Veritas Access Installation Guide

Last Published:
Product(s): Access (7.4)
Platform: Linux
  1. Introducing Veritas Access
    1.  
      About Veritas Access
  2. Licensing in Veritas Access
    1.  
      About Veritas Access product licensing
  3. System requirements
    1.  
      Important release information
    2. System requirements
      1. Linux requirements
        1.  
          Operating system RPM installation requirements and operating system patching
        2.  
          Kernel RPMs that are required to be installed with exact predefined RPM versions
        3.  
          OL kernel RPMs that are required to be installed with exact predefined RPM versions
        4.  
          Required operating system RPMs for OL 7.3
        5.  
          Required operating system RPMs for OL 7.4
        6.  
          Required operating system RPMs for RHEL 7.3
        7.  
          Required operating system RPMs for RHEL 7.4
      2.  
        Software requirements for installing Veritas Access in a VMware ESXi environment
      3.  
        Hardware requirements for installing Veritas Access virtual machines
      4.  
        Management Server Web browser support
      5.  
        Supported NetBackup versions
      6.  
        Supported OpenStack versions
      7.  
        Supported Oracle versions and host operating systems
      8.  
        Supported IP version 6 Internet standard protocol
    3. Network and firewall requirements
      1.  
        NetBackup ports
      2.  
        OpenDedup ports and disabling the iptable rules
      3.  
        CIFS protocols and firewall ports
    4.  
      Maximum configuration limits
  4. Preparing to install Veritas Access
    1.  
      Overview of the installation process
    2.  
      Hardware requirements for the nodes
    3.  
      Connecting the network hardware
    4. About obtaining IP addresses
      1.  
        About calculating IP address requirements
      2.  
        Reducing the number of IP addresses required at installation time
    5.  
      About checking the storage configuration
  5. Deploying virtual machines in VMware ESXi for Veritas Access installation
    1.  
      Setting up networking in VMware ESXi
    2.  
      Creating a datastore for the boot disk and LUNs
    3.  
      Creating a virtual machine for Veritas Access installation
  6. Installing and configuring a cluster
    1.  
      Installation overview
    2.  
      Summary of the installation steps
    3.  
      Before you install
    4. Installing the operating system on each node of the cluster
      1.  
        About the driver node
      2.  
        Installing the operating system on the target Veritas Access cluster
      3.  
        Installing the Oracle Linux operating system on the target Veritas Access cluster
    5. Installing Veritas Access on the target cluster nodes
      1.  
        Installing and configuring the Veritas Access software on the cluster
      2.  
        Veritas Access Graphical User Interface
    6. About managing the NICs, bonds, and VLAN devices
      1.  
        Selecting the public NICs
      2.  
        Selecting the private NICs
      3.  
        Excluding a NIC
      4.  
        Including a NIC
      5.  
        Creating a NIC bond
      6.  
        Removing a NIC bond
      7.  
        Removing a NIC from the bond list
    7. About VLAN tagging
      1.  
        Creating a VLAN device
      2.  
        Removing a VLAN device
      3.  
        Limitations of VLAN tagging
    8.  
      Replacing an Ethernet interface card
    9.  
      Configuring I/O fencing
    10.  
      About configuring Veritas NetBackup
    11.  
      About enabling kdump during an Veritas Access configuration
    12.  
      Reconfiguring the Veritas Access cluster name and network
    13.  
      Configuring a KMS server on the Veritas Access cluster
  7. Automating Veritas Access installation and configuration using response files
    1.  
      About response files
    2.  
      Performing a silent Veritas Access installation
    3.  
      Response file variables to install and configure Veritas Access
    4.  
      Sample response file for Veritas Access installation and configuration
  8. Displaying and adding nodes to a cluster
    1.  
      About the Veritas Access installation states and conditions
    2.  
      Displaying the nodes in the cluster
    3.  
      Before adding new nodes in the cluster
    4.  
      Adding a node to the cluster
    5.  
      Adding a node in mixed mode environment
    6.  
      Deleting a node from the cluster
    7.  
      Shutting down the cluster nodes
  9. Upgrading Veritas Access and operating system
    1.  
      Upgrading the operating system and Veritas Access
  10. Upgrading Veritas Access using a rolling upgrade
    1.  
      About the rolling upgrades
    2.  
      Supported rolling upgrade paths for upgrades on RHEL and Oracle Linux
    3.  
      Performing a rolling upgrade using the installer
  11. Uninstalling Veritas Access
    1.  
      Before you uninstall Veritas Access
    2. Uninstalling Veritas Access using the installer
      1.  
        Removing Veritas Access 7.4 RPMs
      2.  
        Running uninstall from the Veritas Access 7.4 disc
  12. Appendix A. Installation reference
    1.  
      Installation script options
  13. Appendix B. Configuring the secure shell for communications
    1.  
      Manually configuring passwordless SSH
    2.  
      Setting up the SSH and the RSH connections
  14. Appendix C. Manual deployment of Veritas Access
    1.  
      Deploying Veritas Access manually on a two-node cluster in a non-SSH environment
    2.  
      Enabling internal sudo user communication in Veritas Access

