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Proxmox High Availability

You're reading from   Proxmox High Availability Discover how to introduce, design, and implement high availability clusters for your business without hassle

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783980888
Length 258 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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CHENG MAN CHENG MAN
Author Profile Icon CHENG MAN
CHENG MAN
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Basic Concepts of a Proxmox Virtual Environment FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started with a High Availability (HA) Environment 3. Key Components for Building a Proxmox VE Cluster 4. Configuring a Proxmox VE Cluster 5. Testing on a Proxmox Cluster 6. System Migration of an Existing System to a Proxmox VE Cluster 7. Disaster Recovery on a Proxmox VE Cluster 8. Troubleshooting on a Proxmox Cluster Index

The restore process of VMs in Proxmox


We have gone through different types of backup modes provided by the vzdump command and created different backup files for our VMs. However, we won't stop here because our target is to restore the VMs when there is a problem. This is the main reason we would like to perform a backup. Let's learn about it step by step.

Restoring a VM with vzrestore

In the previous section, we created our own backup files for VM 100 and VM 101 under /backup/dump. Now, it's time for us to practice restoring a VM from those backup files. We can restore the container with the vzrestore command or via the web management console. The following section shows the restore procedures when you choose to restore a VM using the command line with the vzrestore command.

Restoring an OpenVZ container with vzrestore

To avoid overwriting the existing VM data, we will restore it to VMID401. The steps for this are as follows:

  1. Make sure that we have the backup file at /backup/dump. The filename...

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