NetBackup™ Web UI Cloud Administrator's Guide
- Managing and protecting cloud assets
- Configure Snapshot Manager in NetBackup
- Managing intelligent groups for cloud assets
- Protecting cloud assets or intelligent groups for cloud assets
- About protecting Microsoft Azure resources using resource groups
- About the NetBackup Accelerator for cloud workloads
- Protecting PaaS assets
- Installing the native client utilities
- Configuring storage for different deployments
- Add credentials to a database
- Recovering cloud assets
- Performing granular restore
- Troubleshooting protection and recovery of cloud assets
- Troubleshoot PaaS workload protection and recovery issues
Limitations and considerations
The following limitations and considerations exist for granular restore:
If adequate space is not available on the target location, the restore operation fails before the copy operation begins.
The following devices are ignored when snapshots are performed or indexed.
Ephemeral storage devices
(For example, an Amazon AWS instance store volumes and Microsoft Azure temporary disks.) These devices are also ignored for indexing as well.
File systems that are created on the LDM disk.
These file systems are ignored for host consistent snapshots.
Until the old agent (preinstalled) service is not restarted, alternate host restore (GRT and application) of the LVM asset might fail. To support the recovery of LVM assets, you need to restart the older agents.
Granular restore can be performed with the help of VxMS indexing. VxMS indexing is applicable for all Snapshot Manager-supported file systems. VxMS indexing can be performed for Azure, Azure Stack, AWS, and GCP.
However, VxMS indexing is not supported for volumes or partitions created on software RAID devices. These volumes, or partitions, are skipped while indexing the file system.
Host consistent snapshot is supported for the EXT2 file system only if it is mounted as read only.
If any unsupported file systems are present on the host, the host can be added to the protection plan that is created for granular restore. The protection plans for granular restore have the
check box value set to true.During indexing, OS errors can occur while crawling files, directories, or other entries. These errors are ignored and the indexing operation continues. To restore the missing files, you must initiate the granular restore operations on the parent folder.
When you create or mount a disk from the Windows VM, add the drive letter. This action ensures that the indexing operation can capture the correct drive letter.
In some cases a mount point is not visible when you browse for files or folders from the recovery point. Consider the following reasons:
The "/" (root file system) is on an LVM, and:
The mount point is not directly related to "/" (root file system).
In this scenario, search for the mount point from the right panel and then restore the files or folders successfully.
Consider the following example. A disk is mounted on
/mnt1/mnt2
where/mnt1
is any directory on the "/". (The root file system that is on the LVM setup.)mnt2
is a mount point insidemnt1
.mnt2
is not visible in the tree on the left panel. However, you can search and restore files or folders inside the mount point.To restore files and folders from VM snapshot recovery points, the
/etc/fstab
file on the Linux servers must have entries based on the file system UUID, instead of device paths. The device paths can change depending on the order in which Linux discovers the devices during system boot.While restoring application or file systems from one OS version to another OS version, refer to the OS and application vendor's compatibility matrix. The restore of a file system from a higher version to a lower version is not recommended.
A user group cannot restore a drive as a source to an alternate folder as the destination. A user group does not have the writer permission to create a new folder.
The agentless connection cannot restore the encrypted file by Windows (or EFS) through a granular file-level restore (Restore files and folder option). However, you can restore the file through a volume-level restore and then decrypt the file.
Files that are stored on a volume that is mounted on a folder (junction point) can be restored only if the underlying disk has the GPT partition layout. If the volume is mounted using a drive letter, then the files can be restored irrespective of the partition layout of the underlying disk.
Consider a scenario where an alternate path that does not exist on the RHEL target host is specified for a single file restore. Then the new directories that are created are under the security context of the user under which the agent runs. The storage administrators must ensure that the final restore location is accessible to the required user.
NetBackup does not support indexing of Azure Ultra disks and granular restore.
When you restore files and folders from a Linux source host and the target host is Windows, the following points apply:
File attributes cannot be restored on a Windows host and only the content of the file is restored.
If there is any symlink in the files or folders that are selected for restore, the symlink is not restored.
For a restore to the original location, the check for available size is skipped before the copy operation.
If restoring files or folders when the source host is Linux and the target host is Linux, then the socket and the block files are not restored.
A restore of files and folders is not supported when they reside on any LDM disks, dynamic disks, or storage spaces.
If the media server or the PureDisk Deduplication Engine and Veritas Provisioning file system daemon service restarts, the live mount that is retained during a partially successful restore is removed or expires before the retention period expiration date.
If any media servers are not upgraded to 10.3, then the primary server on version 10.3 is used to connect to NetBackup Snapshot Manager.
The junction point on Windows after indexing uses the following format:
Volume {4e3f8396-490a-400a-8abf-5579cafd4c0f}
To restore a junction point for single file restore from backup operation, select
and in the Advanced options enable .
The following behaviors exist for the Activity monitor:
After a restore job is completed, you cannot expand the directories in the File List section of the restore job.
In the Activity monitor summary, when the restore job starts it shows the current file which is the first entry in the restore items. After the job is complete, the summary no longer displays.
Bytes transferred and estimated bytes are not updated and are shown as 0.