5.5

Table Of Contents
3 Select whether to recover the virtual machine with all the latest data, or to recover the virtual machine
with the most recent data from the target site.
Option Description
Recover with recent changes Performs a full synchronization of the virtual machine from the source site to the
target site before recovering the virtual machine. Selecting this option avoids data
loss, but it is only available if the data of the source virtual machine is accessible.
You can only select this option if the virtual machine is powered off.
Recover with latest available data Recovers the virtual machine by using the data from the most recent replication
on the target site, without performing synchronization. Selecting this option results
in the loss of any data that has changed since the most recent replication. Select
this option if the source virtual machine is inaccessible or if its disks are
corrupted.
4 Select the recovery folder and click Next.
5 Select the target compute resource and click Next.
6 If the virtual machine contains hard disks for which you have not enabled replication, select a target
destination to attach an existing disk or detach the disk, and click Next.
This page only appears if the virtual machine contains hard disks for which you have not enabled
replication.
n
To select a target destination, click Browse and navigate to a folder on a datastore in which disk
file is placed.
n
To detach the disk and exclude disk files from the recovery, click Detach.
7 (Optional) Select Power on after recovery.
8 Click Finish.
vSphere Replication validates the provided input and recovers the virtual machine. If successful, the
virtual machine status changes to Recovered. The virtual machine appears in the inventory of the target
site.
If you enabled multiple point in time instances when you configured replication for the virtual machine,
vSphere Replication presents the retained instances as standard snapshots after a successful recovery.
You can select one of these snapshots to revert the virtual machine. vSphere Replication does not
preserve the memory state when you revert to a snapshot.
If the recovery fails, the replication of the virtual machines reverts to the replication state before the
attempted recovery. For more information about the failed recovery attempt, check the last recovery error
message in the replication details pane or check vCenter Server tasks.
The recovery might also fail if you use the same name for the virtual machine in a scenario where you
use vSphere Replication to replicate a virtual machine in a single vCenter Server and the vCenter Server
instance has only one host in its inventory. See Error Recovering Virtual Machine in a Single vCenter
Server Instance for more information.
VMware vSphere Replication Administration
VMware, Inc. 69