Encrypted Databases with AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server)
This topic contains information about the using currently encrypted or recently decrypted databases with Always On Availability Groups in SQL Server 2014.
In this Topic:
Limitations and Restrictions
If a database is encrypted or even contains a Database Encryption Key (DEK), you cannot use the New Availability Group Wizard or Add Database to Availability Group Wizard to add the database to an availability group. Even if an encrypted database has been decrypted, its log backups might contain encrypted data. In this case, full initial data synchronization could fail on the database. This is because the restore log operation might require the certificate that was used by the database encryption keys (DEKs), and that certificate might be unavailable.
To make a decrypted database eligible to add to an availability group using the wizard:
Create a log backup of the primary database.
Create a full database backup of the primary database.
Restore the database backup on the server instance that hosts the secondary replica.
Create a new log backup from primary database.
Restore this log backup on the secondary database.
Related Tasks
Manually Prepare a Secondary Database for an Availability Group (SQL Server)
Use the Availability Group Wizard (SQL Server Management Studio)
Use the Add Database to Availability Group Wizard (SQL Server Management Studio)
See Also
Overview of AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server)
Transparent Data Encryption (TDE)