Veritas NetBackup™ for VMware Administrator's Guide
- Introduction
- Required tasks: overview
- Notes and prerequisites
- Configure NetBackup communication with VMware
- Adding NetBackup credentials for VMware
- Configure NetBackup policies for VMware
- VMware backup options
- Exclude Disks tab
- Configure a VMware Intelligent Policy
- Reduce the size of backups
- Back up virtual machines
- Use Accelerator to back up virtual machines
- Restore virtual machines
- Restoring the full VMware virtual machine
- Virtual Machine Recovery dialog boxes (restore to original location)
- Virtual Machine Recovery dialogs boxes (restore to alternate location)
- Restoring VMware virtual machine disks by using Backup, Archive, and Restore
- Restoring VMware virtual machine disks by using NetBackup commands
- Restoring individual VMware virtual machine files
- Browse and search virtual machines for restore
- Restore virtual machines with Instant Recovery
- Use NetBackup for vCloud Director
- Virtual machine recovery dialog boxes for vCloud Director
- Best practices and more information
- Troubleshooting
- Appendix A. NetBackup commands to back up and restore virtual machines
- Using NetBackup commands to create a VMware policy
- Appendix B. Configuring services for NFS on Windows
- About configuring services for NFS on Windows 2012 or 2016 (NetBackup for VMware)
- About configuring services for NFS on Windows 2008 and 2008 R2 (NetBackup for VMware)
- Appendix C. The Reuse VM selection query results option
- Appendix D. Backup of VMware raw devices (RDM)
Notes on the hotadd transport mode
NetBackup supports several transport modes for sending snapshot data between the VMware datastore and the VMware backup host during a backup or restore. One of those transport modes (hotadd) is used when the VMware backup host is installed in a virtual machine.
Note the following about the hotadd transport mode:
The VMware backup host must be installed in a virtual machine.
The following is a VMware requirement: The virtual machine to back up and the virtual machine that contains the hotadd backup host must reside in the same VMware datacenter. The same VMware requirement applies to virtual machine restore: The virtual machine to restore and the virtual machine that contains the hotadd restore host must reside in the same VMware datacenter.
For hotadd backup, Veritas recommends at least one hotadd backup host for each datacenter.
NetBackup does not support IDE disks on the virtual machine.
On the virtual machine to back up, no two disks should have the same name. (Identical names can occur if the disks reside on different datastores.)
The ESX server (where the backup-host virtual machine resides) must have access to the datastore of the virtual machines that you want to back up.
The datastore for the backup-host virtual machine must have some free space before the hotadd backup begins. Otherwise, the backup may fail.
Restores that use the hotadd or SAN transport modes do not include the VM's metadata changes in the restore. The status log of the NetBackup job contains messages similar to the following:
07/25/2013 12:37:29 - Info tar (pid=16257) INF - Transport Type = hotadd 07/25/2013 12:42:41 - Warning bpbrm (pid=20895) from client <client_address>: WRN - Cannot set metadata (key:geometry. biosSectors, value:62) when using san or hotadd transport.
As a workaround, retry the restore with a different transport mode (nbd or nbdssl).
This problem is a known VMware issue. For more details, see the VMware VDDK 6.0 release notes.
Locking timeouts in the VMware VDDK may cause simultaneous hotadd backups from the same VMware backup host to fail.
See Simultaneous hotadd backups (from the same VMware backup host) fail with status 13.
On a Windows Server backup host (proxy) with the hotadd transport mode, set the Windows SAN policy to onlineAll.
For more information on hotadd, see the following article:
For a list of VMware restrictions on the hotadd transport mode, refer to VMware's documentation. For example:
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