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Veritas NetBackup™ Security and Encryption Guide
Last Published:
2020-09-13
Product(s):
NetBackup (8.3.0.1, 8.3)
- Increasing NetBackup security
- Security deployment models
- Port security
- About NetBackup daemons, ports, and communication
- Additional port information for products that interoperate with NetBackup
- About configuring ports
- Auditing NetBackup operations
- About Enhanced Auditing
- Access control security
- NetBackup Access Control Security (NBAC)
- Configuring NetBackup Access Control (NBAC)
- Configuring Access Control host properties for the master and media server
- Access Control host properties dialog for the client
- Troubleshooting Access Management
- Windows verification points
- UNIX verification points
- Verification points in a mixed environment with a UNIX master server
- Verification points in a mixed environment with a Windows master server
- About determining who can access NetBackup
- Viewing specific user permissions for NetBackup user groups
- About AD and LDAP domains
- NetBackup CA and NetBackup certificates
- About the Security Management utilities
- About audit events
- About host management
- Adding shared or cluster mappings
- Allowing or disallowing automatic certificate reissue
- About global security settings
- About host name-based certificates
- About host ID-based certificates
- Using the Certificate Management utility to issue and deploy host ID-based certificates
- About NetBackup certificate deployment security levels
- Setting up trust with the master server (Certificate Authority)
- About reissuing host ID-based certificates
- About Token Management for host ID-based certificates
- About the host ID-based certificate revocation list
- About revoking host ID-based certificates
- Host ID-based certificate deployment in a clustered setup
- About deployment of a host ID-based certificate on a clustered NetBackup host
- Migrating NetBackup CA
- External CA support in NetBackup
- About external CA support in NetBackup
- Configuration options for external CA-signed certificates
- ECA_CERT_PATH for NetBackup servers and clients
- About certificate revocation lists for external CA
- About certificate enrollment
- Configuring an external certificate for the NetBackup web server
- About external certificate configuration for a clustered master server
- About API keys in NetBackup
- Data at rest encryption security
- About NetBackup client encryption
- Configuring standard encryption on clients
- About configuring standard encryption from the server
- Configuring legacy encryption on clients
- About configuring legacy encryption from the client
- About configuring legacy encryption from the server
- Additional legacy key file security for UNIX clients
- Data at rest key management
- About the Key Management Service (KMS)
- Installing KMS
- Configuring KMS
- About key groups and key records
- Overview of key record states
- Configuring NetBackup to work with KMS
- About using KMS for encryption
- KMS database constituents
- Command line interface (CLI) commands
- About exporting and importing keys from the KMS database
- Troubleshooting KMS
- External KMS support in NetBackup
- Configuring KMS credentials
- Configuring KMS
- Creating keys in an external KMS
- Working with multiple KMS servers
- Regenerating keys and certificates
- NetBackup web services account
Renewing a file-based external certificate
Use this section to renew a file-based external certificate without restarting NetBackup services.
While you replace the certificate, private key, and passphrase files one by one with all the services up, communication may fail because of mismatch in the certificate - private key pair. To avoid any communication failure, create copies of the files that NetBackup can use if there is a mismatch in the files.
To renew a file-based external certificate
- Make a copy of the certificate file and rename it with
.old
extension.For example, if the certificate file name is
cert.pem
, rename it ascert.pem.old
. - Make a copy of the private key file and rename it with
.old
extension. - Carry out the following step if the certificate's private key is encrypted.
Make a copy of the passphrase file and rename it with
.old
extension. - Replace the original certificate, private key, and passphrase files with the renewed certificate, private key, and passphrase files.
- Ensure that the host communication is successful with the renewed certificate and then delete the old certificate files.