Vproxy Guide
Vproxy Guide
Version 18.1
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Published in the USA.
Dell EMC
Hopkinton, Massachusetts 01748-9103
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www.DellEMC.com
Figures 9
Tables 13
Preface 15
Glossary 363
1 Revision history...........................................................................................................15
2 Style conventions........................................................................................................18
3 NetWorker VMware Protection with vProxy appliance requirements......................... 24
4 Incoming port requirements........................................................................................25
5 Outgoing port requirements....................................................................................... 26
6 Performance and scalability factors........................................................................... 30
7 MSVMAPPAGENT binaries called by vProxy..............................................................52
8 Supported characters in SQL database names........................................................... 55
9 Minimum required vCenter user account privileges ................................................... 60
10 Supported and unsupported VMware Backup appliance operations in a NetWorker 9.1
and later environment..................................................................................................71
11 Schedule icons........................................................................................................... 93
12 Schedule icons........................................................................................................... 98
13 Backup log files......................................................................................................... 126
14 FLR privilege requirements........................................................................................ 161
15 Recovery log files..................................................................................................... 205
16 NetWorker VMware Data Protection tasks...............................................................208
17 NetWorker VMware Protection requirements........................................................... 210
18 Incoming port requirements....................................................................................... 211
19 Outgoing port requirements — with external proxies................................................212
20 Recommended memory and swap space based on storage space utilization............. 216
21 Minimum required vCenter user account privileges .................................................. 231
22 Description of services running on the VMware Backup Appliance............................241
23 Backup tab column descriptions .............................................................................. 264
24 Task Failure column descriptions.............................................................................. 267
25 Job Details column descriptions................................................................................267
26 Unprotected Clients column descriptions................................................................. 268
27 Backup appliance detail descriptions........................................................................ 268
28 Email configuration field descriptions........................................................................ 271
29 EMC Backup and Recovery alarms .......................................................................... 290
30 Scalability Factors.................................................................................................... 303
31 Maximum concurrent sessions per VMware Backup Appliance................................. 304
32 Concurrency/parallelism recommendations .............................................................305
33 Application information values ................................................................................. 330
34 VADP recovery privileges ........................................................................................ 332
Note
This document was accurate at publication time. To ensure that you are using the
latest version of this document, go to the Support website at https://
support.emc.com.
Purpose
This document describes how to configure the NetWorker software to protect a
VMware environment.
Audience
This document is part of the NetWorker documentation set and is intended for use by
system administrators during the configuration of the NetWorker software.
Revision history
The following table presents the revision history of this document.
Related documentation
The NetWorker documentation set includes the following publications, available on the
Support website:
l NetWorker Online Software Compatibility Matrix
Provides compatibility information, including specific software and hardware
configurations that NetWorker supports. To access the matrix, go to http://
compatibilityguide.emc.com:8080/CompGuideApp/.
l NetWorker Administration Guide
Describes how to configure and maintain the NetWorker software.
l NetWorker Network Data Management Protocol (NDMP) User Guide
Describes how to use the NetWorker software to provide data protection for
NDMP filers.
l NetWorker Cluster Integration Guide
Contains information related to configuring NetWorker software on cluster servers
and clients.
l NetWorker Installation Guide
Provides information on how to install, uninstall, and update the NetWorker
software for clients, storage nodes, and servers on all supported operating
systems.
l NetWorker Updating from a Previous Release Guide
Describes how to update the NetWorker software from a previously installed
release.
l NetWorker Release Notes
Contains information on new features and changes, fixed problems, known
limitations, environment and system requirements for the latest NetWorker
software release.
l NetWorker Command Reference Guide
Provides reference information for NetWorker commands and options.
l NetWorker Data Domain Boost Integration Guide
Provides planning and configuration information on the use of Data Domain
devices for data deduplication backup and storage in a NetWorker environment.
NOTICE
Note
Typographical conventions
The following type style conventions are used in this document:
Bold Used for interface elements that a user specifically selects or clicks,
for example, names of buttons, fields, tab names, and menu paths.
Also used for the name of a dialog box, page, pane, screen area with
title, table label, and window.
Italic Used for full titles of publications that are referenced in text.
Monospace Used for:
l System code
l System output, such as an error message or script
l Pathnames, file names, file name extensions, prompts, and
syntax
l Commands and options
You can use the following resources to find more information about this product,
obtain support, and provide feedback.
Where to find product documentation
l https://support.emc.com
l https://community.emc.com
Where to get support
The Support website at https://support.emc.com provides access to licensing
information, product documentation, advisories, and downloads, as well as how-to and
troubleshooting information. This information may enable you to resolve a product
issue before you contact Support.
To access a product specific Support page:
1. Go to https://support.emc.com/products.
2. In the Find a Product by Name box, type a product name, and then select the
product from the list that appears.
3. Click .
4. (Optional) To add the product to My Saved Products, in the product specific
page, click Add to My Saved Products.
Knowledgebase
The Knowledgebase contains applicable solutions that you can search for by solution
number, for example, 123456, or by keyword.
To search the Knowledgebase:
1. Go to https://support.emc.com.
2. Click Advanced Search.
The screen refreshes and filter options appear.
3. In the Search Support or Find Service Request by Number box, type a solution
number or keywords.
4. (Optional) To limit the search to specific products, type a product name in the
Scope by product box, and then select the product from the list that appears.
5. In the Scope by resource list box, select Knowledgebase.
The Knowledgebase Advanced Search panel appears.
6. (Optional) Specify other filters or advanced options.
7. Click .
Live chat
To participate in a live interactive chat with a support agent:
1. Go to https://support.emc.com.
2. Click Chat with Support.
Service requests
To obtain in-depth help from Licensing, submit a service request. To submit a service
request:
1. Go to https://support.emc.com.
2. Click Create a Service Request.
Note
To create a service request, you must have a valid support agreement. Contact a sales
representative for details about obtaining a valid support agreement or with questions
about an account. If you know the service request number, then directly enter the
service request number in the Service Request field to get the valid details.
Note
If upgrading to NetWorker 18.1, you can continue to use the legacy NetWorker
VMware Protection Solution with the VMware Backup appliance (VBA) to run existing
VMware Backup appliance protection policies. However, you will not be able to create
any new policies using the VMware Backup Appliance, and you cannot recover
backups performed with the VMware Backup appliance by using the vProxy appliance.
System requirements
The following table lists the required components for NetWorker VMware Protection
with the vProxy appliance.
When you install or upgrade NetWorker and deploy the vProxy appliance, ensure that
the NetWorker server and storage node are at the same version, and that you use the
latest version of the vProxy appliance.
System requirements 23
Introduction to NetWorker VMware Protection with the vProxy appliance
Component Requirements
NetWorker NetWorker 18.1 server software with NMC.
Note
vCenter server l Version 5.5, 5.5 U2, 5.5 U3a, 5.5 U3b, 5.5
U3d, 6.0, 6.0 U1b, 6.0 U2, 6.5, 6.50b.
Note
ESX/ESXi server l Version 5.5, 5.5 U2, 5.5 U3a, 5.5 Ub, 6.0
U1, 6.0 U1b, 6.0 U2, 6.5, 6.50b.
Note
Note
Component Requirements
Data Domain l A minimum of one configured DD Boost
device is required. Additionally, you must
specify one pool that contains the DD
Boost device.
l Data Domain system OS at DDOS version
5.7, 6.0.0.30, 6.0.1-10, or 6.1. If using
DDOS 5.7.x, 5.7.1 is recommended.
Note
Port requirements
The NetWorker VMware Protection solution requires the ports outlined in the
following tables.
Port requirements 25
Introduction to NetWorker VMware Protection with the vProxy appliance
vProxy Appliance Data Domain 22, 111, 131, 161, 2049, Data Domain
2052 management
Figure 2 Port requirements for NetWorker VMware Protection with the vProxy appliance
Note
Network configuration settings do not get restored with virtual machine after
recovery of a vApp backup
Network configuration settings are not backed up with the virtual machine as part
of a vApp backup in NetWorker. As a result, when you restore a vApp backup, you
must manually reconfigure the network settings.
vProxy appliance configured with dual stack or IPv6 only is not supported
The vProxy appliance does not support dual stack (IPv4 and IPv6) or IPv6 only
addressing. If you want to run backups and restores using the vProxy appliance,
use IPv4 addressing for the vProxy and disable IPv6.
Concurrent vProxy workflows on the same virtual machine is not supported when not
using a vCenter server
NetWorker does not support running multiple vProxy workflows concurrently
(backup, image-level recovery, or file-level restore operations) on the same
virtual machine when not using a vCenter server in your environment.
Data Domain system requires REPLICATION license when clone of VMware backup
performed to same system as the backup
When cloning VMware backups using NetWorker VMware Protection with the
vProxy appliance, if the clone is performed to the same Data Domain system as
the backup, a REPLICATION license is required on the Data Domain system.
vProxy cannot perform recoveries from policies run with VMware Backup appliance
After upgrading to a NetWorker release with the vProxy appliance, any policies
run with the VMware Backup appliance cannot be recovered with the vProxy
appliance. If you want to recover these backups you must continue to use the
VMware Backup appliance.
Virtual machine alert "VM MAC conflict" may appear after successful recovery of
virtual machine
After performing a successful recovery of a virtual machine through vCenter
version 6, an alert may appear indicating a "VM MAC conflict" for the recovered
virtual machine, even though the new virtual machine will have a different and
unique MAC address. You must manually acknowledge the alert or clear the alert
after resolving the MAC address conflict. Note that this alert can be triggered
even when the MAC address conflict is resolved.
The VMware release notes at http://pubs.vmware.com/Release_Notes/en/
vsphere/60/vsphere-vcenter-server-60u2-release-notes.html provide more
information.
Backups fail for resource pools recreated with the same name as deleted pool
When you delete a resource pool in vCenter and then recreate a resource pool
with the same name, backups fail. Re-configure the protection group with the
newly created resource pool.
other transport mode to 0. For example, if you want to use hotadd mode only, set
hotadd = 25 and nbd = 0.
Note
If upgrading to NetWorker 18.1 from a previous release where the hotadd and nbd
transport modes were configured with different non-zero values for maximum
sessions, ensure that you change these settings to the same non-zero value.
Setting different non-zero values for both transport modes is not supported in
NetWorker 18.1.
Specify NBD for datastores if proxies should use NBD mode only
For proxies that only use NBD transport mode (proxies where you specify a value
greater than 0 for the NBD maximum sessions limit), you must also specify the
datastores for which you want the proxy to perform only NBD backups to ensure
that any backups of virtual machines running on these datastores are always
performed using NBD mode. This also ensures that the same NBD-only proxies
are never used for backups of virtual machines residing on any other datastores.
VMware View in the NetWorker Administration map view does not display when
configuration for Virtual Machines within the vCenter is incomplete
When you use VMware View, the map view does not appear when the
configuration for one or more Virtual Machines in the vCenter is incomplete. To
avoid this issue, remove the incomplete Virtual Machine configurations from
vCenter.
Cannot select a vProxy or the cloned vProxy when you create a VMware group
When you create a new protection group, you cannot select vProxy or clones of
the vProxy from the hosts list. To use the clone vProxy as a normal virtual
machine, clear the annotation string This is EMC Backup and Recovery
vProxy Appliance in the Notes section of the cloned vProxy virtual machine.
Compatibility information
The NetWorker Online Compatibility matrix provides software compatibility
information for the NetWorker release, which includes NetWorker VMware Protection
with the vProxy appliance.
The guide is available at http://compatibilityguide.emc.com:8080/CompGuideApp/.
Note
For compatibility information related to the Microsoft VM App Agent for SQL Server
application-consistent protection, refer to the NMM support matrix.
Number of concurrent NBD 50 (10G VMware uses Network File Copy (NFC) protocol to
backups per vCenter server network) read VMDK using NBD transport mode. You need one
VMware NFC connection for each VMDK file being
backed up. The VMware Documentation provides more
information on vCenter NFC session connection limits.
