NetBackup™ Snapshot Manager Install and Upgrade Guide
- Introduction
- Section I. NetBackup Snapshot Manager installation and configuration
- Preparing for NetBackup Snapshot Manager installation
- Meeting system requirements
- Snapshot Manager host sizing recommendations
- Snapshot Manager extension sizing recommendations
- Creating an instance or preparing the host to install Snapshot Manager
- Installing container platform (Docker, Podman)
- Creating and mounting a volume to store Snapshot Manager data
- Verifying that specific ports are open on the instance or physical host
- Preparing Snapshot Manager for backup from snapshot jobs
- Deploying NetBackup Snapshot Manager using container images
- Deploying NetBackup Snapshot Manager extensions
- Before you begin installing Snapshot Manager extensions
- Downloading the Snapshot Manager extension
- Installing the Snapshot Manager extension on a VM
- Installing the Snapshot Manager extension on a managed Kubernetes cluster (AKS) in Azure
- Installing the Snapshot Manager extension on a managed Kubernetes cluster (EKS) in AWS
- Installing the Snapshot Manager extension on a managed Kubernetes cluster (GKE) in GCP
- Install extension using the Kustomize and CR YAMLs
- Managing the extensions
- NetBackup Snapshot Manager cloud plug-ins
- NetBackup Snapshot Manager application agents and plug-ins
- About the installation and configuration process
- Installing and configuring Snapshot Manager agent
- Configuring the Snapshot Manager application plug-in
- Configuring an application plug-in
- Microsoft SQL plug-in
- Oracle plug-in
- NetBackup protection plan
- Configuring VSS to store shadow copies on the originating drive
- Additional steps required after restoring an AWS RDS database instance
- Protecting assets with NetBackup Snapshot Manager's agentless feature
- Volume Encryption in NetBackup Snapshot Manager
- NetBackup Snapshot Manager security
- Preparing for NetBackup Snapshot Manager installation
- Section II. NetBackup Snapshot Manager maintenance
- NetBackup Snapshot Manager logging
- Upgrading NetBackup Snapshot Manager
- Uninstalling NetBackup Snapshot Manager
- Preparing to uninstall Snapshot Manager
- Backing up Snapshot Manager
- Unconfiguring Snapshot Manager plug-ins
- Unconfiguring Snapshot Manager agents
- Removing the Snapshot Manager agents
- Removing Snapshot Manager from a standalone Docker host environment
- Removing Snapshot Manager extensions - VM-based or managed Kubernetes cluster-based
- Restoring Snapshot Manager
- Troubleshooting NetBackup Snapshot Manager
- Troubleshooting Snapshot Manager
- SQL snapshot or restore and granular restore operations fail if the Windows instance loses connectivity with the Snapshot Manager host
- Disk-level snapshot restore fails if the original disk is detached from the instance
- Discovery is not working even after assigning system managed identity to the control node pool
- Performance issue with GCP backup from snapshot
- Post migration on host agents fail with an error message
- File restore job fails with an error message
Prerequisites to install the extension on VM
Choose the Snapshot Manager image supported on Ubuntu or RHEL system that meets the Snapshot Manager installation requirements and create a host.
See Creating an instance or preparing the host to install Snapshot Manager.
Verify that you can connect to the host through a remote desktop.
See Verifying that specific ports are open on the instance or physical host.
Install Docker or Podman container platforms on the host.
Download the OS-specific Snapshot Manager image from the Veritas support site.
The Snapshot Manager image name resembles the following format for Docker and Podman environment:
NetBackup_SnapshotManager_<version>.tar.gzRun the following command to prepare the Snapshot Manager host for installation:
# sudo ./flexsnap_preinstall.sh
Note:
The actual file name varies depending on the release version.
For the VM based extension installed on a RHEL OS the SElinux mode should be "permissive".
Network Security Groups used by the host that is being protected should allow communication from the host where the extension is installed, on the specified ports.