Veritas NetBackup™ Troubleshooting Guide
- Introduction
- Troubleshooting procedures
- About troubleshooting procedures
- Troubleshooting NetBackup problems
- Troubleshooting installation problems
- Troubleshooting configuration problems
- Device configuration problem resolution
- Testing the master server and clients
- Testing the media server and clients
- Resolving network communication problems with UNIX clients
- Resolving network communication problems with Windows clients
- Troubleshooting vnetd proxy connections
- vnetd proxy connection requirements
- Where to begin to troubleshoot vnetd proxy connections
- Verify that the vnetd process and proxies are active
- Verify that the host connections are proxied
- Test the vnetd proxy connections
- Examine the log files of the connecting and accepting processes
- Viewing the vnetd proxy log files
- Troubleshooting security certificate revocation
- Troubleshooting cloud provider's revoked SSL certificate issues
- Troubleshooting cloud provider's CRL download issues
- How a host's CRL affects certificate revocation troubleshooting
- NetBackup job fails because of revoked certificate or unavailability of CRLs
- NetBackup job fails because of apparent network error
- NetBackup job fails because of unavailable resource
- Master server security certificate is revoked
- Determining a NetBackup host's certificate state
- Troubleshooting issues with external CA-signed certificate revocation
- About troubleshooting networks and host names
- Verifying host name and service entries in NetBackup
- Example of host name and service entries on UNIX master server and client
- Example of host name and service entries on UNIX master server and media server
- Example of host name and service entries on UNIX PC clients
- Example of host name and service entries on UNIX server that connects to multiple networks
- About the bpclntcmd utility
- Using the Host Properties window to access configuration settings
- Resolving full disk problems
- Frozen media troubleshooting considerations
- Troubleshooting problems with the NetBackup web services
- Troubleshooting problems with the NetBackup web server certificate
- Resolving PBX problems
- Troubleshooting problems with validation of the remote host
- Troubleshooting Auto Image Replication
- Troubleshooting network interface card performance
- About SERVER entries in the bp.conf file
- About unavailable storage unit problems
- Resolving a NetBackup Administration operations failure on Windows
- Resolving garbled text displayed in NetBackup Administration Console on a UNIX computer
- Troubleshooting error messages in the NetBackup Administration Console
- Extra disk space required for logs and temporary files for the NetBackup Administration Console
- Unable to logon to the NetBackup Administration Console after external CA configuration
- Troubleshooting file-based external certificate issues
- Troubleshooting Windows certificate store issues
- Troubleshooting backup failures
- Troubleshooting backup failure issues with NAT clients or NAT servers
- Troubleshooting issues with the NetBackup Messaging Broker (or nbmqbroker) service
- Issues with email notifications for Windows systems
- Using NetBackup utilities
- About NetBackup troubleshooting utilities
- About the analysis utilities for NetBackup debug logs
- About the Logging Assistant
- About network troubleshooting utilities
- About the NetBackup support utility (nbsu)
- About the NetBackup consistency check utility (NBCC)
- About the NetBackup consistency check repair (NBCCR) utility
- About the nbcplogs utility
- About the robotic test utilities
- Disaster recovery
- About disaster recovery
- About disaster recovery requirements
- Disaster recovery packages
- About disaster recovery settings
- Recommended backup practices
- About disk recovery procedures for UNIX and Linux
- About clustered NetBackup server recovery for UNIX and Linux
- About disk recovery procedures for Windows
- About clustered NetBackup server recovery for Windows
- Generating a certificate on a clustered master server after disaster recovery installation
- About restoring disaster recovery package
- About the DR_PKG_MARKER_FILE environment variable
- Restoring disaster recovery package on Windows
- Restoring disaster recovery package on UNIX
- About recovering the NetBackup catalog
- About NetBackup catalog recovery on Windows computers
- About NetBackup catalog recovery from disk devices
- About NetBackup catalog recovery and symbolic links
- About NetBackup catalog recovery and
- NetBackup disaster recovery email example
- About recovering the entire NetBackup catalog
- About recovering the NetBackup catalog image files
- About recovering the NetBackup relational database
- Recovering the NetBackup catalog when NetBackup Access Control is configured
- Recovering the NetBackup catalog from a nonprimary copy of a catalog backup
- Recovering the NetBackup catalog without the disaster recovery file
- Recovering a NetBackup user-directed online catalog backup from the command line
- Restoring files from a NetBackup online catalog backup
- Unfreezing the NetBackup online catalog recovery media
- Steps to carry out when you see exit status 5988 during catalog recovery
- Index
Device configuration problem resolution
An auto-configuration warning message appears in the second panel of the Device Configuration Wizard if the selected device meets any of the following conditions:
Not licensed for NetBackup server
Exceeds a license restriction
Has some inherent qualities that make it difficult to auto-configure
The following messages relate to device configuration, along with their explanations and recommended actions.
