exceed 4 hours, so
that vSphere Replication can create 6 instances in 24 hours.
When you configure replication of a virtual machine, you can enable multiple point in time (MPIT)
instances in the recovery settings in the Configure Replication wizard. vSphere Replication retains a
number of snapshot instances of the virtual machine on the target site based on the retention policy that
you specify. vSphere Replication supports a maximum of 24 snapshot instances. After you recover a
virtual machine, you can revert it to a specific snapshot.
During replication, vSphere Replication replicates all aspects of the virtual machine to the target site,
including any potential viruses and corrupted applications. If a virtual machine suffers from a virus or
corruption and you have configured vSphere Replication to keep PIT snapshots, you can recover the
virtual machine and then revert it to a snapshot of the virtual machine in its uncorrupted state.
You can also use the PIT instances to recover the last known good state of a database.
Replication
VR Appliance VR Appliance
t0 t1 t2 t3
Note vSAN is a fully supported feature of vSphere 5.5 Update 1 and later.
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Because user-friendly names of directories on vSAN datastores might change and cause errors during
replication or recovery operations, vSphere Replication automatically replaces the user-friendly name of a
directory with its UUID, which is constant. Therefore, you may see the UUID displayed in the
Site Recovery user interface instead of a human-readable name.
Using vSphere Replication adds to the load on the storage. Every virtual machine generates regular read
and write operations. Configuring replications on those virtual machines adds another read operation to
the regular read and write operations, which increases the I/O latency on the storage. The precise
number of virtual machines that you can replicate to vSAN storage by using vSphere Replication depends
on your infrastructure. If you notice slower response times when you configure replications for virtual
machines in vSAN storage, monitor the I/O latency of the vSAN infrastructure. Potentially, reduce the
number of virtual machines that you replicate in the vSAN datastore.
Note When you stop a replication, vSphere Replication does not delete the replica directory at the target
datastore. As a result, stale directories remain on VMFS and NFS target datastores, and unused
namespaces remain on vSAN and Virtual Volume target datastores. Because the maximum number of
directories and namespaces on a datastore is limited, you must manually clean them up to free resources
on the datastore. See Clean up the Target Datastore After You Stop a Replication.
n If a virtual machine has one 256 GB disk and you use the default vSAN storage policy, the disk object
will have 2 mirror components of 256 GB each and 1 witness, to make a total of 3 components.
n If a virtual machine has one 512 GB disk and you use the default vSAN storage policy, the disk object
will have 4 mirror components of 256 GB each and 1 witness, to make a total of 5 components.
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If you enable multiple point-in-time (MPIT) snapshots, you must make allowances for the additional
components that each snapshot creates in the vSAN storage, based on the number of disks per virtual
machine, the size of the disks, the number of PIT snapshots to retain, and the number of failures to
tolerate. When retaining PIT snapshots and using vSAN storage, you must calculate the number of extra
components that you require for each virtual machine:
Number of disks x number of PIT snapshots x number of mirror and witness components
Examples of using this formula demonstrate that retaining PIT snapshots rapidly increases the number of
components in the vSAN storage for every virtual machine that you configure for vSphere Replication:
n You have a virtual machine with two 256 GB disks for which you retain 10 MPIT snapshots, and you
set the default vSAN storage policy:
n You have a virtual machine with two 512 GB disks for which you retain 10 PIT snapshots, and you set
the default vSAN storage policy:
The number of PIT snapshots that you retain can increase I/O latency on the vSAN storage.
Storage DRS can detect the data that vSphere Replication copies on the target site and can move
replications without affecting the replication process.
The speed of data synchronization depends on the availability of information about block allocation of the
VMDK files. vSphere Replication uses this information to find empty regions of the disks and accelerate
the sync operations by skipping these regions. The speed of data synchronization also depends on the
site for which block allocation information is available.
n If the allocation information is available at both sites, data synchronization occurs at the highest
possible speed.
n If the allocation information is available only at the source or the target site, vSphere Replication skips
the empty regions on the VMDK disks at that site, but processes the entire disk at the site where
allocation information is not available. Therefore, data synchronization is slower.
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n If the allocation information is not available at either site, data synchronization is done by comparing
all blocks between the source site and the target site, even if many of the blocks have not been
allocated on the disk by the guest OS. This is the slowest method for data synchronization.
Note The availability of block allocation information has little effect on the speed of data synchronization
for VMDK disks that are almost full.
Product Versions at the The acceleration of initial synchronization is supported only on ESXi hosts
Source and the Target 6.0.x or later.
Site If the ESXi and the vSphere Replication Server on the source site are 6.x or
later, but the vSphere Replication Server or the hosts at the target site are
not 6.x or later, the allocation information will be available only on the
source site.
If the vSphere Replication Management servers at the source and at the
target site are both 6.x, but one or more ESXi hosts at the target site are
not 6.0 or later, if the vSphere Replication Management server selects a
target host that is not 6.0 or later, there will be no allocation information
available on the target site.
The Type of the Disks on VMFS or VSAN datastores provide full allocation information.
Datastore NFS datastores cannot provide allocation information for the disks that are
located on them.
Note Replication disks on the source and the target site can be on
different datastore types. The acceleration of the initial synchronization
depends on whether both sites can provide allocation information, or only
one site. If none of the sites can provide allocation information, no
acceleration occurs.
The Type of Virtual Disk Lazy zeroed thick disks, thin disks, and vSAN sparse disks, Space-Efficient
sparse disks, and VMDK sparse snapshots provide allocation information.
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vSphere Replication compares the differences on the source and target site, and replicates only the
changed blocks.
When, during replication configuration, you select a target datastore for the virtual machine or a specific
disk, vSphere Replication looks for disks with the same filename in the target datastore. If a file with the
same name exists, a warning appears in the wizard. You can review and configure the replication seeds
or choose not to use any replication seeds. If you choose not to use the discovered seeds, then replica
files are placed in a new directory with a unique name. If you choose to configure seeds by selecting the
Select seeds check box, then a new page appears in the wizard where you can configure seeds for each
disk on each virtual machine.
