RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Kate An excellent pointed Email, and again exactly how my setup is configured (with a few more volume pools, but its manageable and works) Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Greenberg, Katherine A [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 18:08 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] OK boys, (and girls, altho we seem to be generally keeping our mouths shut on this one!) to summarize... 1. Yes, you can have multiple retentions on a single piece of media. We have established this at least 4 times on this list. However, it is not recommended to do. (unless your life sucks like Jonathan's here) 2. Volume pool configuration is really up to the individual shop. PERSONALLY, I do not use the NetBackup pool for anything but catalogue tapes. If you opt for the 1 POOL configuration, your best bet would be to make an alternate pool, set your policies up to use it and then throw everything into it. 3. If you opt for Multiple Volume Pools, best practice is to utilize a SCRATCH POOL and let NetBackup divvy the tapes up accordingly. Post-4.5, if a tape starts in SCRATCH, it will be returned to SCRATCH once it's de-assigned. I, personally, use Volume pools based on the Environment which they back up (Corporate, Web, etc.). I also use volume pools for duplicated tapes. I support a 250 + TB environment and this works well for me. Breaking things out and micro-managing this application is really not necessary. As long as it's set up intelligently, it will self-manage, unless something in your environment breaks. ~Kate -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Martin, Jonathan (Contractor) Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2006 12:56 PM To: Paul Keating; veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Sorry to call you on this one, but you CAN have multiple retentions on one tape. Under your Master Server Properties / MEDIA there is a Allow Multiple Retentions Per Media check box which I am forced to use. I've got 4 sites without robots that use Netbackup to write 2 week, 3 month and 1 year retention data to and without this I'd be up the creek! I'm not sure who shelled out the big bucks for Netbackup for a site with no robot, but that's another debate entirely! =P -Jonathan -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Paul Keating Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2006 12:40 PM To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave Markham Correct. Unless you have mix retentions on media set which i think everyone has agreed is a bad idea. Agreed...but mixed retentions has nothing to do with multiple volume pools. You can have 10 different retentions and only 1 volume pool, and you will not get two different retentions written to the same media. A single volume pool does not equal mixed retention on one media. Your description below uses 4 tapes ( if one tape per backup is used ) which are all associated to the same volume pool. But each tape has a different retention. Paul ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu - This e-mail may contain confidential or privileged information. If you think you have received this e-mail in error, please advise the sender by reply e-mail and then delete this e-mail immediately. Thank you. Aetna ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Richard Well bye bye offline catalog :-( Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Mansell, Richard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 21:56 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Hi Simon I suspect you are right but another reason to move to hot catalog backups is in the 6.0 release notes:- End of Life Notification for Catalog 1. The offline catalog backup feature will be removed in the next major release of NetBackup. Improved functionality is currently available to user with the new online catalog backup. Regards Richard -Original Message- From: WEAVER, Simon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, 26 April 2006 6:59 pm To: Mansell, Richard; veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Richard Although recommended, Online Cat backups were originally designed for Enterprise Backup Environments where there is no window to perform an offline backup. In other words, it will work while normal backups are running at the same time. Also (I think I am write!), online catalog backups allow the use to span more tapes, where an offline uses 1. Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Mansell, Richard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 06:06 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] FWIW, in NBU 6 hot catalogue backups are the recommended way to go and a pool called CatalogBackup gets created especially for that purpose. We therefore just use NetBackup for the normal data tapes and it is fed from a scratch pool. Since we use the vault option we also have a VaultCatalogue and a VaultData pool. Regards Richard -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of bob944 Sent: Wednesday, 26 April 2006 4:49 pm To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu; 'Wilkinson, Alex' Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Alex, you'll get a dozen recommendations. This is the right one. :-) What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? Yes to the first, no to the second. Offline catalog backup tapes in NetBackup. Everything else in dsto-mlb. ** This electronic email and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. The views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of the Christchurch City Council. If you are not the correct recipient of this email please advise the sender and delete. Christchurch City Council http://www.ccc.govt.nz ** ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Alex You may want to check and re-read (if you have not done so already) the