Veritas NetBackup™ 8.0 for VMware Administrator's Guide
- Introduction
- Required tasks: overview
- Notes and prerequisites
- Configure NetBackup communication with VMware
- Configure NetBackup policies for VMware
- VMware backup options
- Configure a VMware Intelligent Policy
- Reduce the size of backups
- Back up virtual machines
- Use Accelerator to back up virtual machines
- Restore virtual machines
- Restoring the full VMware virtual machine
- Virtual Machine Recovery dialog boxes (restore to original location)
- Virtual Machine Recovery dialogs boxes (restore to alternate location)
- Restoring VMware virtual machine disks
- Restoring individual files
- Browse and search virtual machines for restore
- Restore virtual machines with Instant Recovery
- Use NetBackup for vCloud Director
- Virtual machine recovery dialog boxes for vCloud Director
- Best practices and more information
- Troubleshooting
- Appendix A. NetBackup commands to back up and restore virtual machines
- Using NetBackup commands to create a VMware policy
- Appendix B. Configuring services for NFS on Windows
- About configuring services for NFS on Windows 2012 (NetBackup for VMware)
- About configuring services for NFS on Windows 2008 and 2008 R2 (NetBackup for VMware)
- About configuring Services for Network File System (NFS) on the Windows 2003 R2 SP2 NetBackup media server and NetBackup clients (NetBackup for VMware)
- Appendix C. The Reuse VM selection query results option
- Appendix D. Backup of VMware raw devices (RDM)
- Appendix E. SYMCquiesce utility for Linux virtual machines
About VMware virtual machine disk restore
NetBackup supports the restore of individual VMware virtual machine disks, as follows:
Restore virtual disks to a new VM | NetBackup creates a new virtual machine and restores the specified disks to the new VM. The new VM is intended to be a container for the restored disks. It is minimally configured and does not have enough memory to run most operating systems. After the restore, you should attach the restored virtual disks to a VM that can support them and then delete the restore VM. |
Restore virtual disks to an existing VM | You can restore the disks to the same VM from which the disks were backed up or to a different VM. If you restore to the original VM, you can either overwrite the original disks or attach the virtual disks without overwriting the original disks. For this type of restore, NetBackup creates a new, temporary VM to which it restores the virtual disks. Then, NetBackup attaches the virtual disks to the existing, target VM. Finally, NetBackup deletes the temporary VM after the disk or disks are attached successfully. |
The restore requires that you describe in a text file the parameters of the restore, as follows:
The backup image from which you want to restore.
The target VM if restoring to an existing VM.
The virtual machine disks to restore.
Other parameters control other aspects of the restore.
The NetBackup nbrestorevm command includes an option that you can use to create the required restore parameters file from a backup image. The NetBackup nbrestorevm command then reads that file to accomplish the restore.
See Restoring VMware virtual machine disks.
The restore parameters file uses the JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format to describe the restore parameters.
See VMware virtual machine disk restore file.
Support for virtual disk restore requires that a NetBackup 7.7.3 or later master server and backup host perform both the backup and the restore. Sufficient storage must exist for the restore.
NetBackup does not support the following virtual machine disk restores:
From NetBackup Replication Director for VMware backups.
To templates. However, virtual disks from a backup of a VM template can be restored to a virtual machine.