Veritas NetBackup™ Logging Reference Guide
- Using logs
- About logs
- About UNIX system logs
- About log retention in NetBackup
- About limiting the size of unified and legacy logs
- About unified logging
- Gathering unified logs for NetBackup
- Types of unified logging messages
- File name format for unified logging
- Originator IDs for the entities that use unified logging
- About changing the location of unified log files
- About rolling over unified log files
- About recycling unified log files
- About using the vxlogview command to view unified logs
- About query strings used with the vxlogview command
- Examples of using vxlogview to view unified logs
- Examples of using vxlogmgr to manage unified logs
- Examples of using vxlogcfg to configure unified logs
- About legacy logging
- UNIX client processes that use legacy logging
- PC client processes that use legacy logging
- File name format for legacy logging
- Directory names for legacy debug logs for servers
- Directory names for legacy debug logs for media and device management
- How to control the amount of information written to legacy logging files
- About limiting the size and the retention of legacy logs
- Configuring the legacy log rotation
- About global logging levels
- Setting retention limits for logs on clients
- Logging options with the Windows Event Viewer
- Troubleshooting error messages in the NetBackup Administration Console
- Backup process and logging
- Media and device processes and logging
- Restore process and logging
- Advanced Backup and Restore Features
- Storage logging
- NetBackup Deduplication logging
- OpenStorage Technology (OST) logging
- Snapshot technologies
- Locating logs
- acsssi logging
- bpbackup logging
- bpbkar logging
- bpbrm logging
- bpcd logging
- bpcompatd logging
- bpdbm logging
- bpjobd logging
- bprd logging
- bprestore logging
- bptm logging
- daemon logging
- ltid logging
- nbemm logging
- nbjm logging
- nbpem logging
- nbproxy logging
- nbrb logging
- NetBackup web services logging
- NetBackup web server certificate logging
- PBX logging
- reqlib logging
- robots logging
- tar logging
- txxd and txxcd logging
- vnetd logging
- Java-based administration console logging
- About the Java-based administration console logging
- Java-based administration console logging process flow
- Setting up a secure channel between the Java-based administration console and bpjava-*
- Setting up a secure channel between the Java-based administration console and either nbsl or nbvault
- Java-based administration console logging configuration on NetBackup servers and clients
- Java-based remote administration console logging on a Windows computer where NetBackup is not installed
- Configuring and gathering logs when troubleshooting Java GUI issues
- Undo logging
OpenStorage Technology (OST) backup logging
The following shows the OpenStorage Technology (OST) configuration.
In this scenario, the client backs up the data directly to the media server and the media server accesses the vendor plug-in to transfer the data to the storage server.
For logging that is specific to OST, enable the following on the media server or plug-in host:
In the registry or
bp.conffile, set VERBOSE = 5.Ensure that the following directories exist under
/usr/openv/netbackup/logs(for Windows, useinstall_path\NetBackup\logs):bptmbpbrmbpstsinfo
Create the
volmgr/debug/tpcommanddirectory.Put VERBOSE in the
vm.conffile.Set DebugLevel=6 and DiagnosticLevel=6 for the following processes:
OID 178 (Disk Manager Service, dsm)
OID 202 (Storage Service, stssvc)
OID 220 (Disk Polling Service, dps)
OID 221 (Media Performance Monitor Service)
OID 222 (Remote Monitoring & Management Service)
OID 230 (Remote Disk Manager Service, rdsm)
OID 395 (STS Event Manager, stsem)
These OIDs all log to the
nbrmmsunified log file on the media server.Increase the vendor plug-in logging. Most vendors have their own plug-in logging in addition to what is logged within the NetBackup logs.
Reproduce the backup failure.
Within the NetBackup Administration Console, click on , open the job details and click the Detailed Status tab. It displays the media server host name that ran the backup and the bptm process ID number (PID).
Find a line similar to bptm(pid=value); this value is the bptm PID to locate in the bptm log.
Extract the bptm PID found in step 8 from the bptm log on the media server. This step gathers only the single-line entries; review the raw logs to see the multi-line log entries. In the following examples, 3144 is the bptm PID:
Windows command line:
findstr "\[3144." 092611.log > bptmpid3144.txt
UNIX/Linux command line:
grep "\[3144\]" log.092611 > bptmpid3144.txt
Gather the vendor specific plug-in logs that cover the dates from when the backup started and when it failed.