Administrator Guide

Table Of Contents
3. Right-click the restore point that corresponds to the replication, then select Restore/Restart DR Volumes. The Restore/
Restart DR Volumes dialog box appears.
4. Enable or disable the replication options as needed, then click OK. These options are described in the online help.
Restoring Replications and Live Volumes
A replication source volume or Live Volume primary volume can be restored from a replication destination volume or Live Volume
secondary volume. Restoring a volume is necessary when it has been deleted or DR has been activated and data has been
written to the activated volume.
Volume Restore Options
The options to restore a volume differ depending on whether DR was activated.
Recover from a destination volume that was not activated: If a source volume no longer exists, Storage Manager
restores the data from the destination volume by replicating it back to a newly created source volume. Once the replication
is complete, Storage Manager maps the new source volume to a selected server and restarts the replication back from the
source system to the destination system.
Recover from a destination volume that was activated: Storage Manager recovers data from the destination volume,
including all new writes to the volume after it has been activated, to the original source volume. If the original source volume
is no longer there it will be re-created. Once the restore is complete, Storage Manager maps the source volume to the
selected server and restarts the replication from the source volume to the destination volume.
NOTE: To restore a volume to an alternate site, consult with technical support (see https://www.dell.com/support).
Volume Restore Limitations
The following limitations apply to the volume restore process.
Restoring a volume removes replications that use it as a source volume.
Restoring an original primary Live Volume volume using a managed replication removes the associated Live Volume.
Related concepts
Replicating a Single Volume to Multiple Destinations on page 502
Managed Replications for Live Volumes on page 524
Restoring a Live Volume and a Managed Replication
After a failover of a Live Volume with a Managed Replication, Storage Manager creates a new managed replication for the
secondary Live Volume. When the original primary Live Volume system is brought back online and the Live Volume is not
restored, there will be two managed replications for the Live Volume. Restoring the Live Volume will delete the managed
replications on the original primary Live Volume and keep the Managed Replication on the secondary Live Volume. Swapping
the roles of the Live Volume will recreate the managed replication on the original primary Live Volume and delete the Managed
Replication on the secondary Live Volume.
552
Storage Center DR Preparation and Activation