NetBackup™ Commands Reference Guide

Last Published:
Product(s): NetBackup (10.0)
  1. Introduction
    1.  
      About NetBackup commands
    2.  
      Navigating multiple menu levels
    3.  
      NetBackup command conventions
    4.  
      NetBackup Media Manager command notes
    5.  
      IPV6 updates
  2. Appendix A. NetBackup Commands
    1.  
      acsd
    2.  
      add_media_server_on_clients
    3.  
      backupdbtrace
    4.  
      backuptrace
    5.  
      bmrc
    6.  
      bmrconfig
    7.  
      bmrepadm
    8.  
      bmrprep
    9.  
      bmrs
    10.  
      bmrsrtadm
    11.  
      bp
    12.  
      bparchive
    13.  
      bpbackup
    14.  
      bpbackupdb
    15.  
      bpcatarc
    16.  
      bpcatlist
    17.  
      bpcatres
    18.  
      bpcatrm
    19.  
      bpcd
    20.  
      bpchangeprimary
    21.  
      bpcleanrestore
    22.  
      bpclient
    23.  
      bpclimagelist
    24.  
      bpclntcmd
    25.  
      bpclusterutil
    26.  
      bpcompatd
    27.  
      bpconfig
    28.  
      bpdbjobs
    29.  
      bpdbm
    30.  
      bpdgclone
    31.  
      bpdown
    32.  
      bpduplicate
    33.  
      bperror
    34.  
      bpexpdate
    35.  
      bpfis
    36.  
      bpflist
    37.  
      bpgetconfig
    38.  
      bpgetdebuglog
    39.  
      bpimage
    40.  
      bpimagelist
    41.  
      bpimmedia
    42.  
      bpimport
    43.  
      bpinst
    44.  
      bpkeyfile
    45.  
      bpkeyutil
    46.  
      bplabel
    47.  
      bplist
    48.  
      bpmedia
    49.  
      bpmedialist
    50.  
      bpminlicense
    51.  
      bpnbat
    52.  
      bpnbaz
    53.  
      bppficorr
    54.  
      bpplcatdrinfo
    55.  
      bpplclients
    56.  
      bppldelete
    57.  
      bpplinclude
    58.  
      bpplinfo
    59.  
      bppllist
    60.  
      bpplsched
    61.  
      bpplschedrep
    62.  
      bpplschedwin
    63.  
      bppolicynew
    64.  
      bpps
    65.  
      bprd
    66.  
      bprecover
    67.  
      bprestore
    68.  
      bpretlevel
    69.  
      bpschedule
    70.  
      bpschedulerep
    71.  
      bpsetconfig
    72.  
      bpstsinfo
    73.  
      bpstuadd
    74.  
      bpstudel
    75.  
      bpstulist
    76.  
      bpsturep
    77.  
      bptestbpcd
    78.  
      bptestnetconn
    79.  
      bptpcinfo
    80.  
      bpup
    81.  
      bpverify
    82.  
      cat_convert
    83.  
      cat_export
    84.  
      cat_import
    85.  
      configureCerts
    86.  
      configureMQ
    87.  
      configurePorts
    88.  
      configureWebServerCerts
    89.  
      create_nbdb
    90.  
      csconfig cldinstance
    91.  
      csconfig cldprovider
    92.  
      csconfig meter
    93.  
      csconfig reinitialize
    94.  
      csconfig throttle
    95.  
      duplicatetrace
    96.  
      importtrace
    97.  
      jbpSA
    98.  
      jnbSA
    99.  
      ltid
    100.  
      mklogdir
    101.  
      nbauditreport
    102.  
      nbcallhomeproxyconfig
    103.  
      nbcatsync
    104.  
      NBCC
    105.  
      NBCCR
    106.  
      nbcertcmd
    107.  
      nbcertupdater
    108.  
      nbcldutil
    109.  
      nbcloudrestore
    110.  
      nbcomponentupdate
    111.  
      nbcplogs
    112.  
      nbcredkeyutil
    113.  
      nbdb_admin
    114.  
      nbdb_backup
    115.  
      nbdb_move
    116.  
      nbdb_ping
    117.  
      nbdb_restore
    118.  
      nbdb_unload
    119.  
      nbdb2adutl
    120.  
      nbdbms_start_server
    121.  
      nbdbms_start_stop
    122.  
      nbdc
    123.  
      nbdecommission
    124.  
      nbdelete
    125.  
      nbdeployutil
    126.  
      nbdevconfig
    127.  
      nbdevquery
    128.  
      nbdiscover
    129.  
      nbdna
    130.  
      nbemm
    131.  
      nbemmcmd
    132.  
      nbfindfile
    133.  
      nbfirescan
    134.  
      nbfp
    135.  
      nbftadm
    136.  
      nbftconfig
    137.  
      nbgetconfig
    138.  
      nbhba
    139.  
      nbholdutil
    140.  
      nbhostidentity
    141.  
      nbhostmgmt
    142.  
      nbhypervtool
    143.  
      nbidpcmd
    144.  
      nbimageshare
    145.  
      nbinstallcmd
    146.  
      nbjm
    147.  
      nbkmiputil
    148.  
      nbkmscmd
    149.  
      nbkmsutil
    150.  
      nboraadm
    151.  
      nborair
    152.  
      nbpem
    153.  
      nbpemreq
    154.  
      nbmlb
    155.  
      nbperfchk
    156.  
      nbplupgrade
    157.  
      nbrb
    158.  
      nbrbutil
    159.  
      nbregopsc
    160.  
      nbreplicate
    161.  
      nbrepo
    162.  
      nbrestorevm
    163.  
      nbseccmd
    164.  
      nbserviceusercmd
    165.  
      nbsetconfig
    166.  
      nbsmartdiag
    167.  
      nbsnapimport
    168.  
      nbsnapreplicate
    169.  
      nbsqladm
    170.  
      nbstl
    171.  
      nbstlutil
    172.  
      nbstop
    173.  
      nbsu
    174.  
      nbsvrgrp
    175.  
      netbackup_deployment_insights
    176.  
      resilient_clients
    177.  
      restoretrace
    178.  
      stopltid
    179.  
      tldd
    180.  
      tldcd
    181.  
      tpautoconf
    182.  
      tpclean
    183.  
      tpconfig
    184.  
      tpext
    185.  
      tpreq
    186.  
      tpunmount
    187.  
      verifytrace
    188.  
      vltadm
    189.  
      vltcontainers
    190.  
      vlteject
    191.  
      vltinject
    192.  
      vltoffsitemedia
    193.  
      vltopmenu
    194.  
      vltrun
    195.  
      vmadd
    196.  
      vmchange
    197.  
      vmcheckxxx
    198.  
      vmd
    199.  
      vmdelete
    200.  
      vmoprcmd
    201.  
      vmphyinv
    202.  
      vmpool
    203.  
      vmquery
    204.  
      vmrule
    205.  
      vmupdate
    206.  
      vnetd
    207.  
      vssat
    208.  
      vwcp_manage
    209.  
      vxlogcfg
    210.  
      vxlogmgr
    211.  
      vxlogview
    212.  
      W2KOption
  3.  
    Index

