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
About the NetBackup sg driver
NetBackup provides its own SCSI pass-through driver to communicate with SCSI-controlled robotic peripherals. This driver is called the SCSA (generic SCSI pass-through driver), also referred to as the sg driver.
For full feature support, NetBackup requires the sg driver and SCSI pass-through device paths.
Install the NetBackup sg driver on each Solaris NetBackup media server that hosts tape devices. Each time you add or remove a device, you should reinstall the sg driver again.
If you do not use a pass-through driver, performance suffers.
NetBackup uses the pass-through driver for the following:
By avrd and robotic processes to scan drives.
By NetBackup to position tapes by using the locate-block method.
By NetBackup for SAN error recovery.
By NetBackup for Quantum SDLT performance optimization.
By NetBackup for SCSI reservations.
By NetBackup device configuration to collect robot and drive information.
To collect Tape Alert information from tape devices allowing support of functions such as tape drive cleaning.
For WORM tape support.
Future NetBackup features and enhancements
Note:
Because NetBackup uses its own pass-through driver, NetBackup does not support the Solaris sgen SCSI pass-through driver.
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