Veritas NetBackup™ for Microsoft SQL Server Administrator's Guide
- Introducing NetBackup for SQL Server
- Installing NetBackup for SQL Server
- Managing SQL Server objects for use with SQL Server Intelligent Policies
- About the Applications utility
- About discovery of SQL Server objects
- About registering SQL Server instances and availability group replicas
- About credentials used with SQL Server Intelligent Policy
- Configuring the services for SQL Server backups and restores
- Configuring local security privileges for SQL Server
- Registering a SQL Server instance or availability replica
- Registering instances or availability replicas with an instance group
- Registering instances or availability replicas automatically
- Authorizing a DBA to register instances or availability replicas with the nbsqladm command
- Deleting SQL Server objects from the Applications utility
- Manually add a SQL Server instance
- Deactivating or activating an instance
- Cleaning up instances
- Configuring backups with SQL Server Intelligent Policy
- About SQL Server Intelligent Policies
- Creating a SQL Server Intelligent Policy
- About policy attributes
- About schedule properties
- Schedule backup types for SQL Server Intelligent Policies
- Adding instances to a policy
- Adding databases to a policy
- Adding filegroups or files to the backup selections list
- Manually adding files or filegroups to the backup selections list
- Adding instance groups to a backup policy
- About tuning parameters for SQL Server backups
- Backing up read-only filegroups
- Backing up read-write filegroups
- Configuring host properties and job settings
- Performing restores of SQL Server
- Starting the NetBackup MS SQL Client for the first time
- Selecting the SQL Server host and instance
- Browsing for SQL Server backup images
- Options for NetBackup for SQL Server restores
- Restoring a SQL Server database backup
- Staging a full SQL Server database recovery
- Restoring SQL Server filegroup backups
- Recovering a SQL Server database from read-write filegroup backups
- Restoring SQL Server read-only filegroups
- Restoring SQL Server database files
- Restoring a SQL Server transaction log image without staging a full recovery
- Performing a SQL Server database move
- About performing a SQL Server page-level restore
- Configuring permissions for redirected restores
- Redirecting a SQL Server database to a different host
- Performing a restore of a remote SQL Server installation
- Restoring multistreamed SQL Server backups
- About using bplist to retrieve SQL Server backups
- About NetBackup for SQL Server backup names
- Protecting SQL Server data with VMware backups
- About protecting SQL Server data with VMware backups
- About configuring for VMware backups that protect SQL Server
- Configuring the services for a VMware backup that protects SQL Server
- Configuring a VMware backup policy to protect SQL Server
- Configuring a VMware policy to protect SQL Server using Replication Director to manage snapshot replication
- Restoring SQL Server databases from a VMware backup
- Configuring backups with Snapshot Client
- About NetBackup Snapshot Client for SQL Server
- How SQL Server operations use Snapshot Client
- Configuration requirements for SQL Server snapshot and Instant Recovery backups
- Configuring a snapshot policy for SQL Server
- Configuring a policy for Instant Recovery backups of SQL Server
- Using copy-only snapshot backups to affect how differentials are based
- About SQL Server agent grouped backups (legacy SQL Server policies)
- Protecting SQL Server availability groups
- About protecting SQL Server availability groups
- Protecting SQL Server availability groups with intelligent policies
- Protecting SQL Server availibility groups with legacy policies
- About protecting the preferred replica in a SQL Server availability group (legacy backup policies)
- Prerequisites for protecting SQL Server availability groups
- Configuring an automatic backup policy for the preferred or the primary replica of a SQL Server availability group
- Creating batch files for the policy that protects the preferred or the primary replica
- Adding the batch files to the policy that protects the preferred or the primary replica
- About protecting a specific node in a SQL Server availability group (legacy backup policies)
- Configuring an automatic backup policy for a specific replica of a SQL Server availability group
- Creating a batch file for the policy that protects a specific availability replica in an availability group
- Adding the batch files to the policy that protects a specific replica in the availability group
- About protecting the preferred replica in a SQL Server availability group (legacy backup policies)
- Protect a SQL Server availability group that crosses domains
- Browsing for SQL Server availability group backup images
- Restoring a SQL Server availability database to a secondary replica
- Restoring a SQL Server availability database to the primary and the secondary replicas
- Restoring an availability database when an availability group crosses NetBackup domains
- Protecting SQL Server in a cluster environment
- Configuring backups with legacy SQL Server policies using clients and batch files
- About legacy SQL Server policies
- About configuring backups with legacy SQL Server policies
- Configuring the NetBackup services for SQL Server backups and restores (legacy SQL Server policies)
- About SQL Server security with NetBackup legacy backup policies
- About using batch files with NetBackup for SQL Server
- Adding a new SQL Server legacy policy
- About schedule properties
- Adding clients to a policy
- Adding batch files to the backup selections list
- Selecting the SQL Server host and instance
- Options for SQL Server backup operations
- About viewing the properties of the objects selected for backup
- Performing user-directed backups of SQL Server databases
- Performing user-directed backups of SQL Server transaction logs
- Performing user-directed backups of SQL Server database filegroups
- Performing user-directed backups of read-only filegroups
- Performing user-directed backups of read-write filegroups
- Performing user-directed backups of SQL Server database files
- Performing partial database backups
- Performing a backup of a remote SQL Server installation
- About file checkpointing with NetBackup for SQL Server
- About automatic retry of unsuccessful SQL Server backups
- Using NetBackup for SQL Server with multiple NICs
- About configuration of SQL Server backups with multiple NICs
- Configuring the client with the private interface name
- Configuring backups of SQL Server when you have multiple NICs (SQL Server Intelligent Policies)
- Configuring backups for SQL Server when you have multiple NICs (legacy SQL Server policies)
- Performing restores of SQL Server when you have multiple NICs
- Configuring backups of a SQL Server cluster when you have multiple NICs (SQL Server Intelligent Policies)
- Configuring backups of a SQL Server cluster when you have multiple NICs (legacy SQL Server policies)
- Creating a batch file for backups of a SQL Server cluster when you have multiple NICs (legacy SQL Server policies)
- Performing restores of a SQL Server cluster when you have multiple NICs
- Performance and troubleshooting
- What are the components of NetBackup for SQL Server?
