Veritas NetBackup™ OpenStorage Solutions Guide for Disk
- Introducing disk appliance storage solutions
- Planning your deployment
- Planning your OpenStorage deployment
- About OpenStorage requirements and limitations
- About OpenStorage storage servers for backups
- About OpenStorage server credentials
- About OpenStorage data movers for backups
- About the OpenStorage plug-in
- About OpenStorage disk pools for backups
- About OpenStorage optimized duplication and replication
- About OpenStorage optimized synthetic backups
- About storage unit groups for OpenStorage
- About OpenStorage direct to tape
- Provisioning the storage
- Licensing OpenStorage
- Configuring OpenStorage in NetBackup
- Configuring OpenStorage disk appliance storage
- Configuring an OpenStorage storage server for backups
- Configuring an OpenStorage disk pool for backups
- Configuring an OpenStorage storage unit
- Configuring OpenStorage optimized synthetic backups
- Configuring OpenStorage direct to tape
- Configuring optimized duplication to an OpenStorage device within the same NetBackup domain
- Configuring replication to an OpenStorage device in a different domain
- About storage lifecycle policies
- About the storage lifecycle policies required for Auto Image Replication
- Creating a storage lifecycle policy
- Creating a backup policy
- Adding OpenStorage functionality to an existing environment
- Managing OpenStorage
- Managing OpenStorage storage servers
- Viewing OpenStorage storage servers
- Determining OpenStorage storage server state
- Changing OpenStorage storage server properties
- Setting OpenStorage storage server attributes
- Removing OpenStorage storage server attributes
- Updating an OpenStorage storage server to reflect plug-in updates
- Deleting an OpenStorage storage server
- Managing OpenStorage server credentials
- Managing OpenStorage data movers
- Managing OpenStorage disk pools
- Viewing OpenStorage disk pools
- Determining OpenStorage disk pool state
- Changing OpenStorage disk pool state
- Determining OpenStorage disk volume state
- Changing OpenStorage disk volume state
- Changing OpenStorage disk pool properties
- Setting OpenStorage disk pool attributes
- Removing OpenStorage disk pool attributes
- Adding volumes to an OpenStorage disk pool
- Merging OpenStorage disk pools
- Removing a volume from an OpenStorage disk pool
- Updating an OpenStorage disk pool to reflect plug-in updates
- Deleting an OpenStorage disk pool
- Monitoring OpenStorage storage capacity and usage
- Viewing OpenStorage disk reports
- Reporting on Auto Image Replication jobs
- About catalog backups to OpenStorage devices
- About restoring from OpenStorage backup copies
- About restoring from a backup at a target master domain
- Managing OpenStorage storage servers
- Troubleshooting
About legacy logging
Legacy logging and unified logging are the two forms of debug logging used in NetBackup. All NetBackup processes use either unified logging or legacy logging.
In legacy debug logging, each process creates log files of debug activity in its own logging directory. The NetBackup legacy debug log directories are located in the following directories:
Windows | install_path\NetBackup\logs install_path\Volmgr\debug |
UNIX | /usr/openv/netbackup/logs /usr/openv/volmgr/debug |
These top-level directories can contain a directory for each NetBackup process that uses legacy logging. By default, NetBackup creates only a subset of all of the possible log directories. For example, the following directories are created by default on UNIX servers:
nbfp
nbliveup
nblogadm
user_ops
To enable logging for all of the NetBackup processes that use legacy logging, you must create the log file directories that do not already exist, unless you use the Logging Assistant. For more information about the Logging Assistant, see the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume I. The guide is available at the following location:
http://www.veritas.com/docs/DOC5332
You can use the following batch files to create all of the debug log directories at once:
See the NetBackup Commands Reference Guide for a complete description about the mklogdir command. The guide is available at the following location:
http://www.veritas.com/docs/DOC5332
After the directories are created, NetBackup creates log files in the directory that is associated with each process. A debug log file is created when the process begins. Each log file grows to a certain size before the NetBackup process closes it and creates a new log file.
To enable debug logging for the NetBackup Status Collection Daemon (vmscd), create the following directory before you start nbemm.
As an alternative, you can restart vmscd after creating the directory.
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