Veritas Access Appliance 8.3 Administrator's Guide
- Section I. Introducing Access Appliance
- Section II. Configuring Access Appliance
- Managing users
- Managing licenses
- Configuring the network
- About configuring the Access Appliance network
- About bonding Ethernet interfaces
- Bonding Ethernet interfaces
- Considerations for configuration a LACP bond
- Configuring DNS settings
- About Ethernet interfaces
- Displaying current Ethernet interfaces and states
- Configuring IP addresses
- Configuring IP addresses and FQDNs in a non-DNS environment
- Configuring VLAN interfaces
- Configuring NIC devices
- About configuring routing tables
- Configuring routing tables
- Changing the firewall settings
- Configuring Access Appliance in IPv4 and IPv6 mixed mode
- Support for multiple data subnets
- Adding console FQDN to the network and accessing the GUI using the console FQDN
- Configuring authentication services
- About configuring LDAP settings
- Configuring LDAP server settings
- Administering the Access Appliance cluster's LDAP client
- About Active Directory (AD)
- Configuring AD server settings
- Configuring entries for Access Appliance DNS for authenticating to Active Directory (AD)
- Configuring AD/LDAP using the GUI
- Configuring NSS lookup order
- Sign-in options for the Access Appliance UI
- Configuring user authentication using digital certificates or smart cards
- Section III. Managing Access Appliance storage
- Configuring storage
- About storage provisioning and management
- About configuring disks
- About configuring storage pools
- Configuring storage pools
- About quotas for usage
- Enabling, disabling, and displaying the status of file system quotas
- Setting and displaying file system quotas
- Setting user quotas for users of specified groups
- About quotas for CIFS home directories
- Workflow for configuring and managing storage using the Access Appliance CLI
- Displaying information for all disk devices associated with the nodes in a cluster
- Displaying WWN information
- Importing new LUNs forcefully for new or existing pools
- Initiating host discovery of LUNs
- Managing disks
- Access Appliance as an iSCSI target
- Configuring storage
- Section IV. Managing Access Appliance file access services
- Configuring the NFS server
- About using the NFS server with Access Appliance
- Using the kernel-based NFS server
- Accessing the NFS server
- Displaying and resetting NFS statistics
- Configuring Access Appliance for ID mapping for NFS version 4
- Configuring the NFS client for ID mapping for NFS version 4
- About authenticating NFS clients
- Setting up Kerberos authentication for NFS clients
- Using Access Appliance as a CIFS server
- About configuring Access Appliance for CIFS
- About configuring CIFS for Active Directory (AD) domain mode
- Adding an SPN entry on the Windows client
- About setting trusted domains
- About storing account information
- Storing user and group accounts
- Reconfiguring the CIFS service
- About mapping user names for CIFS/NFS sharing
- About the mapuser commands
- Adding, removing, or displaying the mapping between CIFS and NFS users
- Automatically mapping UNIX users from LDAP to Windows users
- About managing home directories
- About CIFS clustering modes
- About migrating CIFS shares and home directories
- Setting the CIFS aio_fork option
- Enabling CIFS data migration
- Using Access Appliance as an Object Store server
- About the Object Store server
- Use cases for configuring the Object Store server
- Configuring the Object Store server
- About buckets and objects
- File systems used for objectstore buckets
- Enabling WORM on buckets
- Object Access SSL certificate
- Object Access endpoints
- S3 with NFS use case
- S3 with NSP use case
- Configuring the S3 server using GUI
- Configuring the NFS server
- Section V. Managing Access Appliance security
- Managing security
- Setting up FIPS mode
- Configuring STIG
- Setting the banner
- Setting the password policy
- Immutability in Access Appliance
- Deploying certificates on Access Appliance
- Single Sign-On (SSO)
- Configuring multifactor authentication
- About multifactor authentication
- Considerations when configuring multifactor authentication
- Configuring multifactor authentication for your user account
- Disabling multifactor authentication for your user account
- Enforcing multifactor authentication for all users
- Configuring multifactor authentication for your user account when it is enforced in the cluster
- Resetting multifactor authentication for a user
- Section VI. Monitoring and troubleshooting
- Monitoring the appliance
- Configuring event notifications and audit logs
- About troubleshooting
- Monitoring command activity
- Monitoring alerts
- About alert management
- Monitoring events
- Viewing reports
- Viewing cluster storage usage
- Viewing file system usage
- About event notifications
- About severity levels and filters
- About SNMP notifications
- Configuring a syslog server
- Displaying events on the console
- Appliance log files
- Section VII. Provisioning and managing Access Appliance file systems
- Creating and maintaining file systems
- About creating and maintaining file systems
- About encryption at rest
- Considerations for creating a file system
- Best practices for creating file systems
- Choosing a file system layout type
- Determining the initial extent size for a file system
- About striping file systems
- About FastResync
- About fsck operation
- Enabling WORM on a file system
- Setting retention in files
- Setting WORM over NFS
- Manually setting WORM-retention on a file over CIFS
- About managing application I/O workloads using maximum IOPS settings
- Creating a file system
- Bringing the file system online or offline
- Listing all file systems and associated information
- Modifying a file system
- Managing a file system
- Destroying a file system
- Upgrading disk layout versions
- Creating and maintaining file systems
- Section VIII. Provisioning and managing Access Appliance shares
- Creating shares for applications
- Creating and maintaining NFS shares
