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NetBackup™ Backup Planning and Performance Tuning Guide
Last Published:
2024-04-16
Product(s):
NetBackup & Alta Data Protection (10.4, 10.3.0.1, 10.3, 10.2.0.1, 10.2, 10.1.1, 10.1, 10.0.0.1, 10.0, 9.1.0.1, 9.1, 9.0.0.1, 9.0, 8.3.0.2, 8.3.0.1, 8.3)
- NetBackup capacity planning
- Primary server configuration guidelines
- Media server configuration guidelines
- NetBackup hardware design and tuning considerations
- About NetBackup Media Server Deduplication (MSDP)
- MSDP tuning considerations
- MSDP sizing considerations
- Accelerator performance considerations
- Media configuration guidelines
- How to identify performance bottlenecks
- Best practices
- Best practices: NetBackup AdvancedDisk
- Best practices: NetBackup tape drive cleaning
- Best practices: Universal shares
- NetBackup for VMware sizing and best practices
- Best practices: Storage lifecycle policies (SLPs)
- Measuring Performance
- Table of NetBackup All Log Entries report
- Evaluating system components
- Tuning the NetBackup data transfer path
- NetBackup network performance in the data transfer path
- NetBackup server performance in the data transfer path
- About shared memory (number and size of data buffers)
- About the communication between NetBackup client and media server
- Effect of fragment size on NetBackup restores
- Other NetBackup restore performance issues
- About shared memory (number and size of data buffers)
- Tuning other NetBackup components
- How to improve NetBackup resource allocation
- How to improve FlashBackup performance
- Tuning disk I/O performance
System resource usage and tuning considerations
Different backup images achieve different deduplication ratio and can create very different performance bottleneck on the NetBackup server. In general, servers that process many concurrent high deduplication ratio backups, 75% or above, tend to consume high % of CPU and more likely to bottleneck on CPU and network, while low deduplication ratio backups, 60% or below, tend to be I/O bound due to more data segments need to be written to the data store. A clear understanding of your workload and how MSDP consumes the four major system resources, CPU, memory, network and I/O bandwidth is critical for configuring MSDP for optimal performance.