NetBackup™ Web UI Microsoft SQL Server Administrator's Guide

Last Published:
Product(s): NetBackup (10.3.0.1, 10.3)
  1. About NetBackup for SQL Server
    1.  
      Overview of NetBackup for SQL Server
    2.  
      Detailed features for NetBackup for SQL Server
  2. Installation and host configuration
    1. Planning the installation of NetBackup for SQL Server
      1.  
        NetBackup server and client requirements
      2.  
        Requirements for using NetBackup for SQL Server in a NetBackup cluster
      3.  
        License for NetBackup for SQL Server
    2. Configuring SQL Server hosts and user permissions
      1.  
        Installing the Veritas VSS provider for vSphere
    3.  
      Configuring the NetBackup services for SQL Server backups and restores
    4.  
      Configure local security privileges for SQL Server
    5.  
      Assign an RBAC role to the SQL Server administrator
    6.  
      Configuring the primary server host name for the SQL Server agent
    7.  
      Configure the number of jobs allowed for backup operations
    8.  
      Configure the Maximum jobs per client setting
  3. Managing SQL Server discovery and credentials
    1. About discovery of SQL Server objects
      1.  
        Discover advanced or basic availability groups on demand
      2.  
        Discover databases on demand
      3.  
        Discover read-scale availability groups
    2. About SQL Server credentials
      1.  
        Add a credential for SQL Server
      2.  
        Select a credential for a SQL Server instance or replica
      3.  
        View the credential name that is applied to an asset
      4.  
        Edit or delete a named credential
    3.  
      Remove SQL Server instances
    4.  
      Manually add a SQL Server instance
  4. Managing protection plans for SQL Server
    1.  
      About protecting SQL Server availability groups
    2. Create a protection plan to protect SQL Server assets
      1.  
        Schedules
      2.  
        Performance tuning and configuration options
    3.  
      Add SQL Server assets to a protection plan
    4.  
      Customize protection settings for a Microsoft SQL Server asset
    5.  
      Remove protection from SQL Server assets
    6.  
      Protect a SQL Server availability group that crosses NetBackup domains
  5. Configuring backup policies with Snapshot Client
    1.  
      About NetBackup Snapshot Client for SQL Server
    2.  
      How SQL Server operations use Snapshot Client
    3.  
      Snapshot methods
    4.  
      Configuration requirements for SQL Server snapshot and Instant Recovery backups
    5.  
      Configure a snapshot policy for SQL Server
    6.  
      Configure a policy for Instant Recovery backups of SQL Server
    7. Using copy-only snapshot backups to affect how differentials are based
      1.  
        Creating a copy-only backup (legacy SQL Server policies)
      2.  
        Creating an Instant Recovery backup that is not copy-only (legacy SQL Server policies)
    8. About SQL Server agent grouped snapshots
      1.  
        Restoring a database backed up in a group
  6. Viewing SQL Server asset details
    1.  
      Browse SQL Server assets
    2.  
      View the protection status of databases, instances, or availability groups
  7. Restoring SQL Server
    1.  
      Requirements for restores of SQL Server
    2.  
      Perform a complete database recovery
    3.  
      Recover a single recovery point
    4.  
      Options for SQL Server restores
    5.  
      Restore a database (non-administrator users)
    6.  
      Select a different backup copy for recovery
    7.  
      Restore a SQL Server availability database to a secondary replica
    8.  
      Restore a SQL Server availability database to the primary and the secondary replicas
  8. Using instant access with SQL Server
    1. Prerequisites when you configure an instant access SQL Server database
      1.  
        Hardware and configuration requirements of instant access
    2.  
      Things to consider before you configure an instant access database
    3.  
      Configure Samba users for SQL Server instant access
    4.  
      Configure an instant access database
    5.  
      View the livemount details of an instant access database
    6.  
      Delete an instant access database
    7.  
      Options for NetBackup for SQL Server instant access
    8.  
      NetBackup for SQL Server terms
    9.  
      Frequently asked questions
  9. Protecting SQL Server with VMware backups
    1. About protecting an application database with VMware backups
      1.  
        Limitations of VMware application backups
    2. Create a protection plan to protect SQL Server data with a VMware backup
      1.  
        Backup options and Advanced options
      2.  
        Exclude disks from backups
      3.  
        Snapshot retry options
    3.  
      Protect SQL Server data with a VMware backup
    4.  
      Restore SQL Server databases from a VMware backup
  10. Performance and troubleshooting
    1.  
      NetBackup for SQL Server performance factors
    2.  
      Troubleshooting credential validation
    3.  
      Troubleshooting VMware backups
    4.  
      SQL Server log truncation failure during VMware backups of SQL Server

