Veritas Velocity™ User's Guide
- Getting to know Velocity
- Setting up Velocity
- How to set up the Velocity Storage Server
- How to set up the Velocity Client
- Setting up the Velocity on-premises management server
- Upgrading Velocity
- Velocity Storage Server
- Users and roles
- Oracle database ingestion using Velocity
- How to use copy preparation to mask or sanitize sensitive data
- Oracle database ingestion using NetBackup CoPilot
- Microsoft SQL Server database ingestion using Velocity
- Database sources and copies
- About scheduling ingestions for a database source
- Retention periods for database sources and copies
- Sandboxes
- Database recovery
- Alerts and logs
- Managing the Velocity physical appliance
- Configuring network address settings on the Velocity physical appliance
- About WAN optimization on the Velocity physical appliance
- About the Veritas Remote Management Console on the Velocity physical appliance
- About Velocity physical appliance storage
- About users on the Velocity physical appliance
- About Velocity physical appliance checkpoints
- About factory reset on the Velocity physical appliance
- Configuring network address settings on the Velocity physical appliance
- Monitoring the Velocity physical appliance
- Velocity physical appliance security
- About Velocity physical appliance user account privileges
- About the Velocity physical appliance intrusion detection system
- About Velocity physical appliance operating system security
- Recommended IPMI settings on the Velocity physical appliance
- Best practices
- Troubleshooting
- Glossary
- Context-sensitive topics
- Section I. Velocity shell menu commands
- Introduction
- Appendix A. Main > Manage > Storage
- Appendix B. Main > Manage > Cloud
- Appendix C. Main > Manage > Software
- Appendix D. Main > Monitor
- Appendix E. Main > Network
- Appendix F. Main > Settings
- Appendix G. Main > Support
About Velocity physical appliance checkpoints
The appliance uses a checkpoint system to protect the appliance system configuration during software upgrades. Appliance checkpoints are point-in-time snapshots of the appliance system state and configuration. You can use appliance checkpoints to restore (rollback) your appliance to a particular point in time in case of system failure.
The appliance automatically creates checkpoints during software upgrades. However, you also have the option to create a custom user-directed checkpoint for future use.
Appliance checkpoints capture the following components:
Appliance operating system
Appliance software
Velocity software
Networking configuration
Any applied patches
Note:
Appliance checkpoints do not capture any data that is in storage. Any backup data that has been stored by Velocity since the last checkpoint will still be present after a rollback.
Table: Checkpoint types
Type | Description |
---|---|
Pre-upgrade | Created automatically as part of an appliance software upgrade. If the software upgrade fails for some reason, the appliance uses this checkpoint to rollback to a pre-upgrade state. After successful upgrades to minor software version, you can still access the pre-upgrade checkpoint to use for rollback. |
Post-upgrade | Created automatically as part of an appliance software upgrade. |
User-directed | A custom checkpoint that you create at any point in time. Only one user-directed checkpoint is allowed at any given time. If you create a new user-directed checkpoint, any existing user-directed checkpoint is replaced. |
Factory reset | Created automatically during the installation of each new appliance. The factory reset checkpoint is used to revert the appliance to factory settings. Common uses for this checkpoint include repurposing the appliance or reconfiguring the appliance from scratch. |