NetBackup™ NAS Administrator's Guide
- Section I. About NAS backups
- Section II. Using NAS-Data-Protection (D-NAS)
- D-NAS overview
- D-NAS Planning and Tuning
- Pre-requisites for D-NAS configuration
- Configuring Storage Lifecyle Policies for D-NAS
- About storage lifecycle policies
- Snapshot operation in SLP
- Creating a storage lifecycle policy for snapshots and snapshot replication
- Replication operation in the SLP
- Index from snapshot operation in an SLP
- Backup from snapshot operation in an SLP
- Duplication operation in an SLP
- Retention types for SLP operations
- Volume multi-host backup
- Configure D-NAS policy for NAS backups
- About policies for NAS backups
- Planning for policies
- Prerequisites for D-NAS policies
- Configure D-NAS policy for NAS volumes
- Policy attributes
- Creating schedule attributes for policies
- Configuring the Start window
- Configuring the exclude dates
- Configuring clients
- Configuring backup selections
- Configuring exclude lists
- Ordering of backup from snapshot jobs
- About mixed mode volumes
- Configuring include and exclude lists
- Auto-resume backup for incomplete backup jobs
- Using Accelerator
- Using Vendor Change Tracking
- Using true image restore
- Replication using D-NAS policy
- Restoring from D-NAS backups
- Multi-stream restores from D-NAS backups
- Considerations for restoring from D-NAS backups
- About the Overwrite existing file option during restore
- RBAC role for D-NAS restores
- Scanning for malware
- Restore everything to a different location
- Restore individual files and folders to different locations
- Original location restores for D-NAS Policy
- Point-in-time rollback
- Multi-stream restores from D-NAS backups
- Troubleshooting
- Troubleshooting
- Setting the log level
- Logging directories for Linux platforms
- Logging folders for Windows platforms
- Logging folders for multi-stream restore
- Exclude list is not working during backup
- Restore from a snapshot fails with status 133
- Backup from snapshot jobs do not start after the snapshot job completes successfully
- Backup from snapshot fails with error 50
- Backup from snapshot parent job fails with error 4213: Snapshot import failed
- Backup host pool creation fails with the error "Failed to fetch host list"
- Snapshot job fails and the snapshot command does not recognize the volume name
- Accelerator enabled incremental backup of NetApp NAS volume
- Snapshot method: Auto
- Backup from snapshot jobs for NAS-Data-Protection policy fail with error 4213
- A full VCT-enabled indexing job runs, when followed by a non-VCT indexing job with a backup host prior to version to 10.3
- Backup from snapshot jobs for NAS data protection policy fail with error 927
- Error code: 930: No supported media server is available in the All_Media_Server_Pool to use to backup the NAS shares.
- Restore from NAS array volume fails with the status: 174 Media manager - system error occurred.
- NAS job fails with the error: Crawler process timed out after 600 seconds waiting for streams to attach with shared memory.
- D-NAS backup fails with the error: The file system crawler process timed-out waiting for streams to attach with shared memory. (3003)
- Isilon backup from snapshot failed with the Snapshot cannot be mounted error.
- Discovery and snapshot operations fail with the errors 156 and 1542
- Section III. Using NDMP
- Introduction to NetBackup for NDMP
- About NetBackup for NDMP
- About Network Data Management Protocol (NDMP)
- Types of NDMP backup
- About NDMP policies in NetBackup
- About NetBackup storage units
- About assigning tape drives to different hosts
- About the NDMP backup process
- About the NDMP restore process
- About Direct Access Recovery (DAR)
- Snapshot Client assistance
- About NDMP multiplexing
- About NDMP support for Replication Director
- Limitations of Replication Director with NDMP
- About NDMP support for NetApp clustered Data ONTAP (cDOT)
- Installation Notes for NetBackup for NDMP
- Configuring NDMP backup to NDMP-attached devices
- About configuring NDMP-attached devices
- Authorizing NetBackup access to a NAS (NDMP) host
- About access for three-way backups and remote NDMP
- About Media and Device Management configuration
- Using the Device Configuration Wizard to configure an NDMP filer
- About creating an NDMP policy
- About appropriate host selection for NetApp cDOT backup policies
- Attributes tab options for an NDMP policy
- Schedules tab options for an NDMP policy with Accelerator for NDMP enabled
- About backup types in a schedule for an NDMP policy
- Clients tab options for an NDMP policy
- Backup selection options for an NDMP policy
- About enabling or disabling DAR
- Configuring NetBackup for NDMP in a clustered environment
- Configuring NDMP backup to NetBackup media servers (remote NDMP)
- Configuring NDMP DirectCopy
- Accelerator for NDMP
- Remote NDMP and disk devices
