NetBackup™ Commands Reference Guide

Last Published:
Product(s): NetBackup & Alta Data Protection (10.4)
  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.  
      backupdbtrace
    3.  
      backuptrace
    4.  
      bmrc
    5.  
      bmrconfig
    6.  
      bmrepadm
    7.  
      bmrprep
    8.  
      bmrs
    9.  
      bmrsrtadm
    10.  
      bp
    11.  
      bparchive
    12.  
      bpbackup
    13.  
      bpbackupdb
    14.  
      bpcatarc
    15.  
      bpcatlist
    16.  
      bpcatres
    17.  
      bpcatrm
    18.  
      bpcd
    19.  
      bpchangeprimary
    20.  
      bpcleanrestore
    21.  
      bpclient
    22.  
      bpclimagelist
    23.  
      bpclntcmd
    24.  
      bpclusterutil
    25.  
      bpcompatd
    26.  
      bpconfig
    27.  
      bpdbjobs
    28.  
      bpdbm
    29.  
      bpdgclone
    30.  
      bpdown
    31.  
      bpduplicate
    32.  
      bperror
    33.  
      bpexpdate
    34.  
      bpfis
    35.  
      bpflist
    36.  
      bpgetconfig
    37.  
      bpgetdebuglog
    38.  
      bpimage
    39.  
      bpimagelist
    40.  
      bpimmedia
    41.  
      bpimport
    42.  
      bpinst
    43.  
      bpkeyfile
    44.  
      bpkeyutil
    45.  
      bplabel
    46.  
      bplist
    47.  
      bpmedia
    48.  
      bpmedialist
    49.  
      bpminlicense
    50.  
      bpnbat
    51.  
      bpnbaz
    52.  
      bppficorr
    53.  
      bpplcatdrinfo
    54.  
      bpplclients
    55.  
      bppldelete
    56.  
      bpplinclude
    57.  
      bpplinfo
    58.  
      bppllist
    59.  
      bpplsched
    60.  
      bpplschedrep
    61.  
      bpplschedwin
    62.  
      bppolicynew
    63.  
      bpps
    64.  
      bprd
    65.  
      bprecover
    66.  
      bprestore
    67.  
      bpretlevel
    68.  
      bpschedule
    69.  
      bpschedulerep
    70.  
      bpsetconfig
    71.  
      bpstsinfo
    72.  
      bpstuadd
    73.  
      bpstudel
    74.  
      bpstulist
    75.  
      bpsturep
    76.  
      bptestbpcd
    77.  
      bptestnetconn
    78.  
      bpup
    79.  
      bpverify
    80.  
      cat_convert
    81.  
      cat_export
    82.  
      cat_import
    83.  
      configureCerts
    84.  
      configureMQ
    85.  
      configureWebServerCerts
    86.  
      create_nbdb
    87.  
      csconfig cldinstance
    88.  
      csconfig cldprovider
    89.  
      csconfig meter
    90.  
      csconfig reinitialize
    91.  
      csconfig throttle
    92.  
      duplicatetrace
    93.  
      importtrace
    94.  
      jbpSA
    95.  
      jnbSA
    96.  
      ltid
    97.  
      mklogdir
    98.  
      msdpcldutil
    99.  
      nbauditreport
    100.  
      nbcallhomeproxyconfig
    101.  
      nbcatsync
    102.  
      NBCC
    103.  
      NBCCR
    104.  
      nbcertcmd
    105.  
      nbcertupdater
    106.  
      nbcldutil
    107.  
      nbcmdrun
    108.  
      nbcomponentupdate
    109.  
      nbcplogs
    110.  
      nbcredkeyutil
    111.  
      nbdb_admin
    112.  
      nbdb_backup
    113.  
      nbdb_move
    114.  
      nbdb_ping
    115.  
      nbdb_restore
    116.  
      nbdb_unload
    117.  
      nbdb2adutl
    118.  
      nbdbms_start_server
    119.  
      nbdbms_start_stop
    120.  
      nbdc
    121.  
      nbdecommission
    122.  
      nbdelete
    123.  
      nbdeployutil
    124.  
      nbdevconfig
    125.  
      nbdevquery
    126.  
      nbdiscover
    127.  
      nbdna
    128.  
      nbemm
    129.  
      nbemmcmd
    130.  
      nbepicfile
    131.  
      nbfindfile
    132.  
      nbfirescan
    133.  
      nbfp
    134.  
      nbftadm
    135.  
      nbftconfig
    136.  
      nbgetconfig
    137.  
      nbhba
    138.  
      nbholdutil
    139.  
      nbhostidentity
    140.  
      nbhostmgmt
    141.  
      nbhypervtool
    142.  
      nbidpcmd
    143.  
      nbimageshare
    144.  
      nbinstallcmd
    145.  
      nbjm
    146.  
      nbkmiputil
    147.  
      nbkmscmd
    148.  
      nbkmsutil
    149.  
      nboraadm
    150.  
      nborair
    151.  
      nboracmd
    152.  
      nbpem
    153.  
      nbpemreq
    154.  
      nbmariadb
    155.  
      nbmlb
    156.  
      nbperfchk
    157.  
      nbplupgrade
    158.  
      nbrb
    159.  
      nbrbutil
    160.  
      nbreplicate
    161.  
      nbrepo
    162.  
      nbrestorevm
    163.  
      nbseccmd
    164.  
      nbserviceusercmd
    165.  
      nbsetconfig
    166.  
      nbshvault
    167.  
      nbsmartdiag
    168.  
      nbsnapimport
    169.  
      nbsnapreplicate
    170.  
      nbsqladm
    171.  
      nbsqlite
    172.  
      nbstl
    173.  
      nbstlutil
    174.  
      nbstop
    175.  
      nbsu
    176.  
      nbsvrgrp
    177.  
      netbackup_deployment_insights
    178.  
      resilient_clients
    179.  
      restoretrace
    180.  
      stopltid
    181.  
      tldd
    182.  
      tldcd
    183.  
      tpautoconf
    184.  
      tpclean
    185.  
      tpconfig
    186.  
      tpext
    187.  
      tpreq
    188.  
      tpunmount
    189.  
      verifytrace
    190.  
      vltadm
    191.  
      vltcontainers
    192.  
      vlteject
    193.  
      vltinject
    194.  
      vltoffsitemedia
    195.  
      vltopmenu
    196.  
      vltrun
    197.  
      vmadd
    198.  
      vmchange
    199.  
      vmcheckxxx
    200.  
      vmd
    201.  
      vmdelete
    202.  
      vmoprcmd
    203.  
      vmphyinv
    204.  
      vmpool
    205.  
      vmquery
    206.  
      vmrule
    207.  
      vmupdate
    208.  
      vnetd
    209.  
      vssat
    210.  
      vwcp_manage
    211.  
      vxlogcfg
    212.  
      vxlogmgr
    213.  
      vxlogview
    214.  
      W2KOption