Release Notes for NBU6 my friend Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Wilkinson, Alex [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 27 April 2006 07:57 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] 0n Thu, Apr 27, 2006 at 08:55:55AM +1200, Mansell, Richard wrote: End of Life Notification for Catalog 1. The offline catalog backup feature will be removed in the next major release of NetBackup. Improved functionality is currently available to user with the new onlineA catalog backup. How did you recieve this notification ? -aW ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Richard Although recommended, Online Cat backups were originally designed for Enterprise Backup Environments where there is no window to perform an offline backup. In other words, it will work while normal backups are running at the same time. Also (I think I am write!), online catalog backups allow the use to span more tapes, where an offline uses 1. Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Mansell, Richard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 06:06 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] FWIW, in NBU 6 hot catalogue backups are the recommended way to go and a pool called CatalogBackup gets created especially for that purpose. We therefore just use NetBackup for the normal data tapes and it is fed from a scratch pool. Since we use the vault option we also have a VaultCatalogue and a VaultData pool. Regards Richard -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of bob944 Sent: Wednesday, 26 April 2006 4:49 pm To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu; 'Wilkinson, Alex' Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Alex, you'll get a dozen recommendations. This is the right one. :-) What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? Yes to the first, no to the second. Offline catalog backup tapes in NetBackup. Everything else in dsto-mlb. ** This electronic email and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. The views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of the Christchurch City Council. If you are not the correct recipient of this email please advise the sender and delete. Christchurch City Council http://www.ccc.govt.nz ** ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
I am surprised by the number of people using a single volume pool for data backups. What about mixed retentions on media? The way i do things is like this :- Have a daily, weekly, monthly, offsite, logs tape pools ( as well as netbackup, and none obviously ) Now whatever the policy and file list, clients etc i have a daily, weekly, monthly schedule which has different expiry times on it. Dailys i expire after 2 weeks, weeklys after 1 month and monthlys after 6 months. The volume pool is associated with the schedule and then all images from different policies are striped to tapes (mpx) to keep tape usage down and have the same retention on media. Weekly and monthly backups are then identified by tapes used in x hours for a certain tape pool or schedule name once a week and removed from the jukebox. The offsite pool i have is for ITC where it is used and have the second job write to an offsite pool which can then be identified daily and removed. This offsite pool only has a retention of 2 weeks for any schedule which runs as there is little point ( IMO ) of having 2 weeks old Disaster recovery data. Tapes are then brought back into to scratch after this 2 weeks and reused. The logs policy has a schedule which is infinite expiry as my customers sometimes want to keep logs indefinitely and these are usually written by a script on each client invoking bparchive or bpbackup with a list produced from find command. Each to there own, but there is what i do on a normal setup if you can find any use from it. Cheers Wilkinson, Alex wrote: Hi all, What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? -aW ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
-Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of WEAVER, Simon 2) Each Policy has its own Volume Pool OMG!! How many policies? You don't multiplex at all? Sounds like you also have only one client per policy 3) Easier to manage tapes (ie: Only tapes in a specified pool will contain data for the end client. Having all tapes in one pool, with all clients using them means that possibly tape retention and expiry of tapes could be an issue. Nope...by default netbackup does not mix retentions on a single media.even within a given volume pool. Paul -- La version française suit le texte anglais. This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu.
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Paul Around 13 Policies, (For example: one for AD, one for SMS, SQL, Exchange, ect). There are policies that have multiple clients but each policy has a created volume pool. Paul, note the word possibly in my last statement. My thought of this was 1 volume pool with say 3 tapes. Lets say one policy runs and completes and uses 1 1/2 tapes. Later a 2nd policy runs (using the same pool) and possibly uses the remainder of the 1/2 tape before starting a new tape. Volume Pools, in my view should be separate in most cases. But each to their own. Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Paul Keating [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 13:20 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of WEAVER, Simon 2) Each Policy has its own Volume Pool OMG!! How many policies? You don't multiplex at all? Sounds like you also have only one client per policy 3) Easier to manage tapes (ie: Only tapes in a specified pool will contain data for the end client. Having all tapes in one pool, with all clients using them means that possibly tape retention and expiry of tapes could be an issue. Nope...by default netbackup does not mix retentions on a single media.even within a given volume pool. Paul -- This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Paul It may or may not be a problem, but if 1 1/2 tapes are used for a policy with a 2 week retention and then a 2nd policy comes along and uses the remainder of that 1/2 tape with a retention of 2 months, that tape cannot be used until the image expires (at least that is how I see it). We have Policies that include Full and Incrementals. They are multiplexed onto several tapes, but Incrementals are set to only multiplex to one tape. So yes, more tapes, bigger library, but as we backup 10TB of Data, I think its needed and on top of this, a further 4TB will be added later this year when we start backing up Unix and More Exchange Servers. Again, this is all going to be down to each and every environment and how best to implement Netbackup. I would say your environment is a lot smaller compared to ours (not really sure of your setup), but again each Business is going to do things differently. Im not sure if there is a misunderstanding here, but to put it again I have a Policy for each type of Server we have (example AD Servers, DNS Servers, Exchange, Unix, Mission Critical Clusters, ect). There are policies where they contain MULTIPLE clients (ie: 50) and share a single volume pool. I have some cases where 2 policies share the same volume pools, but in most cases each has a separate volume pool. And we always have around 40 - 50 scratch tapes available to use. The above does NOT include Month ends, which most are all in 1 separate policy with corresponding Volume Pools. Month end tapes are of course removed in a safe. It works very well, and with the correct multiplexing, we hardly use many tapes (seeing as we backup so much in a week). Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Paul Keating [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 13:51 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Paul, note the word possibly in my last statement. My thought of this was 1 volume pool with say 3 tapes. Lets say one policy runs and completes and uses 1 1/2 tapes. Later a 2nd policy runs (using the same pool) and possibly uses the remainder of the 1/2 tape before starting a new tape. Uh hunh. Not sure how that's a problem...it makes the most efficient use of your tapes, otherwise half of your tapes are only half fullrequires more tapes, bigger library (more slots), more media management, more drives (ie. Tape belonging to a particular policy is in a drive, another policy cannot start to backup untill a free drive is available to insert it's own tape) I think the amalgation of volume pools is something that has to be done as businesses expand from SMB - Enterprise. We have a business line that used to do their own local backups, and when we went to the Central Entrprise backup environment, one of their requirements was to have every server backed up to a spearate tape, that was removed each day, labeled with the date and server name, signed by the person who removed it, initialed by a witness, and sealed in an envelope, walked to the other tower, and palced in a vault. Obviously that wasn't gonna workthis was a database application group, and we had to convince them that it was ok to let the Netbackup database manage the tapespart of going big I guess. Volume Pools, in my view should be separate in most cases. But each to their own. True..to each their own. Depends on the environment I suppose. I've got a small environment, (about 4TB in a full backup window) but it sounds a bit bigger than your's. I have 220 physical machines, plus several dozen VMs, in 42 policies (most clients fall into one of about 10 policies due to retention differences or mandated media segregation, the rest are one offs for specific filesystems, application, or whatever.) If each policy had it's own volume pool, a single night's incremental backup would probably use every tape in my 219 slot librarythe way we are currently setup, we currently have about 25 scratch tapes, and we haven't had to add or remove tapes in about 18 months, with 7 volume pools other than scratch. (including Daily, Weekly, Monthly and Yearly pools...though I'd like to migrate out of that paradigm.) Paul This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
0n Wed, Apr 26, 2006 at 12:49:25AM -0400, bob944 wrote: Alex, you'll get a dozen recommendations. This is the right one. :-) What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? Yes to the first, no to the second. Offline catalog backup tapes in NetBackup. Everything else in dsto-mlb. - dsto-mlb is a made-up name to suggest that you name your primary pool after your datacenter (and supposing DSTO and Melbourne and that you have, or may later have, other datacenters). The intent is to have a simple way to keep your DC's tapes separate from dsto-prth's tapes during the inevitable consolidation or other circumstance that co-mingles your and foreign tapes. - Practically, you'll still have a None pool (cleaning tapes, tapes with errors you don't want used until you test or toss them). And probably a scratch pool, a duplicates pool or two, a duplicate catalog backup pool, the goofy DataStore pool unused. - I always suggest a test pool. Keeps your production pool from accumulating junk test data, frees you to do any testing and expiring you need to without risk of filling/tying-up/expiring production tapes. Test what you want, expire the tapes when done and let them go back to scratch. - There _are_ reasons to have separate pools. Find a logical division _with_ a reason that justifies the administrative and operational burden. - - Customer privacy. Do you have two clients whose data should not be mixed? Army and Navy pools, then. Related to this is restricting access to a pool to a specified host (media server) if there's a Really Good Reason to do this. - - Minimizing collateral damage. Does someone occasionally leak classified info onto an unclassified