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Wasfi_182818
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Dec 05, 2016
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take a UCS on system1 and restore it on system2

Hi;

 

When you take a UCS on system1 with LTM and DNS modules and their specific configuration and then restore it on system 2 which has a license only for LTM, how would that work? would the configuration restore correctly

 

Kindly Wasfi

 

  • Config load would fail. You can address this issue by loading System2 configuration from an UCS which does not have DNS module provisioned. Go to System -> Resource Provisioning, and untick DNS. After a reboot, you can create an UCS on System1 which is exempt of any DNS/GTM config. This should load successfully on System2 which is the LTM-only box.

     

    If you're familiar with the UCS archive, you can also get your UCS prepared without any downtime. Since UCS is equal to a regular unix tarball, it's possible to extract the files from it, have them modified, and re-bundled into a new UCS tarball.

     

    Regards,

     

4 Replies

  • Config load would fail. You can address this issue by loading System2 configuration from an UCS which does not have DNS module provisioned. Go to System -> Resource Provisioning, and untick DNS. After a reboot, you can create an UCS on System1 which is exempt of any DNS/GTM config. This should load successfully on System2 which is the LTM-only box.

     

    If you're familiar with the UCS archive, you can also get your UCS prepared without any downtime. Since UCS is equal to a regular unix tarball, it's possible to extract the files from it, have them modified, and re-bundled into a new UCS tarball.

     

    Regards,

     

  • Config load would fail. You can address this issue by loading System2 configuration from an UCS which does not have DNS module provisioned. Go to System -> Resource Provisioning, and untick DNS. After a reboot, you can create an UCS on System1 which is exempt of any DNS/GTM config. This should load successfully on System2 which is the LTM-only box.

     

    If you're familiar with the UCS archive, you can also get your UCS prepared without any downtime. Since UCS is equal to a regular unix tarball, it's possible to extract the files from it, have them modified, and re-bundled into a new UCS tarball.

     

    Regards,