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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.
After a successful recovery, vSphere Replication disables the virtual machine for replication if the source
site is still available. When the virtual machine is powered on again it does not send replication data to the
recovery site. To unconfigure the replication, select Stop replication.
When the source virtual machine is no longer in the vCenter Server inventory, the replication is
unconfigured. Unconfigured replications do not appear in the Summary tab nor in the Incoming
Replications or Outgoing Replications tabs. Check vCenter Server task history for information on
performed recoveries.
If a replicated virtual machine is attached to a distributed virtual switch and you attempt to perform a
recovery in an automated DRS cluster, the recovery operation succeeds but the resulting virtual machine
cannot be powered on. Edit the recovered virtual machine settings to attach it to the correct network.
vSphere Replication disconnects virtual machine network adapters to prevent damage in the production
network. After recovery, you must connect the virtual network adapters to the correct network. If target
host or cluster has no access to the DVS the virtual machine was configured with at the source site,
manually connect the virtual machine to a network or other DVS to successfully power on the virtual
machine.
Failback of Virtual Machines in vSphere Replication
Failback of virtual machines is a manual task in vSphere Replication.
After performing a successful recovery from the source site to the target site, you can perform failback.
You manually configure a new replication in the reverse direction, that is, from the target site to the source
site. The disks on the source site are used as replication seeds, so that vSphere Replication only
synchronizes the changes made to the .vmdk files. Before you configure the reverse replication, you must
manually unregister the virtual machine from the inventory on the source site. See Replicating Virtual
Machines Using Replication Seeds.
Automated failback is not available in vSphere Replication.
VMware vSphere Replication Administration
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