Understanding Replication; About Protecting Workstations And Servers; About Replication - Dell DL4000 User Manual

Tape library
Hide thumbs Also See for DL4000:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

2.
Click Next.
Click Reset. Returns the configuration to the following default settings:
– Request Timeout: 01:30 (minutes and seconds)
– Retry Count: 3 (attempts)
Removing a Cloud account
You can remove a Cloud account to, discontinue your cloud service, or stop using it for a particular Core.
To remove a cloud account:
1.
On the Core Console, click the Tools tab.
2.
In the left menu, click Clouds.
3.
Next to the cloud account you want to edit, click the drop-down menu, and then click Remove.
4.
In the Delete Account window, click Yes to confirm that you want to remove the account.
5.
If the cloud account is currently in use, a second window asks you if you still want to remove it. Click
Yes to confirm.
NOTE: Removing an account that is currently in use causes all archive jobs scheduled for this
account to fail.

Understanding replication

About protecting workstations and servers

To protect your data add the workstations and servers you want to protect in the Core Console; for
example, your Exchange server, SQL Server, or your Linux server.
NOTE: In this section, generally the word machine also refers to the AppAssure Agent software
installed on that machine.
In the Core Console, you can identify the machine on which an AppAssure Agent software is installed and
specify which volumes to protect, define schedules for protection, add extra security measures such as
encryption, and more. For more information on how to access the Core Console to protect workstations
and servers, see
Protecting A

About replication

Replication is the process of copying recovery points and transmitting them to a secondary location for
disaster recovery. The process requires a paired source-target relationship between two cores. The
source core copies the recovery points of the protected machines and then asynchronously and
continuously transmits them to a target core at a remote disaster recovery site. The off-site location can
be a company-owned data center (self-managed core) or a third-party managed service provider's
(MSP's) location or cloud environment. When replicating to an MSP, you can use built-in work flows that
let you request connections and receive automatic feedback notifications. Possible scenarios for
replication include:
Replication to a Local Location. The target core is located in a local data center or on-site location,
and replication is maintained at all times. In this configuration, the loss of the Core does not prevent a
recovery.
Replication to an Off-site Location. The target core is at an off-site disaster recovery facility for
recovery in the event of a loss.
42
Machine.

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents