Veritas NetBackup™ Device Configuration Guide
- Introducing device configuration
- Section I. Operating systems
- Linux
- Before you begin on Linux
- About the required Linux SCSI drivers
- Verifying the Linux drivers
- About configuring robot and drive control for Linux
- Verifying the device configuration on Linux
- About SAN clients on Linux
- About SCSI persistent bindings for Linux
- About Emulex HBAs
- Utilities to test SCSI devices
- Linux command summary
- Solaris
- Before you begin on Solaris
- About the NetBackup sg driver
- Determining if the NetBackup sg driver is installed
- Special configuration for the StorEdge Network Foundation HBA driver
- About binding Fibre Channel HBA drivers
- Configuring Solaris 10 x86 for multiple drive paths
- Installing/reinstalling the sg and the st drivers
- Configuring 6 GB and larger SAS HBAs in Solaris
- Preventing Solaris driver unloading
- About Solaris robotic controls
- About Solaris tape drive device files
- Configuring Solaris SAN clients to recognize FT media servers
- Uninstalling the sg driver on Solaris
- Solaris command summary
- Windows
- Linux
- Section II. Robotic storage devices
- Robot overview
- Oracle StorageTek ACSLS robots
- About Oracle StorageTek ACSLS robots
- Sample ACSLS configurations
- Media requests for an ACS robot
- About configuring ACS drives
- Configuring shared ACS drives
- Adding tapes to ACS robots
- About removing tapes from ACS robots
- Robot inventory operations on ACS robots
- NetBackup robotic control, communication, and logging
- ACS robotic test utility
- Changing your ACS robotic configuration
- ACS configurations supported
- Oracle StorageTek ACSLS firewall configuration
- Device configuration examples
Solaris command summary
The following is a summary of commands that may be useful when you configure and verify devices:
/usr/sbin/modinfo | grep sg
/usr/openv/volmgr/bin/driver/sg.install
/usr/sbin/rem_drv sg
Uninstalls the sg driver. This command usually is not necessary because sg.install uninstalls the old driver before it upgrades a driver.
/usr/openv/volmgr/bin/sg.build all -mt max_target -ml max_lun
Updates
st.conf,sg.conf, and sg.links, and generates SCSI Target IDs with multiple LUNs./usr/openv/volmgr/bin/sgscan all
Scans all connected devices with an SCSI inquiry and provides correlation between physical and the logical devices that use all device files in
/dev/sg.Also checks for the devices that are connected to the StorEdge Network Foundation HBA that are not configured for use by Veritas products.
boot -r or reboot -- -r
Reboot the system with the reconfigure option (-r). The kernel's SCSI disk (sd) driver then recognizes the drive as a disk drive during system initialization.
See the procedures in this chapter for examples of their usage.