Virtual machines concurrent 100 100 Can be achieved with a combination of the number of
backups per vCenter server proxies multiplied by the number of configured hotadd
sessions per vProxy.
Number of proxies per 8 8 proxies with 12-13 hotadd sessions on each proxy can
vCenter protect 100 virtual machines concurrently. If more than
8 proxies are required per vCenter, configure the
hotadd limits on the proxies to ensure that no more
Number of workflows per 64 8 Ensure that you do not to exceed 2000 virtual
VMware policy machines per VMware policy.
Number of virtual machines 2000 Ensure that you do not to exceed 2000 virtual
per workflow machines per VMware policy.
Note that the maximum of 2000 virtual machines per
workflow is only applicable to the first FULL backup to
Data Domain, and does not apply to CBT-based
incremental backups of the virtual machines.
However, ensure that you do not exceed 100
connections per vCenter at any time during the backup
window.
Number of vCenter servers 5 3 Per policy you can use 5 vCenter servers in the
per policy respective workflows and trigger concurrent backups.
Backup Optimization modes During creation of a VMware type group in NMC, you
can select a backup optimization mode of either
Capacity or Performance. Performance mode
results in additional space use on the Data Domain
device (around 20%) but significantly improves
random I/O performance for instant access restores.
Note
You cannot use hotadd mode with IDE Virtual disks and therefore backup of these
disks will be performed using NBD mode.
l For best practices related to SQL Server application-consistent protection, review
the software and security requirements in the section Enable the Microsoft VM
App Agent for SQL Server application-consistent protection.
l During policy configuration, assign virtual machines to a protection group based on
logical grouping to allow for better scheduling of backups that will help you avoid
resource contention and create more organized logs for review.
l When you plan the backups, ensure that NetWorker VMware Protection supports
the disk types that you use in the environment. Currently, NetWorker VMware
Protection does not support the following disk types:
n Independent (persistent and non-persistent)
n RDM Independent - Virtual Compatibility Mode
n RDM Physical Compatibility Mode
l The vProxy Appliance leverages Changed Block Tracking (CBT) by default. If CBT
is disabled on the virtual machine, then it will enable CBT automatically. If you add
a disk to the virtual machine after the first full backup, for the next policy run a full
backup will be performed automatically for the newly added disk, and an
incremental backup will be performed for the existing disk. For information on
disabling CBT, refer to the section Enabling or disabling Changed Block Tracking.
l When backing up thin-provisioned Virtual Machines or disks for Virtual Machines
on NFS datastores, an NFS datastore recovery does not preserve thin
provisioning. VMware knowledge base article 2137818 at http://
kb.vmware.com/kb/2137818 provides more information.
l It is recommended that you set an appropriate NetWorker server/storage
parallelism value, according to the available resources, to reduce queuing. For
example, 5 vProxy appliances with backup and clone operations will require more
than 125 parallel sessions. Therefore, setting the parallelism for the NetWorker
server to 128 or higher (while also setting the server with 32+ GB memory and 8+
CPUs) will suit such an environment. The NetWorker Performance Optimization
Planning Guide provides more details.
If you require a larger number of parallel image backups, also consider setting the
maximum number of vCenter SOAP sessions to larger value. Note that this
requires careful planning and additional resources on the vCenter Server You can
configure this by modifying the following line in the vCenter vpxd.cfg file:
<vmacore><soap><maxSessionCount> N </maxSessionCount></soap></
vmacore>
This applies specifically to SDK sessions as opposed to VI client sessions:
l Each Virtual Machine backup to a Data Domain system consumes more than one
session on the Data Domain device. The default device configuration is target
sessions=20 and max session=60, however it is recommended that you
configure additional devices for more than 10 parallel backups.
l Virtual Machines with extremely high IO may face hangs during consolidation due
to the ESXi forced operation called synchronous consolidate. Plan your backups of
such Virtual Machines according to the amount of workload on the Virtual
Machine.
NetWorker VMware Protection Solution best practices with the vProxy appliance 33
Introduction to NetWorker VMware Protection with the vProxy appliance
l When you work with the vCenter database either directly or by using scripts, do
not change the name attribute for the vmfolder object. VMware knowledge base
article at https://support.emc.com/kb/190755 provides more information.
l Resource contention can occur at various points during the backup cycle. When
NetWorker runs larger policies, issues due to contention of resources can occur,
which impact all running operations. Adjust your resources and times for other
larger policies to avoid overlaps, and avoid resource contention.
For example, you configure one pool named Bronze, with one device. If you set up
a policy where every day at 10 pm two policies called 'Bronze1' and 'Bronze2' with
400 virtual machines each start writing to the device in the 'Bronze' pool, then the
long wait for device availability may cause unexpected delays or timeouts. To fix
this, set the policy start times 4 hours apart and add more devices, to allow for
stable backups.
Transport mode recommendations
Review the following recommendations for transport mode settings:
l Use hotadd transport mode for faster backups and restores and less exposure to
network routing, firewall, and SSL certificate issues. The vProxy appliance
currently supports a maximum of 25 concurrent hotadd sessions. To support
hotadd mode, deploy the vProxy on an ESXi host that has a path to the storage
that holds the target virtual disk(s) for backup.
Note
Hotadd mode requires VMware hardware version 7 or later. Ensure that all virtual
machines that you back up with Hotadd mode are using Virtual Machine hardware
version 7 or later.
For sites that contain a large number of virtual machines that do not support
hotadd requirements, NBD transport mode will be used. This can cause congestion
on the ESXi host management network. Plan your backup network carefully for
large scale NBD installs. You may consider configuring one of the following
options:
n Set up Management network redundancy.
n Set up backup network to ESXi for NBD.
n Set up storage heartbeats. http://www.vmware.com/files/pdf/techpaper/
vmw-vsphere-high-availability.pdf provides more information.
l If you have vFlash-enabled disks and are using hotadd transport mode, ensure that
you configure the vFlash resource for the vProxy host with sufficient resources
(greater than or equal to the virtual machine resources), or migrate the vProxy to
a host with vFlash already configured. Otherwise, backup of any vFlash-enabled
disks will fail with the error "VDDK Error: 13: You do not have access rights to this
file," and the error "The available virtual flash resource '0' MB ('0' bytes) is not
sufficient for the requested operation" on the vCenter server.
l If you only want to use one transport mode, ensure that you set the maximum
sessions value for the other transport mode to 0. For example, if you want to use
hotadd mode only set hotadd = 25 and nbd = 0. If you want to use NBD mode only,
set hotadd = 0 and nbd = 10.
l In order for backup and recovery operations to use Hotadd mode on a VMware
Virtual Volume (VVol) datastore, the vProxy should reside on the same VVol as the
virtual machine.
Configuration checklist
The following configuration checklist provides best practices and troubleshooting tips
that might help resolve some common issues.
Basic configuration
l Synchronize system time between vCenter, ESX/ESXi/vSphere, and the vProxy
appliance
l Assign IPs carefully — do not reuse any IP address
l Use FQDNs (Fully Qualified Domain Names) everywhere
l For any network related issue, confirm that forward and reverse DNS lookups
work for each host in the datazone.
NetWorker configuration
l Ensure that the relevant devices are mounted.
l Ensure that vProxy IP addresses are populated in DNS, and that the NetWorker
server has name resolution for the vProxy host names.
l Wait until you successfully configure a policy before you run the policy.
l A message appears after successful vProxy registration in NMC.
Configuration checklist 35
Introduction to NetWorker VMware Protection with the vProxy appliance
l In the Default gateway field, specify the IP address of the gateway host.
l In the Network Netmask/Prefix field, specify the netmask for an IPv4
Network IP address. vProxy backups do not support the use of IPv6
Network IP addresses.
c. Expand Timezone settings and in the Timezone setting field, select the
timezone.
Note
To set a timezone outside of the list supported by the vProxy appliance, you
need to change the timezone manually. SSH into the vProxy appliance using
root credentials and run the following command: /usr/bin/timedatectl
set-timezone new-timezone
5. On the Accept License Agreements window, the EULA appears. Review the
EULA and then click Accept.
6. On the Name and Location window, specify a name for the virtual appliance,
and optionally the inventory location, for example a datacenter or VM folder.
Click Next.
7. If the location you selected in the previous step has more than one available
host, the Host / Cluster window appears. Select the ESXi host or cluster on
which you want to deploy the virtual appliance, and then click Next.
8. On the Resource Pool window, perform one of the following tasks, and then
click Next.
l When you deploy the virtual appliance in a cluster with multiple hosts, select
the specific host in the cluster on which to deploy the virtual appliance.
Note
9. On the Storage window, select the destination datastore on which to store the
virtual appliance files, and then click Next.
10. On the Disk Format window, select the disk format.
EMC recommends that you select Thick Provision Lazy Zeroed to ensure that
amount of storage space allocated to the virtual appliance is available.
11. On the Network Mapping window, select the Source and Destination networks
to use with the appliance, and then click Next.
12. On the Ready to Complete window, review the deployment configuration
details. If you will immediately configure the appliance, select Power on after
deployment, and then click Finish.
The Deploying window appears and provides status information about the
deployment.
Note
Note
When you select Deployed in Cloud, a parameter displays in the backup action
logs that indicates HypervisorMode: VMC. When the checkbox is not
selected, the parameter indicates HypervisorMode: vSphere.
7. Click OK.
Note
When you select Deployed in Cloud, a parameter will appear in the backup
action logs that indicates HypervisorMode: VMC. When the checkbox is not
selected, the parameter indicates HypervisorMode: vSphere.
6. Click OK.
Results
The changes will appear automatically in the visual representation of the vCenter in
the right pane of VMware View.
Note
If you want to delete a vCenter resource from NetWorker, right-click the vCenter
under VMware View and select Remove.
c. Type the port that will be used for communication between the NetWorker
server and the vCenter server.
d. Click Log in.
The landing page displays options for Monitoring, Protection, and Recovery in
the left pane.
3. Select Protection > VMware vCenters.
4. In the Protection window's VMware vCenters pane, click the + icon.
The Add vCenter dialog displays.
5. In the Hostname field, specify the FQDN or IP address of the vCenter server.
6. In the Username field, specify a vCenter user account that has permissions to
perform backups.
7. In the Password field, specify the password for the vCenter user account.
8. If the vCenter server is deployed in the Cloud, select the Deployed in Cloud
checkbox.
Note
When you select Deployed in Cloud, a parameter will appear in the backup
action logs that indicates HypervisorMode: VMC. When the checkbox is not
selected, the parameter indicates HypervisorMode: vSphere.
9. Click Save.
An entry for the added vCenter server will appear automatically in the
Protection window's VMware vCenters pane. If an entry for the added
vCenter does not appear, click the Refresh icon. You can also use the Refresh
icon to refresh the vCenter inventory.
Results
When you select one of the available vCenter resources, the vCenter inventory
displays in the right pane of the window in a tree structure that allows you to view all
virtual machines and entities, and select individual items to view the entity's
properties. Additionally, you can toggle a switch to displays all entities (protected and
unprotected) in the tree, display only entries that are currently protected by a policy,
or display only unprotected entities. An entity that is already protected appears blue
and bolded.
5. If the vCenter server is deployed in the Cloud and this option is currently
unselected, select the Deployed in Cloud checkbox.
Note
When you select Deployed in Cloud, a parameter will appear in the backup
action logs that indicates HypervisorMode: VMC. When the checkbox is not
selected, the parameter indicates HypervisorMode: vSphere.
6. Click Save.
Results
The changes will appear automatically in the VMware vCenters pane. If the changes
do not appear, click the Refresh icon.
Note
If you want to delete a vCenter resource from NetWorker, select the entry in the
VMware vCenters pane and click the Delete icon.
The Select the VMware Proxies to Configure and Register page displays. On
this page, the VMware Proxy Selection pane displays the location of the
deployed but unregistered vProxy appliance(s) within the vCenter/ESXi server.