Name

bpverify — verify the backups that NetBackup creates

SYNOPSIS

bpverify [-l] [-p] [-pb] [-v] [-local] [-client name] [-st sched_type] [-sl sched_label] [-L output_file [-en]] [-policy name] [-s date] [-e date] [-M master_server] [-Bidfile file_name] [-pt policy_type] [-hoursago hours] [[-cn copy number] | [-primary]] [-backupid backup_id] [[-id media_id or path] | [-stype server_type] [-dp disk_pool_name [-dv disk_volume]]] [-priority number]

 

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

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

DESCRIPTION

bpverify verifies the contents of one or more backups by reading the backup volume and by comparing its contents to the NetBackup catalog. This operation does not compare the data on the volume with the contents of the client disk. However, it does read each block in the image, which verifies that the volume is readable. NetBackup verifies only one backup at a time and tries to minimize media mounts and position time.

If either -Bidfile or -backupid is specified, bpverify uses this option as the sole criterion for selecting the set of backups it verifies. If the command line does not contain -Bidfile or -backupid, then bpverify selects the backups that satisfy all the selection options. For example, if the command line looks like the following:

bpverify -pt Standard -hoursago 10

then bpverify verifies the set of backups with policy type Standard that run in the past 10 hours.

If -p or -pb is specified, bpverify previews the set of backups that meet the selection criteria. It displays the backup IDs, but does not perform the verification.

bpverify sends its error messages to stderr. It sends a log of its activity for the current day to the NetBackup admin log file in the following directory:

UNIX systems:

/usr/openv/netbackup/logs/admin

Windows systems:

install_path\NetBackup\Logs\admin

Any authorized user can run this command.

For more about NetBackup authorization, see the NetBackup Security and Encryption Guide.

OPTIONS

-backupid backup_id

Specifies the backup ID of a single backup to verify. This option takes precedence over any other selection criteria except -Bidfile. The default is any backup.

-Bidfile file_name

Specifies a file that contains a list of backup IDs to be verified. This file is removed during the activation of the command line interface (CLI). This file is removed because the NetBackup GUIs commonly use this parameter. The GUIs expect the command-line interface to remove the temporary file that was used for the -Bidfile option upon completion. Direct command-line interface users can also use the option, however it removes the file.

The file contains one backup ID per line. If this option is specified, other selection criteria are ignored. The default is no file of backup IDs, which means any backup can be verified.

-client name

Specifies the name of the client that produced the original backup. The default is any client.

