NetBackup™ Deployment Guide for Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Services (EKS) Cluster
- Introduction to NetBackup on EKS
- Deployment with environment operators
- Assessing cluster configuration before deployment
- Deploying NetBackup
- Preparing the environment for NetBackup installation on EKS
- Recommendations of NetBackup deployment on EKS
- Limitations of NetBackup deployment on EKS
- 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 group for primary or media servers
- Upgrading NetBackup
- Deploying Snapshot Manager
- Migration and upgrade of Snapshot Manager
- Deploying MSDP Scaleout
- Upgrading MSDP Scaleout
- Monitoring NetBackup
- Monitoring MSDP Scaleout
- Monitoring Snapshot Manager deployment
- Managing the Load Balancer service
- Performing catalog backup and recovery
- Managing MSDP Scaleout
- About MSDP Scaleout maintenance
- Uninstalling MSDP Scaleout from EKS
- Uninstalling Snapshot Manager
- 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 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
- Resolving the certificate error issue in NetBackup operator pod logs
- Resolving the primary server connection issue
- Primary pod is in pending state for a long duration
- Host mapping conflict in NetBackup
- NetBackup messaging queue broker take more time to start
- Local connection is getting treated as insecure connection
- Issue with capacity licensing reporting which takes longer time
- Backing up data from Primary server's /mnt/nbdata/ directory fails with primary server as a client
- Wrong EFS ID is provided in environment.yaml file
- Primary pod is in ContainerCreating state
- Webhook displays an error for PV not found
- Appendix A. CR template
Notes for Load Balancer service
Note the following points:
After deployment of primary server or media server, updating the DNS name, IP address and subnet through CR is not allowed.
If mistakenly user has added wrong values:
User wants to update IP address and subnet, you must delete the CR and update the CR yaml and reapply it.
User wants to update the DNS name, you must delete the respective CR and delete the respective PVC and PV as well.
Note:
Be caution while performing this step, this may lead to data loss.
Before using the DNS and its respective IP address in CR yaml, you can verify the IP address and its DNS resolution using nslookup.
In case of media server scaleout, ensure that the number of IP addresses mentioned in IPList in networkLoadBalancer section matches the replica count.
If nslookup is done for loadbalancer IP inside the container, it returns the DNS in the form of . This is Kubernetes behavior. Outside the pod, the loadbalancer service IP address is resolved to the configured DNS. The nbbptestconnection command inside the pods can provide a mismatch in DNS names, which can be ignored.