7. Select the checkbox next to the vProxy appliance(s) you want to configure.
8. (Optional) If you want to override the common configuration options for the
selected vProxy, click the Edit button to open the Configure VMware Proxy
dialog. When finished, click OK to save the settings.
9. Click Next.
The VMware Proxies Configuration and Registration Summary page
displays.
10. Verify that the details are correct, and then click Configure.
Results
The jobs created for all vProxy registrations display in a table on the Check Results
page, where you can view the status, as well as the logs, for each entry. If you want to
close the wizard, you can also monitor the progress in the Monitoring pane of the
Devices window. To view the details of the job at any time, right-click an entry in the
Monitoring pane and select View Log.
When specifying the maximum sessions value for the transport modes,
ensure that at least one transport mode is set to a value greater than 0. If
you want to enable only one of the transport modes, set the maximum
sessions for the transport mode you do not want to use to 0.
8. Click OK.
When specifying the maximum sessions value for the transport modes,
ensure that at least one transport mode is set to a value greater than 0. If
you want to enable only one of the transport modes, set the maximum
sessions for the transport mode you do not want to use to 0.
6. Click Finish.
Results
When vProxy registration is initiated, a notification displays at the top of the window
that a request was submitted. You can monitor the status and progress of the
registration from the Tasks tab on this page.
Once registration is complete, you can use the vProxy for backups of VMware
protection policies. You can also edit the configuration settings for the vProxy by
clicking the Edit icon, or remove the vProxy by clicking the Delete icon.
Note
If you installed the HTML-5 based plug-in, you can use the vcui log file available
at /nsr/authc/logs/vcui.log to assist with troubleshooting issues with the Dell
EMC NetWorker interface. If you installed the flash-based plug-in, you can use the
ebr-server log file available at /nsr/authc/logs/ebr-server.log to assist
with troubleshooting issues with the VM Backup and Recovery interface.
Remove and reinstall the HTML5-based vCenter plug-in from the vSphere Client
In vSphere version 6.5 and later and NetWorker 18.1, the html-5 based vCenter plug-in
appears as Dell EMC NetWorker in the vSphere Client. If you need to remove the
HTML5-based plug-in and then reinstall the plug-in, perform the following steps.
Procedure
1. Stop the vSphere Client services.
2. Log into vCenter Server's MOB at http://vcenter-server/mob.
3. Click the content link.
4. Click the ExtensionManager link.
5. Click the UnregisterExtension link.
6. Enter the value com.dell.emc.nw and click the Invoke Method link.
7. Enter the value com.emc.networker.backup and click the Invoke Method link.
8. Enter the value com.emc.networker.recover and click the Invoke Method
link.
9. On the vCenter server, manually remove the plug-in from the /vsphere-
client-serenity folder. The path is /etc/vmware/vsphere-
client/vc-packages/vsphere-client-serenity on Linux, and C:
\ProgramData\VMware\vCenterServer\cfg\vsphere-client\vc-
packages\vsphere-client-serenity on Windows.
10. Restart the vSphere Client services.
11. Perform the steps in the section Install the vCenter plug-in for the vSphere
Client to re-install the HTML5-based plug-in, and verify that the Dell EMC
NetWorker interface appears in the vSphere Client.
Remove the flash-based vCenter plug-in from the vSphere Web Client
In NetWorker 9.2.x and earlier versions, the vCenter plug-in for vProxy backup and
recovery is a flash-based plug-in that appears as VM Backup and Recovery in the left
pane of the vSphere Web Client. vSphere versions 6.5 and later and NetWorker 18.1
support both this plug-in and the html-5 based vCenter plug-in that appears as Dell
EMC NetWorker in the vSphere Web Client. If upgrading to NetWorker 18.1 and you
no longer require the flash-based plug-in, perform the following steps in order to
manually remove VM Backup and Recovery from the vSphere Web Client.
Procedure
1. Stop the vSphere Web Client services.
2. Log into vCenter Server's MOB at http://vcenter-server/mob.
3. Click the content link.
4. Click the ExtensionManager link.
5. Click on the UnregisterExtension link.
6. Enter the value com.emc.networker and click the Invoke Method link.
7. Enter the value com.emc.networker.backup and click the Invoke Method link.
8. Enter the value com.emc.networker.recover and click the Invoke Method
link.
9. On the vCenter server, manually remove the plug-in from the /vsphere-
client-serenity folder. On vCenter 6.0 and 6.5, the path is /etc/
vmware/vsphere-client/vc-packages/vsphere-client-serenity
on Linux, and C:\ProgramData\VMware\vCenterServer\cfg\vsphere-
client\vc-packages\vsphere-client-serenity on Windows.
10. Restart the vSphere Web Client services.
Figure 5 vCenter plug-in for Dell EMC NetWorker in the vSphere Client
Note
If you installed the HTML-5 based plug-in, you can use the vcui log file available
at /nsr/authc/logs/vcui.log to assist with troubleshooting issues with the Dell
EMC NetWorker interface. If you installed the flash-based plug-in, you can use the
ebr-server log file available at /nsr/authc/logs/ebr-server.log to assist
with troubleshooting issues with the VM Backup and Recovery interface.
Enable the Microsoft VM App Agent for SQL Server application-consistent protection 51
Deploy the vProxy appliance and configure the NetWorker datazone
directly to Data Domain under the SDSF backup folder that was created by the
NetWorker save set session. Transaction log backup is only performed for
databases in the proper state, otherwise databases are skipped. The sections
Creating a VMware backup action, Creating a workflow provide more information.
l Restore of SQL Server instance or individual SQL Server databases—The Dell
EMC Data Protection Restore Client includes an App mode that allows you to
restore an entire SQL Server instance to the original virtual machine and original
instance, and restore individual SQL Server databases to the original database on
the original virtual machine, to multiple instances on the same virtual machine, or
to an alternate location (different virtual machines/SQL instances on the same or
a different vCenter), as well as the ability to roll-forward transaction log backups.
The section Restoring SQL Server application-consistent backups provides more
information.
During advanced application-consistent backup for both SQL Server FULL backup and
transaction log backup, vProxy installs or upgrades the vProxy Agent and
MSVMAPPAGENT software packages. On a new virtual machine without these
software packages installed, the vProxy Agent uses the VM Administrator Credentials
from the backup action to install the vProxy Agent, using the vCenter VIX API to copy
packages into the guest virtual machine and run the install. Once the vProxy Agent is
installed in the virtual machine, vProxy communicates with the vProxy Agent to install
the MSVMAPPAGENT package.
On a system with vProxy and MSVMAPPAGENT already installed, vProxy performs a
version check of the MSVMAPPAGENT by running the
Msvmagent_discovery.exe program to report the installed program version and, if
necessary, perform an upgrade if the vProxy software repository contains a later
version.
Note
Ensure that you manually uninstall in-guest agents (VM app agent for Microsoft
Applications) from an alternate virtual machine that is not protected by a SQL
application-consistent backup workflow. Also, if you are restoring to an alternate
virtual machine that is not protected by a SQL application-consistent workflow, note
that the agents will not be automatically uninstalled once the restore is complete. If
you want to remove these agents, you must manually uninstall the agents.
The following table provides a list of the MSVMAPPAGENT binaries that are called by
the vProxy, and the operations these binaries perform.
Table 7 MSVMAPPAGENT binaries called by vProxy
Note
If Msvmagent_discovery.exe does
not find running SQL Server services,
the program returns a failure to the
vProxy and the overall NetWorker
Application Consistent backup workflow
cannot proceed. To resolve the issue,
remove virtual machines that do not
have SQL from the NetWorker
Application Consistent workflow. You
can also use the action logs to diagnose
the failure, and contact Dell EMC
support if required.
Msvmagentcatsnap.exe Catalogs the SQL VSS Full backup that Called by vProxy once the virtual
was performed by VMware Tools as an machine image snapshot has completed.
App Agent VSS Full backup of SQL
Server instances. Catalog is written to
Data Domain.
Msvmagent_appbackup.exe Performs transaction log backup. Called by vProxy for transaction log
backup workflows.
The Msvmagent_appbackup.exe
program will back up all SQL instances in
the virtual machine.
Msvmagent_appbackup.exe
performs transaction log backup only,
and does not create a virtual machine
image backup.
Msvmagent_snapshotrestore.exe Performs restore of SQL VSS Full Called by vProxy during restore of SQL
backup. Database FULL backup.
Prior to the restore, the virtual machine
image backup is mounted on the target
virtual machine. The
Msvmagent_snapshotrestore.exe
copies the VSS manifest documents
from the backup, and uses those
documents to perform a VSS-aware
restore of the SQL database. The SQL
database files are copied from the
mounted backup VMDK to the original
location of the database, and during the
VSS post restore, the SQL VSS Writer
completes recovery of the backup. If
transaction logs are to be restored, or if
the NORECOVERY option has been
specified, the database will be left in a
NORECOVERY state. The
msvmagent_snapshotrestore.exe
Enable the Microsoft VM App Agent for SQL Server application-consistent protection 53
Deploy the vProxy appliance and configure the NetWorker datazone
Msvmagent_apprestore.exe Performs restore of individual SQL Called by vProxy during restore of the
transaction log backup. transaction log backup.
For each transaction log restore,
Msvmagent_apprestore.exe
receives the Data Domain path for the
backup and performs a SQL VDI restore
of the transaction log backup. For
intermediate transaction logs, the
database is left in the NORECOVERY
state. For the final transaction log
restore, the database is either recovered
or left in the NORECOVERY state if you
specify this option. The STOPAT feature
may also be used for the final
transaction log restore if you specify this
option. The msvmagent_apprestore.exe
command also supports SQL Alternate
restore and instructs SQL the SQL
instance to be restored and to change
database name and file locations as
selected by the customer.
Note
The following table provides a list of special characters known to be supported in SQL
database names for English and non-English locales.
Table 8 Supported characters in SQL database names
Special character FULL and transaction log FULL and transaction log
backup restore
~ Tilde Supported Supported
Note
Restore to an alternate
location for a SQL database
with an apostrophe in the file
name or destination file path
will fail to restore.
Enable the Microsoft VM App Agent for SQL Server application-consistent protection 55
Deploy the vProxy appliance and configure the NetWorker datazone
Special character FULL and transaction log FULL and transaction log
backup restore
. Period Supported Supported
Note
To back up the vSAN virtual machine, use the vProxy deployed in the vSAN
datastore.
If these messages appear, you can use PowerCLI commands to disable and then
enable CBT without powering off the virtual machines as described in the VMware
knowledgebase article at https://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/search.do?
cmd=displayKC&docType=kc&docTypeID=DT_KB_1_1&externalId=1031873, or
perform the following steps to clean up CBT:
1. Power down the virtual machine.
2. Remove CBT flags.
3. Delete CTK files from the datastore.
4. Power ON the virtual machine.
Creating a dedicated vCenter user account and VM Backup and Recovery role 59
Deploy the vProxy appliance and configure the NetWorker datazone
Note
vApp l Export
l Import
l vApp application configuration
Note
In high-security environments, you can restrict the vCenter user account permissions
required to configure and administer the vProxy appliance. Table 9 on page 60
provides the account permission categories.
The following steps allow you to configure a VM Backup and Recovery user or SSO
admin user by using the vSphere Web Client.
Procedure
1. From a web browser, access the vSphere Web Client using the following URL:
https://<Ip_address_vCenter_server>:9443/vsphere-client/
Note
When assigning permissions, the vSphere Web Client places the curser in the
location last used. Depending on what level was selected the last time you used
this window, permissions might not get applied to the root level of the vCenter.
For example, if the last item you selected in this window was Cluster Name,
permissions will be assigned at the Cluster level. Review carefully to ensure that
permissions get assigned at the root level of the vCenter.
