a very good video again!!! Is it the same way for all virtual environments? Or did we have differences between vmware and hyper-V for example? Thanks for your time!
When the backup files become locked, does that mean that during this time any backup jobs that this VM is a part of will fail? I'm assuming they will fail since Veeam can't use this data.
The Instant VM Recovery feature works for both Hyper-V and VMware. You can read more here helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backup/hyperv/instant_recovery.html?ver=100
Yes, but there is to be some expected performance decrease as the source is a deduplicating storage, so typically we do not advise it for long term deployments. It's recommended to migrate to production soon.
a very good video again!!! Is it the same way for all virtual environments? Or did we have differences between vmware and hyper-V
for example? Thanks for your time!
@@Chromedonkey
thank you for the detailed answer! the procedure as I do in veeam it is the same, right?
your method of explanation is very clear and easy to follow. thanks!
What is the difference between the Instant VM Recovery and Full. How to decide which one to use in which scenario?
When the backup files become locked, does that mean that during this time any backup jobs that this VM is a part of will fail? I'm assuming they will fail since Veeam can't use this data.
Hi and thanks for the question. We're looking into this scenario and will follow up shortly.
Is this only for VMware, or does it work with Hyper-V? Is there anything special needed to get it to work with Hyper-V?
The Instant VM Recovery feature works for both Hyper-V and VMware. You can read more here helpcenter.veeam.com/docs/backup/hyperv/instant_recovery.html?ver=100
Can you run instant VM Recovery if your backup repository is Dell EMC Datadomain?
Yes, but there is to be some expected performance decrease as the source is a deduplicating storage, so typically we do not advise it for long term deployments. It's recommended to migrate to production soon.
Thanks