NetBackup™ Release Notes
- About NetBackup 10.3
- New features, enhancements, and changes
- NetBackup 10.3 new features, changes, and enhancements
- Operational notes
- NetBackup installation and upgrade operational notes
- NetBackup administration and general operational notes
- NetBackup administration interface operational notes
- NetBackup Bare Metal Restore operational notes
- NetBackup Cloud Object Store Workload operational notes
- NetBackup Snapshot Manager (formerly NetBackup CloudPoint)
- NetBackup NAS operational notes
- NetBackup for OpenStack operational notes
- NetBackup internationalization and localization operational notes
- Appendix A. About SORT for NetBackup Users
- Appendix B. NetBackup installation requirements
- Appendix C. NetBackup compatibility requirements
- Appendix D. Other NetBackup documentation and related documents
About multi-factor authentication
Multi-factor authentication is a multi-step account login process that requires users to enter more information than just a password. The second level of authentication can help prevent unauthorized account access if a system password is compromised. This method protects against stolen credentials by requiring additional authentication steps (or factors) before granting access. Common factors are username and password, numeric codes from an authentication application, or physical security keys. NetBackup supports time-based one-time password. The one-time password works with commonly available authentication applications, such as Microsoft Authenticator or Google Authenticator. NetBackup users can configure multi-factor authentication for their user accounts. If the NetBackup Security Administrator has enforced it in the domain, all users must configure it for a successful web UI sign-in.
See the NetBackup Web UI Administrator's Guide for more information.