9. Click OK.
10. From the Assigned Role drop-down list, select the role you created.
11. Confirm that the Propagate to children box is checked.
12. Click OK.
e. In the NetWork Type page, change the value in the Adapter Type field to
VMXNET 3, and assign this vNIC to the appropriate virtual machine port
group. Select the Connect at power on checkbox if it is not selected.
Figure 8 Change Adapter Type
f. Select the appropriate virtual machine port group for the production
network/VLAN, and then click Next.
g. In the Ready to Complete page, verify the information and then click
Finish.
4. Right click the vProxy appliance and select Power > Power On.
5. Configure the second NIC on the vProxy appliance:
a. After you power on the vProxy appliance, log in as root to the vProxy
appliance Console by using the vSphere Client.
b. Type yast2 to invoke the YaST configuration tool.
c. Select Network Devices and press Enter.
The Network Devices dialog appears.
d. Select Network Settings and press Enter.
The Network Settings dialog appears.
e. In the Overview tab, select the Second Ethernet Adapter labeled eth1.
f. Use the tab key to select Edit and press Enter.
g. From the Network Card Setup, use the tab key to access Statically
assigned IP Address and select using the spacebar. Use the tab key to
select IP Address and enter the IP Address, the Subnet Mask, and the host
name of the vProxy appliance. Ensure that these settings come from the
production network/VLAN.
h. Use the tab key to select Edit, and then press Enter.
i. (Optional when setting up second NIC) From Network Settings, use the tab
key to select Overview. Use the right-arrow key to select Hostname/DNS.
Use the tab key to select and then specify the following fields:
l Host name
l Domain name for the production network
l Policy for DNS configuration
l Name Server 1 for production network
l Name Server 2 for backup network
l Domain Search for both production and backup network.
j. From Network Settings, use the tab key to select Hostname/DNS.Use the
right-arrow key to select Routing, and update the routing table by setting
the Default Gateway to the gateway/address for the backup network, if not
already set.
Figure 9 Routing table with backup network gateway
m. Use the tab key to select OK, and then press Enter.
n. Use the tab key to select Quit, and then press Enter.
6. Restart the vProxy appliance.
7. Login to the vProxy appliance and confirm that you can ping the vCenter
production network IP.
You can now proceed with registering the vProxy appliance with the NetWorker
server on the backup subnet/VLAN. This will require selecting the vCenter
server running on the production network in the drop-down.
Note
You can use a non-routable private address space for the subnet used for the backup
traffic/data, providing that:
l All devices/vNICs using a private IP address exist on the same physical switch, and
l There is a DNS server on the non-routed private network so that the proxies can
perform a reverse lookup for its host name.
Note
curl -O ftp://valid_ftp_needed/software/scripts/proxycp.jar
For sites where direct download using curl is unavailable, use WinSCP to transfer
the script to the VMware Backup appliance or external proxy.
5. Change the permissions on proxycp.jar:
Note
NetWorker does not support the migration of workflows and policies from a VMware
Backup appliance deployed in a NetWorker release previous to NetWorker 9.0 that
uses GSAN internal storage.
l Scheduled backups of VMware Backup appliance policies l Create new VMware Backup appliance protection policies
that were created before upgrading to NetWorker 9.1 or
9.2
Table 10 Supported and unsupported VMware Backup appliance operations in a NetWorker 9.1
and later environment
l On demand (adhoc) backups of virtual machines l Image-level recovery of VMware Backup appliance
protected by a VMware Backup appliance from NMC's backups by using the VM Backup and Recovery plug-
Protection window in in the vSphere Web Client
l On demand (adhoc) backups of virtual machines l Image-level recovery of VMware Backup appliance
protected by a VMware Backup appliance from the EMC backups by using the NMC Recovery wizard
Backup and Recovery plug-in in the vSphere Web l File-level recovery from VMware Backup appliance
Client backups by using the NMC Recovery wizard
l Edit existing VMware Backup appliance protection l File-level recovery from VMware Backup appliance
policies (for example, to modify an existing action to point
backups by using the Dell EMC Data Protection
to a different VMware Backup appliance)
Restore Client (vProxy)
l Modify the VMware Backup appliance protection group to
l Manage VMware Backup appliance policies by using the
add virtual machines to an existing group or remove
virtual machines from an existing group VM Backup and Recovery plug-in in the vSphere
Web Client
l Image-level recovery (to a new virtual machine, revert,
VMDK-level and instant access) from VMware Backup l Manage vProxy policies by using the VM Backup and
appliance backups run before or after the upgrade by Recovery plug-in in the vSphere Web Client
using the EMC Backup and Recovery plug-in in the
vSphere Web Client
l File-level recovery from VMware Backup appliance
backups run before or after the upgrade by using the Dell
EMC Data Protection Restore Client (VBA)
l Emergency restore from VMware Backup appliance
backups run before or after the upgrade
l Create checkpoints after the upgrade by running an
integrity check using the EMC Backup and Recovery
plug-in in the vSphere Web Client
l Rollback to a desired checkpoint (to checkpoints taken
after the upgrade)
l Deploy and manage VMware Backup appliance external
proxies after the upgrade by selecting a desired VMware
Backup appliance
l Resurrect VMware Backup appliance backups run before
or after the upgrade by using the EMC Backup and
Recovery plug-in in the vSphere Web Client
l Disaster recovery of VMware Backup appliance in case of
a VMware Backup appliance failure
l Restore to the same vCenter with a newly deployed
VMware Backup appliance by using the EMC Backup
and Recovery plug-in in the vSphere Web Client
l Recovery of VMware Backup appliance backups from a
secondary site (restore to a different vCenter) with a
newly deployed VMware Backup appliance by using the
Table 10 Supported and unsupported VMware Backup appliance operations in a NetWorker 9.1
and later environment
Migration pre-requisites
When you migrate a VMware Backup appliance policy to a vProxy policy, a pre-check
occurs automatically to determine that compatibility requirements are met.
These requirements include verification of the following items:
l The Data Domain OS (DD-OS) is DDOS version 5.7, 6.0.0.30, 6.0.1-10, or 6.1. Note
that use of the DD Retention Lock feature on vProxy backup and clone actions
requires DDOS 6.1.
l The NetWorker server and storage node version is NetWorker 18.1.
l The vProxy is available on the vCenter server and is version 2.1.0.17 for NetWorker
18.1.
l The vCenter server is a minimum of version 5.5.
If this check discovers any compatibility issues that can cause problems migrating all
policies, the issues are reported and migration is cancelled. If using the command line
to migrate policies, you can specify a force flag (-f) to ignore these errors and
proceed with the migration to correct any issues afterwards, however it is
recommended that the pre-check requirements be met prior to proceeding with the
migration. Issues discovered during the pre-check will be logged and displayed even
when using the force flag.
Additionally, if you used IPv6 only or dual stack (IPv4 and IPv6) for the VMware
Backup appliance and are migrating to use the vProxy appliance, ensure that you
switch to IPv4 only. The vProxy appliance does not support either IPv6 or dual stack
(IPv4 and IPv6), and so the migration from the VMware Backup appliance to the
vProxy appliance will not work with these configurations. If you previously used IPv4
only, no configuration change is necessary.
Migration pre-requisites 73
Deploy the vProxy appliance and configure the NetWorker datazone
Note
Results
A Migrate Operation Results dialog box opens which provides a real-time report of
the analyzation and the migration until the process completes. You can then choose to
export a log of the analyzation or migration as a report by clicking Export Log File.
Figure 12 Migrate Operation Results dialog
perform a pre-migration check before migrating. The command line supports multiple
policies for each run.
Before you begin
To perform a pre-check only before migrating, run nsrvbaupgrade -c. It is
recommended that you resolve any pre-check errors, including unsupported software
versions, before completing the migration in order for backups to complete
successfully.
Procedure
1. Open a command prompt.
2. Specify the nsrvbaupgrade command in the following format:
nsrvbaupgrade –p policy [-c] [-f] [-v] where:
l -p policy specifies one or more policies to migrate
l -c runs the pre-check only
l -f forces the migration to ignore a pre-check failure
l -v specifies verbose mode
Renaming a NetWorker 9.1 and later server with legacy VMware Backup
appliance
When a NetWorker 8.2.x release is upgraded to NetWorker 9.1 and later, if you plan to
change the NetWorker server name or domain name, restore of legacy backups using
the VMware Backup appliance will fail. This occurs because when you change the
name, the NetWorker sever is in the new domain and the VMware Backup appliance is
in the old domain.
In order to ensure that the new domain can access the legacy VMware Backup
appliance backups, perform the Disaster Recovery procedures for the VMware Backup
appliance specified in the section Disaster Recovery.
Renaming a NetWorker 9.1 and later server with legacy VMware Backup appliance 75
Deploy the vProxy appliance and configure the NetWorker datazone
you must delete the currently deployed appliance from NMC and vCenter, and then
deploy and register the new vProxy appliance on the same vCenter.
Procedure
1. Delete the vProxy appliance from NMC, as described in the section Deleting the
vProxy host.
2. Log in to the vCenter server by using the vSphere Client.
3. Remove the vProxy appliance from the vCenter by powering off the appliance
and then deleting the vProxy virtual machine from the disk.
4. Deploy the new vProxy appliance and configure the network settings, as
described in the section "Deploy the vProxy appliance".
Note
When upgrading to NetWorker 18.1 from a previous release, if the hotadd and
nbd transport modes were configured with different non-zero values for
maximum sessions, ensure that you change these settings to the same non-zero
value. Setting different non-zero values for both transport modes is not
supported in NetWorker 18.1.
5. Add the newly deployed vProxy appliance to the NetWorker server and
configure the appliance, as described in the section Configuring the vProxy in
NetWorker.
6. After vProxy appliance registration completes, verify that a valid certificate
appears in the NMC NetWorker Administration window by enabling diagnostic
mode and adding the column VM vProxy certificate.
Redeploying a vProxy
The procedure to redeploy a vProxy appliance requires you to perform the same steps
that you performed when you deployed the original vProxy host.
After you deploy the vProxy appliance, perform the following steps:
Procedure
1. Delete the vProxy by performing the steps in the section "Deleting the vProxy
host".
2. Deploy the vProxy by performing the procedures in the section "Deploy the
vProxy appliance".
3. Configure the vProxy using the steps in the section "Configuring the vProxy in
NetWorker".
Redeploying a vProxy 77
Deploy the vProxy appliance and configure the NetWorker datazone
passwd admin
The pam_tally2 man page provides more information about the pam_tally2
command and how to configure the maximum number of login attempts for a user
account.
Note
c. If it does not exist, add the DD Boost user to the Users with DD Boost
Access table:
a. Click the + (Add) button that is located above the table and to the right.
b. In the User list, select an existing local user, or select Create a new
Local User and then create a user account.
c. Click Add, and then click Close.
4. For file-level restore and instant access restore only, on Protocols, select NFS,
ensure that NFS status is enabled, and then click OK.
The vProxy appliance dynamically creates and deletes the NFS shares, as
required.
Creating VMware data protection policies in NMC for the vProxy appliance 81
Protecting virtual machines
l Create one protection group for each workflow. Each group can be assigned to
only one workflow.
l You can add the same Client resources and save sets to more than one group at a
time.
l You can create the group before you create the workflow, or you can create the
group after you create the workflow and then assign the group to the workflow
later.
Actions
Actions are the key resources in a workflow for a data protection policy and define a
specific task, for example, a backup, clone, or snapshot. NetWorker uses a work list to
define the task. A work list is composed of one or several work items. Work items
include client resources, virtual machines, save sets, or tags. You can chain multiple
actions together to occur sequentially or concurrently in a workflow. All chained
actions use the same work list.
When you configure an action, you define the days on which to perform the action, as
well as other settings specific to the action. For example, you can specify a destination
pool, a retention period, and a target storage node for the backup action, which can
differ from the subsequent action that clones the data.
You can create multiple actions for a single workflow. However, each action applies to
a single workflow and policy.
The following figure provides a high level overview of the components that make up a
data protection policy in a datazone.
Figure 13 Data Protection Policy
Note
Platinum policy
The Platinum policy provides an example of a data protection policy for an
environment that contains supported storage arrays or storage appliances and
requires backup data redundancy. The policy contains one workflow with two actions,
a snapshot backup action, followed by a clone action.
Gold policy
The Gold policy provides an example of a data protection policy for an environment
that contains virtual machines and requires backup data redundancy.
Silver policy
The Silver policy provides an example of a data protection policy for an environment
that contains machines where file systems or applications are running and requires
backup data redundancy.
Bronze policy
The Bronze policy provides an example of a data protection policy for an environment
that contains machines where file systems or applications are running.
Note
nsrlog -f policy_notifications.log
l On Linux, to send an email notification, type the following command:
where:
n -s subject—Includes a standard email header with the message and
specifies the subject text for that header. Without this option, the
smtpmail program assumes that the message contains a correctly
formatted email header and nothing is added.
n -h mailserver—Specifies the hostname of the mail server to use to
relay the SMTP email message.
n recipient1@mailserver—Is the email address of the recipient of the
notification. Multiple email recipients are separated by a space.
7. In the Restricted Data Zones tab, leave the Restricted Data Zone field blank.
NetWorker VMware Protection with the vProxy appliance does not currently
support the protection of virtual machines within a Restricted Data Zone.
8. Click OK.
After you finish
You can now create the workflow, group, and actions for the policy.
Creating a workflow
The policy workflow defines a list of actions to perform sequentially or concurrently, a
schedule window during which the workflow can run, and the client resource or save
set group to which the workflow applies. You can create a workflow when you create a
new policy, or you can create a workflow for an existing policy.
nsrlog -f policy_notifications.log
l On Linux, to send an email notification, type the following command:
where:
n -s subject—Includes a standard email header with the message and
specifies the subject text for that header. Without this option, the
smtpmail program assumes that the message contains a correctly
formatted email header and nothing is added.
n -h mailserver—Specifies the hostname of the mail server to use to
relay the SMTP email message.
n recipient1@mailserver—Is the email address of the recipient of the
notification. Multiple email recipients are separated by a space.
Creating a workflow 85
Protecting virtual machines
8. In the Running section, perform the following steps to specify when and how
often the workflow runs:
a. To ensure that the actions that are contained in the workflow run when the
policy or workflow starts, in the Enabled box, leave the option selected. To
prevent the actions in the workflow from running when the policy or
workflow that contains the action starts, clear this option.
b. To start the workflow at the time that is specified in the Start time
attribute, on the days that are defined in the action resource, in the
AutoStart Enabled box, leave the option selected. To prevent the workflow
from starting at the time that is specified in the Start time attribute, clear
this option.
c. To specify the time to start the actions in the workflow, in the Start Time
attribute, use the spin boxes.
The default value is 9:00 PM.
d. To specify how frequently to run the actions that are defined in the
workflow over a 24-hour period, use the Interval attribute spin boxes. If you
are performing transaction log backup as part of application-consistent
protection, you must specify a value for this attribute in order for
incremental transaction log backup of SQL databases to occur.
The default Interval attribute value is 24 hours, or once a day. When you
select a value that is less than 24 hours, the Interval End attribute appears.
To specify the last start time in a defined interval period, use the spin boxes.
nsrlog -f policy_notifications.log
l On Linux, to send an email notification, type the following command:
Creating a workflow 87
Protecting virtual machines
10. In the Running section, perform the following steps to specify when and how
often the workflow runs:
a. To ensure that the actions that are contained in the workflow run when the
policy or workflow starts, in the Enabled box, leave the option selected. To
prevent the actions in the workflow from running when the policy or
workflow that contains the action starts, clear this option.
b. To start the workflow at the time that is specified in the Start time
attribute, on the days that are defined in the action resource, in the
AutoStart Enabled box, leave the option selected. To prevent the workflow
from starting at the time that is specified in the Start time attribute, clear
this option.
c. To specify the time to start the actions in the workflow, in the Start Time
attribute, use the spin boxes.
The default value is 9:00 PM.
d. To specify how frequently to run the actions that are defined in the
workflow over a 24-hour period, use the Interval attribute spin boxes. If you
are performing transaction log backup as part of application-consistent
protection, you must specify a value for this attribute in order for
incremental transaction log backup of SQL databases to occur.
The default Interval attribute value is 24 hours, or once a day. When you
select a value that is less than 24 hours, the Interval End attribute appears.
To specify the last start time in a defined interval period, use the spin boxes.
11. In the Groups group box, specify the protection group to which the workflow
applies.
To use a group, select a protection group from the Groups list. To create a
protection group, click the + button that is located to the right of the Groups
list.
12. The Actions table displays a list of actions in the workflow. To edit or delete an
action in the workflow, select the action and click Edit or Delete. To create one
or more actions for the workflow, click Add.
The Actions table organizes the information in sortable columns. Right-click in
the table to customize the attributes that appear.
13. To create the workflow, click OK.
Note
Note
You can also assign the group to a workflow when you create or edit a
workflow.
9. (Optional) Select the Dynamic Association checkbox if you plan to apply rules
that will determine which virtual machines and containers are dynamically
included in the group based upon the rule criteria. The section xxx provides
more information on enabling a policy/group with Dynamic Association and
applying rules.
10. From the vCenter drop-down, select the vCenter server that contains the
VMware objects that you want to protect, and then select the objects
(Datacenter, ESX host, virtual machine, resource pool, vApp, or disk) to include
in this group. Any objects selected here will be considered static objects, which
means that the items will be included in the group until unselected, even when
Dynamic Association is enabled.
Note
If the vCenter list is empty, cancel the task and, using the NMC Protection
window, right-click VMware View in the left pane, and select Refresh.
11. (Optional) If the group as Dynamic Association enabled, from the Rule drop-
down, select a pre-defined rule that you want to apply for any VMware objects
that will be dynamically included in the group based upon the rule criteria, or
click + to open the Create Rule window and create a new rule. The section xxx
provides more information on associating a VMware group with rules.
12. Click Preview All Virtual Machines to view a list of the static and dynamic
virtual machines and objects that have been added to the group. In this window,
you can also unselect a virtual machine or VMDK to exclude the item from the
backup. When an object is unselected, an entry for the object appears in the
Excluded VM list.
13. Click OK to exit the Preview Virtual Machines window, and then click OK to
finish creating or editing the group.
Figure 15 Changing the Backup Optimization mode in the vProxy protection group
VMware actions
Actions are the key resources in a workflow for a data protection policy. An action is
the task that occurs on the client resources in the group assigned to the workflow.
You can chain multiple actions together to occur sequentially or concurrently in a
workflow.
When you create an action for a policy that is associated with the virtual machine
backup, you can select one of the following data protection action types:
l Backup (Backup Subtype—VMware (vProxy))—Performs a backup of virtual
machines in vCenter to a Data Domain system. You can only perform one VMware
VMware actions 91
Protecting virtual machines
backup action per workflow. The VMware backup action must occur before clone
actions.
l Clone—Performs a clone of the VMware backup on a Data Domain system to any
clone device that NetWorker supports (including Data Domain system or tape
targets). You can specify multiple clone actions. Clone actions must occur after
the Backup action.
Note
When you clear the Enabled option, actions that occurs after a disabled action
do not start, even if the subsequent options are enabled.
Note
Any backup level that displays in the wizard but is not identified in this table is
not supported for VMware.
Note
To perform the same type of backup on each day, select the backup type from
the list and click Make All.
Note
VMware actions 93
Protecting virtual machines
12. From the Destination Storage Node box, select the storage node that contains
the devices where you want to store the backup data.
Note
When you deploy the vCenter server in the Cloud, a parameter displays in the
backup action logs that indicates HypervisorMode: VMC. When not deployed
in the Cloud, the parameter indicates HypervisorMode: vSphere.
13. From the Retention spin boxes, specify the amount of time to retain the
backup data.
After the retention period expires, the save set is removed from the client file
index and marked as recyclable in the media database during an expiration
server maintenance task.
14. Select the Apply DD Retention Lock checkbox to enable retention lock for the
virtual machines included in this backup action. Note that the device used for
backing up these virtual machines must also have DD Retention lock enabled in
the NMC Device Properties window, or DD Retention Lock must be enabled
during device creation.
15. In the DD Retention Lock Time box, specify the duration the virtual machines
will remain on the Data Domain device before the retention lock expires. During
this time, these virtual machine backups cannot be overwritten, modified, or
deleted for the duration of the retention period, although the backups can be
mounted and unmounted. The retention time period set here must fall within the
minimum and maximum values set for the Data Domain Mtree, and should be
lower than or equal to the NetWorker Retention Period.
Note
VMware actions 95
Protecting virtual machines
Note
Note
25. From the Send Notifications list box, select whether to send notifications for
the action:
l To use the notification configuration that is defined in the Policy resource to
send the notification, select Set at policy level.
l To send a notification on completion of the action, select On Completion.
l To send a notification only if the action fails to complete, select On Failure.
Note
When you clear the Enabled option, actions that occurs after a disabled action
do not start, even if the subsequent options are enabled.
VMware actions 97
Protecting virtual machines
l To skip a clone on a specific day, click the Skip icon on the day.
l To check connectivity every day, select Execute from the list, and then click
Make All.
The following table provides details on the icons.
Note
Although the Retries, Retry Delay, or the Inactivity Timeout options appear,
the clone action does not support these options and ignores the values.
14. In the Parallelism field, specify the maximum number of concurrent operations
for the action. This value should not exceed 25.
15. From the Failure Impact list, specify what to do when a job fails:
l To continue the workflow when there are job failures, select Continue.
l To abort the entire workflow if there is a failure with one of the jobs in the
action, select Abort workflow.
Note
If any of the actions fail in the workflow, the workflow status does not appear
as interrupted or cancelled. NetWorker reports the workflow status as failed.
16. From the Send Notifications list box, select whether to send notifications for
the action:
l To use the notification configuration that is defined in the Policy resource to
send the notification, select Set at policy level.
l To send a notification on completion of the action, select On Completion.
l To send a notification only if the action fails to complete, select On Failure.
17. From the Soft Limit list, select the amount of time after the action starts to
stop the initiation of new activities. The default value of 0 (zero) indicates no
amount of time.
18. From the Hard Limit list, select the amount of time after the action starts to
begin terminating activities. The default value of 0 (zero) indicates no amount
of time.
19. Optional, in Start Time specify the time to start the action.
Use the spin boxes to set the hour and minute values, and select one of the
following options from the drop-down list:
l Disabled—Do not enforce an action start time. The action will start at the
time defined by the workflow.
l Absolute—Start the action at the time specified by the values in the spin
boxes.
l Relative—Start the action after the period of time defined in the spin boxes
has elapsed after the start of the workflow.
20. (Optional) Configure overrides for the task that is scheduled on a specific day.
To specify the month, use the navigation buttons and the month list box. To
specify the year, use the spin boxes. You can set an override in the following
ways:
l Select the day in the calendar, which changes the action task for the
specific day.
l Use the action task list to select the task, and then perform one of the
following steps:
n To define an override that occurs on a specific day of the week, every
week, select Specified day, and then use the lists. Click Add Rules
based override.
n To define an override that occurs on the last day of the calendar month,
select Last day of the month. Click Add Rules based override.
Note
VMware actions 99
Protecting virtual machines
occur as part of incremental backups after the initial full backup, at the interval set in
the workflow properties.
Note
A VMware group with Dynamic Association enabled can include both static and
dynamic objects:
l Virtual machines and containers from the vCenter that are manually selected when
you create or edit the group in NMC are known as static objects, because their
inclusion in the group does not change unless you unselect an item.
l Virtual machines and containers that are only included in the group according to
the rules assigned when you create or edit the group in NMC are known as
dynamic objects, because their inclusion in the group can change over time based
on whether the items continue to match the rule criteria.
