Veritas NetBackup™ OpenStorage Solutions Guide for Disk
- Introducing disk appliance storage solutions
- Planning your deployment
- Planning your OpenStorage deployment
- About OpenStorage requirements and limitations
- About OpenStorage storage servers for backups
- About OpenStorage server credentials
- About OpenStorage data movers for backups
- About the OpenStorage plug-in
- About OpenStorage disk pools for backups
- About OpenStorage optimized duplication and replication
- About OpenStorage optimized synthetic backups
- About storage unit groups for OpenStorage
- About OpenStorage direct to tape
- Provisioning the storage
- Licensing OpenStorage
- Configuring OpenStorage in NetBackup
- Configuring OpenStorage disk appliance storage
- Configuring an OpenStorage storage server for backups
- Configuring an OpenStorage disk pool for backups
- Configuring an OpenStorage storage unit
- Configuring OpenStorage optimized synthetic backups
- Configuring OpenStorage direct to tape
- Configuring optimized duplication to an OpenStorage device within the same NetBackup domain
- Configuring replication to an OpenStorage device in a different domain
- About storage lifecycle policies
- About the storage lifecycle policies required for Auto Image Replication
- Creating a storage lifecycle policy
- Creating a backup policy
- Adding OpenStorage functionality to an existing environment
- Managing OpenStorage
- Managing OpenStorage storage servers
- Viewing OpenStorage storage servers
- Determining OpenStorage storage server state
- Changing OpenStorage storage server properties
- Setting OpenStorage storage server attributes
- Removing OpenStorage storage server attributes
- Updating an OpenStorage storage server to reflect plug-in updates
- Deleting an OpenStorage storage server
- Managing OpenStorage server credentials
- Managing OpenStorage data movers
- Managing OpenStorage disk pools
- Viewing OpenStorage disk pools
- Determining OpenStorage disk pool state
- Changing OpenStorage disk pool state
- Determining OpenStorage disk volume state
- Changing OpenStorage disk volume state
- Changing OpenStorage disk pool properties
- Setting OpenStorage disk pool attributes
- Removing OpenStorage disk pool attributes
- Adding volumes to an OpenStorage disk pool
- Merging OpenStorage disk pools
- Removing a volume from an OpenStorage disk pool
- Updating an OpenStorage disk pool to reflect plug-in updates
- Deleting an OpenStorage disk pool
- Monitoring OpenStorage storage capacity and usage
- Viewing OpenStorage disk reports
- Reporting on Auto Image Replication jobs
- About catalog backups to OpenStorage devices
- About restoring from OpenStorage backup copies
- About restoring from a backup at a target master domain
- Managing OpenStorage storage servers
- Troubleshooting
NetBackup OpenStorage log files
You can monitor NetBackup OpenStorage activity and status by viewing the NetBackup log files.
Some NetBackup commands or processes write messages to their own log files. For those commands and processes, the log directories must exist so that the utility can write log messages.
See Creating NetBackup log file directories for OpenStorage.
Other processes use Veritas unified log (VxUL) files. Each process has a corresponding VxUL originator ID. VxUL uses a standardized name and file format for log files. To view VxUL log files, you must use the NetBackup vxlogview command.
More information about how to view and manage VxUL log files is available. See the NetBackup Logging Reference Guide:
http://www.veritas.com/docs/DOC5332
The following are the component identifiers for log messages:
An sts_ prefix relates to the interaction with the plug-in that writes to and reads from the storage.
For OpenStorage, the storage vendor provides the plug-in.
An encrypt prefix relates to interaction with the encryption plug-in.
Most interaction occurs on the NetBackup media servers. Therefore, the log files on the media servers that you use for disk operations are of most interest.
Warning:
The higher the log level, the greater the affect on NetBackup performance. Use a log level of 5 (the highest) only when directed to do so by a Veritas representative. A log level of 5 is for troubleshooting only.
Specify the NetBackup log levels in the host properties on the NetBackup master server. The log levels for some processes specific to certain options are set in configuration files as described in Table: NetBackup logs.
Table: NetBackup logs describes the logs.
Table: NetBackup logs
Activity | OID | Processes |
|---|---|---|
Backups and restores | N/A | Messages appear in the log files for the following processes:
The log files reside in the following directories:
|
Backups and restores | 117 | The nbjm Job Manager. |
Image cleanup, verification, import, and duplication | N/A | The bpdbm database manager log files. The log files reside in the following directories:
|
Credentials configuration | N/A | The tpconfig utility. The tpconfig command writes log files to the |
Device configuration | 111 | The nbemm process. |
Device configuration | 178 | The Disk Service Manager process that runs in the Enterprise Media Manager (EMM) process. |
Device configuration | 202 | The Storage Server Interface process that runs in the Remote Manager and Monitor Service. RMMS runs on media servers. |
Device configuration | 230 | The Remote Disk Service Manager interface (RDSM) that runs in the Remote Manager and Monitor Service. RMMS runs on media servers. |
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