NetBackup and Veritas Appliances Hardening Guide
- Top recommendations to improve your NetBackup and Veritas appliances security posture
- Steps to protect Flex Appliance
- Managing single sign-on (SSO)
- About lockdown mode
- Configuring an isolated recovery environment on a WORM storage server
- Steps to protect NetBackup Appliance
- About single sign-on (SSO) authentication and authorization
- About authentication using smart cards and digital certificates
- About data encryption
- About forwarding logs to an external server
- Steps to protect NetBackup
- Configure NetBackup for single sign-on (SSO)
- Configure user authentication with smart cards or digital certificates
- Access codes
- Workflow to configure immutable and indelible data
- Add a configuration for an external CMS server
- Configuring an isolated recovery environment on a NetBackup BYO media server
- About FIPS support in NetBackup
- Workflow for external KMS configuration
- Workflow to configure data-in-transit encryption
- Workflow to use external certificates for NetBackup host communication
- About certificate revocation lists for external CA
- Configuring an external certificate for a clustered primary server
- Configuring a NetBackup host (media server, client, or cluster node) to use an external CA-signed certificate after installation
- Configuration options for external CA-signed certificates
- ECA_CERT_PATH for NetBackup servers and clients
- About protecting the MSDP catalog
- How to set up malware scanning
- About backup anomaly detection
About data encryption
The NetBackup Appliance offers the following encryption methodologies to protect both data at rest and in flight:
Transmits data in encrypted formats by using secure tunnels. These configurations can be made by client-side encryption and also replication. If these options are not used, once the data is transmitted from the appliance, the network infrastructure is used for securing data in flight.
Starting with NetBackup Appliance version 3.0 (NetBackup version 8.0), MSDP provides AES encryption. If your environment uses encrypted MSDP, new incoming data gets encrypted with AES 128-bit (default) or AES 256-bit. For more information, see the following NetBackup documents:
Veritas NetBackup Deduplication Guide
Veritas NetBackup Security and Encryption Guide
Supports encryption using NetBackup Key Management Service (KMS) which is integrated with NetBackup Enterprise Server 7.1. See KMS support .