Note If you plan to copy files from the source to the target datastore, the source virtual machine must be
powered off before downloading the VMDK files that will be used as seeds for the replication.
When you configure replication in a single vCenter Server instance, you can select the source site as the
target site for replication. You then configure replication in the same way as for an infrastructure with a
source and a target site. For example, you can replicate a virtual machine to a different datastore
attached to the same host or another host. vSphere Replication prevents you from using the source or
replicated virtual machine's vmdk files as the target of the replication.
The virtual machine name must be unique in the same folder in the vCenter Server inventory. In the
recovery wizard, vSphere Replication does not allow you to select a folder if there is already a virtual
machine with the same name registered to it. During recovery if there is a virtual machine with the same
name, you might see an error message. See Error Recovering Virtual Machine in a Single vCenter Server
Instance for more information.
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Although vSphere Replication supports up to 24 recovery points, you must set the MPIT to the lowest
number of recovery points that meets your business requirements. For example, if the business
requirement is for 10 recovery points, you must set up vSphere Replication to save only 10 snapshots.
You can set up two recovery points per day for the last five days. As a result, the consumed storage and
the time needed to consolidate the snapshots after recovery are less than if you use the maximum
number of recovery points.
Configuring Quiescing
For VMs with high levels of storage I/O, quiescing of the file system and applications can take several
minutes and impact the performance of the VM . When quiescing a file system and applications for
Windows VMs, vSphere Replication requires a regular VM snapshot before replication. When you
estimate the RPO time, consider the time and resource consumption for the quiescing and for the
consolidation of the snapshots. For example, if you configure a replication of a Windows VM with an RPO
of 15 minutes and quiescing is enabled, vSphere Replication generates a VM snapshot and consolidates
it every 15 minutes.
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Configure Replication
vSphere Replication can protect one or more virtual machines and their virtual disks by replicating them
from one vCenter Server instance to another.
This procedure is for configuring replications to a target vCenter Server. To configure a replication to a
cloud provider, see vSphere Replication for Disaster Recovery to the Cloud.
When you configure a replication, you set a recovery point objective (RPO) to determine the maximum
data loss that you can tolerate. For example, an RPO of 1 hour seeks to ensure that a virtual machine
loses the data for no more than 1 hour during the recovery. For smaller RPO values, less data is lost in a
recovery, but more network bandwidth is consumed keeping the replica up to date. The RPO value affects
replication scheduling, but vSphere Replication does not adhere to a strict replication schedule. See How
the Recovery Point Objective Affects Replication Scheduling and How the 5 Minute Recovery Point
Objective Works.
Every time that a virtual machine reaches its RPO target, vSphere Replication records approximately
3800 bytes of data in the vCenter Server events database. If you set a low RPO period, this can quickly
create a large volume of data in the database. To reduce the volume of data that is kept in the
vCenter Server events database, limit the number of days that vCenter Server retains event data. See
Configure Database Retention Policy in the vCenter Server and Host Management Guide. Alternatively,
set a higher RPO value.
vSphere Replication guarantees crash consistency among all the disks that belong to a virtual machine. If
you use quiescing, you might obtain a higher level of consistency. The available quiescing types are
determined by the operating system of the virtual machine. See Compatibility Matrices for vSphere
Replication 8.1 for quiescing support for Windows and Linux virtual machines.
You can configure virtual machines to replicate from and to vSAN datastores. See Using vSphere
Replication with vSAN Storage for the limitations when using vSphere Replication with vSAN.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Replication appliance is deployed at the source and the target sites.
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n To enable the quiescing of virtual machines that run Linux guest OS, install the latest version of
VMware Tools on each Linux machine that you plan to replicate.
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Replications tab, select Forward replications or Reverse replications, and click the
Create new replication icon.
5 On the Virtual machines page of the Configure Replication wizard, select the virtual machines you
want to replicate and click Next.
6 Accept the automatic assignment of a vSphere Replication server or select a particular server on the
target site and click Next.
When replicating multiple virtual machines, you can configure a different target datastore for each
virtual machine.
Replication seeds can reduce the network traffic during the initial full synchronization, but unintended
use of replication seeds might lead to data loss.
9 Click Next.
10 (Optional) On the Select seed page, review the suggested replication seeds and change them if
necessary.
You can select seed files for each virtual machine disk and search for seeds by using the dropdown
menu and clicking Browse.
The replica files for the disk are written in the seeds file directory.
11 Select the The selected seeds are correct check box and click Next.
12 On the Replication settings page, use the RPO slider to set the acceptable period for which data
can be lost if a site failure occurs.
13 (Optional) To save multiple replication instances that can be converted to snapshots of the source
virtual machine during recovery, select Enable point in time instances and adjust the number of
instances to keep.
Note You can keep up to 24 instances for a virtual machine. For example, if you configure
vSphere Replication to keep 6 replication instances per day, the maximum number of days you can
set is 4 days.
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The number of replication instances that vSphere Replication keeps depends on the configured
retention policy, but also requires that the RPO period is short enough for these instances to be
created. Because vSphere Replication does not verify whether the RPO settings will create enough
instances to keep, and does not display a warning message if the instances are not enough, you
must ensure that you set vSphere Replication to create the instances that you want to keep. For
example, if you set vSphere Replication to keep 6 replication instances per day, the RPO period must
not exceed 4 hours, so that vSphere Replication can create 6 instances in 24 hours.
14 (Optional) Enable quiescing for the guest operating system of the source virtual machine.
Note Quiescing options are available only for virtual machines that support quiescing.
vSphere Replication does not support VSS quiescing on Virtual Volumes.
Compressing the replication data that is transferred through the network saves network bandwidth
and might help reduce the amount of buffer memory used on the vSphere Replication server.
However, compressing and decompressing data requires more CPU resources on both the source
site and the server that manages the target datastore.
16 On the Ready to complete page, review the replication settings, and click Finish.
vSphere Replication starts an initial full synchronization of the virtual machine files to the designated
datastore on the target site.
Prerequisites
You must have an additional vSphere Replication Server deployed and registered, apart from the
embedded vSphere Replication Server.
Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Client or vSphere Web Client on the source site.
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Replications tab and select a replication from Forward replications or Reverse
replications.
6 On the Target site page of the Reconfigure Replication wizard, select Manually select vSphere
Replication Server.
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7 Select a different vSphere Replication Server instance from the list and click Next until you finish the
wizard.
Take a note of the target datastore and the name of the replication that you are about to stop. You need
this information to clean up your environment after you stop the replication.
Prerequisites
Verify that you are logged in the vSphere Web Client or vSphere Client as a VRM virtual machine
replication user or a VRM administrator user. See vSphere Replication Roles Reference.
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Replications tab and select a replication from Forward replications or Reverse
replications.
vSphere Replication asks you if you want to stop permanently the replication for the selected virtual
machine.
Note The connection between the vSphere Replication sites must be working to stop a replication
on both sites. Alternatively, you can force stop the replication on the local site by selecting Force
stop replication. If the remote site is available, you must also use the Site Recovery user interface to
force stop the corresponding replication on the remote site. If you force stop a forward replication, the
replication can still be recovered by using the Site Recovery user interface on the remote site.
6 Click Remove to confirm that you want to stop replicating this virtual machine.
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When you stop a replication, the following operations are performed at the replication target site.
n If the VMDK files were created when the replication was first configured, the VMDK files are deleted
from the target site datastore.
Note When you stop a replication, vSphere Replication does not delete the replica directory at the target
datastore. As a result, stale directories remain on VMFS and NFS target datastores, and unused
namespaces remain on vSAN and Virtual Volume target datastores. Because the maximum number of
directories and namespaces on a datastore is limited, you must manually clean them up to free resources
on the datastore. See Clean up the Target Datastore After You Stop a Replication.
n If you configured the replication to use existing disks at the target site as seeds, the VMDK files are
not deleted and remain on the target datastore.
As a result, stale directories remain on VMFS and NFS target datastores, and unused namespaces
remain on vSAN and Virtual Volume target datastores. Because the maximum number of directories and
namespaces on a datastore is limited, you must manually clean them up to free resources on the
datastore.
Prerequisites
Verify that you know the name of the replication that was stopped and its target datastore.
Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Web Client or vSphere Client as an administrator user and navigate to the
datastore that was the target for the stopped replication.
2 Select the files tab, enter the name of the stopped replication in the search text box, and locate the
folder that corresponds to this name.
Note
If the folder is not empty and you might use the files as replication seeds to create a new replication
later on, do not delete the folder. If you do not need the files, continue with the deletion.
Reconfiguring Replications
You can reconfigure a replication to modify its settings.
For example, you can reconfigure the replication to enable or disable a virtual machine disk file for
replication, modify replication options, such as RPO, MPIT retention policy, or quiescing method. You can
also specify a different target datastore for replica configuration and disk files.
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Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Replications tab and select a replication from Forward replications or Reverse
replications.
6 Click Next until you reach the Replication settings page of the Reconfigure Replication wizard.
7 Modify the RPO settings for this replication and click Next.
Procedure
3 On the target site, resize the disk that is left over after you stopped the replication.
4 Configure the replication on the source virtual machine and use the resized disk on the target site as
seed.
To resize a virtual machine disk if you did not initially use replication seeds, you must perform a recovery,
resize the disk on source and target site manually, and use the target disk as a replication seed to
configure a new replication.
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Procedure
4 Resize the disk of the recovered virtual machine on the target site.
5 Unregister the recovered virtual machine on the target site, but do not delete the disks.
6 Configure a replication by using the disks of the recovered virtual machine as seeds.
vSphere Replication can save replication instances that can be used as snapshots after recovery or
planned migration operations. You can save up to 24 point in time instances per VM.
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Replications tab and select a replication from Forward replications or Reverse
replications.
6 Click Next until you reach the Replication settings page of the Reconfigure Replication wizard.
7 In the Point in time instances pane, make the changes that you want to apply and click Next.
Action Procedure
Enable the saving of point in time Select the Enable point in time instances check box.
instances
Disable the saving of point in time Deselect the Enable point in time instances check box.
instances
Adjust the number of instances to keep Use the spin-boxes to adjust the number of instances to keep per day and the
and for how long to keep them number of past days for which you want to keep replication instances.
Note You cannot keep more than 24 replication instances per virtual machine.
If you selected to disable the saving of point in time instances, the instances that exist on the target site
are deleted when the next replication instance appears on the target site. The moment when a new
replication instance is saved on the target site depends on the RPO setting.
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Note The old target datastore from which you want to move the replication data must be online. If the
old datastore is inaccessible, the reconfiguration task fails. To change the target datastore when the old
datastore is inaccessible, you must stop the replication to the old datastore and configure another
replication to the new datastore.
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Replications tab and select a replication from Forward replications or Reverse
replications.
6 Click Next to reach the Target datastore page of the Reconfigure Replication wizard.
8 Click Next until you reach the Ready to complete page and click Finish to save your settings.
vSphere Replication moves all replicated instances and configuration files to the new target datastore
according to your settings.
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Monitoring and Managing
Replications in
vSphere Replication 12
vSphere Replication provides a management interface where you can monitor and manage virtual
machine replication and connectivity states for local and remote sites.
On the home page of the Site Recovery user interface, you can see all vSphere Replication site
connections and the number of forward and reverse replications between the sites.
To see details about the status of a connection, replication problems, and to manage and monitor
replications between a site pair, click the View Details button.
For more information about how to identify replication errors, see Identifying Replication Problems.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
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4 To see details of the virtual machines replicated from this site, select the Replications tab and click
Forward Replications or Reverse replications.
