HPP Enterprises P4000 SAN User Manual

Page 43

Advertising
background image

43

Figure 36. Creating a new remote snapshot

4.

Set the Recurrence time (in minutes, hours, days, or weeks).
Consider the following:
– Ensure you leave enough time for the previous snapshot to complete.
– Ensure there is adequate storage space at both sites.
– Set a retention policy at the primary site based on a timeframe or snapshot count.

5.

Select the Management Group for the remote snapshot.

6.

Create a remote volume as the destination for the snapshot.
Based on the convention used in this document, name the target Remote-XPSP2-02.

7.

Set the replication level of Remote-XPSP2-02

8.

Set the retention policy for the remote site. .

Depending on the scheduled start time, replication may now commence.

The first remote snapshot copies all your data – perhaps many terabytes – to the remote cluster.

To speed up the process, you can carry out this initial push on nodes at the local site, then physically
ship these nodes to the remote site

6

. For more information, refer to the support documentation

After the initial push, subsequent remote snapshots are smaller – only transferring changes made since
the last snapshot – and can make efficient use of a high-latency, low-bandwidth connection.

6

The physical transfer of data – in this case, a storage cluster or SAN that may be carrying many terabytes of data – is known as sneakernetting.

Advertising