When creating or editing the group, you can preview both static and dynamic contents
to ensure that the protection policy will include all the virtual machines and containers
that you want protect in the backup. Additionally, you can specify a virtual machine
exclusion list for the VMware protection group to exclude particular virtual machines
or VMDKs from being backed up as part of the group.
When a VMware protection group is associated with one or more rules, the rules are
executed against the vCenter inventory when the policy backup is started in order to
filter the group contents according to the rule criteria.
Note
Once virtual machines are associated with tags, the association will not be reflected in
the NMC NetWorker Administration window's VMware View until the timeout
period has completed. The default timeout for NetWorker to fetch the latest inventory
from vCenter is 15 minutes.
l Operator: Uses the object type properties to further define how a match is made.
Available selections include Equals, DoesNotEqual, StartsWith, DoesNotStartWith,
Contains, DoesNotContain, EndsWith, DoesNotEndWith, or Regular expression.
For example, for an object type VirtualMachine with the Name property selected, you
can select "equals" to create a rule where the virtual machine will only be included in
the group when the entire name is specified, or "contains" to include the virtual
machine in the group whenever a specific text string appears in the virtual machine
name.
Additionally, if you create multiple rules, you can select All from the Match type drop-
down if the item has to meet all of the rules criteria in order to be included in the
group, or select Any from the drop-down to include the item if the item meets any of
the criteria.
Note
Rule definitions for NetWorker vProxy policies with dynamic association enabled can
contain regular expressions. The appendix Regular expressions for NetWorker vProxy
dynamic policies rule definitionsdescribes the acceptable rules, syntax, and grammar
to use when writing such regular expressions.
Enabling a VMware group with Dynamic Association and applying rules in NMC 103
Protecting virtual machines
3. In the General tab, type a name for the rule, and select the Datastore Type
from the drop-down. The default Datastore Type is VMware.
4. In the Rule Definition pane, click Add.
5. In the Rule Definition pane:
a. For the Type column's drop-down, select the object type, for example,
VirtualMachine.
b. For the Property column's drop-down, select from one of the available
options, for example, Tag.
c. For the Operator column's drop-down, select from one of the available
options, for example, Equals.
d. Click Browse to display a list of all the categories and tags that have been
created on that vCenter server. Select the tag you want to apply to the rule
and click OK to exit the dialog.
Note
6. Repeat steps 2 through 5 for any additional rules you want to create.
Note
If adding multiple rules, in order to specify whether to apply more than one rule
to the group, select either All or Any from the Match Type drop-down.
7. When finished adding rules, return to the Protection window and right-click the
desired group in the left pane, and then select Properties from the drop-down.
The Edit Group window displays.
8. If not already selected, select the Dynamic Association checkbox, and then
select any virtual machine(s) in this workflow that you want to include in the
group regardless of the rules applied. These objects are known as static objects.
9. Select the desired rule from the Rule drop-down that you want to apply to the
other virtual machines in the workflow to determine which objects will be
dynamically included.
10. Click Preview All Virtual Machines to view a list of the static and dynamic
virtual machines and objects that have been added to the group. In this window,
you can also unselect a virtual machine or VMDK to exclude the item from the
backup. When an object is unselected, an entry for the object appears in the
Excluded VM list.
11. Save the changes in the Edit Group window, and close the window.
Results
When you select the specific VMware group in the Protection window, the vCenter
Objects Selected field displays the list of virtual machines that are statically selected.
Similarly, Protected VMs in VMware View only displays the virtual machines that are
statically protected.
The Media window displays the save sets contained within the policy. If the save sets
are additionally part of an application-consistent policy, a green check mark appears in
the VM App Consistent column.
In the Host Name field, type the IP address of the host, and provide the vCenter
Server username and password credentials. Additionally, if the vCenter server is
deployed in the Cloud, select the Deployed in Cloud checkbox, and then click OK.
Note
When you select Deployed in Cloud, a parameter displays in the backup action logs
that indicates HypervisorMode: VMC. When the checkbox is not selected, the
parameter indicates HypervisorMode: vSphere.
When you add the vCenter server to VMware View, the following actions occur:
l A visual (map) or tabular representation of the vCenter environment appears in
the VMware View window.
l A client resource is created for the vCenter server with the vProxy backup type.
Using VMware View, you can also assign the policies you created in "VMware data
protection policies in NMC." to the vCenter objects.
The following sections describe the options that are available in VMware View.
To refine items displayed in the right details pane, select containers in the
Virtualization node hierarchy in the left pane. For example, if an individual Cluster is
selected in the Virtualization node, only child elements associated with that Cluster
display.
To filter the visible items to show only protected VMs, unprotected VMs, or
overprotected VMs, click the links located above the right pane, as shown in the
following figure.
Note
When you enable a VMware group with Dynamic Association, the protected VMs
reflect those virtual machines that are statically protected, and does not include
virtual machines that get dynamically added to the group after rules are applied.
Note
Table view only displays information for virtual machines. It does not show any details
about VMDKs. You must use Map view to display those details.
The filtering function works the same in Table view as in Map view. Links provided
above the details pane allow you to display only overprotected virtual machines,
unprotected virtual machines, or all virtual machines in the environment. The
NetWorker Administration Guide provides general information on using tables in the
Administration window.
Note
In Table view, the Host field contains an undefined value for virtual machines or
containers that are part of a cluster. The Map view provides a link to the cluster.
vCenter server, however, if you start the group, the group will remain in “interrupted”
state until you reconnect the ESX back to the vCenter server and run the group again.
Note
Disconnecting an ESX server from a vCenter server only temporarily disconnects the
server and does not remove the server. To permanently remove the ESX server from
the vCenter inventory, use the Remove command from vCenter.
Note
Backup and recovery operations in the vSphere Client Dell EMC NetWorker
interface are not supported for SQL Server advanced application-consistent
protection policies. Perform these operations from the NMC NetWorker
Administration window or the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client.
A prompt displays in the right pane with fields required to connect to the
NetWorker server.
3. For the NetWorker server, type the following information:
a. In the Username field, type the NetWorker administrator username.
b. In the Password field, type the NetWorker administrator password.
c. In the NetWorker Server field, type the IP address of the NetWorker
server.
d. In the Port field, type 9090.
Figure 27 NetWorker connection information in the vSphere Client
cn=VMwareUser,cn=Users,dc=vproxy,dc=com
where VMwareTeam is the security group name, and VMwareUser is the Active
Directory user name.
4. Log in to the vSphere Web Client as the Active Directory user, in the format
<tenant>\<domain>\<userid>. For example:
default\vproxy\VMwareUser
Results
The Active Directory user that you create using these steps will only have access to
the vSphere Client Dell EMC NetWorker interface, and cannot be used to log in to
NetWorker Management Console. If you also need to provide access to NMC, then
add those required privileges accordingly.
Start a vProxy policy in the vSphere Client Dell EMC NetWorker interface
To start a vProxy backup policy by using the Dell EMC NetWorker interface in the
vSphere Client, perform the following steps.
Procedure
1. In the vSphere Client, if not already selected, click Dell EMC NetWorker in the
left pane.
When a connection to the NetWorker server is established, links to Basic Tasks
appear in the right pane.
2. From the Basic Tasks pane, click Assign Backup Policy, or click the Protection
3. Click the arrow to the left of a policy to expand and view the policy and
workflow details. You can click the Items link under the Workflow to display the
virtual machines protected by this workflow.
Start a vProxy policy in the vSphere Client Dell EMC NetWorker interface 115
Protecting virtual machines
4. If you do not need to add or remove any virtual machines from the workflow,
click the three dots next to the policy and select Backup all sources or Backup
only out of date sources from the drop-down.
Figure 30 Policy backup options
Results
A dialog displays indicating that the policy was successfully started. To close the
dialog, click OK. You can then click the blue arrows in the lower right corner of the
window to monitor the progress of the policy in the Recent Tasks pane.
Figure 31 Recent Tasks pane
Add virtual machines to a vProxy policy in the vSphere Client Dell EMC
NetWorker interface
Perform the following steps to edit a vProxy policy to add virtual machines to a
workflow by using the Dell EMC NetWorker interface in the vSphere Client.
Procedure
1. In the vSphere Client, if not already selected, click Dell EMC NetWorker in the
left pane.
When a connection to the NetWorker server is established, links to Basic Tasks
appear in the right pane.
2. Click Assign Backup Policy.
A list of available vProxy policies that were created in NMC displays in the right
pane.
3. Click the arrow to the left of a policy to expand and view the policy and
workflow details. You can click the Items link under the Workflow to display the
virtual machines protected by this workflow.
4. To add virtual machines to the workflow, click the three dots next to the policy
and select Edit from the drop-down.
Figure 33 Edit a vProxy policy
The Editing backup policy dialog displays with available backup sources.
5. Select any virtual machines or VMDKs in the inventory you want to protect with
this workflow, and then click Finish.
Add virtual machines to a vProxy policy in the vSphere Client Dell EMC NetWorker interface 117
Protecting virtual machines
Results
Any virtual machines or VMDKs added to the workflow now appear when you click the
Items link under the workflow in the Policies pane.
Note
Backup and recovery operations in the vSphere Web Client VM Backup and
Recovery interface are not supported for SQL Server advanced application-
consistent protection policies. Perform these operations from the NMC NetWorker
Administration window or the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client.
Results
The Active Directory user that you create using these steps will only have access to
the vSphere Web Client VM Backup and Recovery interface, and cannot be used to
log in to NetWorker Management Console. If you also need to provide access to NMC,
then add those required privileges accordingly.
3. Highlight the policy and workflow you want to run and click Backup now in the
top-right corner.
Results
You can monitor the progress of the backup in the Running tab of the Recent Tasks
pane.
Note
If you cancel a workflow from the vSphere Web Client and then want to restart the
backup, ensure that you restart the workflow from the vSphere Web Client. If a
workflow that was started from the vSphere Web Client is restarted from the NMC
NetWorker Administration window, the backup fails.
Adding virtual machines to a vProxy policy workflow in the vSphere Web Client 121
Protecting virtual machines
4. Select any virtual machines or VMDKs in the inventory you want to protect with
this workflow and click Finish.
Results
Any virtual machines or VMDKs added to the workflow appear under Sources in the
bottom of the Backup pane.
Backup operations
The following troubleshooting items provide some direction on how to identify and
resolve common issues with NetWorker VMware Protection backups for the VMware
Backup Appliance (VBA).
SQL Server application-consistent backups fail with error "Unable to find VSS metadata files in
directory"
SQL Server application-consistent virtual machine backups might fail with the
following error when the disk.enableUUDI variable for the virtual machine is set to
False.
Unable to find VSS metadata files in directory C:\Program Files
\DPSAPPS\MSVMAPPAGENT\tmp\VSSMetadata.xxxx.
To resolve this issue, ensure that the disk.enableUUDI variable for the virtual machines
included in an SQL Server application-consistent backup is set to True.
Failed to lock Virtual Machine for backup: Another EMC vProxy operation 'Backup' is active on
VM
This error message appears when a backup fails for a virtual machine, when previous
backups of the virtual machine was abruptly ended and the VM annotation string was
not cleared.
To resolve this issue, clear the annotation string value for the virtual machine.
1. Connect to the vCenter server and navigate Home > Inventory > Hosts and
Clusters.
2. Select the virtual machine, and then select the Summary tab.
3. Clear the value that appears in the EMC Proxy Session field.
“The following items could not be located and were not selected {client name}.”
This error can occur when the backed up VM(s) cannot be located during Edit of a
backup job. This is a known issue.
Windows 2008 R2 VMs may fail to backup with “disk.EnableUUID” configured to “true.”