Not Active The replication is not running at the n Power on the source virtual
moment. machine.
n The source virtual machine is n If all replications for an ESXi host
powered off. are in Not Active state, verify that
n A communication problem might the security rule Replication-to-
have occurred between the source Cloud Traffic is enabled on the
ESXi host and the target site. host. This rule opens TCP ports
from 10000 to 10010 for outgoing
communication.
Paused The replication is not running at the From the list of replications, select the
moment. A vSphere Replication user paused replication and click the
has paused the replication. Resume icon.
Status (RPO violation) For replication status OK, Sync, or Full n Improve the network connection
Sync, the replication is running, but the between the source and target site.
RPO that is set for the replication is not n Increase the RPO period.
met and is violated. n For replication status Not Active
For replication status Not Active or or Error, address the cause for
Error, the replication is not running, the status and wait for the next
and the RPO that is set for the sync.
replication is violated.
n The network connection between
the source and the target site is
dropping intermittently.
n The bandwidth of the connection
between the source and the target
site is too low.
n The replication is not running, so
data cannot be replicated on the
target site.
Note If a replication is in the Not Active replication state, you might have connected the source
and target sites using network address translation (NAT). vSphere Replication does not support NAT.
Use credential-based authentication and network routing without NAT when connecting the sites.
Another cause for a Not Active replication state might be that the source virtual machine is powered
off. Automatic replication works only on virtual machines that are powered on.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Site Pair tab and click vSphere Replication reports.
The Reports page displays historic data for vSphere Replication for a certain time period.
Note Data is collected in 5 minute intervals and the graphs represent aggregated data for each interval.
Therefore, you cannot see the exact moment when a peak value occurred. The displayed data combines
all site pairs.
What to do next
n You can use the drop-down menu above the reports to change the time range of the reports.
Server and site connectivity, number of RPO violations, and other metrics give you, as an administrator,
the information you need to diagnose replication issues.
The following sections contain examples of interpreting the data displayed under vSphere Replication
reports on the Site Pair tab of vSphere Replication.
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VMware vSphere Replication Administration
RPO Violations
The large number of RPO violations can be caused by various problems in the environment, on both the
protected and the recovery site. With more details on historical replication jobs, you can make educated
decisions on how to manage the replication environment.
n The network bandwidth cannot accommodate all n To allow lower change rate virtual machines to meet their
replications. RPO objectives, disable the replication on some virtual
n The replication traffic might have increased. machines with high change rate.
n The initial full sync for a large virtual machine is taking n Increase the network bandwidth for the selected host.
longer than the configured RPO for the virtual machine. n Check if the replication traffic has increased. If the traffic
has increased, investigate possible causes, for example
the usage of an application might have changed without
you being informed.
n Check the historical data for average of transferred bytes
for a notable and sustained increase. If an increase exists,
contact application owners to identify recent events that
might be related to this increase.
n Adjust to a less aggressive RPO or look at other ways to
increase bandwidth to accommodate the current RPO
requirements.
n A connectivity problem exists between the protected and n To verify the connection between the protected and
the recovery site. recovery site, check the site connectivity data.
n An infrastructure change might have occurred on the n Check if the infrastructure on the recovery site has
recovery site. changed or is experiencing problems that prevent
vSphere Replication from writing on the recovery
datastores. For example, storage bandwidth management
changes made to recovery hosts might result in storage
delays during the replication process.
n Check on the vSphere Replication Management Server
appliance and the vSphere Replication Server appliance.
Someone might have shut down the appliance or it might
have lost connection.
Transferred Bytes
Corelating the total number of transferred bytes and the number of RPO violations can help you decide
on how much bandwidth might be required to meet RPO objectives.
Table 12‑3. Analyzing the Rate of Transferred Bytes and RPO Violations
Graph Values Probable Cause Solution
n High rate of transferred bytes and high number of RPO The network bandwidth might n Maximize the transferred
violations be insufficient to bytes graph and use the
n Low rate of transferred bytes and high number of RPO accommodate all replications. drop-down menu to filter
violations the data by virtual
machine. To allow lower
change rate virtual
machines to meet their
RPO objectives, disable
the replication on some
virtual machines with high
change rate.
n Increase the network
bandwidth for the
selected host.
n High rate of transferred bytes and a few or no RPO The environment operates as N/A
violations expected.
n Low rate of transferred bytes and a few or no RPO
violations
Under Issues on the Site Pair tab of vSphere Replication, you can view and identify possible replication
problems.
Not The replication is not active because the virtual machine is Power on the virtual machine to resume the
Active powered off and a warning icon appears. Replication is not running replication.
for that virtual machine.
Paused If you paused the replication, a warning icon appears. Resume the paused replication from the Issues
tab.
Error If you added a disk on a virtual machine which is already Reconfigure the replication and enable or
configured for replication, the replication pauses and goes to an disable the newly added disk.
error state.
Error While configuring replication, the replication fails with the incorrect Reconfigure the replication.
UUID. For example, the replication seed found and intended for
use has a different UUID from the original hard disk.
RPO A replication contains an RPO violation. See Reconfigure Recovery Point Objectives in
Violatio Replications.
n
If you have problems with an existing site pair, you can attempt to reconfigure the site pair with the
Reconfigure Site Pair action. When you provide the required credentials, the reconfiguration operation
attempts to repair the existing site pair.
With the Break Site Pair action, you can disconnect vSphere Replication sites.
Note You cannot use the Reconfigure Site Pair action to add a missing pairing or a pairing that was
manually broken with Break Site Pair. If your site pair is missing a pairing, you must use New Site Pair
to configure it.
Prerequisites
Verify that you have paired your protected site with at least one recovery site. To create a connection to a
new recovery site, see Configure vSphere Replication Connections.
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
Option Description
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Site Pair tab, click Replication Servers, and select a server from the list.
Option Description
Register a virtual machine as vSphere Click to register a virtual machine as a vSphere Replication Server. See Register
Replication Server. an Additional vSphere Replication Server.
Unregister the selected vSphere Click to unregister the vSphere Replication Server that you selected from the list.
Replication Server. See Unregister and Remove A vSphere Replication Server.
Reconnect the selected vSphere Click if the status of the vSphere Replication Server that you selected from the list
Replication Server. is Disconnected.
Configure the selected vSphere Click to access the VAMI of the vSphere Replication Server that you selected
Replication Server. from the list.
n If you skip the synchronization and recover with the latest data available, for example, if the
source site is not available, vSphere Replication uses the latest available data at the target site.
n vSphere Replication reconfigures the newly replicated virtual machine with the correct disk paths.
n vSphere Replication registers the virtual machine with vCenter Server at the target site.
You can recover one virtual machine at a time in Reverse Replications on the Replications tab at the
target site. Optionally, you can power on the recovered virtual machine. The network devices of the
recovered virtual machine are disconnected. You might need to configure the recovered virtual machine
to render it fully operational.
If you had enabled the saving of point in time instances, those instances are converted to snapshots of
the recovered virtual machine. You can use the vSphere Web Client to revert to a snapshot from the list.
Prerequisites
Verify that the virtual machine at the source site is powered off. If the virtual machine is powered on, an
error message reminds you to power it off.
Procedure
1 Log in to the target site by using the vSphere Web Client or vSphere Client.
2 On the home page, click Site Recovery and click Open Site Recovery.
3 On the Site Recovery home page, select a site pair and click View Details.
4 Click the Replications tab and select a replication from Reverse replications.
6 Select whether to recover the virtual machine with all the latest data, or to recover the virtual machine
with the most recent data available on the target site.
Option Description
Synchronize recent changes Performs a full synchronization of the virtual machine from the source site to the
target site before recovering the virtual machine. Selecting this option avoids data
loss, but it is only available if the data of the source virtual machine is accessible.
You can only select this option if the virtual machine is powered off.
Use latest available data Recovers the virtual machine by using the data from the most recent replication
on the target site, without performing synchronization. Selecting this option results
in the loss of any data that has changed since the most recent replication. Select
this option if the source virtual machine is inaccessible or if its disks are
corrupted.
7 (Optional) Select the Power on the virtual machine after recovery check box.
8 Click Next.
11 (Optional) If the virtual machine contains hard disks for which you have not enabled replication, select
a target destination to attach an existing disk or detach the disk, and click Next.
This page only appears if the virtual machine contains hard disks for which you have not enabled
replication.
n To select a target destination, click Browse and navigate to a folder on a datastore in which disk
file is placed.
n To detach the disk and exclude disk files from the recovery, click Detach.
12 Click Finish.
vSphere Replication validates the provided input and recovers the virtual machine. If successful, the
virtual machine status changes to Recovered. The virtual machine appears in the inventory of the target
site.
If you enabled multiple point in time instances when you configured replication for the virtual machine,
vSphere Replication presents the retained instances as standard snapshots after a successful recovery.
You can select one of these snapshots to revert the virtual machine. vSphere Replication does not
preserve the memory state when you revert to a snapshot.
If the recovery fails, the replication of the virtual machines reverts to the replication state before the
attempted recovery. For more information about the failed recovery attempt, check the last recovery error
message in the replication details pane or check vCenter Server tasks.
The recovery might also fail if you use the same name for the virtual machine in a scenario where you
use vSphere Replication to replicate a virtual machine in a single vCenter Server and the vCenter Server
instance has only one host in its inventory. See Error Recovering Virtual Machine in a Single vCenter
Server Instance for more information.
After a successful recovery, vSphere Replication disables the virtual machine for replication if the source
site is still available. When the virtual machine is powered on again, it does not send replication data to
the recovery site. To unconfigure the replication, click the Remove icon.
When the source virtual machine is no longer in the vCenter Server inventory, the replication is removed
from the Forward Replications tab, but it can still be found in the Reverse Replications tab on the
target site.
If a replicated virtual machine is attached to a distributed virtual switch and you attempt to perform a
recovery in an automated DRS cluster, the recovery operation succeeds but the resulting virtual machine
cannot be powered on. To attach it to the correct network, edit the recovered virtual machine settings.
vSphere Replication disconnects virtual machine network adapters to prevent damage in the production
network. After recovery, you must connect the virtual network adapters to the correct network. A target
host or cluster might lose access to the DVS the virtual machine was configured with at the source site. In
this case, manually connect the virtual machine to a network or other DVS to successfully power on the
virtual machine.
After performing a successful recovery on the target vCenter Server site, you can perform failback. Click
Reverse replications and manually configure a new replication in the reverse direction, from the target
site to the source site. The disks on the source site are used as replication seeds, so that
vSphere Replication only synchronizes the changes made to the disk files on the target site. For more
information on replication seeds, see Replicating Virtual Machines Using Replication Seeds.
Before you configure a reverse replication, you must unregister the virtual machine from the inventory on
the source site.
If you have problems with deploying vSphere Replication, replicating or recovering virtual machines, or
connecting to databases, you can troubleshoot them. To help identify the problem, you might need to
collect and review vSphere Replication logs and send them to VMware Support.
See Chapter 12 Monitoring and Managing Replications in vSphere Replication to learn about replication
states and how to identify replication issues.
You can also search for solutions to problems in the VMware knowledge base at http://kb.vmware.com.
To access and download the vSphere Replication logs, you need access to the vSphere Replication
VAMI. vSphere Replication rotates its logs when the log file reaches 50 MB and keeps at most 12
compressed log files. For more options on how to collect automatically vSphere Replication logs, see
https://kb.vmware.com/s/article/2013091.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have administrator privileges to configure the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
3 Click Generate to generate a .zip package of the current vSphere Replication logs.
A link to the package containing the replication and system logs appears. Log files from the
vSphere Replication appliance and all connected Additional vSphere Replication Servers are included
in the same package.
