NetBackup™ Web UI VMware Administrator's Guide
- Introducing the NetBackup web user interface
- Monitoring NetBackup
- Managing VMware servers
- Add VMware servers
- Validate and update VMware server credentials
- Browse VMware servers
- Remove VMware servers
- Create an intelligent VM group
- Remove an intelligent VM group
- Add a VMware access host
- Remove a VMware access host
- Change resource limits for VMware resource types
- Change the autodiscovery frequency of VMware assets
- Discover VMware server assets manually
- Protecting VMs
- Instant access
- Instant rollback
- Continuous data protection
- CDP terminology
- CDP Architecture
- About continuous data protection
- Prerequisites
- Capacity-based licensing for CDP
- Configuring CDP
- Defining the CDP gateway
- Sizing considerations
- Limiting concurrent CDP backup jobs
- Controlling full sync
- Monitoring CDP jobs
- Using accelerators with CDP
- Recovering CDP protected VMs
- Some limitations of CDP
- Troubleshooting for CDP
- VM recovery
- Troubleshooting VMware operations
- Errors when adding VMware servers
- Errors when browsing VMware servers
- Errors for the Status for a newly discovered VM
- Error when downloading files from an instant access VM
- Troubleshooting backups and restores of excluded virtual disks
- Restore fails for a virtual machine with multiple datastores
- Errors when you change the recovery destination
Prerequisites and limitations of VMware agentless restores
You must provision VxUpdate packages for all platforms for which you have virtual machines where you want to perform agentless recovery.
You must have an account with administrator or root permissions on the target virtual machine.
The target VM is where the files are recovered. It must be powered on and have VMware Tools installed.
The target VM should have at least one Paravirtual Controller with available LUNs or available space for Paravirtual SCSI Controller.
The default staging location on the target VM is
%TEMP%or%TMP%for Windows and the root directory (/) for Linux.The staging location must exist on the target VM file system.
You must have the latest version of VMware Tools installed to perform agentless restores.
Agentless restores to Windows target VMs can fail if you use an account other than the built-in Administrator for Windows Guest OS account as the . The restore fails because is enabled. More information is available:
https://www.veritas.com/content/support/en_US/article.100046138.html
VMware agentless restores can only be used for the restore of files and folders.
In some instances, when you perform an agentless restores, orphaned VMs starting with
NB_are left behind. Using the ESX server credentials to perform the restore on the target VM even though the vCenter manages the ESX server can cause this condition. This condition is a known limitation of VMware. To resolve the problem, register the vCenter in NetBackup and use vCenter credentials for backups and restores. The orphaned VMs starting withNB_can be removed from inventory manually by logging into the vCenter using VMware vSphere Client.Restore job fails if NetBackup is unable to use the directory that is specified in the TMP or TEMP environment variable as the staging directory.
Restore job fails if NetBackup does not have sufficient privileges to the staging directory or if there is insufficient space in the staging directory.
If you select and options, you risk an incorrect restore if it contains multiple files with the same file name. In this case, the last file that is restored is the one that is present when the restore completes.
If you select and you do not select , the restore succeeds, and the first file that is restored is present when the restore completes. To prevent this issue, do not select when restoring multiple files with the same name.
The and options are only applicable to files. They are not available for directories.
Multiple restore jobs to the same VM are not supported. The user must start another job as needed for that VM once the first restore job for that VM has completed.
If a backup and a restore occur simultaneously on the same VM, one or both jobs can have unexpected results. If a backup or a restore exits with a non-zero NetBackup Status Code, one possible cause is simultaneous jobs occurring on the same VM.
Veritas does not recommend VMware agentless restore if a NetBackup client already exists on the target VM. The NetBackup administrator must use the agent-based restore in such cases.
For the current list of guest operating systems that NetBackup supports for the target VM, see Supported guest operating systems for VMware in the following document: