5.5

Table Of Contents
Resize Virtual Machine Disk Files During Replication Without
Using Replication Seeds
vSphere Replication prevents you from resizing the virtual machine disk file during replication. If you did
not use replication seeds during configuration of the target disk, vSphere Replication deletes the target
disk when you stop the replication.
To resize a virtual machine disk if you did not initially use replication seeds, you must perform a recovery
and reconfigure the disk manually using replication seeds.
Procedure
1 Perform a recovery.
2 Unconfigure the replication.
3 Resize the disk on the source site.
4 Resize the disk on the recovered virtual machine on the target site.
5 Unregister the recovered virtual machine on the target site, but do not delete the disks.
6 Enable replication by using the disks of the recovered virtual machine as seeds.
Change the Target Datastore Location
Changing the target location of an already configured replication requires vSphere Replication to
unconfigure and then reconfigure the replication.
All replication instances are lost and vSphere Replication performs an initial full sync to the new location
for all virtual machine disks. If a replication seed was used for some of these disks, vSphere Replication
uses the seed again.
If the source host goes offline after vSphere Replication unconfigures the replication, the virtual machine
is not configured for replication.
The source host must remain online during the reconfiguration and stay online during the full sync period
so that replication is in the OK state as it was prior to moving the disks to a different location. The sync
can take a long time if there are no replication seeds.
VMware vSphere Replication Administration
VMware, Inc. 67