The direction of a FlashCopy relationship can be reversed, where
the volume that was previously defined as the target becomes the source for
the volume that was previously defined as the source (and is now the target).
The data that has changed is copied to the volume previously defined as the
source.
You can reverse a FlashCopy relationship if you want to restore a source
volume (Volume A) to a point in time before you performed the FlashCopy operation.
In effect, you are reversing the FlashCopy operation so that it appears as
though no FlashCopy operation ever happened. Keep in mind that the background
copy process of a FlashCopy operation must complete before you can reverse
volume A as the source and volume B as the target.
There might be certain circumstances when you might want to
reverse an original FlashCopy relationship. For example, suppose you create
a FlashCopy relationship between source volume A and target volume B. Data
loss occurs on source volume A. To keep applications running, you can reverse
the FlashCopy relationship so that volume B is copied to volume A.
Note: A
fast reverse option that applies to a Global Mirror operation
allows a FlashCopy relationship to be reversed without waiting for the background
copy of a previous FlashCopy relationship to finish. A Global Mirror operation
is based on existing Global Copy and
FlashCopy operations at the target site.
Figure 1 illustrates how a reverse
restore operation works:
Figure 1. Refreshing target volume
— reverse restore