Veritas NetBackup™ SAN Client and Fibre Transport Guide
- Introducing SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Planning your deployment
- Planning your SAN Client deployment
- SAN Client operational notes
- About SAN Client storage destinations
- How to choose SAN Client and Fibre Transport hosts
- About NetBackup SAN Client support for agents
- About NetBackup SAN Client support for clustering
- About NetBackup SAN Client support for Windows Hyper-V Server
- About NetBackup SAN Client unsupported restores
- About Fibre Transport throughput
- Converting a SAN media server to a SAN client
- Preparing the SAN
- Preparing the SAN
- About zoning the SAN for Fibre Transport
- About zoning the SAN for Fibre Transport for a 16-gigabit target mode HBA support
- About HBAs for SAN clients and Fibre Transport media servers
- About the 16-gigabit target mode HBAs for SAN clients and Fibre Transport media servers
- When selecting the HBA ports for SAN Client
- About supported SAN configurations for SAN Client
- Licensing SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Configuring SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Configuring SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Configuring a Fibre Transport media server
- About the target mode driver
- About nbhba mode and the ql2300_stub driver
- About FC attached devices
- How to identify the HBA ports
- About HBA port detection on Solaris
- About Fibre Transport media servers and VLANs
- Starting nbhba mode
- Marking the Fibre Transport media server HBA ports
- Configuring the media server Fibre Transport services
- Configuring the media server Fibre Transport services for a 16-gigabit target mode HBA support
- Displaying the FTMS state for a 16-gigabit target mode HBA support
- Identifying the HBA ports for a 16-gigabit target mode HBA support
- Configuring SAN clients
- Configuring SAN clients in a cluster
- About configuring Fibre Transport properties
- Configuring Fibre Transport properties
- Fibre Transport properties
- About SAN client usage preferences
- Configuring SAN client usage preferences
- Managing SAN clients and Fibre Transport
- Enabling or disabling the Fibre Transport services
- Enabling or disabling the Fibre Transport services for a 16-gigabit target mode HBA support
- Rescanning for Fibre Transport devices from a SAN client
- Viewing SAN Client Fibre Transport job details
- Viewing Fibre Transport traffic
- Adding a SAN client
- Deleting a SAN client
- Disabling SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Troubleshooting SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- About troubleshooting SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- SAN Client troubleshooting tech note
- Viewing Fibre Transport logs
- About unified logging
- Stopping and starting Fibre Transport services
- Stopping and starting Fibre Transport services for a 16-gigabit target mode HBA support
- Backups failover to LAN even though Fibre Transport devices available
- Kernel warning messages when Veritas modules load
- SAN client service does not start
- SAN client Fibre Transport service validation
- SAN client does not select Fibre Transport
- Media server Fibre Transport device is offline
- No Fibre Transport devices discovered
- Appendix A. AIX Specific Configuration Details
- Appendix B. HP-UX Specific Configuration Details
- HP-UX Reference Information
- Before you begin configuring NetBackup on HP-UX
- About HP-UX device drivers for legacy device files
- About legacy robotic control device files
- About legacy tape drive device files
- About legacy pass-through paths for tape drives
- Creating device files for SAN Clients on HP-UX
- About configuring legacy device files
- Index
Creating AIX no rewind device files for tape drives
NetBackup uses no rewind device files for tape drives and for NetBackup SAN Clients. During system startup, the AIX cfgmgr command configures all the devices that are necessary to use the system. If necessary, you can use the following procedure to check for and create a no rewind device file.
To check for and create a no rewind device file
- Display the I/O controllers in the system by using the following command:
/usr/sbin/lsdev -C | grep I/O
The following sample output shows that SCSI controller 1 (00-01) has been assigned the logical identifier scsi0.
scsi0 Available 00-01 SCSI I/O Controller
- Display the SCSI and Fibre Channel devices in the system by using the following command. For SCSI devices, use scsi for the type; for Fibre Channel Protocol devices, use fcp for the type.
/usr/sbin/lsdev -C -s type
The following example shows two disk drives and a tape drive:
hdisk0 Available 00-01-00-0,0 400 MB SCSI Disk Drive hdisk1 Available 00-01-00-1,0 400 MB SCSI Disk Drive rmt0 Available 00-01-00-3,0 Other SCSI Tape Drive
If the device files for the tape drives exist, they appear in the output as rmt0, rmt1, and so on. The previous example output shows rmt0.
- If a device file does not exist for the wanted tape drive, create it by using the following command:
/usr/sbin/mkdev -c tape -s scsi -t ost -p controller -w id,lun
The following are the arguments for the command:
controller is the logical identifier of the drive's SCSI adapter, such as scsi0, fscsi0, or vscsi1.
scsi_id is the SCSI ID of the drive connection.
lun is the logical unit number of the drive connection.
For example, the following command creates a device file for a non-IBM 8-mm drive connected to controller scsi0 at SCSI address 5,0:
mkdev -c tape -s scsi -t ost -p scsi0 -w 5,0
- To verify, display the SCSI device files by using the lsdev command, as follows:
/usr/sbin/lsdev -C -s scsi hdisk0 Available 00-01-00-0,0 400 MB SCSI Disk Drive hdisk1 Available 00-01-00-1,0 400 MB SCSI Disk Drive rmt0 Available 00-01-00-3,0 Other SCSI Tape Drive rmt1 Available 00-01-00-5,0 Other SCSI Tape Drive
The output shows that the rmt1 device file was created.
- If the device files do not exist on an FCP controller, use the following command to create them:
/usr/sbin/cfgmgr -l device
device is the controller number from step 1.
- Ensure that the device is configured for variable-mode and extended file marks. Use the chdev command, as follows (dev is the logical identifier for the drive (for example, rmt1)).
/usr/sbin/chdev -l dev -a block_size=0 /usr/sbin/chdev -l dev -a extfm=yes
- To configure the drive manually in NetBackup, enter the following device file pathname:
/dev/rmt1.1