Overview of Recovery Flows : Flow for a Disaster Recovery Operation
  
Flow for a Disaster Recovery Operation
Disaster recovery using Zerto Virtual Replication enables recovering from a disaster to any point between the moment just before the disaster and a specified amount of time in the past up to 30 days. The recovery is done in real time at the recovery site with a minimal RTO.
A recovery operation is one of the following:
A failover.
A planned move of the protected virtual machines from the protected site to the recovery site.
A clone of the protected virtual machine to the recovery site.
Virtual machines are protected in VPGs. Once a VPG is created, Zerto Virtual Replication creates a copy under the management of a Virtual Replication Appliance, VRA, on the recovery site, of the protected virtual machine files, such as the configuration and data files. A VRA is installed on every host where the machines are to be recovered.
When a recovery operation is performed, the VRA creates the virtual machines defined in the VPG and attaches the virtual disks to these machines. It then promotes the data from the journal to the virtual machine disks.
The following references the appropriate procedure to protect virtual machines:
“Replication From a Protected Site vCenter Server to a Recovery Site vCenter Server”, on page 46
“Replication From a Protected vCenter Server to the Same Site”, on page 68
“Replication From a Protected Site vCenter Server To a Recovery Site Hyper-V Host”, on page 71
“Replication From a Protected Site vCenter Server to a Recovery Site AWS”, on page 92
“Protecting Virtual Machines to and From vCloud Director”, on page 120
After initializing the VPG, all writes to the protected virtual machines are sent by the VRA on the relevant host for each virtual machine on the protected site to the VRA on the recovery site specified as the recovery host for the virtual machine. The information is saved in the journal for the virtual machine with a timestamp, ensuring write-fidelity. Every few seconds the Zerto Virtual Manager causes a checkpoint to be written to every journal on the recovery site for every virtual machine in the VPG, ensuring crash-consistency.
The data remains in the journal until the time specified for the journal when it is moved to the relevant mirror disks, also managed by the VRA for the virtual machine. In this way, you can recover the virtual machines using the mirror disks and then promoting the data from the journal to include the final few hours of data for each virtual machine. Refer to “The Role of the Journal During Protection”, on page 40 for more details about the journal.
The following references the procedures to recover virtual machines protected in a VPG:
“Overview of Disaster Recovery Operations”, on page 327
“Managing Failover”, on page 355
“Migrating a VPG to a Recovery Site”, on page 343
“Cloning a VPG to the Recovery Site”, on page 366