If a failure occurs, a system administrator restores the VMware Aria Automation appliance. If a load balancer is used, the administrator restores the load balancer and the virtual appliances that it manages. For VMware Aria Automation 7.0, you cannot change the host names during restoration.
You might need to restore a failed virtual appliance in the following circumstances:
You are running a minimal deployment and your only VMware Aria Automation appliance fails or becomes corrupted.
You are running a distributed deployment and some, but not all, virtual appliances fail.
You are running a distributed deployment and all virtual appliances fail.
How you restore a VMware Aria Automation appliance or virtual appliance load balancer depends on your deployment type and on which appliances failed.
If you are using a single virtual appliance whose name is unchanged, restore the virtual appliance, or redeploy it and restore a set of backed up files. No further steps are required.
If you are running a distributed deployment that uses a load balancer, and you change the name of the virtual appliance or the virtual IP address of the load balancer, you must redeploy the appliance and restore the backed-up VMs or files. Also, you must regenerate and copy certificates for your deployment.
If you are redeploying, reconfiguring, or adding virtual appliances to a cluster, see Installation and Configuration documentation for VMware Aria Automation appliance in the VMware Aria Automation product documentation for more information.