Name

vxlogview — display logs generated by the unified logging component

SYNOPSIS

vxlogview[-A] [-b StartDate] [-e EndDate] [-D] [-G Directory] [-g LogSet] [-I] [-i FileID] [-K HostName] [-L SeverityLevel] [-m Entity] [-N Level MsgTypes] [-n NumberofDays] [-o OriginatorID] [-P ProcessID] [-p ProductID] [-r Result] [-s Subject] [-T ThreadID] [-t hh:mm:ss] [-X ContextToken] [-y]

vxlogview -a [-p ProductID] {[-d DisplayOption,...] [-R ResourceDirectory] [-z TimeZone] [-l Locale]}

vxlogview -q QueryName -f FileName {[-d DisplayOption,...][-R ResourceDirectory] [-z TimeZone] [-l Locale]}

vxlogview -p ProductID -g LogSet | -i FileID {[-d DisplayOption,...] [-R ResourceDirectory] [-z TimeZone] [-l Locale]}

vxlogview -p ProductID -w queryString {[-d DisplayOption,...] [-R ResourceDirectory] [-z TimeZone] [-l Locale]}

vxlogview -v

 

On UNIX systems, the directory path to this command is /usr/openv/netbackup/bin/

On Windows systems, the directory path to this command is install_path\NetBackup\bin\

DESCRIPTION

The vxlogview utility lets you view the logs that unified logging generates. Search criteria can be specified by using command-line options to view specific logs.

Unified logging uses a standardized naming format for log files, as follows:

productID-originatorID-hostID-date-rotation.log

For more information about the unified logging name format and the logging originator IDs, refer to the NetBackup Logging Reference Guide.

OPTIONS

Specify the logs you want to view.

-A, --audit

Displays the audit messages.

-a, --all

Displays all log messages from log files that multiple Veritas products generate.

-b, --stdate StartDate

Displays the messages that are logged at the given start date and time.

The required date and time values format in NetBackup commands varies according to your locale. The /usr/openv/msg/.conf file (UNIX) and the install_path\VERITAS\msg\LC.CONF file (Windows) contain information such as the date-time formats for each supported locale. The files contain specific instructions on how to add or modify the list of supported locales and formats.

See the "About specifying the locale of the NetBackup installation" topic in the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume II for more information.

Surround the date by single quotes in UNIX and double quotes in Windows. For example:

-b '1/1/2013 12:00:00 AM'

If -b is not specified, messages are displayed from the beginning of the log file to the given end time (see the -e option).

-D, --debug

Displays debug log messages.

-d, --display DisplayOption,...

Displays the specified message fields. Separate multiple DisplayOptions with commas.

DisplayOption may be one or more of the following:

D - Display date

T - Display timestamp

m - Display message type

p - Display process ID

t - Display thread ID

P - Display product ID

O - Display originator ID

c - Display context token

s - Display application log entry severity

u - Display application or diagnostic Unique Message ID

x - Display actual log message text

w - Display who logged the diagnostic or the debug message

i - Display short name for a product

o - Display short name for an originator

all - Display all fields of the log record

If -d is not specified, the following fields are displayed by default.

- Date

- Time

- Who (for diagnostic and debug messages only)

- Severity (application messages only)

- UMI (application and diagnostic messages only)

- message text

-e, --endate EndDate

Displays the messages that are logged up to a given end day and time.

The required date and time values format in NetBackup commands varies according to your locale. The /usr/openv/msg/.conf file (UNIX) and the install_path\VERITAS\msg\LC.CONF file (Windows) contain information such as the date-time formats for each supported locale. The files contain specific instructions on how to add or modify the list of supported locales and formats.

See the "About specifying the locale of the NetBackup installation" topic in the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume II for more information.

Surround the date with single quotes in UNIX and double quotes in Windows. For example:

--endate '1/1/2013 12:00:00 PM'

If the -e option is unspecified, vxlogview displays messages from the given start date-time (see the -b option) to the end of the log file.

-f, --filename FileName

Specifies the path name and file name of a file that contains one or more queries. Use with the -q option.

-G, --logdir Directory

Displays logs from the specified directory instead of a configured log directory. An absolute path must be specified for the directory.

-g, --logset LogSet

Displays log configuration settings for the specified LogSet.

-I, --diag

Displays diagnostic log messages.

-i, --fileid FileID

Displays the messages that a given file ID or shared originator ID logged. It searches only the log files that the specified process has created. By limiting the log files that it has to search, vxlogview returns a result faster. By comparison, the vxlogview -o option searches all unified log files for messages that the specified process logs.

-K, --hostname HostName

Displays the messages that the specified host name logged.

-L, --app -C | -E | -F | -M | -W

Displays the application log messages. The following parameters can be used with -L to specify the severity level:

-C, --crit : A critical error has occurred which may impact the availability of the application.

-E, --err : An error has occurred that does not affect the entire application.

-F, --info : An informational message.

-M, --emerg : An emergency condition exists that may result in an operating system failure or shutdown.

-W, --warning : A warning is issued for a problem that has been detected.

-l, --locale Locale

Displays the messages in the specified locale. The default is English. The messages are displayed in the current system locale if this option is not given.

-m, --who Entity

Displays the messages that are logged by the given entity method name or function name.

-N, --level Level -D | -I

Displays debug messages (-D) or diagnostic log messages (-I) for a given level (Level).

-n, --days NumberOfDays

Displays the messages that are logged for the last NumberOfDays days.

-o, --orgid OriginatorID

Displays the messages that the specified originator ID has logged. You can use the ID number or the short name for the originator. For example, the Policy Execution Manager can be specified by nbpem or by 116, its originator ID number.

-P, --pid ProcessID

Displays the messages that the specified process ID has logged.

-p, --prodid ProductID

Displays the messages that the product (identified by a given product ID) logged. Instead of an identifier, the user can provide the abbreviated name of product. The NetBackup product ID is 51216, and the PBX product ID is 50936.

