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You have an on-premises Hyper-V clustern that hosts 20 virtual machines. Some virtual machines run Windows Server 2016 and some run Linux.
You plan to migrate the virtual machines to an Azure subscription.
You need to recommend a solution to replicate the disks of the virtual machines to Azure. The solution must ensure that the virtual machines remain available during the migration of the disks.
Solution: You recommend implementing a Recovery Services vault, and then using Azure Site Recovery.
Does this meet the goal?
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A. B.A
Site Recovery can replicate on-premises VMware VMs, Hyper-V VMs, physical servers (Windows and Linux), Azure Stack VMs to Azure.
Note: Site Recovery helps ensure business continuity by keeping business apps and workloads running during outages. Site Recovery replicates workloads running on physical and virtual machines (VMs) from a primary site to a secondary location. When an outage occurs at your primary site, you fail over to secondary location, and access apps from there. After the primary location is running again, you can fail back to it.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/site-recovery/site-recovery-overviewYes, the solution of implementing a Recovery Services vault and using Azure Site Recovery meets the goal of replicating the disks of the virtual machines to Azure while ensuring that the virtual machines remain available during the migration of the disks.
Azure Site Recovery is a disaster recovery solution that allows you to replicate on-premises virtual machines and physical servers to Azure. This solution provides continuous replication of the virtual machine's disks to the Azure site, ensuring that the virtual machines remain available during the migration of the disks. Once the replication is complete, you can perform a test failover to validate the replication and then perform a failover to Azure to migrate the virtual machines.
Recovery Services vault is an Azure resource that provides a storage location for data backups and site recovery operations. By using a Recovery Services vault, you can store the replication data in a centralized location in Azure and use it for disaster recovery or migration purposes.
In summary, using Azure Site Recovery with a Recovery Services vault provides a solution for replicating the disks of the virtual machines to Azure while ensuring that the virtual machines remain available during the migration of the disks. Therefore, the solution meets the stated goal.