Veritas NetBackup™ Administrator's Guide, Volume II
- NetBackup licensing models and usage reporting
- How capacity licensing works
- Creating and viewing the licensing report
- Reviewing a capacity licensing report
- Reconciling the capacity licensing report results
- Reviewing a traditional licensing report
- Reviewing an NEVC licensing report
- Additional configuration
- About dynamic host name and IP addressing
- About busy file processing on UNIX clients
- About the Shared Storage Option
- DELETE About configuring the Shared Storage Option in NetBackup
- Viewing SSO summary reports
- About the vm.conf configuration file
- Holds Management
- Menu user interfaces on UNIX
- About the tpconfig device configuration utility
- About the NetBackup Disk Configuration Utility
- Reference topics
- Host name rules
- About reading backup images with nbtar or tar32.exe
- Factors that affect backup time
- NetBackup notify scripts
- Media and device management best practices
- About TapeAlert
- About tape drive cleaning
- How NetBackup reserves drives
- About SCSI persistent reserve
- About the SPC-2 SCSI reserve process
- About checking for data loss
- About checking for tape and driver configuration errors
- How NetBackup selects media
- About Tape I/O commands on UNIX
NetBackup for Hyper-V agent
Note:
This section is applicable for NetBackup master server 8.3 or later and NetBackup client 8.3 or later.
Hyper-V virtual machine (VM) is backed up by a Hyper-V policy (all drives). The NetBackup client that is installed inside the guest is backed up with non-file system workloads (policy types other than Standard/MS-Windows). You are only charged for the virtual machine (VM) backup.
The nbdeployutil report does not display a row for agent backup. Only one row is displayed corresponding to the Hyper-V backup for the virtual machine (VM).
As Hyper-V supports single file restore, the file system backup with the agent inside the guest is charged separately. Corresponding rows are displayed in the nbdeployutil report. The nbdeployutil utility uses the virtual machine (VM) DNS name to correlate backup entries corresponding to the Hyper-V and the agent backup. If the virtual machine (VM) DNS name is not recorded as part of the Hyper-V backup, this correlation does not work. A virtual machine (VM) backup must have all drives included. If drives are excluded as part of the Hyper-V backup, the agent backup is charged separately.