- How does NetBackup for SQL Server back up a database?
- How does NetBackup for SQL Server recover a database?
- Performing a manual backup
- About debug logging for SQL Server troubleshooting
- About NetBackup for SQL Server performance factors
- About monitoring NetBackup for SQL Server operations
- Setting the maximum trace level for NetBackup for SQL Server
- Troubleshooting credential validation
- Reporting of unsuccessful filegroup or file backups
- About minimizing timeout failures on large SQL Server database restores
- Troubleshooting VMware backups and restores of SQL Server
- Delays in completion of backup jobs
- SQL Server log truncation failure during VMware backups of SQL Server
- SQL Server restore fails when you restore a SQL Server compressed backup image as a single stripe or with multiple stripes
- Incorrect backup images are displayed for availability group clusters
- A restore of a SQL Server database fails with Status Code 5, or Error (-1), when the host name of the SQL Server or the SQL Server database name has trailing spaces
- A move operation fails with Status Code 5, or Error (-1), when the SQL Server host name, the database name, or the database logical name has trailing spaces
- Unable to discover or browse availability group replicas
- About disaster recovery of SQL Server
- Appendix A. Other configurations
- Configuring multiplexed backups of SQL Server
- Restoring a multiplexed SQL Server backup
- About SQL Server backups and restores in an SAP environment
- Configuring NetBackup to support database log-shipping
- Backing up SQL Server in an environment with log shipping
- Appendix B. Register authorized locations
Registering authorized locations used by a NetBackup database script-based policy
During a backup, NetBackup checks for scripts in the default script location and any authorized locations. The default, authorized script location for UNIX is usr/openv/netbackup/ext/db_ext and for Windows is install_path\netbackup\dbext. If the script is not in the default script location or an authorized location, the policy job fails. You can move any script into the default script location or any additional authorized location and NetBackup recognizes the scripts. You need to update the policy with the script location if it has changed. An authorized location can be a directory and NetBackup recognizes any script within that directory. An authorized location can also be a full path to a script if an entire directory does need to be authorized.
If the default script location does not work for your environment, use the following procedure to enter one or more authorized locations for your scripts. Use nbsetconfig to enter an authorized location where the scripts reside. You can also use bpsetconfig, however this command is only available on the master or the media server.
Note:
One recommendation is that scripts should not be world-writable. NetBackup does not allow scripts to run from network or remote locations. All scripts must be stored and run locally. Any script that is created and saved in the NetBackup db_ext (UNIX) or dbext (Windows) location needs to be protected during a NetBackup uninstall.
For more information about registering authorized locations and scripts, review the knowledge base article:
To add an authorized location
- Open a command prompt on the client.
- Use nbsetconfig to enter values for an authorized location. The client privileged user must run these commands.
The following examples are for paths you may configure for the Oracle agent. Use the path that is appropriate for your agent.
On UNIX:
[root@client26 bin]# ./nbsetconfig nbsetconfig>DB_SCRIPT_PATH = /Oracle/scripts nbsetconfig>DB_SCRIPT_PATH = /db/Oracle/scripts/full_backup.sh nbsetconfig> <ctrl-D>
On Windows:
C:\Program Files\Veritas\NetBackup\bin>nbsetconfig nbsetconfig> DB_SCRIPT_PATH=c:\db_scripts nbsetconfig> DB_SCRIPT_PATH=e:\oracle\fullbackup\full_rman.sh nbsetconfig> <ctrl-Z>
Note:
Review the NetBackup Command Reference Guide for options, such as reading from a text file and remotely setting clients from a NetBackup server using bpsetconfig. If you have a text file with the script location or authorized locations listed, nbsetconfig or bpsetconfig can read from that text file. An entry of DB_SCRIPT_PATH=none does not allow any script to execute on a client. The none entry is useful if an administrator wants to completely lock down a server from executing scripts.
- (Conditional) Perform these steps on any clustered database or agent node that can perform the backup.
- (Conditional) Update any policy if the script location was changed to the default or authorized location.