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Long term recovery options or what happens if the core doesn't contact the license server? (or have any licenses)

I need to confirm what happens if a customer stops paying for the system (we are an MSP) but wants to retain access to their old backups.  

 

For non-trial licenses, the Rapid Recovery Core contacts the license portal once every hour. If the Core cannot reach the license portal after a 10-day grace period, the Core stops taking snapshots.

I have seen the above.  Does this mean that I can still perform mounts, restores and generally still view old archives to restore old data?

 

  • What if they wanted to remove that machine (core) but archived the Repository (and structure / registry) and RR install media to tape would they be able to get it back if requested?
    • i.e. build a machine, install the RR version that they saved
    • Restore / Rebuild the repository
    • Mount the backups and look at that
  • Would this be the same if they simply archived it to S3 storage?  Can they just retain that information?
  • Going further, if they were to retain a copy of the repository (or logon details to amazon S3 storage) would they be able to install the current version of RR and mount that repository or mount / restore from archive?  This is required for compliance purposes.

At present we have been exporting RPs to VHD files and backing those up to tape.  This way i'm pretty certain we will be able to mount VHDs in 10 years and restore data as required, however it'd be nice to save that disk space (D2D2D2T is quite excessive)

 

If that doesn't make sense, please ask :)

Parents
  • Actually, there is one thing you have noted that I would have done differently.
    You stated that you would have the virtual machine with RR installed and ready to rock and roll. You'd then just archive off that machine.

    Your (3) above, I was going to just save the OS media and installation software. But it appears that the software won't let you configure it until you have installed the license. Can potentially save that but i suspect it'd need to connect and then fail as an invalid license so not work.

    I can't test that since I don't have a license to play with and disable to see what happens. So yes, I guess I need a VM archived off with the tape to recover the data.

    Have you been able to confirm what happens when you start your VM and the license is invalid? Is there a time when it will just not let you in to the console?

    So I guess I need an image of a core in a format that can be read by the hypervisor of the day or migrated as required. I guess back to VHDx of the RR Server & core but nothing else on those volumes, including dedupe cache as that'd be too much data change every day.
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  • Actually, there is one thing you have noted that I would have done differently.
    You stated that you would have the virtual machine with RR installed and ready to rock and roll. You'd then just archive off that machine.

    Your (3) above, I was going to just save the OS media and installation software. But it appears that the software won't let you configure it until you have installed the license. Can potentially save that but i suspect it'd need to connect and then fail as an invalid license so not work.

    I can't test that since I don't have a license to play with and disable to see what happens. So yes, I guess I need a VM archived off with the tape to recover the data.

    Have you been able to confirm what happens when you start your VM and the license is invalid? Is there a time when it will just not let you in to the console?

    So I guess I need an image of a core in a format that can be read by the hypervisor of the day or migrated as required. I guess back to VHDx of the RR Server & core but nothing else on those volumes, including dedupe cache as that'd be too much data change every day.
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