Windows 2008 R2 backups may fail if the VM is configured with the disk.EnableUUID
parameter set to true. To correct this problem, manually update the vmx configuration
parameter disk.EnableUUID to false by using the vSphere Web Client:
1. Shut down the VM by right clicking the VM and selecting Shut Down Guest OS.
2. Right click the VM and select Edit Settings.
3. Click VM Options.
4. Expand the Advanced section and click Edit Configuration.
5. Locate the name disk.EnableUUId and set the value to false.
6. Click OK on the next two pages.
7. Right click the VM and select Power On.
After you update the configuration parameter, the backups of the Windows 2008 R2
VM should succeed.
When VMs are moved in or out of different cluster groups, associated backup sources may be
lost
When you move hosts into clusters with the option to retain the resource pools and
vApps, the containers get recreated, not copied. As a result, the container is no longer
the same container even though the name is the same. To resolve this issue, validate
or recreate any backup jobs that protect containers after moving hosts in or out of a
cluster.
Backups fail if certain characters are used in the virtual machine name, datastore, folder, or
datacenter names
When you use spaces or special characters in the virtual machine name, datastore,
folder, or datacenter names, the .vmx file is not included in the backup. The vProxy
appliance and VMware Backup appliance do not back up objects that include the
following special characters, in the format of character/escape sequence:
l & %26
l + %2B
l / %2F
l = %3D
l ? %3F
l % %25
l \ %5C
l ~ %7E
l ] %5D
To resolve this issue, increase the values in the max target sessions and target
sessions attributes for the clone device. The NetWorker Administration Guide describes
how to modify the properties of a device.
Lock placed on virtual machine during backup and recovery operations continues for 24 hours if
vProxy appliance fails
During vProxy backup and recovery operations, a lock is placed on the virtual machine.
If a vProxy appliance failure occurs during one of these sessions, the lock gets
extended to a period of 24 hours, during which full backups and transaction log
backups will fail with the following error until the lock is manually released:
Cannot lock VM 'W2K8R2-SQL-2014' (vm-522): Another EMC vProxy
operation 'Backup' is active on VM vm-522.
Workaround
To manually release the lock on the virtual machine:
1. Open the vSphere Web Client.
2. Click on the virtual machine and select Summary.
3. Select Custom attribute and click Edit.
System System databases are automatically skipped for transaction log backup.
Database
Database State Database is not in a state that allows backup. For example, the database is in
the NORECOVERY state.
Recovery Database is in SIMPLE recovery model, which does not support transaction
Model log backup
Other Backup Most recent backup for the database was performed by a different backup
Product product.
New Database Database was created after most recent full backup.
Backup Failure Database was in state to allow backup, backup was attempted, but backup
failed.
All skipped databases will be backed up as part of the next full backup. Also, a skipped
database will not result in msvmagent_appbackup.exe failure. The only instance in
which msvmagent_appbackup.exe would potentially fail is if all databases failed to
back up.
The msvmagent_appbackup.exe program generates a history report of the
databases, if the database backup status was success/skipped/failed, and a reason if
they were skipped or failed if applicable. This history report is visible in the action logs
for the vProxy, which are available on the NetWorker server and also available on the
client as part of the appbackup logs.
Note
For SQL virtual machine application-consistent data protection, the SQL and
operating system versions follow the NMM support matrix available at http://
compatibilityguide.emc.com:8080/CompGuideApp/.
Increase the vCenter query timeout before starting a VMware backup action
Before starting a VMware backup action, NetWorker queries the vCenter server to
determine if any changes have occurred in the items selected for backup. You can
On the NetWorker server, the location of log files for individual backups differ on
Windows and LINUX:
l Linux—/nsr/logs/policy/policy_name
l Windows—C:\Program Files\EMC NetWorker\logs\policy
\policy_name
where policy_name is the name of the policy resource associated with the backup
action.
Additional logging with the VMBackup broker
Debug logging of the vmbackup broker of nsrd is disabled by default. To turn on
additional logging, you can touch an empty file at <nsr>/tmp/vmbackup_logging.
Enabling of additional logging can be performed while other operations are in progress,
and a NetWorker restart is not required. To turn off additional logging, you can
remove the same file.
Note
If you are accessing NMC from a remote machine that cannot communicate with
vProxy, NMC fails to collect the log bundle.
Note
In order to increase the debug level for SQL application-consistent virtual machine
(MSVMAPPAGENT) backups, use dbgcommand, For example, dbgcommand -p
<nsrd-pid> Debug=9. Once you complete the debugging session, ensure that you
reset the debug level of nsrd to zero by running dbgcommand <nsrd-pid>
Debug=0.
MSVMAPPAGENT logs
You can access logs related to MSVMAPPAGENT from the following locations:
l Discovery log: C:\Program Files\DPSAPPS\MSVMAPPAGENT\logs
\msvmagent_discovery.log
l FULL backup: C:\Program Files\DPSAPPS\MSVMAPPAGENT\logs
\msvmcatsnap.log
l Transaction log backup: C:\Program Files\DPSAPPS\MSVMAPPAGENT\logs
\msvmagent_appbackup.log
l Restore of FULL backup: C:\Program Files\DPSAPPS\MSVMAPPAGENT
\logs\msvmagent_snapshotrestore.log
l Restore of transaction log backup: C:\Program Files\DPSAPPS
\MSVMAPPAGENT\logs\msvmagent_apprestore.log
vProxy logs
You can access these vProxy logs from the following locations:
l FULL and transaction log backups: /opt/emc/vproxy/runtime/logs/
vbackupd/BackupVmSessions-sessionnumber.log
l InspectBackup logs: /opt/emc/vproxy/runtime/logs/vsessionsd/
inspectBackup-sessionnumber.log
l Mount session logs: /opt/emc/vproxy/runtime/logs/vflrd/mount-
sessionnumber.log
l Browse session logs: /opt/emc/vproxy/runtime/logs/vflrd/browse-
sessionnumber.log
l Recover App sessions logs: /opt/emc/vproxy/runtime/logs/vflrd/
application-sessionnumber.log. Note that a few minutes after
completion, these logs are moved to /opt/emc/vproxy/runtime/logs/
recycle/.
Note
The NetWorker Data Domain Boost Integration Guide provides information about
the Cloud unit field and use of the Cloud tier device.
Entering management credentials for the Data Domain resource (instant recovery and User mode file-level restore only) 131
Recover virtual machines and data
Note
Steps 1 through 3 provide high level information for running authc_config. More
detailed steps might be required if configuring AD authentication in the NetWorker
environment. The NetWorker Security Configuration Guide provides more information.
Procedure
1. Create a tenant user on NetWorker by running the authc_config command.
For example, open a command prompt and cd to C:\Users\Administrator,
and then type authc_config -u administrator -e add-tenant -D
tenant-name=FLR -D tenant-alias FLR -p password
2. Obtain the tenant ID by running the following command:
b. In the Edit NMC Role dialog, add the Domain FLR user by typing
cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com in the External
roles field, and then click OK.
Figure 39 Add Domain FLR user
8. Navigate to the NMC Enterprise window, right-click the server and select
Launch Application... to open the NMC Administration window.
9. Click Server to open the Server window.
10. In the left navigation pane, select User Groups to display the users in the right
pane.
11. Type the Domain FLR user details in the External Roles field for the following
User groups:
l Application Administrators:
cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
l Users: cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
l VMware FLR Users:
cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
12. Type the Domain FLR user details in the External Roles field for the following
User group:
l VMware FLR Users:
cn=flrusergroup,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
In the example, the Domain FLR user
"cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com" is part of the Domain
FLR group "cn=flrusergroup,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com" in Active
Directory.
13. After registering the user as external domain, log in to the virtual machine as a
domain user.
14. Re-launch the NMC NetWorker Administration window or the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client with the Domain FLR user in the following format:
l In NetWorker Administration, v12nblr\flruser01
Results
You can now perform file level recovery in the NetWorker Administration Recovery
wizard or the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client as a domain user.
After selecting the Virtual Machine Recovery type, you can perform recovery of
individual virtual machines, or (for revert and virtual machine recovery options)
recovery from multiple virtual machines.
Procedure
1. In the Select the Recovery Type page, select Virtual Machine Recovery, and
then select a vCenter server to recover from using the Source vCenter server
drop-down. Click Next.
2. In the Select the Virtual Machine to Recover page, enter the name of the
source virtual machine(s) to recover from, or perform a search for the virtual
machine. Additionally, you can use the tabs on this page to choose a single
virtual machine or multiple virtual machines from a selected backup, or browse
the source vCenter to determine the required virtual machine source. When you
locate and choose the desired virtual machine(s), click Next.
3. In the Select the Target Backups page, select the virtual machine backup(s)
you want to restore from the Available Backups pane. This pane lists both
primary backups and, if available, clone copies. If you selected recovery from
multiple virtual machines, you can switch between virtual machines to browse
each machine's available backups by using the Virtual Machine Name drop-
down. Click Next.
4. In the Select the Virtual Machine Recovery method page, select from one of
the available recovery options:
l Revert (or rollback) a virtual machine
l Instant Recovery of a virtual machine (direct restore from a Data Domain
device)
l Virtual Machine recovery (recovery to a new virtual machine)
l Virtual Disk recovery (recover VMDKs to an existing virtual machine)
l Emergency recovery (recovery to an ESX host)
l File Level recovery (recover files from VMDKs to a file system, or as a
download).
Figure 44 Select the Virtual Machine Recovery method
Results
Subsequent wizard options change based on the recovery option selected, as
described in the following sections.
Note
When you revert a virtual machine, the current virtual machine is removed in the
process. You cannot use the Revert a Virtual Machine recovery option when the
ESXi has been removed from the vCenter and then added back to the vCenter. In this
case, use the Virtual Machine recovery option instead.
To complete the Recovery wizard with the reverting a virtual machine method,
perform the following.
Procedure
1. In the Select the Virtual Machine Recovery Method page:
a. Select Revert a Virtual Machine.
b. Click Next.
The Select Options to Revert a Virtual Machine page displays
2. In the Revert Type pane of the Select Options to Revert a Virtual Machine
page:
a. Select Revert both VM configuration and data to revert both the
configuration information (such as operating system, virtual machine size)
and data for a virtual machine. When you select this revert type, the Delete
existing disk on disk configuration mismatch option appears in the Revert
Options pane to allow you to overwrite an existing disk if a configuration
mismatch occurs.
b. Select Revert VM Data Only to revert only the virtual machine data without
changing the virtual machine configuration.
3. In the Revert Options pane of the Select Options to Revert a Virtual
Machine page, choose from the following options
a. Select Revert all disks on this virtual machine to rollback all VMDKs, or
select Revert one or more disks only and then select a specific disk drive to
rollback only that disk.
b. Select the Power on virtual machine checkbox to power on the virtual
machine after the restore.
c. Select Delete existing disk on disk configuration mismatch if you want to
be presented with the option of deleting the existing disk if a disk
configuration mismatch is detected. Note that this option only appears when
you select the Revert both VM configuration and data revert type in step
two.
d. Click Next.
Note
Note
The entire VMDK will be rolled back unless you have CBT enabled, in which case
only the changed blocks will be moved.
Procedure
1. In the Select the Virtual Machine Recovery Method page:
a. Select Instant Recovery.
b. Click Next.
2. In the Configure the Instant Recovery Options page:
a. Select the location where you want to restore the virtual machine in the
vCenter environment.
This does not have to be the original location, and can also be on a different
vCenter server.
b. Ensure that you select the Power on virtual machine and Reconnect to
network options.
c. Click Next.
Figure 47 Configure the Instant Recovery
Note
Note
Recoveries of virtual machines backed up with the VMware Backup Appliance should
still be performed with the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere
Web Client.
To complete the Recovery wizard with the virtual machine recovery method, perform
the following.
Procedure
1. In the Select the Virtual Machine Recovery Method page:
a. Select Virtual Machine Recovery.
b. Click Next.