system--requiring you to destroy all unclassified backups which might contain it? Subdivide in any way that makes sense to minimize loss of the rest of the backups. - - Related to the above, is there a project or client whose backups may need to go elsewhere tomorrow? Just eject all the tapes in that pool and send them on their way with 100% of their info without losing any that's not theirs. - - And a third variation on the going-offsite theme: Maybe a given-to-legal pool for duplicating backups that go off to some other entity and may not return... - - Availability assurance. Have a really small library and need to be positive there'll be enough tape for the big weekend database backup? Separate, stocked-up oracle pool so that other backups/users can't use up those tapes. Or a separate user pool if you allow user backups/archives and that's the group that might use up your free space (though this method loses a lot with the advent of automatic draw from a scratch pool). There are undoubtedly other good reasons, but if you insist that someone come up with a rationale that can't be met any other way--not just something that _sounds_ logical. It makes me crazy to see Full and Incremental pools, or Unix and Windows ones. Remember that pools are another multiplier of tapes-in-use, alongside multiple media servers, mux/non-mux and differen retention levels. You're on the right track. Simplify. Let the computer manage what it can and save your brain for important things. Awesome detailed reply Bob. Thank ! Much appreciated. However, I have a few quick questions still: 1. You say tapes with errors will be moved to the none pool. I was under the impression they would be 'frozen' and left in their orginating Volume Pool ? Can you please clarify what you mean by this. 2. What is the DataStore Pool actually designed to be used for ? 3. You mention that cleaning tapes would go into the None pool. I was origally thinking of creating a CLN pool. Bad idea ? Cheers and thanks to everyone who is responding. Please keep your opinions and ideas flowing in. I am _very_ interested ! -aW ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
-Original Message- From: WEAVER, Simon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] It may or may not be a problem, but if 1 1/2 tapes are used for a policy with a 2 week retention and then a 2nd policy comes along and uses the remainder of that 1/2 tape with a retention of 2 months, that tape cannot be used until the image expires (at least that is how I see it). Yes, however, Netbackup will not do thatone a tape is written with an image with a 2 week retention, that tape will only be used for other images with a 2 week retention, untill the tape is filled, and then after 2 weeks, the entire tape will return to scratch. There is an explicit option mix retentions on media that you can enable, if you really have a justification, but I can't think of one. We have Policies that include Full and Incrementals. They are multiplexed onto several tapes, but Incrementals are set to only multiplex to one tape. Hmmmlooking at my schedules, I'm trying to figure out how you limit the number of tapes used on a per schedule basis, in a given policy. I would say your environment is a lot smaller compared to ours (not really sure of your setup), but again each Business is going to do things differently. Yeahfor sureyou've got more than double the amount of data backed up. I guess the way you broke it down in your example, ie. a server, three tapes...implied something smaller. That could be an issuebut if you have 50 clients in a policy and you do have cases where 2 policies use a pool, then you are taking advantage of economy of scale...if you've got 13 policies, then you've got what? About 10-12 pools? That doesn't sound so bad. Paul -- La version française suit le texte anglais. This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu.
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
0n Wed, Apr 26, 2006 at 10:57:48PM +0930, Wilkinson, Alex wrote: 0n Wed, Apr 26, 2006 at 12:49:25AM -0400, bob944 wrote: Alex, you'll get a dozen recommendations. This is the right one. :-) What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? Yes to the first, no to the second. Offline catalog backup tapes in NetBackup. Everything else in dsto-mlb. - dsto-mlb is a made-up name to suggest that you name your primary pool after your datacenter (and supposing DSTO and Melbourne and that you have, or may later have, other datacenters). The intent is to have a simple way to keep your DC's tapes separate from dsto-prth's tapes during the inevitable consolidation or other circumstance that co-mingles your and foreign tapes. - Practically, you'll still have a None pool (cleaning tapes, tapes with errors you don't want used until you test or toss them). And probably a scratch pool, a duplicates pool or two, a duplicate catalog backup pool, the goofy DataStore pool unused. - I always suggest a test pool. Keeps your production pool from accumulating junk test data, frees you to do any testing and expiring you need to without risk of filling/tying-up/expiring production tapes. Test what you want, expire the tapes when done and let them go back to scratch. - There _are_ reasons to have separate pools. Find a logical division _with_ a reason that justifies the administrative and operational burden. - - Customer privacy. Do you have two clients whose data should not be mixed? Army and Navy pools, then. Related to this is restricting access to a pool to a specified host (media server) if there's a Really Good Reason to do this. - - Minimizing collateral damage. Does someone occasionally leak classified info onto an unclassified system--requiring you to destroy all unclassified backups which might contain it? Subdivide in any way that makes sense to minimize loss of the rest of the backups. - - Related to the above, is there a project or client whose backups