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Power on Virtual Standby Virtual Machines from VMware vSphere Client

When you want to power-on Virtual Standby virtual machines manually, the best practice is to power on the virtual machines from the Virtual Standby screen on the CA ARCserve D2D server. For more information, see Power on Virtual Standby Virtual Machines from Recovery Point Snapshots. However, if you want to start the Virtual Standby virtual machines from the ESX Server or the vCenter Server system, you can do so using VMware vSphere Client.

Note: The VMware vSphere Client lets you access the recovery point snapshots that CA ARCserve Central Virtual Standby created to protect the node. You should not delete the snapshots. When you delete the snapshots, the relationship between the data contained in the snapshots becomes inconsistent the next time a Virtual Standby runs. With inconsistent data, you cannot power on Virtual Standby virtual machines properly.

To power on Virtual Standby virtual machines from VMware vSphere Client

  1. Open VMware vSphere Client and log in to the ESX Server or vCenter Server system that is monitoring the nodes that you are protecting.

    From the directory tree, expand the ESX Server system or the vCenter Server system, locate, and click the virtual machine that you want to power on.

  2. Do one of the following:

    The Virtual Standby virtual machine is powered on.

If necessary, you can back up the virtual machines and create recovery point snapshots after you power on the virtual machine. For more information, see Tasks to Perform After Powering on Virtual Standby Virtual Machines.