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
- Issues with KMS configuration
- Issues with initiating the NetBackup CA migration because of large key size
- Issues with the non-privileged user (service user) account
- Issues with group name format in the auth.conf file
- Troubleshooting the VxUpdate add package process
- Issues with FIPS mode
- Issues with malware scanning
- Issues with NetBackup jobs that are enabled for data-in-transit encryption
- Issues with Unstructured Data Instant Access
- 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
- About the NetBackup Smart Diagnosis (nbsmartdiag) utility
- About log collection by job ID
- 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
- NetBackup disaster recovery email example
- About recovering the entire NetBackup catalog
- Establishing a connection with NAT media server before catalog recovery
- 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
Troubleshooting NetBackup problems
If you have problems with NetBackup, perform these actions first.
This preliminary NetBackup troubleshooting procedure explains what to check first and branches to other procedures as appropriate. These procedures do not try to cover every problem that can occur. However, they do recommend the methods that usually result in successful problem resolution.
When you perform these procedures, try each step in sequence. If you already performed the action or it does not apply, skip to the next step. If you branch to another topic, use the solutions that are suggested there. If you still have a problem, go to the next step in the procedure. Also, alter your approach according to your configuration and what you have already tried.
Table: Steps for troubleshooting NetBackup problems
Step | Action | Description |
|---|---|---|
Step 1 | Verify operating systems and peripherals. | Ensure that your servers and clients are running supported operating system versions and that any peripherals you use are supported. See the NetBackup Master Compatibility List. In addition, the NetBackup release notes include a section "Required operating system patches and updates for NetBackup" that should be checked. The release notes for your release are available here: |
Step 2 | Use reports to check for errors. | Use the All Log Entries report and check for NetBackup errors for the appropriate time period. This report can show the context in which the error occurred. Often it provides specific information, which is useful when the status code can result from a variety of problems. See the Reports information in the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume I. If the problem involved a backup or archive, check the Status of Backups report. This report gives you the status code. If you find a status code or message in either of these reports, perform the recommended corrective actions. See the Status Codes Reference Guide. |
Step 3 | Check the operating system logs. | Check the system log (UNIX) or the Event Viewer Application and System log (Windows) if the problem pertains to media or device management and one of the following is true:
These logs can show the context in which the error occurred. The error messages are usually descriptive enough to point you to a problem area. |
Step 4 | Review the debug logs. | Read the applicable enabled debug logs and correct any problems you detect. If these logs are not enabled, enable them before you retry the failed operation. See the NetBackup Logging Reference Guide. |
Step 5 | Retry the operation. | If you performed corrective actions, retry the operation. If you did not perform corrective actions or if the problem persists, continue with the next step. |
Step 6 | Get more information for installation problems. | If you see the problem during a new installation or upgrade installation, or after you make changes to an existing configuration, see the following procedures: |
Step 7 | Ensure that the servers and clients are operational. | If you experienced a server or a client disk crash, procedures are available on how to recover the files that are critical to NetBackup operation. |
Step 8 | Ensure that the partitions have enough disk space. | Verify that you have enough space available in the disk partitions that NetBackup uses. If one or more of these partitions is full, NetBackup processes that access the full partition fail. The resulting error message depends on the process. Possible error messages: "unable to access" or "unable to create or open a file." On UNIX systems, use the df command to view disk partition information. On Windows systems, use Disk Manager or Explorer. Check the following disk partitions:
|
Step 9 | Increase the logging level. | Enable verbose logging either for everything or only for the areas that you think are related to the problem. See the NetBackup Logging Reference Guide for information on changing the logging level. |
Step 10 | Determine which daemons or processes are running. | Follow the procedures for UNIX or Windows NetBackup servers. |