may need to go elsewhere tomorrow? Just eject all the tapes in that pool and send them on their way with 100% of their info without losing any that's not theirs. - - And a third variation on the going-offsite theme: Maybe a given-to-legal pool for duplicating backups that go off to some other entity and may not return... - - Availability assurance. Have a really small library and need to be positive there'll be enough tape for the big weekend database backup? Separate, stocked-up oracle pool so that other backups/users can't use up those tapes. Or a separate user pool if you allow user backups/archives and that's the group that might use up your free space (though this method loses a lot with the advent of automatic draw from a scratch pool). There are undoubtedly other good reasons, but if you insist that someone come up with a rationale that can't be met any other way--not just something that _sounds_ logical. It makes me crazy to see Full and Incremental pools, or Unix and Windows ones. Remember that pools are another multiplier of tapes-in-use, alongside multiple media servers, mux/non-mux and differen retention levels. You're on the right track. Simplify. Let the computer manage what it can and save your brain for important things. Awesome detailed reply Bob. Thank ! Much appreciated. However, I have a few quick questions still: 1. You say tapes with errors will be moved to the none pool. I was under the impression they would be 'frozen' and left in their orginating Volume Pool ? Can you please clarify what you mean by this. 2. What is the DataStore Pool actually designed to be used for ? 3. You mention that cleaning tapes would go into the None pool. I was origally thinking of creating a CLN pool. Bad idea ? Cheers and thanks to everyone who is responding. Please keep your opinions and ideas flowing in. I am _very_ interested ! -aW Oh and another question: Why would I need a 'duplicates' and 'catalogue duplicates' pool ? -aW ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
0n Wed, Apr 26, 2006 at 12:49:25AM -0400, bob944 wrote: - - Customer privacy. Do you have two clients whose data should not be mixed? Army and Navy pools, then. Related to this is restricting access to a pool to a specified host (media server) if there's a Really Good Reason to do this. Is it possible to restrict a subset of users to a particular Volume Pool ? Or only a media server ? -aW ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
If by users, you mean backup cients, then you can specify volume pool on a per policy basisor if you prefer, even within a policy, you can override the policy default, and specify pool per schedule. Paul -- -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Wilkinson, Alex Sent: April 26, 2006 10:08 AM To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Is it possible to restrict a subset of users to a particular Volume Pool ? Or only a media server ? -aW La version française suit le texte anglais. This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu.
RE:[Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Dave Markham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I am surprised by the number of people using a single volume pool for data backups. What about mixed retentions on media? What about them? NetBackup *never* puts different retentions on a tape unless you force it to with the MULTIPLE_RETENTIONS_PER_MEDIA directive (and there are very few situations where that's a good idea). You are managing something that doesn't need to be managed. There are better uses for administrator brainpower. I'm holding my tongue on a certain British colleague's pathological overmanagement. :-) ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
KISS = Keep It Simple, Stupid! It's easy to over-manage NetBackup, because it lets you. I recommend that you keep things simple, and deviate from the simple when it's evident that you should. If the NetBackup pool contains all of your assigned tapes and the Scratch pool contains all of your available tapes, life is simple. How many tapes are in use? Count the number of tapes in NetBackup. How many tapes are available for backups? Count the number of tapes in Scratch. All free tapes are available for the next backup. Cleaning tapes, if any, will be in pool NONE. I use another pool for suspect tapes ... tapes that have had an event such as a read or write error. If on v6.0, you probably have pool for catalog backups. If you duplicate/vault tapes, you probably have another couple of pools (one for catalog backups; one for data) for your catalog and image copies. Why make more pools? One reason might be to insulate free tapes in a pool from others. For example, in my shop our Oracle Agent backups take precedence over file system backups. We don't want independent file system backups filling a tape pool, possibly delaying backups and causing our archive redo log spaces to fill. I'm sure there are other reasons for more pools, but in general, I recommend: KISS. :-) cheers, wayne Wilkinson, Alex wrote, in part, on 4/25/2006 8:46 PM: What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
