NetBackup™ Deployment Guide for Azure Kubernetes Services (AKS) Cluster
- Introduction to NetBackup on AKS
- Deployment with environment operators
- Assessing cluster configuration before deployment
- Deploying NetBackup
- Preparing the environment for NetBackup installation on AKS
- Recommendations of NetBackup deployment on AKS
- Limitations of NetBackup deployment on AKS
- About primary server CR and media server CR
- Monitoring the status of the CRs
- Updating the CRs
- Deleting the CRs
- Configuring NetBackup IT Analytics for NetBackup deployment
- Managing NetBackup deployment using VxUpdate
- Migrating the node pool for primary or media servers
- Deploying MSDP Scaleout
- Monitoring NetBackup
- Monitoring MSDP Scaleout
- Managing the Load Balancer service
- Performing catalog backup and recovery
- Managing MSDP Scaleout
- About MSDP Scaleout maintenance
- Uninstalling MSDP Scaleout from AKS
- Troubleshooting
- View the list of operator resources
- View the list of product resources
- View operator logs
- View primary logs
- Pod restart failure due to liveness probe time-out
- Socket connection failure
- Resolving an invalid license key issue
- Resolving an issue where external IP address is not assigned to a NetBackup server's load balancer services
- Resolving the issue where the NetBackup server pod is not scheduled for long time
- Resolving an issue where the Storage class does not exist
- Resolving an issue where the primary server or media server deployment does not proceed
- Resolving an issue of failed probes
- Resolving token issues
- Resolving an issue related to insufficient storage
- Resolving an issue related to invalid nodepool
- Resolving a token expiry issue
- Resolve an issue related to inconsistency in file ownership
- Resolve an issue related to KMS database
- Resolve an issue related to pulling an image from the container registry
- Resolving an issue related to recovery of data
- Check primary server status
- Pod status field shows as pending
- Ensure that the container is running the patched image
- Getting EEB information from an image, a running container, or persistent data
- Appendix A. CR template
About NetBackup operator logs
Note the following about the NetBackup operator logs.
NetBackup operator logs can be checked using the operator pod logs using the kubectl logs <Netbackup-operator-pod-name> -c netbackup-operator -n <netbackup-opertaor-namespace> command.
NetBackup operator provides different log levels that can be changed before deployment of NetBackup operator.
The following log levels are provided:
-1 - Debug
0 - Info
1 - Warn
2 - Error
By default, the log level is 0.
It is recommended to use 0, 1, or 2 log level depending on your requirement.
Before you deploy NetBackup operator, you can change the log levels using
operator_patch.yaml.After deployment if user changes operator log level, to reflect it, user has to perform the following steps:
Apply the operator changes using the kubectl apply -k <operator-folder> command.
Restart the operator pod. Delete the pod using the kubectl delete pod/<netbackup-opertaor-pod-name> -n <namespace> command. Kubernetes will recreate the NetBackup operator pod again after deletion.
Config-Checker jobs that run before deployment of primary server and media server creates the pod. The logs for config checker executions can be checked using the kubectl logs <configchecker-pod-name> -n <netbackup-operator-namespace> command.
Installation logs of NetBackup primary server and media server can be retrieved using any of the following methods:
Run the kubectl logs <primaryServer/MediaServer-Pod-Name> -n <primaryServer/mediaServer namespace> command.
Execute the following command in the primary server/media server pod and check the
/mnt/nblogs/setup-server.logfile:kubectl exec -it -n <PrimaryServer/MediaServer-namespace> <primaryServer/MediaServer-Pod-Name> -- bash