NetBackup™ Deployment Guide for Kubernetes Clusters
- Introduction
- Section I. Deployment
- Prerequisites for Kubernetes cluster configuration
- Deployment with environment operators
- Deploying NetBackup
- Primary and media server CR
- Deploying NetBackup using Helm charts
- Deploying MSDP Scaleout
- Deploying Snapshot Manager
- Section II. Monitoring and Management
- Monitoring NetBackup
- Monitoring MSDP Scaleout
- Monitoring Snapshot Manager
- Managing the Load Balancer service
- Managing MSDP Scaleout
- Performing catalog backup and recovery
- Section III. Maintenance
- MSDP Scaleout Maintenance
- Upgrading
- Uninstalling
- Troubleshooting
- Troubleshooting AKS and EKS issues
- Troubleshooting AKS-specific issues
- Troubleshooting EKS-specific issues
- Troubleshooting AKS and EKS issues
- Appendix A. CR template
Config-Checker execution and status details
Note the following points.
Config-Checker is executed as a separate job in Kubernetes cluster for both the primary server and media server CRs respectively. Each job creates a pod in the cluster. Config-checker creates the pod in the operator namespace.
Note:
Config-checker pod gets deleted after 4 hours.
Execution summary of the Config-Checker can be retrieved from the Config-Checker pod logs using the kubectl logs <configchecker-pod-name> -n <operator-namespace> command.
This summary can also be retrieved from the operator pod logs using the kubectl logs <operator-pod-name> -n <operator-namespace> command.
Following are the Config-Checker modes that can be specified in the Primary and Media CR:
Default: This mode executes the Config-Checker. If the execution is successful, the Primary and Media CRs deployment is started.
Dryrun: This mode only executes the Config-Checker to verify the configuration requirements but does not start the CR deployment.
Skip: This mode skips the Config-Checker execution of Config-Checker and directly start the deployment of the respective CR.
Status of the Config-Checker can be retrieved from the primary server and media server CRs by using the kubectl describe <PrimaryServer/MediaServer> <CR name> -n <namespace> command.
For example, kubectl describe primaryservers environment-sample -n test
Following are the Config-Checker statuses:
Success: Indicates that all the mandatory config checks have successfully passed.
Failed: Indicates that some of the config checks have failed.
Running: Indicates that the Config-Checker execution is in progress.
Skip: Indicates that the Config-Checker is not executed because the
configcheckmode
specified in the CR is skipped.
If the Config-Checker execution status is Failed, you can check the Config-Checker job logs using kubectl logs <configchecker-pod-name> -n <operator-namespace>. Review the error codes and error messages pertaining to the failure and update the respective CR with the correct configuration details to resolve the errors.
For more information about the error codes, refer to NetBackup™ Status Codes Reference Guide.
If Config-Checker ran in
mode and if user wants to run Config-Checker again with same values in Primary or Media server YAML as provided earlier, then user needs to delete respective CR of Primary or Media server. And then apply it again.If it is primary server CR, delete primary server CR using the kubectl delete -f <environment.yaml> command.
Or
If it is media server CR, edit the Environment CR by removing the media server section in the
environment.yaml
file. Before removing the mediaServer section, you must save the content and note the location of the content. After removing section apply environment CR using kubectl apply -f <environment.yaml> command.Apply the CR again. Add the required data which was deleted earlier at correct location, save it and apply the yaml using kubectl apply -f <environment.yaml> command.