Veritas NetBackup™ Installation Guide
- Preparing for installation
- General installation information
- Available NetBackup installation methods
 - About compatibility between NetBackup versions
 - About NetBackup software availability
 - How to install NetBackup
 - Creating the user account to support the NetBackup web server
 - About storage device configuration
 - About security certificates for NetBackup hosts
 - Environment variable for certificate key size
 - Restrictions on the NetBackup installation directory
 - NetBackup database is not supported on the btrfs file system
 
 - Installation operational notes and limitations
- Windows compiler and security requirements for NetBackup 9.1 and later installation and upgrade
 - Java GUI and JRE installation optional for some computers
 - Enable 8dot3 name file setting for NetBackup master servers that support NAT
 - NetBackup servers must use a host name that is compliant with RFC 1123 and RFC 952
 - Host ID-based certificate is not deployed during installation on 8.1 media server or client host with dual stack configuration
 - NetBackup 8.2 and later RHEL 8 installation issue
 - NetBackup 8.2 and later SUSE 15 installation issue
 - External certificate authority certificates supported in NetBackup 8.2 and later
 - SCCM and Chef deployment tools and documentation now available
 - Known SUSE Linux master server install issue
 
 - SORT information
 - Veritas NetInsights Console information
 
 - General installation information
 - NetBackup licenses
 - Installing server software on UNIX systems
- Installation requirements for UNIX and Linux
- Do not mix non-English versions of Windows and UNIX platforms unless master and media servers are NetBackup appliances
 - NetBackup installations on environments that run different versions of UNIX-based operating systems
 - Special installation guidelines for Solaris systems
 - Special installation guidelines for UNIX clustered environments
 
 - How the installation script works
 - Installing NetBackup master server software on UNIX
 - Installing NetBackup media server software on UNIX
 - About pushing client software from a master server to clients
 
 - Installation requirements for UNIX and Linux
 - Installing server software on Windows systems
- Installation and upgrade requirements for Windows and Windows clusters
 - Requirements for Windows cluster installations and upgrades
 - Performing local, remote, or clustered server installation on Windows systems
 - Post-installation tasks for NetBackup cluster environments
 - Verifying Windows cluster installations or upgrades
 - Installing NetBackup servers silently on Windows systems
 
 - About the administrative interfaces
- About the NetBackup web user interface
 - About the NetBackup Administration Console
 - Installing the NetBackup Administration Console
 - Installing multiple versions of the NetBackup Administration Console on Windows
 - Removing earlier versions of the NetBackup Administration Console on Windows
 - About the NetBackup Remote Administration Console
 - Installing the NetBackup Remote Administration Console
 
 - Installing NetBackup client software
- About NetBackup client installation
 - About NetBackup client installation on Windows
 - About NetBackup client installation on UNIX and Linux
 
 - Configuring NetBackup
 - Upgrading NetBackup software
 - Removing NetBackup server and client software
- About NetBackup server software removal on UNIX systems
 - About NetBackup client software removal on UNIX and Linux systems
 - Removing NetBackup from UNIX and Linux servers and clients
 - About NetBackup server software removal on Windows systems
 - Removing NetBackup server and client software from Windows servers, clusters, and clients
 - About removal of the Java Console state data from Windows servers and Windows clients
 - Removing a clustered media server by migrating all data to a new media server
 
 - Reference
- Generate a certificate on the inactive nodes of a clustered master server
 - About the NetBackup answer file
 - Persistent Java Virtual Machine options
 - About RBAC bootstrapping
 - NetBackup master server web server user and group creation
 - About the NetBackup Java Runtime Environment
 - Add or Remove Java GUI and JRE after install
 - Using NetApp disk arrays with Replication Director
 - Security updates to the NetBackup database
 - Size guidance for the NetBackup master server and domain
 
 - Index
 
Size guidance for the NetBackup master server and domain
NetBackup master server sizing is an important activity as part of an overall NetBackup solution design. The following information provides best practices and sizing recommendations to assist in that endeavor.
Veritas always recommends a comprehensive data protection assessment to determine the optimal configuration for a NetBackup master and NetBackup domain. The following information is meant as guidelines.
Catalog size should not exceed 4 TB.
The size of the NetBackup catalog and the performance that is related to reading data from the NetBackup catalog is driven by the I/O performance and more specifically the disk speed. Veritas recommends the use of solid-state drives (SSDs) where possible for the catalog. The disks require good read and write performance, which is even more critical in large environments.
Managing the size of the catalog through compression and catalog archiving is recommended for images with a long-term retention (LTR).
The number of devices in the EMM database should not exceed 1500.
Examples of devices are a tape drive, a tape library, a disk pool, and so on.
The number of media servers should not exceed 50.
It is important to maintain a manageable number of media servers and storage targets within each NetBackup domain. Every media server and storage target that is deployed must be managed, maintained, and eventually patched and upgraded. Each of those media servers has a configuration that has to also be maintained. Therefore, it is important to consider the manageability, usability, and the administrative implications. Veritas recommends deploying media servers and storage targets that are properly sized with the necessary CPU, memory, network bandwidth, and disk I/O to support the backup workloads. It is also important to consider whether the same workloads require duplication or replication to a DR location. Sizing the media servers and storage targets to accommodate those secondary options is crucial. In summary, Veritas recommends that you deploy properly sized media servers and storage targets, while keeping the number less than 50 per domain.
The number of jobs must not exceed one job per second per client, but it is possible to submit multiple jobs per second, each sent from a different client. Each backup client has the "one job per second per client" limit, so multiple clients may execute in parallel.
Computing resources such as CPU and memory affect how well the master server scales.
To accommodate the processing of the metadata streams from media servers, it is critical that the master server has the requisite amount of system resources. A media server sends metadata about the files it has backed up to the master server. This metadata is batched and sent periodically. The batch size, determined by the tuning parameter MAX_ENTRIES_PER_ADD, has significant effect on master server performance, especially for backup images that contain many small files.
For additional information about batch size for sending metadata to the NetBackup catalog, see the NetBackup Backup Planning and Performance Tuning Guide
The master server must then process each of these metadata message payloads. Each payload requires an operating system process, each of which consumes system resources. The consumed system resources are disk capacity, CPU cycles, memory capacity, network bandwidth, and disk I/O.
Table: Sizing guidelines provides additional information.
Table: Sizing guidelines
Number of processors  | Recommended memory requirement  | Maximum number of media servers per master server *  | 
|---|---|---|
8  | 128 GB  | 20  | 
16  | 256 GB  | 100  | 
*Veritas recommends that you limit the number of media servers to less than 50 media servers per domain.
Additional recommendations about processor and memory requirements is available.
See Installation requirements for UNIX and Linux.
See Installation and upgrade requirements for Windows and Windows clusters.