Disaster Recovery

This chapter describes the disaster recovery process and the health check feature.

Overview

There are two partitions in NCS 1010: RP SSD (CPU partition) and chassis SSD (Disaster Recovery partition). The Disaster Recovery partition contains all the backup configurations such as ISO images, RPMs, and system configuration files. When the node is corrupted, the Disaster Recovery feature allows the CPU to be replaced with the existing configuration. After replacing the CPU, the node reboots and comes up by restoring the software and configuration files from the chassis SSD without traffic loss.

CPU Replacement Considerations

You must consider the following points for CPU replacement.

  • When the CPU is removed from the chassis, NCS 1010 chassis runs in headless mode which is non-traffic impacting.

  • When the CPU is replaced with another CPU having the same software and RPMs as in the chassis SSD, the configuration is restored from the chassis SSD.

  • When the CPU is replaced with another CPU having different software and RPMs as in the chassis SSD, the Disaster recovery process starts. In this case, the node boots with the software from the chassis SSD and the configuration is also restored from the chassis SSD.

Health Check of Backup ISO Image

The Health Check feature ensures error-free booting of NCS 1010 chassis during disaster recovery operations. NCS 1010 has a partition for disaster recovery where the backup ISO image is stored. The backup ISO image is stored in the chassis SSD.

The chassis SSD content is audited against the running software by the install process in the background every 12 hours to detect corruption. If the ISO image is corrupted, the software will recover it by copying from the backup location. If the software fails to synchronize with the chassis SSD, then the Disaster Recovery ISO Image Corruption alarm is raised. See the Troubleshooting Guide for Cisco NCS 1010 to clear the alarm.