Veritas NetBackup™ Release Notes
- About NetBackup 8.1
- New features, enhancements, and changes
- NetBackup 8.1 new features, changes, and enhancements
- Operational notes
- NetBackup installation and upgrade operational notes
- NetBackup administration and general operational notes
- NetBackup administration interface operational notes
- NetBackup Accelerator operational notes
- NetBackup Bare Metal Restore operational notes
- NetBackup Cloud operational notes
- NetBackup cluster operational notes
- NetBackup database and application agent operational notes
- NetBackup for Exchange operational notes
- NetBackup for SharePoint operational notes
- NetBackup for Oracle operational notes
- NetBackup deduplication operational notes
- NetBackup internationalization and localization operational notes
- NetBackup for NDMP operational notes
- NetBackup virtualization operational notes
- NetBackup for VMware operational notes
- NetBackup for VMware operational notes
- Appendix A. About SORT for NetBackup Users
- Appendix B. NetBackup installation requirements
- Appendix C. NetBackup compatibility requirements
- Appendix D. Other NetBackup documentation and related documents
A restore task may remain in a finalized state in the disaster recovery domain even after the client restores successfully
In the case of a dissimilar domain restore where the primary and the disaster recovery domain names are different, the restore task remains in a finalized state in the disaster recovery domain even after the client restores successfully. The Bare Metal Restore (BMR) restore is successful in the disaster recovery domain and only the restore task update fails.
The update fails because of an invalid network configuration in the client. This behavior is expected because the restore does not modify the configuration files that are related to the DNS of the disaster recovery domain.
You must manually modify the following network configuration files to back up and restore the client in a disaster recovery domain:
Solaris:
- /etc/hosts
- /etc/resolv.conf
- /etc/nodename
- /etc/bge0.hostname
AIX:
Use smitty to modify the network configuration.
HP-UX:
Use the HP System Management home page (SMH) to modify network configuration.
Linux:
/etc/hosts
/etc/resolv.conf
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth*
Windows:
See the following URLs to modify the domain name in Windows: