Veritas NetBackup™ Vault Administrator's Guide
- About Vault
- Installing Vault
- Best Practices
- About preferred vaulting strategies
- About how to ensure that data is vaulted
- About not Vaulting more than necessary
- About preparing for efficient recovery
- About avoiding resource contention during duplication
- About how to avoid sending duplicates over the network
- About increasing duplication throughput
- About organizing reports
- Configuring NetBackup Vault
- Configuring Vault
- About Vault configuration
- About configuring Vault Management Properties
- About creating a vault
- About creating profiles
- Configuring a profile
- Vaulting and managing media
- About Vault sessions
- About monitoring a Vault session
- About the list of images to be vaulted
- About ejecting media
- About injecting media
- About using containers
- About vaulting additional volumes
- About using notify scripts
- Creating originals or copies concurrently
- Reporting
- Administering Vault
- About administering access to Vault
- About NetBackup Vault session files
- Using the menu user interface
- Troubleshooting
- Debug logs
- Appendix A. Recovering from disasters
- Appendix B. Vault file and directory structure
About media that is missing in robot
Duplication may fail if NetBackup does not know that a requested piece of media is in the robot. For example, a tape may have been moved to the off-site volume group inadvertently even though it remains in the robot. To compare the tapes actually stored in the robot with the Media Manager database, use the NetBackup Administration Console Inventory Robot option.
If the tape is in the robot, use the NetBackup Administration Console to move the tape to the robotic volume group.
If the tape is not found, delete it from the NetBackup system. If the tape is missing yet is assigned and has valid duplicate images, use the command bpexpdate to expire the images before you delete the tape from Media Manager. This command is documented in the NetBackup Administrator's Guide.