WOW lots of threads... I didn't read them all but I do have a suggestion. Place tapes that have had a read/write errors or were frozen into a temporary pool until they can be checked out. The pool name - cesspool Bob StumpIncorrigible punster -- Do not incorrige "Wilkinson, Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED] 4/25/2006 8:46 PM Hi all,What is "best practice" with regards to Volume Pools ?We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes.Is it good practice to use the "Netbackup" Volume pool for this situation ?-aW___Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.eduhttp://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Wilkinson, Alex wrote, in part, on 4/26/2006 9:27 AM: 1. You say tapes with errors will be moved to the none pool. I was under the impression they would be 'frozen' and left in their orginating Volume Pool ? NetBackup never moves tapes to NONE. You are right that a frozen tape is an assigned tape and can't be moved from its current pool. However, some of us unfreeze the tape and change it from it's current pool to a cesspool (I use Baudelaire), where it sits until I get a chance to erase it, test it, eye-ball it or whatever, before putting it back in service or discarding it. The key for me is that I can't erase it while it is assigned. If I just bpexpdate (expire) it, it will go back to Scratch and be available for a new write. 2. What is the DataStore Pool actually designed to be used for ? Good question! I have no idea. 3. You mention that cleaning tapes would go into the None pool. I was origally thinking of creating a CLN pool. Bad idea ? You have some options wrt cleaning your tape drives. If your library does it, NetBackup doesn't even see the cleaning tape. If NetBackup is to use them, I think (skepticism = high!) the cleaning tape(s) must be in the NONE pool. cheers, wayne ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Dave Markham wrote, in part, on 4/26/2006 5:28 AM: I am surprised by the number of people using a single volume pool for data backups. What about mixed retentions on media? My feeling is that not many shops mix retentions on a tape volume. I don't, so maybe that's why. ;-) If you decide you must separate daily from weekly from monthly, and they share the same retention, then you probably need separate Volume Pools and you specify a separate volume pool in each policy schedule. I don't see the need and don't ;-) In case it's unclear to those folks new to NetBackup, a Volume Pool can hold tapes that are free or assigned, and if assigned, be of any and various retentions. cheers, wayne ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
I think that my words have been taken out of context. I know you cant and shouldn't mix retentions on media which is why i find it hard that people use 1 media pool for all backups. From that i would assume they have the same retention for all backups. This in my opinion which is only my opinion is a bad idea. To give advise to the original thread i was saying that one volume pool for all backups is perhaps not the right way to do things and i was surprised by the number of people who seemed to adopt it. I asked about mixed retentions as people with 1 volume pool cannot ( safely ) then have a full backup with a different retention than say a cumulative backup. Cheers bob944 wrote: Dave Markham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I am surprised by the number of people using a single volume pool for data backups. What about mixed retentions on media? What about them? NetBackup *never* puts different retentions on a tape unless you force it to with the MULTIPLE_RETENTIONS_PER_MEDIA directive (and there are very few situations where that's a good idea). You are managing something that doesn't need to be managed. There are better uses for administrator brainpower. I'm holding my tongue on a certain British colleague's pathological overmanagement. :-) ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
I don't believe your words were taken out of context, as even re-reading your follow-up, I'm interpretting your words the same way. I think you are misunderstanding what netbackup does...it DOES NOT mix retentions on a single media... If for instance you have one pool, named netbackup and you have 3 different policies, each with different retentions Ie. PolicyA - FULL=4 weeks, INC=2 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=8 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=24 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup You will ned up with something simlar to the following: MediaID PoolRetention 01 Netbackup 24 weeks 01 Netbackup 24 weeks 01 Netbackup 24 weeks 01 Netbackup 24 weeks -- -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave Markham Sent: April 26, 2006 12:15 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] I think that my words have been taken out of context. I know you cant and shouldn't mix retentions on media which is why i find it hard that people use 1 media pool for all backups. From that i would assume they have the same retention for all backups. This in my opinion which is only my opinion is a bad idea. To give advise to the original thread i was saying that one volume pool for all backups is perhaps not the right way to do things and i was surprised by the number of people who seemed to adopt it. I asked about mixed retentions as people with 1 volume pool cannot ( safely ) then have a full backup with a different retention than say a cumulative backup. La version française suit le texte anglais. This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu.
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Mistakenly hit ctrl+enter when I meant to ctrl+V Please read down... I don't believe your words were taken out of context, as even re-reading your follow-up, I'm interpretting your words the same way. I think you are misunderstanding what netbackup does...it DOES NOT mix retentions on a single media... If for instance you have one pool, named netbackup and you have 3 different policies, each with different retentions Ie. PolicyA - FULL=4 weeks, INC=2 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=8 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=24 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup You will ned up with something simlar to the following: MediaID PoolRetention 01Netbackup 24 weeks 02Netbackup 8 weeks 03Netbackup 4 weeks 04Netbackup 2 weeks You will NOT get a 2 week and a 4 week retention backup written to the same media ID, regardless of whether or not they're written to the same volume pool. Paul La version française suit le texte anglais. This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu.
