Veritas InfoScale™ for Kubernetes Environments 8.0.200 - Linux
- Overview
- System requirements
- Preparing to install InfoScale on Containers
- Installing Veritas InfoScale on OpenShift
- Introduction
- Prerequisites
- Additional Prerequisites for Azure RedHat OpenShift (ARO)
- Considerations for configuring cluster or adding nodes to an existing cluster
- Installing InfoScale on a system with Internet connectivity
- Installing InfoScale in an air gapped system
- Installing Veritas InfoScale on Kubernetes
- Introduction
- Prerequisites
- Installing the Special Resource Operator
- Tagging the InfoScale images on Kubernetes
- Applying licenses
- Tech Preview: Installing InfoScale on an Azure Kubernetes Service(AKS) cluster
- Considerations for configuring cluster or adding nodes to an existing cluster
- Installing InfoScale on Kubernetes
- Installing InfoScale by using the plugin
- Undeploying and uninstalling InfoScale
- Configuring KMS-based Encryption on an OpenShift cluster
- Configuring KMS-based Encryption on a Kubernetes cluster
- InfoScale CSI deployment in Container environment
- CSI plugin deployment
- Raw block volume support
- Static provisioning
- Dynamic provisioning
- Resizing Persistent Volumes (CSI volume expansion)
- Snapshot provisioning (Creating volume snapshots)
- Managing InfoScale volume snapshots with Velero
- Volume cloning
- Using InfoScale with non-root containers
- Using InfoScale in SELinux environments
- CSI Drivers
- Creating CSI Objects for OpenShift
- Installing and configuring InfoScale DR Manager on OpenShift
- Installing and configuring InfoScale DR Manager on Kubernetes
- Disaster Recovery scenarios
- Configuring InfoScale
- Administering InfoScale on Containers
- Upgrading InfoScale
- Troubleshooting
Encryption
With encryption, you can secure data at rest and during transmission. Encryption is a technology which converts data into a code by using a key. Data when encrypted is not readable. It is readable only when decrypted by authorized users using the same key that was used for encryption.
Encryption is performed by using the FIPS-compliant Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) 256-bit method. By default, encryption is not enabled. You can enable encryption at disk group level while configuring cr.yaml.
When Disaster Recovery (DR) is configured, encrypted data is transferred across sites. For DR configuration, encryption is supported at volume level only.
With encryption, you can -
Protect data from unauthorized access.
Retire disks without the overhead expense of clearing data.