5 (Optional) Click Delete next to existing log packages to delete them individually.
Use SCP or Win SCP to copy log folders and files from the vSphere Replication appliance and all
Additional vSphere Replication Servers.
n /opt/vmware/hms/logs/
n /opt/vmware/var/log/lighttpd/
n /var/log/vmware/
n /var/log/boot.msg
n /var/opt/apache-tomcat/logs/dr.log
You can define and edit alarms to alert you when a specific vSphere Replication event occurs, such as
after you configure a virtual machine for replication. See View and Edit Alarm Settings in the vSphere
Web Client in the vSphere Web Client documentation.
Host configured for Host is configured for com.vmware.vcHms.h Info Host System
vSphere Replication vSphere Replication ostConfiguredForHbr
Event
Crash consistent sync Crash consistent sync hbr.primary.DeltaCom Info Virtual Machine
completed completed pletedEvent
Sync failed to start Sync failed to start hbr.primary.FailedToS Error Virtual Machine
tartDeltaEvent
Problem
When you deploy the vSphere Replication, an error appears at vService bindings in the Deploy OVF
Template wizard.
Cause
This error is typically the result of the vCenter Management Web service being paused or stopped.
Solution
Attempt to start the vCenter Management Web service. If vCenter Server is running as a Linux virtual
appliance, reboot the appliance.
Problem
The error OVF package is invalid and cannot be deployed might appear while you attempt to
deploy the vSphere Replication appliance.
Cause
This problem is due to the vCenter Server port being changed from the default of 80.
Solution
Problem
vSphere Replication cannot connect to SQL Server, and you have insufficient information to solve this
problem.
Cause
Several issues can cause this problem, and initially available information about the problem is insufficient
to affect a resolution.
Solution
For example, you might use SCP or WinSCP. Connect using the root account, which is the same
account used to connect to the VAMI.
3 Connect to the VAMI and attempt to save the vSphere Replication configuration.
4 Connect to the vSphere Replication appliance again and find the hms-configtool.log file which is
in /opt/vmware/hms/logs.
This log file contains information about the error that just occurred. Use this information to
troubleshoot the connection problem, or provide the information to VMware for further assistance.
See Reconfigure vSphere Replication to Use an External Database.
Problem
Multiple source disks with device keys device_keys point to the same destination datastore and file
path disk_path.
Cause
This problem occurs because vSphere Replication does not generate a unique datastore path or file
name for the destination virtual disk.
Solution
If you select different datastores for the VMDK files on the protected site, you must also select different
datastores for the target VMDK files on the secondary site.
Alternatively, you can create a unique datastore path by placing the VMDK files in separate folders on a
single target datastore on the secondary site.
Problem
The vSphere Replication service stops running or does not start after a reboot. The error unable to
resolve host: non-fully-qualified-name appears in the vSphere Replication logs.
Solution
1 In the vSphere Web Client or vSphere Client, select the vCenter Server instance and click the
Configure tab.
2 Under Settings, click Advanced Settings and verify that the VirtualCenter.FQDN key is set to
either a fully qualified domain name or to a literal address.
4 (Optional) Review and confirm the browser security exception to proceed to the login page.
5 Enter the root user name and password for the appliance.
You configured the root password during the OVF deployment of the vSphere Replication appliance.
7 Enter the same FQDN or literal address for vCenter Server, as you set for the VirtualCenter.FQDN
key.
Problem
Unable to register the recovered virtual machine VM_name with configuration file
<path_to_vmx_config_file>.
Cause
You cannot recover virtual machines with the same name in the same source and destination folder in the
vCenter Server inventory.
Solution
Recover the virtual machine in a different VMs and Templates folder in the same data center. Optionally,
after successful recovery, you can remove the old virtual machine from the vCenter inventory and drag
the recovered virtual machine to the required virtual machine folder.
Problem
When you replicate virtual machines, you might encounter RPO violations.
Cause
n Network connectivity problems between source hosts and vSphere Replication servers at the target
site.
n As a result of changing the IP address, the vSphere Replication server has a different IP address.
n Slow bandwidth between the source hosts and the vSphere Replication servers.
Solution
n Search the vmkernel.log at the source host for the vSphere Replication server IP address to see
any network connectivity problems.
n Verify that the vSphere Replication server IP address is the same. If it is different, reconfigure all the
replications, so that the source hosts use the new IP address.
n Check /var/log/vmware/*hbrsrv* at the vSphere Replication appliance at the target site for
problems with the server accessing a target datastore.
Problem
Deleting the vSphere Replication appliance does not remove the vSphere Replication extension from
vCenter Server.
Solution
1 Use the Managed Object Browser (MOB) to delete the vSphere Replication extension manually.
For more information, see Unregister vSphere Replication from vCenter Server If the Appliance Was
Deleted.
Problem
If the ESXi Server instance on which vSphere Replication runs is disconnected from vCenter Server and
is connected to another vCenter Server instance, you cannot access vSphere Replication functions. If you
try to restart vSphere Replication, the service does not start.
Cause
The OVF environment for the vSphere Replication appliance is stored in the vCenter Server database.
When the ESXi host is removed from the vCenter Server inventory, the OVF environment for the
vSphere Replication appliance is lost. This action disables the mechanisms that the vSphere Replication
appliance uses to authenticate with vCenter Server.
Solution
1 (Optional) If possible, redeploy the vSphere Replication appliance and configure all replications and if
possible, reuse the existing .vmdk files as initial copies.
b Remove any temporary hbr* files from the target datastore folders.
d Configure all replications, reusing the existing replica .vmdk files as initial copies.
2 (Optional) If you cannot redeploy the vSphere Replication appliance, use the VAMI to connect
vSphere Replication to the original vCenter Server instance.