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Agree. IMO simple for small to medium sized solutions is cumulative incremental backups daily and full backups at weekends and at month end with an offsite daily if required. This then defines sensibly you should have 4 different retentions.. dailys 1 to 2 weeks retention. Reason: whats the point in keeping the same data filling up tapes when you have just written it to a full backup. Any requirement for individual day restores after this time then agreed different approach is required. weekly 1-2 months retention. Reason whats the point in having many weeklys when you have taken a monthly full backup. monthly 6 months: Reason: backup runs once every 4 weeks say so doesnt use many tapes over the year thus leaving you to have a longer retention for your data. Anything wanted to be kept over 6 months should be defined separately. offsite 2 weeks Reason: no point having out of date offsite backups in event of DR you want the latest info. That to me is simple :) D Wayne T Smith wrote: KISS = Keep It Simple, Stupid! It's easy to over-manage NetBackup, because it lets you. I recommend that you keep things simple, and deviate from the simple when it's evident that you should. If the NetBackup pool contains all of your assigned tapes and the Scratch pool contains all of your available tapes, life is simple. How many tapes are in use? Count the number of tapes in NetBackup. How many tapes are available for backups? Count the number of tapes in Scratch. All free tapes are available for the next backup. Cleaning tapes, if any, will be in pool NONE. I use another pool for suspect tapes ... tapes that have had an event such as a read or write error. If on v6.0, you probably have pool for catalog backups. If you duplicate/vault tapes, you probably have another couple of pools (one for catalog backups; one for data) for your catalog and image copies. Why make more pools? One reason might be to insulate free tapes in a pool from others. For example, in my shop our Oracle Agent backups take precedence over file system backups. We don't want independent file system backups filling a tape pool, possibly delaying backups and causing our archive redo log spaces to fill. I'm sure there are other reasons for more pools, but in general, I recommend: KISS. :-) cheers, wayne Wilkinson, Alex wrote, in part, on 4/25/2006 8:46 PM: What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
I know exactly how it works im afraid and was posing the question to people who use 1 tape pool. What about mixed retentions? To explain further i meant what about having different retentions on the same media which you would need to turn on in order to have full backups incremental etc to use the same tape pool and have different retentions. This to me is a bit surprising that someone would do it so i posed the question. D Paul Keating wrote: I don't believe your words were taken out of context, as even re-reading your follow-up, I'm interpretting your words the same way. I think you are misunderstanding what netbackup does...it DOES NOT mix retentions on a single media... If for instance you have one pool, named netbackup and you have 3 different policies, each with different retentions Ie. PolicyA - FULL=4 weeks, INC=2 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=8 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=24 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup You will ned up with something simlar to the following: MediaID PoolRetention 01Netbackup 24 weeks 01Netbackup 24 weeks 01Netbackup 24 weeks 01Netbackup 24 weeks La version française suit le texte anglais. This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu. ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Correct. Unless you have mix retentions on media set which i think everyone has agreed is a bad idea. Your description below uses 4 tapes ( if one tape per backup is used ) which are all associated to the same volume pool. IMO this is bad practice. I do think it explains it well to the person who originally asked the question however which is nice. Paul Keating wrote: Mistakenly hit ctrl+enter when I meant to ctrl+V Please read down... I don't believe your words were taken out of context, as even re-reading your follow-up, I'm interpretting your words the same way. I think you are misunderstanding what netbackup does...it DOES NOT mix retentions on a single media... If for instance you have one pool, named netbackup and you have 3 different policies, each with different retentions Ie. PolicyA - FULL=4 weeks, INC=2 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=8 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=24 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup You will ned up with something simlar to the following: MediaID PoolRetention 01 Netbackup 24 weeks 02 Netbackup 8 weeks 03 Netbackup 4 weeks 04 Netbackup 2 weeks You will NOT get a 2 week and a 4 week retention backup written to the same media ID, regardless of whether or not they're written to the same volume pool. Paul La version française suit le texte anglais. This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu. ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Why is it bad practice? I don't understand the big deal about not separating different retentions to different pools? If they all use the same pool, they are separated automatically, you just can't 'see' it. If it's just for visual peace of mind, then I understand. In a shop where we have multiple sites with multiple customers (450+) who each have at least one volume pool, it's becoming imperative to 'downsize' into much fewer pools, and we will let multiple retentions go to the same pool (not to be confused with mixing them on the same tape). -Rusty -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave Markham Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2006 11:35 AM To: Paul Keating Cc: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Correct. Unless you have mix retentions on media set which i think everyone has agreed is a bad idea. Your description below uses 4 tapes ( if one tape per backup is used ) which are all associated to the same volume pool. IMO this is bad practice. I do think it explains it well to the person who originally asked the question however which is nice. Paul Keating wrote: Mistakenly hit ctrl+enter when I meant to ctrl+V Please read down... I don't believe your words were taken out of context, as even re-reading your follow-up, I'm interpretting your words the same way. I think you are misunderstanding what netbackup does...it DOES NOT mix retentions on a single media... If for instance you have one pool, named netbackup and you have 3 different policies, each with different retentions Ie. PolicyA - FULL=4 weeks, INC=2 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=8 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup