5.8

Table Of Contents
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.
Figure 81. Recovering a Virtual Machine at Points in Time (PIT)
vSphere Web Client
VR Appliance
t1
VM
VM VM VM
t3t2
vSphere Web Client
VR Appliance
VM
Replication
Source Site
Target Site
t0
Using vSphere Replication with Virtual SAN Storage
You can use VMware Virtual SAN datastores as the source and target datastores when configuring
replications. Follow the guidelines when using vSphere Replication with Virtual SAN storage.
Note VMware Virtual SAN is a fully supported feature of vSphere 5.5u1 and later.
vSphere Replication does not support replicating or recovering virtual machines to the root folders with
user-friendly names on Virtual SAN datastores. These names can change, which causes replication
errors. When selecting Virtual SAN datastores, always select folders with UUID names, which do not
change.
Configuring Replications
When configuring replications for a single virtual machine, vSphere Replication creates the destination
folder that you choose, obtains the UUID reference for that folder, and then uses the UUID name rather
than the user-friendly name. The UUID name is visible when vSphere Replication displays the target
folders when reconfiguring replications.
When configuring replication for multiple virtual machines, create a root folder in the Virtual SAN
datastore, obtain its UUID name, and use the folder that is identified by the UUID in the replication wizard.
Configure vSphere Replication on batches of a maximum of 30 virtual machines at a time.
VMware vSphere Replication Administration
VMware, Inc. 54