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NetBackup™ Backup Planning and Performance Tuning Guide
Last Published:
2024-04-16
Product(s):
NetBackup & Alta Data Protection (10.4, 10.3.0.1, 10.3, 10.2.0.1, 10.2, 10.1.1, 10.1, 10.0.0.1, 10.0, 9.1.0.1, 9.1, 9.0.0.1, 9.0, 8.3.0.2, 8.3.0.1, 8.3)
- NetBackup capacity planning
- Primary server configuration guidelines
- Media server configuration guidelines
- NetBackup hardware design and tuning considerations
- About NetBackup Media Server Deduplication (MSDP)
- MSDP tuning considerations
- MSDP sizing considerations
- Accelerator performance considerations
- Media configuration guidelines
- How to identify performance bottlenecks
- Best practices
- Best practices: NetBackup AdvancedDisk
- Best practices: NetBackup tape drive cleaning
- Best practices: Universal shares
- NetBackup for VMware sizing and best practices
- Best practices: Storage lifecycle policies (SLPs)
- Measuring Performance
- Table of NetBackup All Log Entries report
- Evaluating system components
- Tuning the NetBackup data transfer path
- NetBackup network performance in the data transfer path
- NetBackup server performance in the data transfer path
- About shared memory (number and size of data buffers)
- About the communication between NetBackup client and media server
- Effect of fragment size on NetBackup restores
- Other NetBackup restore performance issues
- About shared memory (number and size of data buffers)
- Tuning other NetBackup components
- How to improve NetBackup resource allocation
- How to improve FlashBackup performance
- Tuning disk I/O performance
Monitoring Windows disk load
To use disk performance counters to monitor the disk performance in Performance Monitor, you may need to enable the counters. Windows may not have enabled the disk performance counters by default for your system.
To enable the counters and allow disk monitoring
- Enter the following:
diskperf -y
- Restart the system.
To disable the counters and cancel disk monitoring
- Enter the following:
diskperf -n
- Restart the system.
To monitor disk performance
- Use the %Disk Time counter for the PhysicalDisk object.
Track the percentage of elapsed time that the selected disk drive is servicing read or write requests.
- Monitor the Avg. Disk Queue Length counter and watch for values greater than 1 that last for more than one second.
Values greater than 1 for more than a second indicate that multiple processes are waiting for the disk to service their requests.
See Bypassing disk performance with the SKIP_DISK_WRITES touch file.