PolicyB - FULL=24 weeks, INC=4 weeks - pool=netbackup You will ned up with something simlar to the following: MediaID PoolRetention 01 Netbackup 24 weeks 02 Netbackup 8 weeks 03 Netbackup 4 weeks 04 Netbackup 2 weeks You will NOT get a 2 week and a 4 week retention backup written to the same media ID, regardless of whether or not they're written to the same volume pool. Paul -- -- == == La version française suit le texte anglais. -- -- This email may contain privileged and/or confidential information, and the Bank of Canada does not waive any related rights. Any distribution, use, or copying of this email or the information it contains by other than the intended recipient is unauthorized. If you received this email in error please delete it immediately from your system and notify the sender promptly by email that you have done so. -- -- Le présent courriel peut contenir de l'information privilégiée ou confidentielle. La Banque du Canada ne renonce pas aux droits qui s'y rapportent. Toute diffusion, utilisation ou copie de ce courriel ou des renseignements qu'il contient par une personne autre que le ou les destinataires désignés est interdite Si vous recevez ce courriel par erreur, veuillez le supprimer immédiatement et envoyer sans délai à l'expéditeur un message électronique pour l'aviser que vous avez éliminé de votre ordinateur toute copie du courriel reçu. ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Hi Simon I suspect you are right but another reason to move to hot catalog backups is in the 6.0 release notes:- End of Life Notification for Catalog 1. The offline catalog backup feature will be removed in the next major release of NetBackup. Improved functionality is currently available to user with the new online catalog backup. Regards Richard -Original Message- From: WEAVER, Simon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, 26 April 2006 6:59 pm To: Mansell, Richard; veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Richard Although recommended, Online Cat backups were originally designed for Enterprise Backup Environments where there is no window to perform an offline backup. In other words, it will work while normal backups are running at the same time. Also (I think I am write!), online catalog backups allow the use to span more tapes, where an offline uses 1. Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Mansell, Richard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 06:06 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] FWIW, in NBU 6 hot catalogue backups are the recommended way to go and a pool called CatalogBackup gets created especially for that purpose. We therefore just use NetBackup for the normal data tapes and it is fed from a scratch pool. Since we use the vault option we also have a VaultCatalogue and a VaultData pool. Regards Richard -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of bob944 Sent: Wednesday, 26 April 2006 4:49 pm To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu; 'Wilkinson, Alex' Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Alex, you'll get a dozen recommendations. This is the right one. :-) What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? Yes to the first, no to the second. Offline catalog backup tapes in NetBackup. Everything else in dsto-mlb. ** This electronic email and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. The views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of the Christchurch City Council. If you are not the correct recipient of this email please advise the sender and delete. Christchurch City Council http://www.ccc.govt.nz ** ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
[Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Hi all, What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? -aW ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
FWIW, in NBU 6 hot catalogue backups are the recommended way to go and a pool called CatalogBackup gets created especially for that purpose. We therefore just use NetBackup for the normal data tapes and it is fed from a scratch pool. Since we use the vault option we also have a VaultCatalogue and a VaultData pool. Regards Richard -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of bob944 Sent: Wednesday, 26 April 2006 4:49 pm To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu; 'Wilkinson, Alex' Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Alex, you'll get a dozen recommendations. This is the right one. :-) What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? Yes to the first, no to the second. Offline catalog backup tapes in NetBackup. Everything else in dsto-mlb. ** This electronic email and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. The views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of the Christchurch City Council. If you are not the correct recipient of this email please advise the sender and delete. Christchurch City Council http://www.ccc.govt.nz ** ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu
RE: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please]
Alex Each to their own at the end of the day. What I have done in the past and present is: 1) Netbackup Pool is for the netbackup catalog tapes (currently 2 live in there). 2) Each Policy has its own Volume Pool 3) Easier to manage tapes (ie: Only tapes in a specified pool will contain data for the end client. Having all tapes in one pool, with all clients using them means that possibly tape retention and expiry of tapes could be an issue. Example: Client1 Policy has a Volume pool called Client1_Full and Client1_Incr And so on HTH Regards Simon Weaver 3rd Line Technical Support Windows Domain Administrator EADS Astrium Limited, B32AA IM (DCS) Anchorage Road, Portsmouth, PO3 5PU Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Wilkinson, Alex [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 26 April 2006 01:47 To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu Subject: [Veritas-bu] Volume Pools [recommendations please] Hi all, What is best practice with regards to Volume Pools ? We are thinking of using a single Volume Pool for all of our data tapes. Is it good practice to use the Netbackup Volume pool for this situation ? -aW ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu This email is for the intended addressee only. If you have received it in error then you must not use, retain, disseminate or otherwise deal with it. Please notify the sender by return email. The views of the author may not necessarily constitute the views of EADS Astrium Limited. Nothing in this email shall bind EADS Astrium Limited in any contract or obligation. EADS Astrium Limited, Registered in England and Wales No. 2449259 Registered Office: Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2AS, England ___ Veritas-bu maillist - Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu