NetBackup™ Backup Planning and Performance Tuning Guide
- 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
Benefits of universal shares
NetBackup's universal share feature provides flexibility, scalability, ease of recoverability to DBAs, all while providing the benefits of existing space-optimized data protection with MSDP. The feature provides support for millions of files per share, and scalability for multi-TB databases. These shares use the same deduplication pool as existing backups. Therefore, all data, whether from the shares or direct to the pool, realizes deduplication benefits. Universal share data is written to the same MSDP location that is used by all other backup activities. All data that is sent to an MSDP-based storage unit or to a universal share will coexist in the same MSDP pool. This optimization is transparent to DBAs.
Protection points facilitate data persistence, data retention, and indexing of the data within the NetBackup primary catalog. They provide single file search and recovery, as well as the ability to conduct secondary operations like replication and optimized duplication. Recovery is flexible. It does not affect existing universal shares. The data is referenced by share, not by media server. Even though the central MSDP pool is used for all shares on a media server, data that is placed in any given share is not visible or accessible by any other share.
Although the universal share feature has existed in previous versions, it required the use of a NetBackup Appliance. However, that support has expanded in NetBackup 9.1 to include build-your-own (BYO) media servers. The universal share feature is supported on an MSDP BYO storage server with NetBackup 9.1 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.6 and later.
Furthermore, support for universal shares has been extended to the NetBackup Flex Appliance platform as of Flex version 2.0.1 while running NetBackup application instances at version 9.1 or later.