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  1. Home
  2. Veritas NetBackup™ for Hyper-V Administrator's Guide
  3. Windows Server failover cluster support
  4. Location of the restored virtual machine in a cluster
Veritas NetBackup™ for Hyper-V Administrator's Guide

Location of the restored virtual machine in a cluster

When you restore a virtual machine to a cluster, you can restore to the original location or to a different location. But for a virtual machine that failed over to another node after the backup occurred, what is the original location? Is it the node (Hyper-V server) where the virtual machine resided when it was backed up, or the node where it now resides?

The following table is a decision chart for restore to original location in a cluster. It indicates where the virtual machine is restored. The location depends on the virtual machine's high availability (HA) state when it was backed up and when it was restored.

Table: Decision chart for restore to original location in a cluster

Is the virtual machine status HA at time of backup?

Is the virtual machine status HA at time of restore?

Virtual machine is restored to this node (to non-HA state):

Yes

Yes

For both WMI and VSS:

Restored to the node that owns the virtual machine at the time of restore.

Yes

No

For both WMI and VSS:

Restored to the node where the virtual machine resided at the time of backup.

Yes

Virtual machine does not exist.

For both WMI and VSS:

Restored to the node where the virtual machine resided at the time of backup.

No

Yes

For both WMI and VSS:

Restored to the node where the virtual machine resided at the time of backup.

At the time of restore, if the virtual machine resides on a different node than where it resided when backed up, the restore fails.

No

No

For both WMI and VSS:

Restored to the node where the virtual machine resided at the time of backup.

No

Virtual machine does not exist.

For both WMI and VSS:

Restored to the node where the virtual machine resided at the time of backup.

Note:

In all cases, the virtual machine is restored to the non-HA state.

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Virtual machine maintenance after a restore

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