8.1
Table Of Contents
- vSphere Replication for Disaster Recovery to Cloud
- Contents
- About Disaster Recovery to Cloud
- Disaster Recovery to Cloud System Requirements and Compatibility
- Installing and Configuring vSphere Replication to Cloud
- Installing vSphere Replication for Disaster Recovery to Cloud
- Upgrading vSphere Replication from Earlier Product Versions
- Configure the NTP Synchronization in Your Environment
- How vSphere Replication Connects to Cloud
- Configuring the Connection to the Cloud
- Connect to a Cloud Provider Site
- Reconfiguring a Site Pair and Breaking a Site Pair
- Select Recovery Networks on the Target Virtual Data Center
- Select Recovery Networks from Cloud to the Local Site
- Disable the Automatic Export of MAC Addresses During Replication
- Cloud Connection States
- Reconnect to a Cloud Provider Site
- Replicating Virtual Machines to Cloud
- Reconfiguring Replications to the Cloud
- Recovering Virtual Machines to Cloud
- Configuring Replications from Cloud
- Recovering Virtual Machines from Cloud
- Monitoring and Managing Replications in vSphere Replication
About
Disaster Recovery to Cloud 1
You can subscribe to a Disaster Recovery service to protect your vSphere workloads.
With Disaster Recovery to Cloud, administrators of small sites can protect their vSphere virtual workloads
from a wide class of disasters by replicating those workloads into the cloud. Disaster Recovery to Cloud
uses the host-based replication feature of vSphere Replication to copy the protected source virtual
machines into the infrastructure of the cloud provider. If a disaster occurs, the Disaster Recovery to Cloud
servers can convert the replicated data into vApps and virtual machines in the cloud.
VMware, Inc. 4