Storage Foundation 8.0 Quick Recovery Solutions Guide for Microsoft Exchange - Windows
- Introducing Quick Recovery for Microsoft Exchange
- Planning a Quick Recovery snapshot solution for Exchange
- System requirements
- Methods of implementing Quick Recovery snapshots
- Recommendations and best practices
- Configuring Exchange for Quick Recovery snapshots
- Implementing Exchange snapshot sets with the configuration wizard
- About the Quick Recovery Configuration Wizard
- Scheduling Exchange snapshot sets
- Scheduling or creating an individual snapshot set for Exchange
- Maintaining or troubleshooting snapshots
- Recovering Exchange mailbox databases
- Recovering after hardware failure
- About recovery after hardware failure
- Scenario I: Database and transaction logs volumes are missing
- Scenario II: Database volumes missing, transaction logs are available
- Refreshing the snapshot set on the current disks
- Moving the production volumes to different disks and refreshing the snapshot set
- Vxsnap utility command line reference for Exchange
Scenario II: Database volumes missing, transaction logs are available
If all the database volumes are missing but the transaction logs volume and metadata file are available, you can choose either of the following restore operations:
Use the snapshot set to restore the mailbox database to the Point in Time (PIT) that the snapshot set was created or last refreshed
Use the snapshot set to perform a roll-forward recovery to the Point of Failure (POF)
The tasks for either a point in time or point of failure recovery are the same except for the actual vxsnap restore command.
Complete the following tasks to perform a VSS-integrated recovery:
Identify the snapshot volume associated with each missing production volume. Note the drive letter or mount point of each volume.
Delete the missing volumes from Storage Foundation.
Replace the failed hardware and add the new disks to the dynamic disk group.
See Replacing hardware and adding disks to the dynamic disk group.
Reassign the drive letters or mount points of the snapshot volumes so that they are the same as the missing production volumes.
See Changing the drive letter or mount points of the snapshot volumes.
Use the vxsnap restore to recover the databases.
See Restoring the Exchange 2010 mailbox database to the point in time.
See Recovering the Exchange 2010 mailbox database to the point of failure.
Refresh the snapshot set.