Veritas NetBackup™ for Enterprise Vault™ Agent Administrator's Guide
- Introduction to NetBackup Enterprise Vault
- About NetBackup Enterprise Vault agent installation requirements
- Installation requirements for NetBackup Enterprise Vault agent
- Verifying Enterprise Vault agent operating system compatibility
- NetBackup server and client software requirements
- About Enterprise Vault agent installation requirements in a cluster
- Configuring Enterprise Vault Agent to protect Enterprise Vault databases
- Adding the Enterprise Vault agent license key
- Configuration requirements for upgrading the Enterprise Vault agent
- Configuration
- About the Windows and Java user interfaces
- Specifying a logon account for the Enterprise Vault server
- About VSS-based snapshot configuration
- Configuring the local media server for Enterprise Vault backup
- Configuration requirements for an Enterprise Vault backup policy
- Adding a new Enterprise Vault policy
- Enterprise Vault backup policy attributes
- Adding schedules to an Enterprise Vault policy
- About the types of Enterprise Vault backups
- Creating a backup selections list
- Adding a client to a policy
- About features provided by Enterprise Vault for a backup provider
- Performing backups of Enterprise Vault
- Performing restores of Enterprise Vault
- Important notes about Enterprise Vault data restore
- Stopping the administrative services on Enterprise Vault servers
- About the Backup, Archive, and Restore interface
- Viewing backup data using the Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio
- Restoring Enterprise Vault data
- About the Enterprise Vault restore options on the General tab
- About the Enterprise Vault Database Settings tab
- Specifying the server, clients, and policy type for restores
- About restoring Enterprise Vault file system data
- Restoring an Enterprise Vault file system component
- About restoring Enterprise Vault SQL databases
- Restoring Enterprise Vault SQL database components
- Disaster recovery
- Disaster recovery requirements for Enterprise Vault server
- About disaster recovery of an Enterprise Vault site
- Recovering a directory database
- Recovering an auditing database
- Recovering an FSA Reporting database
- Recovering a Monitoring database
- Recovering index locations
- Recovering an Enterprise Vault vault store group
- Recovering a fingerprint database
- Recovering a vault store database
- Recovering vault store partition
- Recovering Enterprise Vault partitions
- Recovering an Enterprise Vault server
- Recovering an Enterprise Vault server on a different system
- Enterprise Vault Agent support for Enterprise Vault
- Policy configuration for Enterprise Vault
- Notes about Enterprise Vault 10.0 backups
- Excluding files from the exclude list
- About planning backup schedules
- About hosts for Enterprise Vault policies
- About Enterprise Vault tools
- About Enterprise Vault agent backups
- About Enterprise Vault agent restores
- Useful tips about Enterprise Vault agent
- Enterprise Vault agent functionality and support for Enterprise Vault
- Troubleshooting
- Appendix A. NetBackup Enterprise Vault Migrator
- About the Enterprise Vault Migrator
- About configuring a backup policy for migration
- About configuring Enterprise Vault for collection and migration
- Testing the Enterprise Vault migrator configuration
- Setting the recommended DCOM settings
- Restoring Enterprise Vault migrated data from NetBackup
- Troubleshooting the Enterprise Vault migrator
Important notes about Enterprise Vault data restore
The Backup, Archive, and Restore user interface is used to restore Enterprise Vault data. You can restore any type of Enterprise Vault data from the Backup, Archive, and Restore user interface whose backup was taken from Enterprise Vault agent policy.
Review the following before you begin an Enterprise Vault restore:
The destination client for Enterprise Vault file system data restore should have the same version of Enterprise Vault installed as the client from where Enterprise Vault was backed up.
From the Backup, Archive, and Restore interface, you can change the destination client and policy type. Select > and make the necessary adjustments to the options in this dialog box as shown in the following image.
When you perform a disaster recovery of Enterprise Vault data, restore the directory database first. After you successfully restore the directory database, you can restore other Enterprise Vault components and partitions.
Veritas recommends that you restore the vault store database when you attempt to restore an open partition. In addition, you should restore the open partition when you attempt to restore the vault store database.
Veritas recommends that you restore individual components of Enterprise Vault one at a time.
You must stop all Enterprise Vault services on Enterprise Vault servers when performing a restore.
See Stopping the administrative services on Enterprise Vault servers.
When you restore Enterprise Vault data you select the backup images that are displayed in the Backup, Archive, and Restore interface. These images are for Enterprise Vault file system data or Enterprise Vault SQL databases.
See About the Backup, Archive, and Restore interface.