Veritas NetBackup™ Vault Administrator's Guide
- About Vault
- Installing Vault
- Best Practices
- About best practices
- About vaulting paradigms
- About preferred vaulting strategies
- About how to ensure that data is vaulted
- About not Vaulting more than necessary
- About preparing for efficient recovery
- About media ejection recommendations
- About avoiding resource contention during duplication
- About how to avoid sending duplicates over the network
- About increasing duplication throughput
- About maximizing drive utilization during duplication
- About scratch volume pools
- About organizing reports
- About generating the lost media report regularly
- Configuring NetBackup Vault
- Configuring Vault
- About configuring Vault
- About Vault configuration
- About configuration methods
- About configuring Vault Management Properties
- Configuring robots in Vault
- Vault Robot dialog box options
- About creating a vault
- Media access ports dialog box
- Creating retention mappings
- About creating profiles
- Creating a profile
- Configuring a profile
- Vaulting and managing media
- About Vault sessions
- About previewing a Vault session
- Stopping a Vault session
- About resuming a Vault session
- About monitoring a Vault session
- About the list of images to be vaulted
- About ejecting media
- About injecting media
- About using containers
- Assigning multiple retentions with one profile
- About vaulting additional volumes
- Revaulting unexpired media
- About tracking volumes not ejected by Vault
- Vaulting non-NetBackup media managed by Media Manager
- About notifying a tape operator when an eject begins
- About using notify scripts
- About clearing the media description field
- Restoring data from vaulted media
- Replacing damaged media
- Creating originals or copies concurrently
- Reporting
- Administering Vault
- About setting up email
- About administering access to Vault
- About printing Vault and profile information
- Copying a profile
- About moving a vault to a different robot
- About changing volume pools and groups
- About NetBackup Vault session files
- Operational issue with disk-only option on Duplication tab
- Operational issues with the scope of the source volume group
- Using the menu user interface
- Troubleshooting
- About troubleshooting Vault
- About printing problems
- About errors returned by the Vault session
- About media that are not ejected
- About media that is missing in robot
- Reduplicating a bad or missing duplicate tape
- About the tape drive or robot offline
- No duplicate progress message
- About stopping bpvault
- About ejecting tapes that are in use
- About tapes not removed from the MAP
- Revaulting unexpired tapes
- Debug logs
- Appendix A. Recovering from disasters
- Appendix B. Vault file and directory structure
- Index
About previewing a Vault session
Before you run a Vault session, you can preview the session to verify that the profile selects the appropriate images for off-site storage. To preview a session, use the vltrun command with the -preview option, specifying the robot number, vault, and profile as in the following example:
vltrun robot_number/vault_name/profile_name -preview
Alternatively, you can specify only the profile if it has a unique name.
The vltrun -preview option starts a new vault job and performs a search on the image catalog based on the criteria that is specified on the profile Choose Backups tab. Then vltrun -preview writes the names of the images to a preview.list file and exits. Vault does not act on the images selected.
After you run the preview option, examine the preview.list file, which is located in:
UNIX:
/usr/openv/netbackup/vault/sessions/vault_name/sidxxx
Windows:
install_path\NetBackup\Vault\sessions\vault_name\sidxxx
Under certain circumstances, the preview.list file may contain more backup images than are vaulted:
If the profile is configured to duplicate only disk images, selected images on removable media are not vaulted.
If images in the list do not have a copy on media in one of the Off-site Volume Pools listed for the eject step, they are not vaulted.