Veritas CloudPoint Administrator's Guide
- Getting started with CloudPoint
- Section I. Installing and configuring CloudPoint
- Preparing for installation
- Deploying CloudPoint
- Deploying CloudPoint in the AWS cloud
- Using plug-ins to discover assets
- Configuring off-host plug-ins
- AWS plug-in configuration notes
- Google Cloud Platform plug-in configuration notes
- Microsoft Azure plug-in configuration notes
- HPE RMC plug-in configuration notes
- NetApp plug-in configuration notes
- Hitachi plug-in configuration notes
- InfiniBox plug-in configuration notes
- About CloudPoint plug-ins and assets discovery
- Configuring the on-host agents and plug-ins
- Oracle plug-in configuration notes
- Protecting assets with CloudPoint's agentless feature
- Preparing for installation
- Section II. Configuring users
- Section III. Protecting and managing data
- User interface basics
- Indexing and classifying your assets
- Protecting your assets with policies
- Tag-based asset protection
- Replicating snapshots for added protection
- Managing your assets
- About snapshot restore
- Single file restore requirements and limitations
- Additional steps required after a SQL Server snapshot restore
- Monitoring activities with notifications and the job log
- Protection and disaster recovery
- Section IV. Maintaining CloudPoint
- CloudPoint logging
- Troubleshooting CloudPoint
- Working with your CloudPoint license
- Managing CloudPoint agents and plug-ins
- Upgrading CloudPoint
- Uninstalling CloudPoint
- Section V. Reference
Configuring VSS to store shadow copies on the originating drive
If you want to take disk-level, application-consistent Windows snapshots of a Windows file system or SQL application, you must configure Microsoft Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS). VSS lets you take volume snapshots while applications continue to write to the volume.
When you configure VSS, keep in mind the following;
CloudPoint currently has a limitation that you must manually configure the shadow copy creation location to the same drive or volume as the originating drive. This approach ensures that an application-consistent snapshot is created.
If shadow storage already exists on an alternate drive or a dedicated drive, you must disable that storage and replace it with the configuration in the following procedure.
To configure VSS to store shadow copies on the originating drive
On the Windows host, open the command prompt. If User Account Control (UAC) setting is enabled on the server, launch the command prompt in the
mode.For each drive letter on which you want to take disk-level, application-consistent snapshots using CloudPoint, enter a command similar to the following:
vssadmin add shadowstorage /for=<drive being backed up> ^ /on=<drive to store the shadow copy> ^ /maxsize=<percentage of disk space allowed to be used>
Here, maxsize represents the maximum free space usage allowed on the shadow storage drive. The caret (^) character in the command represents the Windows command line continuation character.
For example, if the VSS shadow copies of the
D:
drive are to be stored on theD:
drive and allowed to use up to 80% of the free disk space onD:
, the command syntax is as follows:vssadmin add shadowstorage /for=d: /on=d: /maxsize=80%
The command prompt displays a message similar to the following:
Successfully added the shadow copy storage association
Verify your changes using the following command:
vssadmin list shadowstorage