Problem
In addition to the generic error, the message provides more detailed information about the problem,
similar to the following examples.
n Error - Unable to reverse replication for the virtual machine 'virtual machine
name'. VRM Server generic error. Please check the documentation for any
troubleshooting information. Exception details:
'org.hibernate.exception.LockAcquisitionException: Transaction (Process ID 57)
was deadlocked on lock resources with another process and has been chosen as the
deadlock victim. Rerun the transaction. This problem relates to a deadlock in Microsoft SQL
Server.
Cause
vSphere Replication sends this message when it encounters configuration or infrastructure errors. For
example, network issues, database connection issues, or host overload.
Solution
Check the Exception details message for information about the problem. Depending on the details of
the message, you can choose to retry the failed operation, restart vSphere Replication, or correct the
infrastructure.
Problem
If you have two connected sites, and the vCenter Server address of either site changes, the connection
status Not connected appears and you cannot reconnect the sites.
Solution
1 Log in the VAMI for the vSphere Replication appliance that is registered to the vCenter Server whose
address has changed.
2 Reconfigure the vSphere Replication appliance with the new vCenter Server address.
4 In the vSphere Replication user interface, from the list of target sites, select the connection that
indicates Not connected status.
6 Enter the PSC address and the credentials of a user that has the VRM remote.Manage VRM
privilege assigned, and click Next.
You can verify the PSC address in the vSphere Replication VAMI on the target site, on the SSO tab
under VR, in the LookupService Address text box.
7 Select a vCenter Server on the second site, select vSphere Replication from the list of services, and
click Next.
9 Verify that the connection between the two sites is successfully restored and the status is Connected.
Problem
When you use the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) in Internet Explorer to upload
certificates to the vSphere Replication appliance, you see a certificate error:
The certificate installed with warnings. Remote VRM systems with the 'Accept only SSL certificate
signed by a
trusted CA' option enabled may be unable to connect to this site for the following reason: The
certificate was not issued
for use with the given hostname: vr_appliance_hostname.
Solution
Ignore this error, or connect to the VAMI by using a supported browser other than Internet Explorer.
Problem
If the vCenter Server inventory contains a few hundred or more hosts, the Register VR Server task takes
more than a few minutes to complete.
Cause
vSphere Replication updates the SSL thumbprint registry of each host. The vCenter Server Events pane
displays Host is configured for vSphere Replication for each host as the vSphere Replication
server registration task progresses.
Solution
After it finishes, you can use vSphere Replication for incoming replication traffic.
Problem
In heavily loaded environments, generating log bundles can cause vSphere Replication connection
problems during recovery operations. Recovery fails with the error
A generic error occurred in the vSphere Replication Management Server. Exception details: 'Failed
write-locking object: object_ID'.
Cause
vSphere Replication server is blocked when the log bundle is generated. This situation occurs if the
storage for the vSphere Replication virtual machine is overloaded.
Solution
Rerun the recovery. If the recovery still fails, reevaluate the storage bandwidth requirements of the cluster
on which vSphere Replication is running, and the network bandwidth if the storage is NAS.
Problem
Operations such as recovering virtual machines fail with the following error:
Object object_GUID is locked by another ongoing operation in vSphere Replication Management Server.
Try again later.
Cause
When running under heavy load, some vSphere Replication operations might take a longer time to
complete and other operations can fail with this error because a background update operation on the
replication group is slow and holds a lock on the replication for a long time.
Solution
Problem
If two sites are paired, and, while the vSphere Web Client is open on the source site, you restart the
vCenter Server and the vSphere Replication Management Server on the target site, when you try to
configure a replication from the source to the target site, the configuration task fails with the following
error message:
The following error message appears in the HMS log file on the restarted target site:
The following error message appears in the HMS log file on the source site:
Cause
When you establish a connection between two sites, the connection is cached in the user session on both
sites. When you restart the vCenter Server and the vSphere Replication Management Server on the
target site, the information about user sessions is discarded. Because the vSphere Web Client is open
and connected to the source site, the login data remains cached in the vSphere Replication Management
Server. When you configure a replication, the source site tries to connect to the target site using the
cached login data. The target site interprets that data as stale and stops the reconnecting thread.
Solution
n Log out the Site Recovery user interface and log back in.
Problem
When you refresh the reverse replications list on a remote site soon after the connection to the local site
has become unavailable, the replications do not display due to a communication error between the two
sites.
Solution
Refresh the Site Recovery user interface. Alternatively, log out and log in again.
Problem
vSphere Replication uses certificate-based authentication to connect to vCenter Server. If you change the
vCenter Server certificate, vSphere Replication is inaccessible.
Cause
The vSphere Replication database contains the old vCenter Server certificate.
Solution
u Log into the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) of the vSphere Replication appliance and
click Configuration > Save and Restart Service.
Do not change any configuration information before clicking Save and Restart Service.
Problem
vSphere Replication needs access to port 80. You might see forbidden HTTP connections in the
vSphere Replication logs.
Solution
Make sure the vSphere Replication appliance has access to port 80 on the storage hosts.
For a list of ports that must be open for vSphere Replication, see vSphere Replication Network Ports.
Problem
When you reconfigure the replication and start a full sync, the replication stops in the same data block
with the virus information in it unless the virus data has moved on the disk. Clones of the disk fail, but
other virtual machines of the same size and configuration from the same host replicating to the same
destination datastore replicate successfully.
Solution
Remove the virus information from the replicated guest to avoid replicating virus information.
Make an exception in the anti-virus rules in the firewall to allow the replication to proceed.
Problem
Configuring vSphere Replication on a large number of virtual machines simultaneously when using
vSphere Replication with vSAN storage causes the initial full synchronization of the virtual machine files
to run very slowly.
Cause
Initial full synchronization operations generate heavy I/O traffic. Configuring too many replications at the
same time can overload the vSAN storage.
Solution
Problem
Unable to configure replication for virtual machine VM_name because group group_name cannot be created.
Another virtual machine configured_VM_name}' that has the same instance UUID instance_UUID already
exists on protection site source_site_name.
