NetBackup™ Backup Planning and Performance Tuning Guide
- NetBackup capacity planning
- Primary server configuration guidelines
- Media server configuration guidelines
- NetBackup hardware design and tuning considerations
- About NetBackup Media Server Deduplication (MSDP)
- MSDP tuning considerations
- MSDP sizing considerations
- Accelerator performance considerations
- Media configuration guidelines
- How to identify performance bottlenecks
- Best practices
- Best practices: NetBackup AdvancedDisk
- Best practices: NetBackup tape drive cleaning
- Best practices: Universal shares
- NetBackup for VMware sizing and best practices
- Best practices: Storage lifecycle policies (SLPs)
- Measuring Performance
- Table of NetBackup All Log Entries report
- Evaluating system components
- Tuning the NetBackup data transfer path
- NetBackup network performance in the data transfer path
- NetBackup server performance in the data transfer path
- About shared memory (number and size of data buffers)
- About the communication between NetBackup client and media server
- Effect of fragment size on NetBackup restores
- Other NetBackup restore performance issues
- About shared memory (number and size of data buffers)
- Tuning other NetBackup components
- How to improve NetBackup resource allocation
- How to improve FlashBackup performance
- Tuning disk I/O performance
Best practices: Universal shares
NetBackup's universal shares feature provides open-source data protection without the need for a backup agent or API. The feature was designed for use with Oracle, MS-SQL, and other relational database types so that a database analyst (DBA) can "dump" a database backup to a specific network share that is mounted on the database client via NFS or SMB. At that point, the "dump" can then be protected with a specialized NetBackup policy. This approach provides the DBA the flexibility to manage their own backups while also realizing the existing protection and optimization benefits of other NetBackup features like MSDP.
Space efficiency is achieved by storing this data directly into an existing NetBackup-based deduplication pool. Any data that is stored in a universal share is automatically placed in MSDP storage where it is deduplicated automatically. This data is then deduplicated against all other data that was previously ingested into the media server's MSDP pool. Because a typical MSDP storage server stores data across a broad scope of data types, the universal share offers significant deduplication efficiency.
After the data is protected and indexed within the NetBackup catalog, the data can be duplicated or replicated as part of any activity that is supported by a NetBackup storage lifecycle policy (SLP).