Veritas NetBackup™ SAN Client and Fibre Transport Guide
- Introducing SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Planning your deployment
- Planning your SAN Client deployment
- About SAN Client best practices
- SAN Client operational notes
- About SAN Client storage destinations
- How to choose SAN Client and Fibre Transport hosts
- About NetBackup SAN Client support for agents
- About NetBackup SAN Client support for clustering
- About NetBackup SAN Client support for Windows Hyper-V Server
- About NetBackup SAN Client unsupported restores
- About Fibre Transport throughput
- Converting a SAN media server to a SAN client
- Preparing the SAN
- Licensing SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Configuring SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Configuring SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Configuring a Fibre Transport media server
- About the target mode driver
- About nbhba mode and the ql2300_stub driver
- About FC attached devices
- How to identify the HBA ports
- About HBA port detection on Solaris
- About Fibre Transport media servers and VLANs
- Starting nbhba mode
- Marking the Fibre Transport media server HBA ports
- Configuring the media server Fibre Transport services
- Configuring SAN clients
- Configuring SAN clients in a cluster
- About configuring Fibre Transport properties
- Configuring Fibre Transport properties
- Fibre Transport properties
- About SAN client usage preferences
- Configuring SAN client usage preferences
- Managing SAN clients and Fibre Transport
- Disabling SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- Troubleshooting SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- About troubleshooting SAN Client and Fibre Transport
- SAN Client troubleshooting tech note
- Viewing Fibre Transport logs
- About unified logging
- Stopping and starting Fibre Transport services
- Backups failover to LAN even though Fibre Transport devices available
- Kernel warning messages when Veritas modules load
- SAN client service does not start
- SAN client Fibre Transport service validation
- SAN client does not select Fibre Transport
- Media server Fibre Transport device is offline
- No Fibre Transport devices discovered
Disabling a Fibre Transport media server
You can disable an FT media server and remove the operating system FT startup scripts from the media server. The process also removes the nbhba driver and exits nbhba mode. The media server then does not support NetBackup Fibre Transport.
See About disabling SAN Client and Fibre Transport.
Warning:
On Solaris systems, /etc/driver_aliases file entries may remain after you remove the FT services and the nbhba driver. The entries are in the form of qla2300 "pci1077,xxx" or qla2300 "pciex1077,xxx. The entries are harmless; however, if you attempt to remove them, the system may not boot. Sun Microsystems recommends that you do not edit the /etc/driver_aliases file.
To disable an FT media server and remove drivers
- On the FT media server, run the following script:
/usr/openv/netbackup/bin/admincmd/nbftsrv_config -d
- Verify that the following startup scripts were removed:
On Linux systems, the following are the scripts:
/etc/rc.d/rc2.d/S21nbftserver /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/S21nbftserver /etc/rc.d/rc5.d/S21nbftserver /etc/rc.d/rc0.d/K03nbftserver /etc/rc.d/rc6.d/K03nbftserver /lib/modules/ 2.6.*smp/kernel/drivers/misc/ql2300_stub.ko /lib/modules/ 2.6.*smp/kernel/drivers/misc/windrvr6.ko
On Solaris systems, the following are the scripts:
/etc/rc2.d/S21nbftserver /etc/rc0.d/K03nbftserver /usr/kernel/drv/windrvr6.conf /usr/kernel/drv/sparcv9/windrvr6 /usr/kernel/drv/sparcv9/ql2300_stub
- If the startup scripts were not removed, delete them manually.
- Run the following script:
/usr/openv/netbackup/bin/admincmd/nbftconfig -ds ft_server_host_name