After you perform a planned failover, services at the production site are failed over to the DR site, and services at the DR site are failed over to the production site. Table 1 shows the direction change.
- |
Production Site |
DR Site |
---|---|---|
Before |
AZ1 |
AZ2 |
After |
AZ2 |
AZ1 |
After the planned failover, data synchronization continues, but the DR direction is changed (from the DR site to the production site). You can perform a planned failover when you are certain that the production site will encounter an interruption. For example, if the production site (AZ1) is going to encounter a power failure, you can perform a planned failover to fail over services in AZ1 to the DR site (AZ2). The planned failover will not affect data synchronization of the protection group.
SDRS will migrate NICs on the server during the planned failover. After the planned failover, the IP, EIP, and MAC addresses of the production site server will be migrated to the DR site server, so that the IP, EIP, and MAC addresses remain the same.
For Linux servers with Cloud-Init installed, if you have changed hostname of the production site server before you perform a planned failover for the first time, this modification will not synchronize to the DR site server.
To resolve this problem, see What Can I Do If hostname of the Production Site Server and DR Site Server Are Different After a Planned Failover or Failover?
The Storage Disaster Recovery Service page is displayed.
During the planned failover, do not start the servers in the protection group. Otherwise, the planned failover may fail.