Administrator Guide

Table Of Contents
Replication Scenarios Description
Fast backup and restore Maintains full copies of data for protection against data loss, corruption, or user
mistakes
Remote data access Applications can access mirrored data in read-only mode, or in read-write mode if NAS
volumes are promoted or cloned
Online data migration Minimizes downtime associated with data migration
Disaster recovery Mirrors data to remote locations for failover during a disaster
Configuring replication is a three-step process:
Add a replication partnership between two FluidFS clusters.
Add replication for a NAS volume.
Run replication on demand or schedule replication.
How Replication Works
Replication leverages snapshots. The first time you replicate a NAS volume, the FluidFS cluster copies the entire contents of
the NAS volume. For subsequent replication operations, the FluidFS cluster copies only the data that changed since the previous
replication operation started. This design allows for faster replication, efficient use of system resources, and saves storage
space while keeping data consistent. Replication is asynchronous, meaning that each source NAS volume can have a unique
schedule for replicating data to the target NAS volume.
The amount of time replication takes depends on the amount of data in the NAS volume and the amount of data that has
changed since the previous replication operation.
When replicating a NAS volume to another FluidFS cluster, the other FluidFS cluster must be set up as a replication partner.
Each FluidFS cluster can have multiple replication partners, enabling you to replicate different NAS volumes to different
partners, depending on operational requirements. However, each individual NAS volume can be replicated to only one target
NAS volume on one replication partner. The following figure summarizes which replication scenarios are supported.
FluidFS Administration
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