9.5 HP P4000 Remote Copy User Guide (AX696-96089, September 2011)

Figure 18 nondestructive rollback example
How this configuration works for nondestructive rollback
You can choose to roll back either the primary snapshot or the remote snapshot. Rolling back one
of the snapshots requires that you delete more recent snapshots of that volume. The other volume
retains the full set of snapshots. You can continue to make snapshots even though one side was
rolled back and the other side was not.
When deciding whether to roll back the primary or remote volume, consider the following:
• When you roll back the primary snapshot to a primary volume, any applications accessing
the primary volume will no longer have access to the most current data (because the primary
volume has been rolled back to a previous state). If the primary volume must be synchronized
with other volumes accessed by the same application, consider rolling back the remote volume
instead. “nondestructive rollback from the primary snapshot” (page 43) shows rollback of the
primary snapshot while leaving the remote snapshots intact.
42 Sample Remote Copy configurations