- Using the Shared Storage Option (SSO) with NetBackup for NDMP
- NAS appliance information for NDMP
- About NAS appliances support
- Non-vendor-specific information
- Vendor-specific information
- Dell EMC Isilon
- Dell EMC VNX
- Dell EMC Unity
- EMC Celerra
- Hitachi HDI/VFP
- Hitachi NAS (HNAS)
- HP X9000 NAS
- Huawei OceanStor V3
- IBM System Storage Nxxxx
- NEC Storage NV series
- NetApp
- Using NetBackup with NetApp's Data ONTAP 8.2 cluster mode
- Using a node name as the NDMP client name in all versions of NetBackup
- Using a data Vserver LIF as the NDMP client name in non-CAB-aware versions of NetBackup
- Using a cluster_mgmt vserver LIF as the NDMP client name in non-CAB-aware versions of NetBackup
- Using a cluster_mgmt Vserver LIF as the NDMP client name in CAB-aware versions of NetBackup
- Using NetBackup with NetApp's Data ONTAP 8.2 cluster mode
- Nexenta
- Nexsan
- Oracle Axiom Series
- Oracle Solaris Server
- Stratus V Series
- Backup and restore procedures
- Troubleshooting
- Using NetBackup for NDMP scripts
- About the NetBackup for NDMP scripts
- ndmp_start_notify script (UNIX)
- ndmp_start_notify.cmd script (Microsoft Windows)
- ndmp_end_notify script (UNIX)
- ndmp_end_notify.cmd script (Microsoft Windows)
- ndmp_start_path_notify script (UNIX)
- ndmp_start_path_notify.cmd script (Microsoft Windows)
- ndmp_end_path_notify script (UNIX)
- ndmp_end_path_notify.cmd script (Microsoft Windows)
- ndmp_moving_path_notify script (UNIX)
- ndmp_moving_path_notify.cmd script (Microsoft Windows)
- Introduction to NetBackup for NDMP
About environment variables in the backup selections list
NDMP lets you use environment variables to pass configuration parameters to an NDMP host with each backup. NDMP environment variables can be one of the following types:
Defined as optional by the NDMP protocol specification.
You can set these variables.
Specific to an NDMP host vendor.
You can set these variables.
See About NAS appliances support. for up-to-date information on environment variables relating to particular NAS vendors. The topic also contains configuration and troubleshooting help for particular NAS systems.
For Isilon filers only, note the following behaviors with environmental variables:
With Isilon filers, if you set the HIST environment variable in a NetBackup NDMP backup policy with Accelerator enabled, you may specify only the value D (that is, SET HIST=D). D specifies a directory/node file history format. If you specify any other value for the HIST variable, NetBackup generates a message that asks you to change the value to D. If you do not use a HIST variable in the policy, the backup should complete successfully.
If you change any of the variables in a NetBackup NDMP backup policy with Accelerator enabled, the Accelerator optimization will be 0% until you run a second full backup with the same variables. When the policy's variables change, a new baseline image is created with the first full backup. You will see Accelerator optimization only after the second full backup with the same variables.
Reserved for use by NetBackup:
FILESYSTEM
DIRECT
EXTRACT
ACL_START
In NetBackup, environment variables can be set within the backup selections list by specifying one or more SET directives.
Note:
In the backup selections list, the SET directive must be the first in the list, followed by the file systems or volumes to back up.
In general, the syntax of a SET directive is as follows:
SET variable = value
Where variable is the name of the environment variable and value is the value that is assigned to it. The value can be enclosed in single or double quotes, and must be enclosed in quotes if it contains a space character. For example:
SET ABC = 22 SET DEF = "hello there"
Setting a variable equal to no value removes any value that was set previously for that variable. For example:
SET ABC = SET DEF =
Variables accumulate as the backup selections list is processed. For example, a backup selection may contain the following entries:
/vol/vol1 SET HIST = N /vol/vol2 SET DEF = 20 SET SAMPLE = all /vol/vol3
In this example, directory/vol/vol1 is backed up without any user-specified environment variables. The second directory (/vol/vol2) is backed up with the variable HIST set to N. The third directory (/vol/vol3) is backed up with all three of the environment variables set (HIST = N, DEF = 20, and SAMPLE = all).
Note:
You cannot restore a single file if HIST = N is set. Only full volume restores are available when the HIST variable is set to N.
If an environment variable appears again later in the list, the value of this variable overrides the previous value of the variable.
The values that each backup uses are saved and provided to subsequent restores of the directory. The NDMP host may have some environment variables that are set internally and these are also saved for restores.
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