6.1

Table Of Contents
Figure 22. Site Recovery Manager Architecture with vSphere Replication
Protected Site
SRM plug-in
vSphere Web Client
SRM plug-in
vSphere Web Client
Recovery Site
ESXi
Server
VR Agent
ESXi
Server
VR Agent
vCenter Server
VMFS
VMFS
Storage
VMFS
VMFS
Storage
ESXi
Server
VR Agent
SRM Server
VR Appliance
Network
File Copy
ESXi
SRM Server
Additional
VR Server
Network
File Copy
ESXi
VR Appliance
vSphere replication
vCenter Server
Replicating a Virtual Machine and Enabling Multiple Point in Time Instances
You can recover virtual machines at specific points in time (PIT) such as the last known consistent state.
When you configure replication of a virtual machine, you can enable multiple point in time (PIT) 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.
NOTE vSphere Replication does not replicate virtual machine snapshots.
Chapter 2 Replicating Virtual Machines
VMware, Inc. 29