Chapter 6: Replication
Receive NAS
Quantum DXi4700 User’s Guide
143
Note:
If you previously remapped your backup application to a recovered share on the target system,
after you failback the share, you must remap your backup application again to point to the source
system.
Deleting a Snapshot
Delete a snapshot if it is no longer needed. After you delete a snapshot, it can no longer be used to recover
or failback a NAS share.
Note:
You cannot delete a snapshot if a failback operation is in progress for the snapshot. Wait for the
failback operation to complete, or abort the operation (see ).
To delete a snapshot:
1. Do one of the following actions:
l
On the source system, disable replication for the share associated with the snapshot (see
Enabling Replication For a Share or Partition
).
l
On the target system, delete the source system associated with the snapshot from the list of allowed
replication sources (see
Deleting a Replication Source8
).
2. On the target system, select a snapshot in the
Snapshots List
and click
Delete
.
Note:
If you delete the last snapshot for a partition while replication for the partition (to this target)
is still enabled, any replicated data not yet protected by a replicated share is
not
deleted. To delete
this data, on the source system, disable replication for the partition before deleting the last
snapshot.
3. Click
Yes
to confirm the action.
Recovery Jobs
The
Recovery Jobs
page allows you to view information about snapshot recover operations that were
previously completed.
To access the
Recovery Jobs
page, on the
Receive NAS
page, click the
Recovery Jobs
).