Cause
n If, due to a connectivity issue or some other problem, an orphaned replication remains on one of the
sites while it is deleted from the other site, the orphaned replication prevents you from configuring a
new replication for the same virtual machine.
n If you have paired two sites and reinstall the vSphere Replication Management server appliance or
reset its database on one of the sites, the other site contains information about the old appliance and
database, and prevents you from configuring new replications.
Solution
n If you have not reinstalled the vSphere Replication Management server, an orphaned replication
exists in your environment. Use the Managed Object Browser (MOB) of the vSphere Replication
Management server to delete the replication.
a Navigate to https://vrms_address:8043/mob/?vmodl=1
c Select the replicaManager or replicationManager value, depending on the type of replication you
want to delete.
Note You must set the start value to 0 and delete the sorters and filter values, to invoke the
first page of maximum 50 listed replications. For more than 50 replications, you can use paging
and make additional calls for the next pages of replications or use the sorters and filter values.
f Locate the replication and click the GID link under replication value.
n If the vSphere Replication Management server on one of the sites was reinstalled or otherwise reset:
a Reinstall the vSphere Replication Management server at the other site or reset its database.
b Connect the sites and register any additional vSphere Replication server appliances.
c Remove any temporary hbr* files left over from the target datastore folders.
d Configure all replications, reusing the existing replica .vmdk files as replication seeds.
Problem
You use a vSphere Replication Server on the target site to manage replications, and the replication status
for the virtual machines that this vSphere Replication Server manages is Not active though there is no
obvious reason for this status.
Cause
The vSphere Replication appliance does not check the connectivity between vSphere Replication Server
instances that you register and the ESXi host on the primary site. If you deploy vSphere Replication
servers on the target site, but these servers cannot access the ESXi host on the primary site, the
vSphere Replication servers register successfully with the vSphere Replication appliance, but cannot
operate as expected.
Solution
u If the replication status of a virtual machine is Not active, check the network connectivity between
the host on which the replicated virtual machine is running and the target vSphere Replication Server.
Problem
Response times for vSphere Replication operations can increase as you replicate more virtual machines.
You possibly experience recovery operation timeouts or failures for a few virtual machines, and RPO
violations.
Cause
Every virtual machine in a datastore generates regular read and write operations. Configuring
vSphere Replication on those virtual machines adds another read operation to the regular read and write
operations, which increases the I/O load on the storage. The performance of vSphere Replication
depends on the I/O load of the virtual machines that you replicate and on the capabilities of the storage
hardware. If the load generated by the virtual machines, combined with the extra I/O operations that
vSphere Replication introduces, exceeds the capabilities of your storage hardware, you might experience
slow response times.
Solution
When running vSphere Replication, if response times are greater than 30 ms, reduce the number of
virtual machines that you replicate to the datastore. Alternatively, increase the capabilities of your
hardware. If you suspect that the I/O load on the storage is an issue and you are using VMware vSAN
storage, monitor the I/O latency by using the monitoring tool in the vSAN interface.
Problem
If you use the virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) to install a new SSL certificate, to change
the IP address of the VRM host, or apply another setting on the VR tab, and you click Save and Restart,
the following error message appears:
Cause
The OVF environment of the vSphere Replication appliance might be missing or corrupted.
Solution
a If the ovfEnv.xml file is not empty, search for the vServiceEnvironmentSection element. If the
vServiceEnvironmentSection element is missing, there might be a problem with the vCenter
Management Web Services process on the vCenter Server machine. Verify that the vCenter
Management Web Services is running on the vCenter Server machine and then try powering the
vSphere Replication appliance off and on. To power the appliance off and on, use the
vSphere Web Client while you are connected to the vCenter Server, and not directly to the ESXi
host.
b If the ovfEnv.xml file is empty, try to power off and on the vSphere Replication appliance by
using the vSphere Web Client while you are connected to the vCenter Server, and not directly to
the ESXi host.
3 If powering the vSphere Replication appliance does not resolve the issue, most certainly the
appliance has been temporarily removed and re-added in the vCenter Server. There is no solution for
restoring the OVF environment in that case. You must re-deploy the vSphere Replication appliance by
using an empty database, and configure all replications from scratch.
Problem
To apply custom settings to vSphere Replication, you need to establish an SSH connection to the
vSphere Replication appliance, and modify certain configuration files.
To transfer files from and to the vSphere Replication appliance, you use SCP or SFTP protocol.
Because the SSH connections are disabled, you cannot apply the changes that you need, and you
cannot transfer files.
Cause
By default, SSH connections to the vSphere Replication appliance are disabled to strengthen the security
in your environment.
Solution
Prerequisites
Verify that you have the root user credentials to log in to the vSphere Replication appliance.
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Web Client, right-click the vSphere Replication Management (HMS) virtual
machine, and select Open Console.
/usr/bin/enable-sshd.sh
Procedure
The script configures the vSphere Replication appliance to enable SSH connections.
The Replication Pauses When You Add a New Disk To the Source
VM
You added a new disk to the source VM, which made the replication pause.
Problem
When you add a new disk to the source VM, the replication pauses.
Cause
vSphere Replication detects the addition of a disk to a VM and generates an event such as vSphere
Replication handled a disk addition on a virtual machine.
Solution
You can set up and view an alarm for the event by using the vSphere Web Client. See the vSphere
Administration with the vSphere Client documentation for details.
Problem
vSphere Replication server cannot update its database and becomes unresponsive. Login through
vSphere Replication virtual appliance management interface (VAMI) UI, ssh, or console fails. Attempts to
use the appliance console to log in result in the following error message:
Cause
To prevent data corruption the vSphere Replication appliance is configured to put its root file system in
read-only mode when it detects a problem with the underlying storage.
Solution
1 Resolve the storage problem or use Storage vMotion to migrate the vSphere Replication appliance to
another storage.
3 Verify that you can log in by using the VAMI UI and the appliance console.