NetBackup™ for VMware Administrator's Guide
- Introduction
- Required tasks: overview
- Configuring RBAC roles for VMware administrators
- Notes and prerequisites
- VMware vSphere privileges
- Managing VMware servers
- About VMware discovery
- Add VMware servers
- Change resource limits for VMware resource types
- Configuring backup policies for VMware
- Backup options on the VMware tab
- Exclude disks tab
- Configuring a VMware Intelligent Policy
- About the Reuse VM selection query results option
- Use Accelerator to back up virtual machines
- Configuring protection plans for VMware
- Malware scan
- Instant access
- Instant rollback
- Continuous data protection
- Backing up virtual machines
- VM recovery
- VMware agentless restore
- Restoring Individual files and folders from VMware backups
- Using NetBackup to back up Cloud Director environments
- Recover VMware Cloud Director virtual machines
- Restore virtual machines with Instant Recovery
- Protecting VMs using hardware snapshots and replication
- Best practices and more information
- Troubleshooting VMware operations
- NetBackup logging for VMware
- Snapshot error encountered (status code 156)
- Appendix A. Configuring services for NFS on Windows
- About configuring services for NFS on Windows 2012 or 2016 (NetBackup for VMware)
- Appendix B. Backups of VMware raw devices (RDM)
Performance recommendations for Instant Recovery for VMware
After Instant Recovery, the virtual machine is on an NFS-attached datastore that is presented by the NetBackup media server. The performance of the virtual machine and of Storage vMotion depends on the following: the network speed and latency between the ESXi host and the media server, and the speed of NetBackup storage that the backup is recovered from.
It is recommended the following:
A SAN connection from the NetBackup media server to its disk storage unit.
For Fibre Channel SAN, a minimum speed of 4 gigabits per second.
For iSCSI SAN, a minimum speed of 1 gigabit per second.
When you use Storage vMotion to migrate a restored virtual machine, migrate one virtual machine at a time per media server. The migration may be slow if you simultaneously migrate multiple virtual machines per media server.
For disaster recovery testing, it is recommended that you restore no more than three or four virtual machines per media server. The number to restore depends on the I/O load on the media server. It is recommended restoring each VM one-by-one, not simultaneously.
Note:
For large-scale recovery of multiple virtual machines, use the virtual machine restore feature in the Backup, Archive, and Restore interface. Do not use Instant Recovery for VMware.