How to Configure Multiple Machines For vCloud Air Disaster Recovery Replication

vCloud_Air

There is something people have asked as I have done multiple demonstrations of the vCloud Air Disaster Recovery offering is “Can we configure multiple machines for replication?”.  Well, with the help of Akeem Jenkins and some lab testing we found out the answer is actually YES.  To be honest this was not something I was told would work when the offering went GA, but the cool thing is you can in fact select multiple machines for replication.  Like anything there is some things about it I want to point out.  This assumes you have already setup the correct vSphere Replication 5.6 Appliance for replication to vCloud Air, and you have a vCloud Air Disaster Recovery account.

  1. You need to select machines of the same OS Type.  If you select Windows and Linux for example since Windows supports Guest Quesicing with VSS then Linux machines in the group may fail to configure
  2. All machines will begin replicating at a similar time.  This means you could be trying to push A LOT of data at once if you configure 100 machines all in the same group.  They will stagger slightly based on when they finish their configuration steps, but you need to consider this for the initial sync
  3. Each machine you configure will be setup with the same RPO since you will only select that once.  You can adjust them individually by changing the settings after.
  4. You can use vSphere Tags to group machines based on RPO, OS type, or other logical groupings.  Once tagged you can then sort by the tags to configure the replication

So How do You Do It?

Well it’s surprisingly simple actually.  Just highlight the group you want and right click to select ‘Configure Replication’ vCloud Air-DR-Multi-Select You will see a validation check vCloud Air-DR-Multi-Select-validate Continue configuring with the normal options to a Cloud Provider and when complete you will se all selected machines in the task pane configuring vCloud Air-DR-Multi-Select-configure You can also use the multi select to stop replication on multiple machines at once, however you can see the options for fail over and test are not available when you multi select, only re-configure, stop, and pause.  You can always however use the vCloud Air API extensions and scripting to call the failover option on multiple machines. vCloud Air-DR-Multi-Select-update

UPDATED 6/24/2014:

I did try to multi select and configure for Data Seeding and it also appears to work!  You get a side by side selection process to choose and match the source to the destination seed.  However, the same things originally apply such as they will all use the same RPO.

vCloud Air-DR-Multi-Select-Seed

About Chris Colotti

Chris is active on the VMUG and event speaking circuit and is available for many events if you want to reach out and ask. Previously to this he spent close to a decade working for VMware as a Principal Architect. Previous to his nine plus years at VMware, Chris was a System Administrator that evolved his career into a data center architect. Chris spends a lot of time mentoring co-workers and friends on the benefits of personal growth and professional development. Chris is also amongst the first VMware Certified Design Experts (VCDX#37), and author of multiple white papers. In his spare time he helps his wife Julie run her promotional products as the accountant, book keeper, and IT Support. Chris also believes in both a healthy body and healthy mind, and has become heavily involved with fitness as a Diamond Team Beachbody Coach using P90X and other Beachbody Programs. Although Technology is his day job, Chris is passionate about fitness after losing 60 pounds himself in the last few years.

6 comments

  1. Chris,

    Thank you. I would like to demonstrate this at the next VMUG. Which tool are you in when you right click and “Configure Replication”? VIClient? vCloud Connector? Web Client? vCloud Director web? I have tried each of them and cannot find that option.

    • This requires the vSphere Web client, the vSphere Replication 5.6 appliance, and a vCloud Air-DR account already configured and connected to the replication appliance. It’s not something you can demo without a vCloud Air-DR account or the correct vSphere replication appliance installed and configured to the DR account.

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