Table: Recommended actions for device configuration messages
Message | Explanation | Recommended action |
|---|---|---|
Drive does not support serialization | The drive does not return its serial number. Note that some manufacturers do not support serial numbers. Although automatic device configuration does not function optimally, the drive can be manually configured and operated without its serial number. | Ask the manufacturer for a newer firmware version that returns serial numbers (if available), or manually configure and operate the drive without a serial number. |
Robot does not support serialization | The robot does not return its serial number or the serial numbers of the drives that are contained within it. Note that some manufacturers do not support serial numbers. Although automatic device configuration does not function optimally, the robot and drives can be manually configured and operated without serial numbers. | Ask the manufacturer for a newer firmware version that returns serial numbers (if available). Or manually configure and operate the robot and drives without serial numbers. |
No license for this robot type | NetBackup server does not support the robotic type that is defined for this robot. | Define a different robot. Use only the robotic libraries that NetBackup server supports. |
No license for this drive type | The drive type that is defined for this drive that the NetBackup server does not support. | Define a different drive. Use only the drives that NetBackup supports |
Unable to determine robot type | NetBackup does not recognize the robotic library. The robotic library cannot be auto-configured. | Do the following:
|
Drive is standalone or in unknown robot | Either the drive is standalone, or the drive or robot does not return a serial number. Note that some manufacturers do not support serial numbers. Although automatic device configuration does not function optimally, the drive or robot can be manually configured and operated without a serial number. | Ask the manufacturer for a newer firmware version that returns serial numbers (if available), or manually configure and operate the drive robot without serial numbers. |
Robot drive number is unknown | Either the drive or robot does not return a serial number. Note that some manufacturers do not support serial numbers. Although automatic device configuration does not function optimally, the drive or robot can be manually configured and operated without a serial number. | Ask the manufacturer for a newer firmware version that returns serial numbers (if available). Or manually configure and operate the drive and robot without serial numbers. |
Drive is in an unlicensed robot | The drive is in a robotic library that cannot be licensed for NetBackup server. Since the robot cannot be licensed for NetBackup server, any drives that were configured in that robot are unusable. | Configure a drive that does not reside in the unlicensed robot. |
Drive's SCSI adapter does not support pass-thru (or pass-thru path does not exist) | A drive was found that does not have a SCSI pass-through path configured. The possible causes are:
| Change the drive's adapter or define a pass-through path for the drive. For information about the SCSI adapter pass-through, see the NetBackup Device Configuration Guide. |
No configuration device file exists | A device has been detected without the corresponding device file necessary to configure that device. | For directions about how to create device files, see the NetBackup Device Configuration Guide. |
Unable to determine drive type | The NetBackup server does not recognize the drive. The drive cannot be auto-configured. | Do the following:
|
Unable to determine compression device | A drive was detected without the expected compression device file that is used to configure that device. Automatic device configuration tries to use a device file that supports hardware data compression. When multiple compression device files exist for a drive, automatic device configuration cannot determine which compression device file is best. It uses a non-compression device file instead. | If you do not need hardware data compression, no action is necessary. The drive can be operated without hardware data compression. Hardware data compression and tape drive configuration help are available. For directions about how to create device files, see the NetBackup Device Configuration Guide. |