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InfoScale™ 9.0 Storage Foundation Quick Recovery Solutions Guide for Microsoft SQL Server - Windows
Last Published:
2025-04-13
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (9.0)
Platform: Windows
- Introducing Quick Recovery for SQL Server
- About Quick Recovery snapshot solutions
- About snapshot-assisted backups
- Advantages of Quick Recovery snapshots
- Quick Recovery process
- Methods of implementing Quick Recovery snapshots for SQL Server
- About the components used in Quick Recovery
- VCS, Microsoft clustering, and Volume Replicator considerations
- About the Solutions Configuration Center
- Starting the Configuration Center
- Solutions wizard logs
- Preparing to implement Quick Recovery for SQL Server
- Implementing Quick Recovery for SQL Server with the configuration wizard
- About the Quick Recovery Configuration Wizard
- Tasks for implementing snapshot sets with the configuration wizard
- Reviewing the prerequisites
- Scheduling SQL Server snapshot sets
- System Selection panel details
- Instance Selection panel details
- Mount Details panel details
- Synchronizing Schedules panel details
- Template Selection panel details
- Number of Snapshot Sets panel details
- Snapshot Volume Assignment panel details
- Snapshot Schedule panel details
- Specifying snapshot schedule details
- Summary panel details
- Template Implementation panel
- Scheduling or creating an individual snapshot set for SQL Server
- Maintaining or troubleshooting snapshots
- Recovering a SQL Server database
- About recovering a SQL Server database
- Tasks for recovering a SQL Server database
- Prerequisites for recovering a SQL Server database
- Types of recovery
- Recovering using snapshots without log replay
- Recovering using snapshots and log replay
- Restoring snapshots and manually applying logs
- Recovering missing volumes
- Post-recovery steps
- Vxsnap restore command reference
- Vxsnap utility command line reference for SQL Server
Replacing hardware and adding disks to the dynamic disk group
Replace any defective hardware and add new disks to the dynamic disk group, as necessary. The number assigned to a new disk, for example harddisk5, may not be the same as the disk number of the failed disk. Note the new disk number(s). You will need the information to add the disks to the dynamic disk group.
To replace the hardware and add the new disks to the dynamic disk group
- Replace the defective hardware.
- In the Actions menu, click Rescan.
- If the disk was previously used in another system and has a disk signature, proceed to step 7.
If the new disk has never been used before, it is unsigned and needs a disk signature. In this case, the disk appears in the left pane of the VEA console and is marked with (No Signature), for example, harddisk5 (No signature). Proceed to the next step.
- Right-click on a new, unsigned disk and click Write Signature.
- Select the appropriate disks in the Available disks list, and use the Add button to move them to the Selected disks list.
- Click OK.
After a signature appears on a disk, the disk will display as a basic disk.
- Add the disk to the dynamic disk group of the volumes associated with the production SQL Server instance. Right-click the new disk and click Add Disk to Dynamic Disk Group.
- In the Welcome panel, click Next.
- Select the appropriate disks in the Available disks list, and use the Add button to move them to the Selected disks list.
- Click Next.
- Review the confirmation information and click Next.
- Click Finish to upgrade the selected disks from basic to dynamic and add them to the dynamic disk group.