-cn copy_number | -primary

Determines the copy number of the backup ID to verify. Valid values are 1 through the setting that the bpconfig -max_copies setting indicates, up to 10. The default is 1.

-primary indicates that the primary copy should be verified rather than the copy.

-dp disk_pool_name [-dv disk_volume]

Specifies the name of the disk pool, which is the data storage area for this storage unit. Optionally, bpverify verifies the images that reside on the specified disk volume only. This option must be used with the -stype option. The disk pool must already exist.

-hoursago hours

Specifies the number of hours before the current time to search for backups. This number is equivalent to the specification of a start time (-s) of the current time minus hours. Do not use both this option and the -s option.

The hours value is a non-negative integer. The default starting time is 24 hours ago.

-id media_id | path

Search the image catalog for backups to verify that they are on this media ID or pathname. If a backup has some fragments on this media ID and some another media ID, the following occurs: NetBackup verifies a spanning image as long as the backup begins on the media of the media ID that is provided.

For the images that are stored on disk rather than removable media, specify an absolute pathname instead of media_id. The default is any media ID or pathname. BasicDisk uses this option.

-L output_file [-en]

Specifies the name of a file in which to write progress information. The default is not to use a progress file, in which case the progress information is written to stderr. For more information, see DISPLAY FORMATS later in this command description.

Example path for UNIX systems,/usr/openv/netbackup/logs/user_ops

Example path for Windows systems, c:\Program Files\Veritas\NetBackup\logs\user_ops

Include the -en option to generate a log entry in English. The name of the log contains the string _en. This option is useful to the support personnel that assist in a distributed environment where different locales may create logs of various languages.

Only default paths are allowed for this option and It is recommended to use the default paths. If you cannot use the NetBackup default path in your setup, you should add custom paths to the NetBackup configuration.

For more information on how to add a custom path, see the "BPCD_ALLOWED_PATH option for NetBackup servers and clients" topic in the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume I.

-l

Specifies that the list type is long, which causes bpverify to write additional information to the progress log. The default list type is short. For additional information, see DISPLAY FORMATS later in this command description.

-local

If you initiate bpverify from a host other than the master server and do not use -local (default), the following occurs: bpverify starts a remote copy of the command on the master server.

The remote copy allows the command to be terminated from the Activity Monitor.

Use -local to prevent the creation of a remote copy on the master server and to run bpverify only from the host where it initiated.

If the -local option is used, bpverify cannot be canceled from the Activity Monitor.

-M master_server

Specifies the master server that provides the bpverify image data. The master server must allow access by the system that issued the bpverify command. The default is the master server for the system where bpverify is entered:

For NetBackup Server:

The default is always the master server where the command is entered.

For NetBackup Enterprise Server:

If the command is entered on a master server, then that server is the default.

If the command is entered on a remote media server, then the master for that media server is the default.

-p

Previews the verification, but does not perform the verification. For additional information, see DISPLAY FORMATS later in this command description.

-pb

Previews the verification but does not perform the verification. This option is similar to -p, but -pb does not display information about the individual backups. For additional information, see DISPLAY FORMATS later in this command description.

-policy name

Search for backups to verify in the specified policy. The default is any policy.

-priority number

Specifies a new priority for the verification job that overrides the default job priority.

-pt policy_type

Specifies the policy type for selecting backups to verify. The default is any policy type.

The valid policy types are the following:

BigData
DataStore
DataTools-SQL-BackTrack
DB2
Enterprise-Vault
FlashBackup
Hyper-V
Informix-On-BAR
Lotus-Notes
MS-Exchange-Server
MS-SharePoint
MS-SQL-Server
MS-Windows
NBU-Catalog
NDMP
Oracle
SAP
Split-Mirror
Standard
Sybase
Universal-share
Vault
VMware
-s date, -e date

Specifies the start of the range of dates and times that include all backups to verify. The -e option specifies the end of the range.

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 "About specifying the locale of the NetBackup installation" in the NetBackup Administrator's Guide, Volume II.

The valid range of dates is from 01/01/1970 00:00:00 to 01/19/2038 03:14:07. The default start time is 24 hours ago. The default ending time is the current date and time.

-sl sched_label

Search for backups to verify that the specified schedule created. The default is all schedules.

-st sched_type

Search for backups to verify that the specified schedule type created. The default is any schedule type.

Valid values are:

FULL (full backup)

INCR (differential-incremental backup)

CINC (cumulative-incremental backup)

UBAK (user backup)

UARC (user archive)

NOT_ARCHIVE (all backups except user archive)

-stype server_type

Specifies a string that identifies the storage server type. The server_type value can originate from one of the following sources:

  • Veritas provided storage. Possible values are AdvancedDisk and PureDisk.

