Please enter search query.
Search <book_title>...
NetBackup™ NAS Administrator's Guide
Last Published:
2024-03-27
Product(s):
NetBackup & Alta Data Protection (10.4)
- Section I. About NAS backups
- Section II. Using NAS-Data-Protection (D-NAS)
- D-NAS overview
- D-NAS Planning and Tuning
- Pre-requisites for D-NAS configuration
- Volume multi-host backup
- Configure D-NAS policy for NAS volumes
- Using accelerator
- Using Vendor Change Tracking
- Replication using D-NAS policy
- Restoring from D-NAS backups
- Troubleshooting
- Section III. Using NDMP
- Introduction to NetBackup for NDMP
- About NetBackup for NDMP
- Types of NDMP backup
- About assigning tape drives to different hosts
- Installation Notes for NetBackup for NDMP
- Configuring NDMP backup to NDMP-attached devices
- About Media and Device Management configuration
- About creating an NDMP policy
- About enabling or disabling DAR
- Configuring NDMP backup to NetBackup media servers (remote NDMP)
- Configuring NDMP DirectCopy
- Accelerator for NDMP
- Remote NDMP and disk devices
- Using the Shared Storage Option (SSO) with NetBackup for NDMP
- NAS appliance information for NDMP
- Vendor-specific information
- EMC Celerra
- NetApp
- Using NetBackup with NetApp's Data ONTAP 8.2 cluster mode
- Using NetBackup with NetApp's Data ONTAP 8.2 cluster mode
- Backup and restore procedures
- Troubleshooting
- Using NetBackup for NDMP scripts
- Introduction to NetBackup for NDMP
Multi-stream restores from D-NAS backups
Starting with NetBackup version 10.2, you can restore a NAS volume using multiple restore streams. Each restore stream runs in parallel, and the restored files are dynamically distributed to each of these restore streams. This helps in achieving optimal performance during restore job. The result is a faster NAS volume restores. Ensure that the primary and media servers, along with the NetBackup client are upgraded to 10.2 to use multi-stream restore.
Each NAS volume restore has a separate parent-child job hierarchy. The parent job is a controller job for the NAS volume and the child job(s) perform the actual restore of the data. Each child restore job represents one restore stream.