-R, --resdir ResourceDirectory

Uses the resources from the specified directory instead of a configured localization resource directory.

-r, --result Result

Displays the audit messages that have the specified result. Result can be either 0 or 1.

-S, --tailloop

Continuously displays the new messages that a given product ID and file ID pair log. The product ID (-p ProductID) and file ID (-i FileID) must accompany the tailloop option (-S) on the command line. The file ID can be a shared originator ID or an originator ID that is not shared with any other ID. tailloop starts by displaying to the console the last 10 messages that have been logged. It then displays any new log messages. Use Ctrl-C at any time to stop the loop.

-s, --subject Subject

Displays the audit messages that have the specified Subject.

-T, --tid ThreadID

Displays the messages that the specified thread ID has logged.

-t, --tail hh:mm:ss

Displays the messages for the last hh:mm:ss time period.

-v, --version

Displays the version information for this command.

-w, --where QueryString

Specifies a WHERE clause to use when you query the log messages such that a subset of messages can be displayed. For more detail on QueryString, refer to the NetBackup Logging Reference Guide.

-X, --ctx ContextToken

Displays the messages that belong to the given context instance. Context tokens identify context instances. If the context token is specified as "all," it displays all of the context names and associated tokens.

-y, --displayhost

Displays the host name with each displayed log message. Use this option if the log files come from different hosts and you want to display which message came from which host.

-z, --timezone GMT+hh:ss | GMT-hh:ss

Displays the messages with time adjusted as per the given timezone.

EXIT STATUS

The following exit values are returned:

0 -- Successful completion.

-1 -- An error occurred.

QUERY STRINGS

A query string is a text expression, similar to a database WHERE clause, that is used to retrieve log entries from the Unified Logging system. The expression is a combination of relational operators, constant integers, constant strings, and names of log fields that evaluate to a single value. Logical operators, such as AND and OR, are used to group expressions.

Supported relational operators include: < (less than), > (greater than) <= (less than or equal to, >= (greater than and equal to), = (equal to), and != (not equal to).

Supported logical operators include && (logical AND) and || (logical OR).

Predefined log fields can be in all uppercase or all lowercase (for example: PID | pid). These fields consist of the following:

CTXTOK -- Context token (string)

ENDATE -- Locale-specific end date (long integer or string)

FILEID -- Shared originator ID (integer)

HOSTNAME -- Name of source host (string with quotes)

LEVEL -- Debug and diagnostic level. Default is to display all (integer 0-6)

MSGTYPE -- The following message types are supported:

DEBUG | debug
DIAG | diag
APP | app
AUDIT | audit

ORGID -- Originator identifier (integer or string)

PID -- Process Identifier (integer)

PREVTIME -- Previous time (string hh:mm:ss)

PRODID -- Product identifier (integer or string)

RETURNVAL -- The audit message outcome field (0 or 1)

SEV -- Severity level. The following severity types are supported:

INFO | info
WARNING | warning
ERR | err
CRIT | crit
EMERG | emerg

STDATE -- Locale-specific start date (long integer or string)

SUBJECT -- Audit message subject field (string)

TID -- Thread ID (integer)

WHO -- Who logged the message (string)

EXAMPLES

The following examples are valid for UNIX, which uses single quotes to enclose option arguments. In Windows, use double quotes.

Example 1 - Display the log messages for all the installed products:

# vxlogview -a

Example 2 - Display the log messages for PBX (product ID 50936). You must be an authorized user with administrator (root) privileges. It displays only the date, time, message type, and message text:

# vxlogview --prodid 50936 --display D,T,m,x

Example 3 - Display the log messages for NetBackup that were logged between the dates 11/18/10 and 11/21/10:

# vxlogview --where "(prodid = 'NB') && (stdate >= '11/18/10 0:0:0 
AM' && endate <= '11/21/10 10:12:00 AM')"

Example 4 - Display the log messages that were created on or after the date and time 1/03/13, 11:00:00 a.m.:

# vxlogview -b '1/03/13 11:00:00 AM'

Example 5 - Display the log messages that were logged within the last hour:

# vxlogview --tail 1:00:00

Example 6 - Display the audit log messages that have a result of 0:

# vxlogview --audit -r 0

Example 7 - Display the context log messages for the "job_context" instance:

# vxlogview --ctx 'jobid=4'

SEE ALSO

See vxlogcfg.

See vxlogmgr.