Veritas NetBackup™ CloudPoint Install and Upgrade Guide
- Section I. CloudPoint installation and configuration
- Preparing for CloudPoint installation
- About the deployment approach
- Deciding where to run CloudPoint
- About deploying CloudPoint in the cloud
- Meeting system requirements
- CloudPoint host sizing recommendations
- CloudPoint extension sizing recommendations
- Creating an instance or preparing the host to install CloudPoint
- Installing container platform (Docker, Podman)
- Creating and mounting a volume to store CloudPoint data
- Verifying that specific ports are open on the instance or physical host
- Preparing CloudPoint for backup from snapshot jobs
- Deploying CloudPoint using container images
- Deploying CloudPoint extensions
- Before you begin installing CloudPoint extensions
- Downloading the CloudPoint extension
- Preparing to install the extension on a VM
- Installing the CloudPoint extension on a VM
- Preparing to install the extension on a managed Kubernetes cluster (AKS) in Azure
- Preparing to install the extension on a managed Kubernetes cluster (EKS) in AWS
- Install extension using the Kustomize and CR YAMLs
- Installing the CloudPoint extension on Azure (AKS)
- Installing the CloudPoint extension on AWS (EKS)
- Managing the extensions
- CloudPoint cloud plug-ins
- CloudPoint storage array plug-ins
- How to configure the CloudPoint storage array plug-ins?
- NetApp plug-in configuration notes
- ACL configuration on NetApp array
- Nutanix Files plug-in configuration notes
- Configuring ACL for Nutanix array
- Dell EMC Unity array plug-in configuration notes
- FUJITSU AF/DX plug-in configuration notes
- NetApp NAS plug-in configuration notes
- Dell EMC PowerStore plug-in configuration notes
- Dell EMC PowerStore NAS plug-in configuration notes
- Dell EMC PowerFlex plug-in configuration notes
- Dell EMC XtremIO SAN plug-in configuration notes
- Pure Storage FlashArray plug-in configuration notes
- Pure Storage FlashBlade plug-in configuration notes
- IBM Storwize plug-in configuration notes
- HPE RMC plug-in configuration notes
- HPE XP plug-in configuration notes
- Hitachi plug-in configuration notes
- Hitachi (HDS VSP 5000) plug-in configuration notes
- InfiniBox plug-in configuration notes
- Dell EMC PowerScale (Isilon) plug-in configuration notes
- Dell EMC PowerMax and VMax plug-in configuration notes
- Qumulo plug-in configuration notes
- CloudPoint application agents and plug-ins
- Microsoft SQL plug-in configuration notes
- Oracle plug-in configuration notes
- About the installation and configuration process
- Preparing to install the Linux-based agent
- Preparing to install the Windows-based agent
- Downloading and installing the CloudPoint agent
- Registering the Linux-based agent
- Registering the Windows-based agent
- Configuring the CloudPoint application plug-in
- Configuring VSS to store shadow copies on the originating drive
- Creating a NetBackup protection plan for cloud assets
- Subscribing cloud assets to a NetBackup protection plan
- Restore requirements and limitations for Microsoft SQL Server
- Restore requirements and limitations for Oracle
- Additional steps required after an Oracle snapshot restore
- Steps required before restoring SQL AG databases
- Recovering a SQL database to the same location
- Recovering a SQL database to an alternate location
- Additional steps required after a SQL Server snapshot restore
- Additional steps required after restoring SQL AG databases
- SQL snapshot or restore and granular restore operations fail if the Windows instance loses connectivity with the CloudPoint host
- Disk-level snapshot restore fails if the original disk is detached from the instance
- Additional steps required after restoring an AWS RDS database instance
- Protecting assets with CloudPoint's agentless feature
- Volume Encryption in NetBackup CloudPoint
- CloudPoint security
- Preparing for CloudPoint installation
- Section II. CloudPoint maintenance
- CloudPoint logging
- Upgrading CloudPoint
- Uninstalling CloudPoint
- Preparing to uninstall CloudPoint
- Backing up CloudPoint
- Unconfiguring CloudPoint plug-ins
- Unconfiguring CloudPoint agents
- Removing the CloudPoint agents
- Removing CloudPoint from a standalone Docker host environment
- Removing CloudPoint extensions - VM-based or managed Kubernetes cluster-based
- Restoring CloudPoint
- Troubleshooting CloudPoint
CloudPoint host sizing recommendations
The CloudPoint host configuration depends primarily on the number of workloads and also the type of workloads that you wish to protect. It is also dependent on the maximum number of simultaneous operations running on the CloudPoint server at its peak performance capacity.
Another factor that affects performance is how you use CloudPoint for protecting your assets. If you use the CloudPoint agentless option to discover and protect your assets, then the performance will differ depending on the type of workload.
With agentless, CloudPoint transfers the plug-in data to the application host, performs the discovery and configuration tasks, and then removes the plug-in package from the application host.
Veritas recommends the following configurations for the CloudPoint host:
Table: Typical CloudPoint host configuration based on the number of concurrent tasks
Workload metric | CloudPoint host configuration |
|---|---|
Up to 16 concurrent operational tasks | CPU: 2 CPUs Memory: 16 GB For example, in the AWS cloud, the CloudPoint host specifications should be an equivalent of a t3.xlarge instance. |
Up to 32 concurrent operational tasks | CPU: 4 - 8 CPUs Memory: 32 GB or more For example, in the AWS cloud, the CloudPoint host specifications should be an equivalent of a t3.2xlarge or a higher type of instance. |
General considerations and guidelines:
Consider the following points while choosing a configuration for the CloudPoint host:
To achieve better performance in a high workload environment, Veritas recommends that you deploy the CloudPoint host in the same location as that of the application hosts.
If you are using the agentless option, Veritas recommends that you allocate enough space to the
/tmpdirectory on the application host. CloudPoint uses this directory for extracting the plug-in configuration files.Depending on the number of workloads, the amount of plug-in data that is transmitted from the CloudPoint host can get really large in size. The network latency also plays a key role in such a case. You might see a difference in the overall performance depending on these factors.
If you wish to configure multiple workloads using the agentless option, then the performance will be dependent on factors such as the network bandwidth and the location of the CloudPoint host with respect to the application workload instances. You can, if desired, bump up the CloudPoint host's CPU, memory, and network configuration to achieve a performance improvement in parallel configurations of agentless application hosts.
In cases where the number of concurrent operations is higher than what the CloudPoint host configuration capacity can handle, CloudPoint automatically puts the operations in a job queue. The queued jobs are picked up only after the running operations are completed.