Administrator Guide

Secondary Volume. Shows the secondary volume name. For replication sets that use volume groups, the secondary volume name is
volume-group-name.* where .* signifies that the replication set contains more than one volume. If the volume is on the local
system, the icon appears.
Status. Shows the status of the replication set.
Not Ready – The replication set is not ready for replications because the system is still preparing the replication set.
Unsynchronized – The primary and secondary volumes are unsynchronized because the system has prepared the replication
set, but the initial replication has not run.
Running – A replication is in progress.
Ready – The replication set is ready for a replication.
Suspended – Replications have been suspended.
Unknown – This system cannot communicate with the primary system and thus cannot be sure of the current state of the
replication set. Check the state of the primary system.
Last Successful Run. Shows the date and time of the last successful replication.
Estimated Completion Time. Shows the estimated date and time for the replication in progress to complete.
To see more information about a replication set, hover the cursor over a replication set in the Replication Sets table. The Replication Sets
panel that appears contains the following information:
Table 26. Replication Sets
Panel Information displayed
Replication Set
Information
Replication set name and serial number; status; primary volume or volume group name and serial number;
secondary volume or volume group name and serial number; peer connection name; queue policy, queue
count, secondary volume snapshot history, primary volume snapshot history, retention count, retention
priority, snapshot basename, associated schedule name, current run progress, current run start time,
current run estimated time to completion, current run transferred data, last successful run, last run start
time, last run end time, last run transferred data, last run status, and last run error status
Replication Snapshot History table
The Replication Snapshot History table shows the following information. By default, the table shows 10 entries at a time.
Local Snapshot Name. Shows the local snapshot name.
Creation Date/Time. Shows the date and time of the last successful snapshot created.
Snap Data. Shows the total amount of write data associated with the snapshot.
Unique Data. Shows the amount of write data that is unique to the snapshot.
To see more information about a snapshot history, hover the cursor over a snapshot set in the Replication Snapshot History table. The
Snapshot Information hover panel that appears contains the following information:
Table 27. Replication Snapshot History
Panel Information displayed
Snapshot information Name, serial number, status, status reason, retention priority, snapshot data, unique data, shared
data, pool, class, number of snaps, number of snapshots in tree, source volume, total size, creation
date/time, type, parent volume, base volume, health
Querying a peer connection
You can view information about systems you might use in a peer connection before creating the peer connection, or you can view
information about systems currently in a peer connection before modifying the peer connection.
Query a peer connection
1. In the Replications topic, do one of the following to display the Query Peer Connection panel:
Select the peer connection to query in the Peer Connections table, then select Action > Query Peer Connection. The remote
host port address field is pre-populated with the selected peer's remote port address.
Select Action > Query Peer Connection.
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Working in the Replications topic