Veritas Velocity™ User's Guide
- Getting to know Velocity
- Setting up Velocity
- How to set up the Velocity Storage Server
- How to set up the Velocity Client
- Setting up the Velocity on-premises management server
- Upgrading Velocity
- Velocity Storage Server
- Users and roles
- Oracle database ingestion using Velocity
- How to use copy preparation to mask or sanitize sensitive data
- Oracle database ingestion using NetBackup CoPilot
- Microsoft SQL Server database ingestion using Velocity
- Database sources and copies
- About scheduling ingestions for a database source
- Retention periods for database sources and copies
- Sandboxes
- Database recovery
- Alerts and logs
- Managing the Velocity physical appliance
- Configuring network address settings on the Velocity physical appliance
- About WAN optimization on the Velocity physical appliance
- About the Veritas Remote Management Console on the Velocity physical appliance
- About Velocity physical appliance storage
- About users on the Velocity physical appliance
- About Velocity physical appliance checkpoints
- About factory reset on the Velocity physical appliance
- Configuring network address settings on the Velocity physical appliance
- Monitoring the Velocity physical appliance
- Velocity physical appliance security
- About Velocity physical appliance user account privileges
- About the Velocity physical appliance intrusion detection system
- About Velocity physical appliance operating system security
- Recommended IPMI settings on the Velocity physical appliance
- Best practices
- Troubleshooting
- Glossary
- Context-sensitive topics
- Section I. Velocity shell menu commands
- Introduction
- Appendix A. Main > Manage > Storage
- Appendix B. Main > Manage > Cloud
- Appendix C. Main > Manage > Software
- Appendix D. Main > Monitor
- Appendix E. Main > Network
- Appendix F. Main > Settings
- Appendix G. Main > Support
Deregistering a Velocity Storage Server
Deregistering a Velocity Storage Server is part of a two-step process for resetting a storage server. If you need to replace your Velocity Storage Server or clean up your environment, you can reset the storage server. The other part of the two-step process is to perform a factory reset of the Velocity hardware appliance or delete the virtual machine that you used as the storage server. The two-step process can be performed in any order.
See How to reset the Velocity Storage Server.
When you deregister a Velocity Storage Server, you remove it from Velocity. After the Velocity Storage Server is deregistered, none of the database sources, database copies, sandboxes, and paths where ingested database sources are stored can be accessed from Velocity. Any mount points on the source host server that point to export paths on the Velocity Velocity Storage Server will become invalid, and must be removed manually. This action cannot be undone. Only the Velocity administrator can perform this action.
Although the data from the Velocity Storage Server is no longer accessible from Velocity, the data still exists temporarily on the virtual machine that you used as a Velocity Storage Server or from the Velocity hardware appliance. If you register a new Velocity Storage Server, the data from the deregistered storage server cannot be synced with the new storage server. The new storage server will require new ingested database sources, database copies, and sandboxes.
To deregister a Velocity Storage Server
- From the Velocity Cloud Console, in the left pane, click Velocity Storage Server.
- Click Deregister on the row that contains the Velocity Storage Server that you want to deregister.
- On the confirmation dialog, click Proceed.
The Velocity Storage Server and all associated database sources, database copies, sandboxes, and paths where ingested databases are stored are removed from the Velocity Cloud Console. The audit log lists the user who initiated the action and the date and time when the action was completed.