Veritas NetBackup™ Administrator's Guide, Volume I
- Section I. About NetBackup
- Section II. Configuring hosts
- Configuring Host Properties
- About the NetBackup Host Properties
- Access Control properties
- Bandwidth properties
- Busy File Settings properties
- Client Attributes properties
- Client Settings properties for UNIX clients
- Client Settings properties for Windows clients
- Data Classification properties
- Default Job Priorities properties
- Encryption properties
- Exchange properties
- Exclude Lists properties
- Fibre Transport properties
- Firewall properties
- General Server properties
- Global Attributes properties
- Logging properties
- Login Banner Configuration properties
- Media properties
- Network Settings properties
- Port Ranges properties
- Preferred Network properties
- Resilient Network properties
- Restore Failover properties
- Retention Periods properties
- Scalable Storage properties
- Servers properties
- SharePoint properties
- SLP Parameters properties
- Throttle Bandwidth properties
- Universal Settings properties
- User Account Settings properties
- Configuration options for NetBackup servers
- THROTTLE_BANDWIDTH option for NetBackup servers
- Configuration options for NetBackup clients
- IGNORE_XATTR option for NetBackup clients
- VXSS_NETWORK option for NetBackup clients
- Configuring server groups
- Configuring host credentials
- Managing media servers
- Configuring Host Properties
- Section III. Configuring storage
- Configuring disk storage
- Configuring robots and tape drives
- About configuring robots and tape drives in NetBackup
- Adding a robot to NetBackup manually
- Managing robots
- Adding a tape drive to NetBackup manually
- Adding a tape drive path
- Correlating tape drives and SCSI addresses on Windows hosts
- Correlating tape drives and device files on UNIX hosts
- Managing tape drives
- Performing device diagnostics
- Configuring tape media
- About NetBackup volume pools
- About WORM media
- About adding volumes
- Configuring media settings
- Media settings options
- Media type (new media setting)
- Media settings options
- About barcodes
- Configuring barcode rules
- Configuring media ID generation rules
- Adding volumes by using the Actions menu
- Configuring media type mappings
- Managing volumes
- About exchanging a volume
- About frozen media
- About injecting and ejecting volumes
- About rescanning and updating barcodes
- About labeling NetBackup volumes
- About moving volumes
- About recycling a volume
- Managing volume pools
- Managing volume groups
- Inventorying robots
- About showing a robot's contents
- About updating the NetBackup volume configuration
- About the vmphyinv physical inventory utility
- Configuring storage units
- About the Storage utility
- Creating a storage unit
- About storage unit settings
- Absolute pathname to directory or absolute pathname to volume setting for storage units
- Maximum concurrent jobs storage unit setting
- Staging backups
- Creating a basic disk staging storage unit
- Configuring storage unit groups
- Section IV. Configuring storage lifecycle policies (SLPs)
- Configuring storage lifecycle policies
- Storage operations
- Index From Snapshot operation in an SLP
- Snapshot operation in an SLP
- Retention types for SLP operations
- Capacity managed retention type for SLP operations
- Storage lifecycle policy options
- Using a storage lifecycle policy to create multiple copies
- Storage lifecycle policy versions
- Section V. Configuring backups
- Creating backup policies
- Planning for policies
- Policy Attributes tab
- Policy storage (policy attribute)
- Policy volume pool (policy attribute)
- Take checkpoints every __ minutes (policy attribute)
- Backup Network Drives (policy attribute)
- Cross mount points (policy attribute)
- Encryption (policy attribute)
- Collect true image restore information (policy attribute) with and without move detection
- Use Accelerator (policy attribute)
- Enable optimized backup of Windows deduplicated volumes
- Use Replication Director (policy attributes)
- Schedule Attributes tab
- Type of backup (schedule attribute)
- Frequency (schedule attribute)
- Multiple copies (schedule attribute)
- Retention (schedule attribute)
- Media multiplexing (schedule attribute)
- Start Window tab
- Include Dates tab
- How open schedules affect calendar-based and frequency-based schedules
- About the Clients tab
- Backup Selections tab
- Adding backup selections to a policy
- Verifying the Backup Selections list
- Pathname rules for UNIX client backups
- About the directives on the Backup Selections list
- ALL_LOCAL_DRIVES directive
- Files that are excluded from backups by default
- Disaster Recovery tab
- Active Directory granular backups and recovery
- Synthetic backups
- Using the multiple copy synthetic backups method
- Protecting the NetBackup catalog
- Parts of the NetBackup catalog
- Protecting the NetBackup catalog
- Archiving the catalog and restoring from the catalog archive
- Estimating catalog space requirements
- About the NetBackup relational database
- About the NetBackup relational database (NBDB) installation
- Using the NetBackup Database Administration utility on Windows
- Using the NetBackup Database Administration utility on UNIX
- Post-installation tasks
- About backup and recovery procedures
- Managing backup images
- Creating backup policies
- Section VI. Configuring replication
- About NetBackup replication