- About NFS file sharing
- About the NFS shares
- Displaying file systems and snapshots that can be exported
- Exporting an NFS share
- Displaying exported directories
- About managing NFS shares using netgroups
- Unexporting a directory or deleting NFS options
- Exporting an NFS share for Kerberos authentication
- Mounting an NFS share with Kerberos security from the NFS client
- Exporting an NFS snapshot
- Creating and maintaining CIFS shares
- About managing CIFS shares
- About the CIFS shares
- Exporting a directory as a CIFS share
- Configuring a CIFS share as secondary storage for an Enterprise Vault store
- Exporting the same file system/directory as a different CIFS share
- About the CIFS export options
- Setting share properties
- Displaying CIFS share properties
- Hiding system files when adding a CIFS normal share
- Allowing specified users and groups access to the CIFS share
- Denying specified users and groups access to the CIFS share
- Exporting a CIFS snapshot
- Deleting a CIFS share
- Modifying a CIFS share
- Making a CIFS share shadow copy aware
- About managing CIFS shares for Enterprise Vault
- Integrating Access Appliance with Data Insight
- Section IX. Managing Access Appliance storage services
- Configuring continuous replication
- About Access Appliance continuous replication
- How Access Appliance continuous replication works
- Starting Access Appliance continuous replication
- Setting up communication between the source and the destination clusters
- Setting up the file system to replicate
- Managing continuous replication
- Displaying continuous replication information and status
- Unconfiguring continuous replication
- Preserving the file system on the destination cluster
- Cloud tiering with continuous replication
- Configuring Enterprise Vault with continuous replication
- Configuring a continuous replication job using the GUI
- Continuous replication failover and failback
- Addition of multiple file systems to a Replicated Volume Group
- Using snapshots
- Using instant rollbacks
- About instant rollbacks
- Creating a space-optimized rollback
- Creating a full-sized rollback
- Listing Access Appliance instant rollbacks
- Restoring a file system from an instant rollback
- Refreshing an instant rollback from a file system
- Bringing an instant rollback online
- Taking an instant rollback offline
- Destroying an instant rollback
- Creating a shared cache object for Access Appliance instant rollbacks
- Listing cache objects
- Destroying a cache object of a Access Appliance instant rollback
- Configuring continuous replication
- Section X. Reference
- Index
Access Appliance integration with Data Insight
The integration of Access Appliance with Data Insight enables organizations to improve data governance through insights into the ownership and usage of unstructured data, including files such as documents, spreadsheets, and emails.
Access Appliance allows DI to display NFS share-level activities on the DI GUI and thus helps the users to make better business decisions and risk-management strategy.
The integration of Access Appliance with Data Insight has the following functionalities:
You can monitor NFS share activities and get details such as who uses the data, who owns the data and who has access to the data.
You can gather audit information on operations such as create, delete, read, write, make directories, remove directories, and rename type.
You have full visibility into data access, which helps drive security remediation, and auditing and compliance efforts using the web-based graphical user interface (GUI).
You can automate the movement of stale, less accessed, and other unimportant data to cloud or cheaper storage alternative with the help of the DI reporting and Access Appliance policy engine.
You can have a cluster-level view of audit logs. Access Appliance has multiple nodes, so you can access the same share or even the same file from multiple nodes in the cluster. You can merge the audit logs from different nodes to give a unified view to DI.
You can monitor data for any potential security breaches or internal misuse of information. You can ensure that proper document protocols are followed consistently, and you can also prevent and track down fraud.
You can enhance your risk-management capabilities by running reports on a given end user and examine their activity. You can see which records have been accessed, edited, added, or deleted. You can also get details on deleted records like when it was deleted, who deleted it, and so on. You can track what goes on in the database.
Access Appliance helps the DI administrator to:
Add Access Appliance in the DI GUI.
Enable and disable auditing on a given NFS share.
Mount and scan the share as and when required.
Fetch the audit logs periodically from Access Appliance.
Allow showing the audit statistics on the DI console.
Prerequisites to configuring Access Appliance in the Data Insight GUI
An NFS server should be running on all the nodes.
xprtld(Access Appliance UI REST server) should be running on all the nodes.sfsdgdisk group should be present
Configuring Access Appliance in the Data Insight GUI
You can add Access Appliance as one of the file system servers.
You can administer Access Appliance from the DI GUI and perform the following functions:
Scan the Access Appliance share from DI. For NFS scanning, the mount and scan approach is used.
Enable and disable audit logs for the share.
List file systems on which auditing is enabled.
You can get the information (path, permissions, and other details) about the shares. The Veritas File System Information Management Infrastructure (IMI) is used for collecting audit logs. The audit logs are created for each node and merged to give a cluster view.
DI can collect the audit logs periodically.
xprtld(Access Appliance UI REST server) is used for transferring the logs. The audit logs of Access Appliance are shared with DI using the pull model.
Limitation
Only NFS shares scanning is supported for this release.
In case of a node restart, monitoring of shares does not work for that node.