How SQL Server operations use Snapshot Client

This topic describes how SQL Server operations use the Snapshot Client.

About selection of backup method

The selection of a backup methodology, whether standard or Snapshot Client, is dependent on what policy is used. If a policy configured for Snapshot Client is selected, then additional attributes of policy determine the Snapshot Client features. It also determines the specific snapshot methods that are used.

About SQL Server limitations with snapshots

Due to SQL Server limitations certain objects cannot be backed up by snapshots. These are database differentials, filegroup differentials, and transaction logs. If a Snapshot Client policy is selected to back up one of these object types, then NetBackup performs a stream-based backup. NetBackup uses the storage unit that is provided in the policy configuration. If a storage unit is not provided, then NetBackup uses the default storage unit for the server.

What is backed up by NetBackup for SQL Server

The database administrator works exclusively with logical objects, such as databases and filegroups. However, it is useful to understand the differences between file- and stream-based backups in terms of the data content that is archived. For stream-based backups, NetBackup captures the data stream content that is provided by SQL Server. If the user has specified multiple streams, then SQL Server opens multiple streams that NetBackup catalogs as separate images.

For file-based backups, NetBackup creates a file list that consists of all the physical files that constitute the object. This file list is supplied to the Snapshot Client, which is responsible for snapshot creation. If multiple streams are specified, then NetBackup divides the file list into sub-lists. Each sub-list is backed up separately and constitutes a separate image. Users may notice that if multiple streams are specified for a file-based backup and if the number of streams exceeds the number of component files, then the number of file-based streams does not exceed the number of files. With stream-based SQL Server backups, SQL Server always creates exactly the number of streams that the end user specifies.

The file list that is used to back up a SQL Server database consists of the physical files that constitute the primary filegroup. The file list also consists of any secondary filegroups, and the transaction log. Typically, these can be identified respectively by their name extensions, which are .mdf, .ndf, and .ldf. The file list for a filegroup backup consists of the physical files that belong to the filegroup. And, finally, the file list for a file object backup consists of a single physical file. This file is the file that maps to the SQL Server file object.

About Snapshot Client and SQL Server performance considerations

When a physical file is backed up with the Snapshot Client, the backup consists of the entire extent. This backup contrasts with stream-based SQL Server backups where only the actual data content of the objects are archived. If you intend to use snapshot technology to back up SQL Server, you may want to use the SQL Server dynamic file allocation. This configuration reduces the likelihood that any of the component files contain large areas of empty space.

Also review the other considerations for SQL Server disk initialization.

About SQL Server snapshot backups

No special interfacing considerations exist when you perform Snapshot Client backups of SQL Server. A snapshot backup is performed if the backup object is: a database, a filegroup, or a file and a policy is selected and configured for Snapshot Client. If a differential backup or transaction log backup is tried with a Snapshot Client backup, then the operation uses the selected policy. But a standard database backup is performed with the configured storage unit.

About SQL Server snapshot restores

Any backup images that were created from snapshots display along with standard backup images. That is, all backup items - without regard to method - display in a time-sequenced ordering that respects the composition of the database hierarchy. In addition, no weighting is given in to determine an optimal recovery that is based on the backup method.