Connecting the network hardware

Before you install the Veritas Access software, you must assemble a cluster by configuring all the nodes with the required network hardware, and connecting the Ethernet interfaces to the private and the public networks.

To assemble the cluster, do the following:

  • Determine a preferred location for the cluster.

  • Make sure that each node has at least two redundant Ethernet interfaces (gigabit Ethernet) to connect to a private network for cluster internal control.

  • Make sure that each node has at least two additional Ethernet interfaces (gigabit Ethernet) to connect to the public network. You can use the public Ethernet interfaces from the embedded interfaces on the motherboard or from the add-on (PCI) network adapter interfaces.

  • To connect the public NICs, connect one end of the Ethernet cables to the Ethernet interfaces on the back of the nodes. Connect the other end of the Ethernet cables to your corporate network so that they can reach the gateway. At least two public interfaces are required for each node.

  • To connect the private NICs, use the first two available NICs when sorted by NIC name. Available NICs are those not connected to the public network or excluded from the node.

    For example, if your NICs are eth1, eth2, eth3, and eth4, and none of the NICs are connected to the public network or excluded, then use eth1 and eth2 as the private NICs.

    Connect one end of the Ethernet cables to Ethernet interface 1 and 2 on the back of the nodes. For a 2-node cluster, connect the other end of the Ethernet cables to the corresponding Ethernet interfaces on the second node. For a cluster with more than 2 nodes, connect the other end of the Ethernet cables to a dedicated switch or VLAN.

  • Ask your network administrator for the IP addresses to use in the Veritas Access installation. The number of IP addresses you need depends on the number of nodes and number of network interface cards in your cluster.

    You need at least one IP address per node per public interface. For virtual IP addresses, you can configure the virtual IP addresses later in the CLISH if you input 0 for the number of virtual IP addresses per NIC during installation time.

    Veritas Access supports both Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) or Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6), but they cannot be mixed.

    Physical IP address

    An IP address that is associated with a specific Ethernet interface address and cannot automatically be failed over.

    Virtual IP address (VIP)

    An IP address whose association to a specific Ethernet interface (VIP) can be failed over to other interfaces on other nodes by the Veritas Access software.

    Console IP address

    A dedicated virtual IP address that is used to communicate with the Veritas Access cluster Management Console. This virtual IP address is assigned to the master node. If the master node fails, the Veritas Access software automatically selects a new master node from the cluster and fails the console IP address over to it.

Figure: Private network configurations: four-node cluster shows a diagram of a four-node cluster.

Figure: Private network configurations: four-node cluster

Private network configurations: four-node cluster

Note:

Two or more Veritas Access private networks cannot be configured on the same IPv4 network.