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Failover vs. Failback: What’s the Difference? 

Pure Storage

Failover vs. Failback: What’s the Difference? by Pure Storage Blog A key distinction in the realm of disaster recovery is the one between failover and failback. In this article, we’ll develop a baseline understanding of what failover and failback are. What Is Failover? Their effects, however, couldn’t be more different.

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Failover vs. Failback: What’s the Difference? 

Pure Storage

Failover vs. Failback: What’s the Difference? by Pure Storage Blog A key distinction in the realm of disaster recovery is the one between failover and failback. In this article, we’ll develop a baseline understanding of what failover and failback are. What Is Failover? Their effects, however, couldn’t be more different.

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Disaster Recovery (DR) Architecture on AWS, Part IV: Multi-site Active/Active

AWS Disaster Recovery

My subsequent posts shared details on the backup and restore , pilot light, and warm standby active/passive strategies. In this post, you’ll learn how to implement an active/active strategy to run your workload and serve requests in two or more distinct sites. DR strategies: Multi-site active/active. DR strategies.

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Combining SAP HANA System Replication with Continuous Storage Replication

Pure Storage

So, given its importance, you want to make sure you have a solid solution for ensuring it’s highly available or protected in the event of a disaster. Most SAP HANA customers today are using SAP HANA system replication (HSR) to ensure the high availability and disaster recovery systems remain in sync.

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Implementing Multi-Region Disaster Recovery Using Event-Driven Architecture

AWS Disaster Recovery

In this blog post, we share a reference architecture that uses a multi-Region active/passive strategy to implement a hot standby strategy for disaster recovery (DR). With the multi-Region active/passive strategy, your workloads operate in primary and secondary Regions with full capacity. This keeps RTO and RPO low.

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Disaster Recovery (DR) for a Third-party Interactive Voice Response on AWS

AWS Disaster Recovery

These are backup and restore, active/passive (pilot light or warm standby), or active/active. But in some situations, Amazon Connect may not be available. In other cases, the customer may want to use their home developed or third-party contact center application. This is where the IVR application will be installed.

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Why SREs Need DR Now

Zerto

SREs and DR DR refers to the processes, procedures, and technologies used to prepare for and recover from natural or man-made disasters that threaten the availability of critical systems. DR tries to minimize the impact a disaster has on applications, restoring them to a usable state as quickly as possible.