NetBackup and Veritas Appliances Hardening Guide
- Top recommendations to improve your NetBackup and Veritas appliances security posture
- Steps to protect Flex Appliance
- Managing multifactor authentication
- Managing single sign-on (SSO)
- About lockdown mode
- Configuring an isolated recovery environment using the web UI
- Steps to protect NetBackup Appliance
- About single sign-on (SSO) authentication and authorization
- About authentication using smart cards and digital certificates
- About data encryption
- About forwarding logs to an external server
- Steps to protect NetBackup
- About multifactor authentication
- Configure NetBackup for single sign-on (SSO)
- Configure user authentication with smart cards or digital certificates
- Workflow to configure multi-person authorization for NetBackup operations
- Access codes
- Workflow to configure immutable and indelible data
- Add a configuration for an external CMS server
- Configuring an isolated recovery environment on a NetBackup BYO media server
- About FIPS support in NetBackup
- Workflow for external KMS configuration
- Workflow to configure data-in-transit encryption
- Workflow to use external certificates for NetBackup host communication
- About certificate revocation lists for external CA
- Configuring an external certificate for a clustered primary server
- Configuring a NetBackup host (media server, client, or cluster node) to use an external CA-signed certificate after installation
- Configuration options for external CA-signed certificates
- ECA_CERT_PATH for NetBackup servers and clients
- About protecting the MSDP catalog
- How to set up malware scanning
- About backup anomaly detection
Managing multifactor authentication
Flex Appliance supports multifactor authentication for local, Active Directory (AD), and LDAP users in the Flex Appliance Console and the hostadmin user in the Flex Appliance Shell. Multifactor authentication uses time-based one-time passwords to provide secure authentication. Each user can configure multifactor authentication individually, or a security administrator can enforce multifactor authentication for all console users.
Multifactor authentication does not apply for users who have configured smart card authentication or for SSO users. For SSO users, Veritas recommends that you configure multifactor authentication through the SSO identity provider (IDP).
Note:
AD and LDAP user groups are not supported for multifactor authentication. You can add these users individually so they can configure multifactor authentication, or you can configure authentication with smart cards or digital certificates instead.
See Configuring or reconfiguring multifactor authentication.