Managing VPGs
  
Managing VPGs
 
After defining virtual protection groups (VPGs) the virtual machines specified as part of each VPG are protected. There are a number of ongoing management tasks that you can perform on a VPG, such as specifying a checkpoint to enable recovery to that specific point or you can modify the configurations of existing VPGs.
The following VPG management options are described in this section:
Editing a VPG
Adding Virtual Machines to a VPG - Overview
Removing Virtual Machines from a VPG
Removing Protected Virtual Machines from the Hypervisor Inventory
Modifying Protected Virtual Machine Volumes
Pausing the Protection of a VPG
Forcing the Synchronization of a VPG
Handling a VPG within an Error State
Deleting a VPG
Ensuring Application Consistency – Checkpoints
Running Scripts Before or After Recovering a VPG
Exporting and Importing VPG Definitions
VPG Statuses and Synchronization Triggers
Monitoring VPGs and the VMs that are protected is described in “Monitoring Zerto Virtual Manager”, on page 123.
 
Note:
To set up Long Term Retention to protect VPGs, or to manually run a Retention process (unscheduled retention process) on the VPG, and to restore the VPG see “Using Zerto’s Long Term Retention”, on page 240. Configuring Long Term Retention is part of defining a VPG.