NetBackup™ Web UI Administrator's Guide
- Section I. About NetBackup
- Section II. Monitoring and notifications
- Monitoring NetBackup activity
- Activity monitor
- Job monitoring
- Troubleshooting the viewing and managing of jobs
- Device monitor
- Notifications
- Registering the data collector
- Monitoring NetBackup activity
- Section III. Configuring hosts
- Managing host properties
- Busy file settings properties
- Client attributes properties
- Client settings properties for UNIX clients
- Client settings properties for Windows clients
- Data Classification properties
- Default job priorities properties
- Encryption properties
- Exchange properties
- Exclude list properties
- Fibre transport properties
- General server properties
- Global attributes properties
- Logging properties
- Media properties
- Network settings properties
- Port ranges properties
- Preferred network properties
- Resilient network properties
- Restore failover properties
- Retention periods properties
- Scalable Storage properties
- Servers properties
- SharePoint properties
- SLP settings properties
- Managing credentials for workloads and systems that NetBackup accesses
- Managing deployment
- Managing host properties
- Section IV. Configuring storage
- Overview of storage options
- Configuring disk storage
- Integrating MSDP Cloud and CMS
- Create a universal share
- Managing media servers
- Configuring storage units
- Managing tape drives
- Managing robots and tape drives
- Inventorying robots
- Managing volumes
- Managing volume pools
- Managing volume groups
- Staging backups
- Troubleshooting storage configuration
- Section V. Configuring backups
- Overview of backups in the NetBackup web UI
- Managing protection plans
- Managing classic policies
- Protecting the NetBackup catalog
- Catalog backups
- Managing backup images
- Pausing data protection activity
- Section VI. Managing security
- Security events and audit logs
- Managing security certificates
- Managing host mappings
- Configuring multi-person authorization
- Managing user sessions
- Configuring multifactor authentication
- Managing the global security settings for the primary server
- About trusted primary servers
- Using access keys, API keys, and access codes
- Configuring authentication options
- Managing role-based access control
- Disabling access to NetBackup interfaces for OS Administrators
- Section VII. Detection and reporting
- Detecting anomalies
- About backup anomaly detection
- Malware scanning
- Usage reporting and capacity licensing
- Detecting anomalies
- Section VIII. NetBackup workloads and NetBackup Flex Scale
- Section IX. Administering NetBackup
- Management topics
- Managing client backups and restores
- About client-redirected restores
- Section X. Disaster recovery and troubleshooting
- Section XI. Other topics
- Additional NetBackup catalog information
- About the NetBackup database
- About the NetBackup database installation
- Post-installation tasks
- Using the NetBackup Database Administration utility on Windows
- Using the NetBackup Database Administration utility on UNIX
About server-directed restores
A NetBackup user with the Administrator role or similar permissions can perform restores from the NetBackup primary server. This type of restore is available in the web UI for the following policy types:
BigData | Hypervisor - Nutanix | Standard |
Cloud-Object-Store | MS-Windows | Universal-Share |
FlashBackup | MSDP-Object-Store | VMware (agent-based recovery) |
FlashBackup-Windows | NAS-Data-Protection | |
Hyper-V | NDMP |
Restore types in addition to "Normal backups" are available for certain policy types. For example: Archived backups, Optimized backups (MS-Windows), Point-in-time rollback (Standard), Raw partition backups, True image backups, Virtual disk restore (VMware), and Virtual machine backups (Hypervisor-Nutanix).
By default, NetBackup clients are configured to allow NetBackup administrators on a primary server to direct restores to any client.
To prevent server-directed restores for a client do the following:
On Windows clients:
Open the
interface.Select
, then clear the check box.On UNIX clients:
Add DISALLOW_SERVER_FILE_WRITES to the following file on the client:
/usr/openv/netbackup/bp.conf
Note:
On UNIX systems, the redirected restores can incorrectly set UIDs or GIDs that are too long. The UIDs and GIDs of files that are restored from one platform to another may be represented with more bits on the source system than on the destination system. If the UID or the GID name in question is not common to both systems, the original UID or GID may be invalid on the destination system. In this case, the UID or GID is replaced with the UID or GID of the user that performs the restore.
On UNIX, no progress log is produced if the bp.conf file of the requesting server does not contain an entry for the restoring server. Without that entry, the restoring server has no access to write the log files to the requesting server. (A progress log is an entry in the Task Progress tab of the Backup, Archive, and Restore client interface.)
Consider the following solutions:
To produce a progress log, add the requesting server to the server list.
Log in to the requesting server. In the NetBackup web UI, open the host properties for the primary server. Then click
. Add the restoring server to the server list.Log on to the restoring server. Check the Activity monitor to determine the success of the restore operation.
To restore a UNIX backup that contains soft and hard links, run the Backup, Archive, and Restore client interface from a UNIX machine.