Veritas NetBackup™ Cloud Administrator's Guide
- About NetBackup cloud storage
- About the cloud storage
- About the cloud storage vendors for NetBackup
- About the Amazon S3 cloud storage API type
- Amazon S3 cloud storage vendors certified for NetBackup
- Amazon S3 storage type requirements
- Amazon S3 cloud storage provider options
- Amazon S3 cloud storage options
- Amazon S3 advanced server configuration options
- Amazon S3 credentials broker details
- About private clouds from Amazon S3-compatible cloud providers
- About Amazon S3 storage classes
- Amazon virtual private cloud support with NetBackup
- About protecting data in Amazon for long-term retention
- Protecting data using Amazon's cloud tiering
- About NetBackup character restrictions for Amazon S3 cloud connector
- About Microsoft Azure cloud storage API type
- About OpenStack Swift cloud storage API type
- Configuring cloud storage in NetBackup
- Before you begin to configure cloud storage in NetBackup
- Configuring cloud storage in NetBackup
- Cloud installation requirements
- Scalable Storage properties
- Cloud Storage properties
- About the NetBackup CloudStore Service Container
- Deploying host name-based certificates
- Deploying host ID-based certificates
- About data compression for cloud backups
- About data encryption for cloud storage
- About key management for encryption of NetBackup cloud storage
- About cloud storage servers
- About object size for cloud storage
- About the NetBackup media servers for cloud storage
- Configuring a storage server for cloud storage
- Changing cloud storage server properties
- NetBackup cloud storage server properties
- About cloud storage disk pools
- Configuring a disk pool for cloud storage
- Saving a record of the KMS key names for NetBackup cloud storage encryption
- Adding backup media servers to your cloud environment
- Configuring a storage unit for cloud storage
- About NetBackup Accelerator and NetBackup Optimized Synthetic backups
- Enabling NetBackup Accelerator with cloud storage
- Enabling optimized synthetic backups with cloud storage
- Creating a backup policy
- Changing cloud storage disk pool properties
- Managing Certification Authorities (CA) for NetBackup Cloud
- Monitoring and Reporting
- Operational notes
- Troubleshooting
- About unified logging
- About legacy logging
- NetBackup cloud storage log files
- Enable libcurl logging
- NetBackup Administration Console fails to open
- Troubleshooting cloud storage configuration issues
- NetBackup Scalable Storage host properties unavailable
- Connection to the NetBackup CloudStore Service Container fails
- Cannot create a cloud storage disk pool
- Cannot create a cloud storage
- Data transfer to cloud storage server fails in the SSL mode
- Amazon GovCloud cloud storage configuration fails in non-SSL mode
- Data restore from the Google Nearline storage class may fail
- Backups may fail for cloud storage configurations with Frankfurt region
- Backups may fail for cloud storage configurations with the cloud compression option
- Fetching storage regions fails with authentication version V2
- Troubleshooting cloud storage operational issues
- Cloud storage backups fail
- Stopping and starting the NetBackup CloudStore Service Container
- A restart of the nbcssc (on legacy media servers), nbwmc, and nbsl processes reverts all cloudstore.conf settings
- NetBackup CloudStore Service Container startup and shutdown troubleshooting
- bptm process takes time to terminate after cancelling GLACIER restore job
- Handling image cleanup failures for Amazon Glacier vault
- Cleaning up orphaned archives manually
- Restoring from Amazon Glacier vault spans more than 24 hours for single fragment
- Restoring from GLACIER_VAULT takes more than 24 hours for Oracle databases
- Troubleshooting failures due to missing Amazon IAM permissions
- Restore job fails if the restore job start time overlaps with the backup job end time
About protecting data in Amazon Glacier
To protect your data for long-term retention you can back up the data to Amazon (AWS) Glacier using NetBackup. Using NetBackup, you can create a storage server with Glacier storage class.
During the backup process, NetBackup internally uses the Amazon's zero-day lifecycle policy to transition data to Glacier. AWS lifecycle policy is a lifecycle rule defined to transition objects to the Glacier storage class in 0 (zero) days after creation. The following diagram illustrates the configuration process:
To configure a cloud storage server for Amazon GLACIER or DEEP ARCHIVE storage class
- Configure the Amazon GLACIER cloud storage server.
- Create a disk pool using the Amazon bucket for GLACIER storage.
- Create a backup policy.
When you configure a storage server to transition data to Amazon Glacier, consider the following:
Ensure that Amazon Glacier is supported for the region to which the bucket belongs.
Ensure that the selected bucket does not have any existing Amazon lifecycle policy.
For restores, set the retrieval retention period to minimum 3 days.
Select option wherever possible to reduce time and cost for image imports.
To retrieve the data that is sent to Glacier, there is an inherent time delay of around 4 hours per fragment of the backup image. For phase 2 of image imports, this time delay is prevalent for images in the Glacier storage. However, if you enable in the policy, the time delay for phase 2 imports reduces drastically from 4 hours to a few minutes per fragment. Phase 1 imports are faster, irrespective of whether is enabled or not for the policy.
See the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume I to know more about supported workloads and file systems for .
See the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume I to know more about the phases during image imports.
You can reduce restore time by parallel restores. For this operation, you use multistreaming to backup which creates multiple images at logical boundaries.
Workload Granular Recovery (GRT) or VMware Single File Restore (SFR), increases the time-out on the master, media, and client to more than 5 hours.
Consider the following limitations:
NetBackup Accelerator feature is not supported for policies of the storage units that are created for Amazon Glacier. Do not select the check box.
Note:
This section does not apply to CloudCatalyst, only non-CloudCatalyst storage servers.
You must have the following permissions:
Note:
The bucket owner has these permissions, by default. The bucket owner can grant these permissions to others by writing an access policy.
Also ensure that you also have the required
IAM USERpermissions.
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