  • Third-party disk appliances. The vendor supplies the server_type string.

  • Cloud storage. Use the csconfig cldprovider -l command to determine the possible stype values. The cloud stype values reflect the cloud storage provider. Cloud storage stype values can also incorporate a suffix (for example, amazon_crypt). Possible suffixes are:

    • _raw: The NetBackup backup image is sent to the cloud in raw format. Use this option if you do not want to compress or encrypt data before sending to cloud storage.

    • _rawc: Compresses the data before it is written to the cloud storage.

    • _crypt: Encrypt the data using AES-256 encryption before writing the data to cloud storage. You must have KMS configured in NetBackup to use this option.

    • _cryptc: Compress and encrypt the data before writing to cloud storage.

The storage server type is case sensitive.

-v

Selects the verbose mode. When -v is specified, the debug logs and progress logs include more information. The default is not verbose.

DISPLAY FORMATS

Preview displays:

bpverify runs a preview by searching for backups and then by displaying them in one of the following ways (bpverify does not verify the backups):

  • The -p display lists backup IDs that meet the criteria that the bpverify command-line options set. The -p information appears in volume order. For each volume that contains a selected backup, the media ID and server appear. The selected backup IDs that reside on that volume follow them.

  • The -pb display is a brief version of the -p display. It lists the media ID and server for each volume that contains the backups that meet the selection criteria.

Verification displays:

bpverify creates these displays as it verifies images. If bpverify contains no option to set the list format, the display format is short. If the command line contains -l, the display format is long. If the command line contains both -l and -L, bpverify creates a file that contains the progress log.

The verification list appears in volume order in the following formats:

  • In long format, bpverify displays the following information for each selected backup ID:

    • Policy, schedule, backup ID, media ID or path, and creation time

    • Files that are backed up

    • Any problems that bpverify detects while it verifies the image

    • Whether the image verification is successful or not

  • In short format, bpverify does not list the files that were backed up.

EXAMPLES

Example 1 - Verify the backups that ran in the past 36 hours:

# bpverify -hoursago 36
      Verify started Thu Feb  3 11:30:29 2012
      INF - Verifying policy mkb_policy, schedule Full
  (plim_0949536546), path /tmp/mkbunit, created 02/02/12 18:09:06.
  INF - Verify of policy mkb_policy, schedule Full 
  (plim_0949536546) was successful.
  INF - Status = successfully verified 1 of 1 images.

Example 2 - Compare the two preview displays, -p and -pb:

# bpverify -p -hoursago 2002
Media id = A00002  Server = plim
Bid = plim_0949616279  Kbytes = 32800  Filenum = 1   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949681647  Kbytes = 12191  Filenum = 2   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949683298  Kbytes = 161    Filenum = 3   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949683671  Kbytes = 11417  Filenum = 4   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949684009  Kbytes = 11611  Filenum = 5   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949684276  Kbytes = 806    Filenum = 6   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949688704  Kbytes = 9869   Filenum = 7   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949688813  Kbytes = 9869   Filenum = 8   Fragment = 1
Bid = gava_0949949336  Kbytes = 10256  Filenum = 9   Fragment = 1
Bid = plim_0949949337  Kbytes = 6080   Filenum = 9   Fragment = 1
Bid = plim_0949949337  Kbytes = 4176   Filenum = 10  Fragment = 2
Bid = gava_0949949686  Kbytes = 10256  Filenum = 11  Fragment = 1
Bid = plim_0949949687  Kbytes = 5440   Filenum = 11  Fragment = 1
Bid = plim_0949949687  Kbytes = 4816   Filenum = 12  Fragment = 2

Media id = 400032  Server = plim
Bid = toaster2_0950199621 Kbytes = 298180 Filenum = 1 Fragment = 1
Bid = toaster2_0950199901 Kbytes = 298180 Filenum = 3 Fragment = 1

# bpverify -pb -hoursago 200
Media id = A00002  Server = plim
Media id = 400032  Server = plim

RETURN VALUES

An exit status of 0 means that the command ran successfully. Any exit status other than 0 means that an error occurred.

If the administrative log function is enabled, bpverify logs the exit status in the administrative daily log under the log directory:

UNIX systems:

/usr/openv/netbackup/logs/admin

Windows systems:

install_path\NetBackup\logs\admin

It has the following form:

bpverify: EXIT status = exit status

If an error occurred, a diagnostic precedes this message.

FILES

UNIX systems:

/usr/openv/netbackup/logs/admin/*
/usr/openv/netbackup/db/error/*
/usr/openv/netbackup/db/images/*

Windows systems:

install_path\NetBackup\logs\admin\*
install_path\NetBackup\db\error\*
install_path\NetBackup\db\images\*