- About NetBackup Auto Image Replication
- Viewing the replication topology for Auto Image Replication
- About the storage lifecycle policies required for Auto Image Replication
- Removing or replacing replication relationships in an Auto Image Replication configuration
- About NetBackup replication
- Section VII. Monitoring and reporting
- Monitoring NetBackup activity
- About the Jobs tab
- About the Daemons tab
- About the Processes tab
- About the Drives tab
- About the jobs database
- About pending requests and actions
- Reporting in NetBackup
- Using the Logging Assistant
- Monitoring NetBackup activity
- Section VIII. Administering NetBackup
- Management topics
- Accessing a remote server
- Using the NetBackup Remote Administration Console
- Run-time configuration options for the NetBackup Administration Console
- About improving NetBackup performance
- About adjusting time zones in the NetBackup Administration console
- Alternate server restores
- About performing alternate server restores
- Managing client backups and restores
- About client-redirected restores
- Powering down and rebooting NetBackup servers
- About Granular Recovery Technology
- About configuring Services for Network File System (NFS) on Windows 2012, 2012 R2, or 2016
- About configuring Services for Network File System (NFS) on Windows 2008 and 2008 R2
About Microsoft DFSR backups
Microsoft Distributed File System Replication (DFSR) service is a multi-master replication engine that is used to keep folders synchronized on multiple servers. To do this, each of these independent DFSR servers maintains a database which is essential in providing this service but is independent of the DFSR data that is being replicated. AlthoughNetBackup protects this database, as well as the DFSR data, there are some things to consider when restoring both.
A DFSR server maintains information in its database that is used by other DFSR servers to identify and validate replication changes that may be needed. One bit of information is a globally unique version number (GVSN), which increases monotonically with every replicated file or folder alteration. It can be thought of as a version or generation number for each DFSR database on each replicated volume.
A problem occurs if a DFSR server is restored to an earlier database version. The other servers, which monitor and remember each other's numbers, will be confused when presented with the older number. At this point replication is impossible and will stop until this is corrected. Consider carefully if your restore actually needs to include the DFSR database, in addition to the DFSR data. This is likely to happen if you have a virtualized DFSR server and you restore it to a snapshot that had been taken earlier. Please refer to the Microsoft documentation on managing and using DFSR for additional details.
In an environment that has DFSR, two changes occur in NetBackup, as follows:
To preserve data integrity, the folder or folders that host the Shared Replica DFSR data are excluded automatically by NetBackup from normal file system backups.
The top-level DFSR shared folders become part of the Shadow Copy Components. Therefore, the data is snapped consistently by Windows Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) before each backup.
Microsoft supports only the VSS writer for DFSR managed data backups. The VSS writer stops and restarts the DFS Replication service automatically. Veritas recommends that you schedule the backups to coincide with a period of low activity. (If you stop the replication service manually, Microsoft change journal problems may occur. Specifically, Update Sequence Number (USN) Journal wrap may occur.)
Veritas recommends that you back up DFSR data based on the amount of data under DFSR control as described in Table: Microsoft DFSR backup recommendations.
Table: Microsoft DFSR backup recommendations
Amount of data | Veritas recommendation |
---|---|
Less than 50 GBs | Configure one policy as follows:
One policy can back up the data within a reasonable time window. |
More than 50 GBs | Configure one backup policy for each DFSR server, and in that policy specify only the replication folders. A policy for each host's replication data ensures that the DFSR data is backed up within a reasonable time window. For each DFSR server host, do the following:
|
The DFSR servers must be configured for NetBackup Administration Console master server host properties Client Attributes tab.
. The snapshot provider must be . Configure these properties in theSee Windows Open File Backup tab of the Client Attributes properties.
During a backup, Windows writes the following event ID messages to the application event log of a DFSR host:
Event ID=1102 Severity=Informational The DFS Replication service has temporarily stopped replication because another application is performing a backup or restore operation. Replication will resume after the backup or restore operation has finished.
Event ID=1104 Severity=Informational The DFS Replication service successfully restarted replication after a backup or restore operation.
To restore DFSR data, use the NetBackup Backup, Archive and Restore client interface to browse the Shadow Copy Components
for the files or folders to restore, as follows:
Shadow Copy Components:\User Data\Distributed File System Replication\DfsrReplicatedFolders\folder_name
The following Veritas article provides a more detailed procedure about configuring DFSR backups: