According to Huawei’s BCManager and HyperReplication guides, "incorrect" statements must be identified to understand the distinction between disaster recovery (DR) and active-active solutions. Option B is incorrect because while HyperMetro supports automatic transparent failover (zero RTO) using a Quorum Server, standard synchronous remote replication typically requires manual intervention or third-party management software to trigger a switchover when the primary site fails. In synchronous replication, the secondary LUN is usually in a read-only state and cannot take over automatically without administrative action.
Option D is incorrectbecause it describes an "Active-Active" state. In a standard Remote Replication pair, only the primary LUN is accessible for host I/O (Read/Write), while the secondary LUN is locked to maintain data consistency. Only theHyperMetrofeature allows both LUNs in the pair to provide simultaneous read and write services to application servers across different sites. Regarding distance, while asynchronous replication is physically less constrained, synchronous and HyperMetro technologies are strictly limited by latency (typically requiring round-trip time <10ms and distance within 100km to 300km depending on the specific product line) to avoid severe application performance degradation.
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