2. In the Configure the Virtual Machine Recovery page, select the location
where you want to restore the virtual machine in the vCenter environment
a. In the Destination pane, select the option to recover the new virtual
machine to the original location, or browse to select a new location on the
same vCenter server or a different vCenter server.
b. In the Recovery Options pane, choose a vProxy for the virtual machine
recovery from the Select vProxy drop-down, specify the name of the new
virtual machine, and then optionally select the virtual machine file datastore
and folder where you want to recover the files. You can recover the virtual
machine to a Blue folder by using the VM Folder drop-down, as shown in the
following figure. The folder can be the default folder, or a new folder.
If you have a single disks, or multiple disks with multiple datastores, you can
perform the following:
l Choose to recover a collection of all the available hard drives.
l Select a different datastore than the original datastore.
l Select a different datatore for each disk you want to recover.
l Specify the datastore where the virtual machine configuration files reside.
Optionally, select the Power on virtual machine and Reconnect to network
options to power on and reconnect after the recovery, and then click Next.
Note
Results
The Check the Recovery Results page will display the duration of the recovery, and a
log file entry when the virtual machine recovery is complete.
c. Click Next.
4. In the Perform the Recovery page:
a. Specify a name for the recovery.
b. Check the summary at the bottom of the page to ensure all the details are
correct.
c. Click Run Recovery.
Results
The Check the Recovery Results page will display the duration of the recovery, and a
log file entry when the disk recovery is complete.
Note
When you start a VMDK recovery, the virtual machine will be powered off
automatically without issuing a warning message.
Emergency Recovery
The next virtual machine recovery option available in the NMC Recovery wizard is an
Emergency Recovery. An Emergency Recovery is required when you need to restore
the virtual machine to an ESXi host.
Before you begin
Emergency Recovery requires a vProxy set up on the ESXi host prior to running the
recovery.
Additionally, ensure that you disconnect the ESXi host from the vCenter server.
Note
During an Emergency Recovery, the vProxy gets associated with the ESXi host and is
unavailable for other operations on the vCenter server. Wait until the recovery
completes before initiating any other operations on the vProxy.
To complete the Recovery wizard with the Emergency Recovery method, perform the
following:
Procedure
1. In the Select the Virtual Machine Recovery Method page:
a. Select Emergency Recovery.
b. Click Next.
2. In the Configure the Emergency Recovery page:
a. Specify the target ESXi server in the vCenter environment.
b. Click Connect.
The Proxy Selection and Recovery Data panes get populated with the ESXi
server details.
3. In the Proxy Selection pane, if a proxy is not discovered, add a new proxy
which is deployed in vCenter but not added to NetWorker.
4. For the disks in the Recovery Data pane:
a. Select a datastore.
b. Optionally, select the Power on virtual machine and Reconnect to
network options.
c. Click Next.
5. In the Select Alternate Recovery Sources page:
a. Select the original disk backup, or a clone copy if one is available.
b. If recovering from a clone that is not on a Data Domain device, or recovering
from a Data Domain Cloud Tier device, specify the staging pool.
6. In the Perform the Recovery page:
a. Specify a name for the recovery and check the summary at the bottom of
the page to ensure all the details are correct.
b. Click Run Recovery.
Results
The Check the Recovery Results page will display a progress bar with the duration of
the recovery, and a log file entry when the Emergency Recovery is complete.
Note
The progress bar may not update correctly when you perform an Emergency Recovery
directly to the ESXi host.
Note
For file-level recovery of high-density file systems (more than few hundred files/
folders), it is recommended to use either the NetWorker Management Web UI or the
Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client (User or Admin mode, as applicable)
instead of the NMC Recovery wizard.
To complete the Recovery wizard with the file level recovery method, perform the
following:
Procedure
1. In the Select the Virtual Machine Recovery Method page:
a. Select File Level recovery.
b. Click Next.
2. In the Select Alternate Recovery Sources page:
a. Select the primary backup to recover from, or select the Recover the
Virtual machine from a clone on a Data Domain device option.
b. Select the clone copy that you want to recover files from.
c. Click Next.
Note
Note
When the Mount Results pane shows that the mount has succeeded, click
Next.
Note
This user should have privileges to install the FLR Agent, which is required to
perform file level recovery. For Linux virtual machines, this requires the root
user account.
Note
NetWorker does not currently support creating folders with spaces in the folder
name.
Results
The Check the Recovery Results page displays the duration of the recovery, and a
log file entry when the file level recovery is complete.
Procedure
1. In the Select Alternative Recovery Sources page, select the clone you want to
recover from, either a clone on a Data Domain device or non-Data Domain
device.
Additionally, make note of the name indicated in the Volume column for all of
the volumes you do not want to recover from, as you will require this
information in steps 5 and 6.
2. Click Close to display the Save Progress dialog, and then specify a name for
the recover and click Save to save your progress.
3. In the NMC Administration window, click Devices to display the Devices
window.
4. In the left navigation pane, select Devices. The list of devices displays in the
right pane.
5. For each volume you do not want to recover from that you made note of in step
1, locate the corresponding device, and make note of that device name.
6. For each device you identify as corresponding with those volumes, right-click
the device and select Unmount from the drop-down, and then also select
Disable from the drop-down.
Note
Note
10. In the Perform the Recovery page, specify a name for the recovery and check
the summary at the bottom of the page to ensure all the details are correct.
Click Run Recovery.
The Check the Recovery Results page will display the duration of the
recovery, and a log file entry when the recovery is complete.
11. In the NMC Administration window, click Devices to return to the Devices
window, and in the left navigation pane, select Devices to display the list of
devices in the right pane.
12. For each device that you unmounted and disabled in step 6, right-click the
device and select Enable from the drop-down, and then select Mount from the
drop-down.
NOTICE
NetWorker removes the recover log file and the job information from the job
database based on value of the Jobsdb retention in hours attribute in the
properties of the NetWorker server resource. The default jobsdb retention is 72
hours.
columns such as the virtual machine UUID by clicking the blue icon in the lower left
corner of the table.
From the Backups and Clones pane, select from one of the available primary or
cloned backups, and then select the Recovery drop-down to choose from one of the
image-level recovery types available, or file level recovery. Additionally, ensure that
you specify the correct time range of the backup(s) that you want to recover.
Note
You cannot use the Revert recovery type when the ESXi has been removed from the
vCenter and then added back to the vCenter. In this case, use the Virtual Machine
recovery method instead.
Procedure
1. In the VMware Recovery window's Backups and Clones pane, select from one
of the available primary or cloned backups, and then select the Recovery drop-
down.
2. From the Image Level drop-down, select Revert.
The Recover wizard launches.
3. In the Configuration page:
a. From the Proxy drop-down, select Automatic to use the default vProxy
appliance, or choose another vProxy.
b. Select Power On to power on the virtual machine after the recovery
completes.
Note
Note
The entire VMDK will be rolled back unless you have CBT enabled, in which case
only the changed blocks will be moved.
Note
The entire VMDK will be rolled back unless you have CBT enabled, in which case
only the changed blocks will be moved.
Note
e. Click Next.
The Virtual Machine Selection page displays.
4. In the Virtual Machine Selection page, select the location of the virtual
machine in the vCenter server where you want to recover the virtual disk(s),
and then click Next.
Note
This location can be the original virtual machine, or another existing virtual
machine.
Note
When you start a Virtual Disk recovery, the virtual machine will be powered off
automatically without issuing a warning message.
Emergency Recovery
Select Emergency when you need to restore the virtual machine to an ESXi host.
Before you begin
Emergency recovery requires a vProxy set up on the ESXi host prior to running the
recovery.
Additionally, ensure that you disconnect the ESXi host from the vCenter server.
Note
During an Emergency Recovery, the vProxy gets associated with the ESXi host and is
unavailable for other operations on the vCenter server. Wait until the recovery
completes before initiating any other operations on the vProxy.
To complete the Recovery wizard with the Emergency Recovery method, perform the
following:
Procedure
1. In the VMware Recovery window's Backups and Clones pane, select from one
of the available primary or cloned backups, and then select the Recovery drop-
down.
2. From the Image Level drop-down, select Emergency.
The Recover wizard launches.
Note
e. Select Reconnect NIC to reconnect the network interface card after the
recovery completes.
f. If required, set a Debug level if you want to enable debug logs. The default
level is 0.
g. Click Next.
The VMware Proxy Configuration page displays.
4. In the VMware Proxy Configuration page:
a. For Proxy Selection Type, if the desired proxy has been discovered, select
an existing vProxy for the recovery. Alternatively, you can use a new vProxy
that is deployed in the vCenter but not yet added in NetWorker by selecting
Register a new VMware Proxy.
b. From the Select Proxy drop-down, select one of the registered vProxies.
c. Click Next.
The Disk Selection page displays.
5. In the Disk Selection page, choose one or more of the available hard disks, and
select a Destination Datastore for each selected disk. The default Destination
Datastore selected is the original datastore, however, you can select a different
datastore for each disk you want to recover. Additionally, you can use the VM
Configuration Files drop-down to select the datastore where the virtual
machine configuration files will reside. Click Next.
The Summary page displays.
6. In the Summary page, review the recovery details and then click Finish.
Results
The wizard exits and a message displays along the top of the VMware Recovery
window to indicate that a recovery request was submitted. Select Monitoring in the
left pane to view the duration and status of the recovery operation.
Note
The progress bar may not update correctly when you perform an Emergency Recovery
directly to the ESXi host.
Note
File level recovery in the NetWorker Management Web UI can only be performed by
an administrator.
Procedure
1. In the VMware Recovery window's Backups and Clones pane, select from one
of the available primary or cloned backups, and then select the Recovery drop-
down.
2. Select File Level.
The Recover wizard launches.
3. In the Configuration page:
a. From the Destination vCenter drop-down, select a different destination
vCenter server if required, or leave the default selection of the same
vCenter server.
b. From the Proxy drop-down, select Automatic to use the default vProxy
appliance, or choose another vProxy.
c. Select Overwrite to overwrite files in the destination location that have the
same name as files being recovered.
d. Select Terminate mount session to release the disk mount after the
recovery completes.
e. If required, set a Debug level if you want to enable debug logs. The default
level is 0.
f. Click Next.
The Destination Virtual Machine page displays.
4. In the Destination Virtual Machine page, the location of the original virtual
machine backup displays by default in blue. If you do not want to recover to the
original location, navigate to the desired virtual machine in the vCenter server
where you want to recover the objects, and click Next.
The Mount Configuration page displays.
5. In the Mount Configuration page, type the user credentials to access the
virtual machine that you want to recover objects to in order to initiate the disk
mount. This user should have privileges to install the FLR Agent, which is
required to perform file level recovery. For Linux virtual machines, this requires
the root user account. Optionally, select Keep FLR agent after installation if
you do not want to remove the FLR Agent from the virtual machine upon
recovery completion. Click Mount.
The disk mount initializes and a progress bar displays.
Note
You cannot browse the contents of the virtual machine backup until the
mounting of the destination virtual machine completes successfully.
6. When the mount completes successfully, click Next.
The Source Data page displays.
7. In the Source Data page, select individual folders to browse the contents of the
backup, and select the objects you want to recover. You can select all objects in
a folder by clicking the checkbox to the left of the Name field in the Contents
pane.
When any objects in a folder are selected, that folder is highlighted in blue in the
Folders pane. After selecting the objects that you want to recover, click Next.
The Destination Location page displays.
8. In the Destination Location page, browse the folder structure of the
destination virtual machine to select the folder where you want to recover the
objects. Click Next.
The Summary page displays.
9. In the Summary page, review the recovery details and then click Finish.
Results
The wizard exits and a message displays along the top of the VMware Recovery
window to indicate that a recovery request was submitted. Select Monitoring in the
left pane to view the duration and status of the recovery operation.
EMC Data Protection Restore Client allows you to restore specific files and folders
from virtual machines in User and Admin modes, and also restore individual SQL
databases from SQL server application-aware backups. The Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client is part of the NetWorker client installation.
Note
Before you start a file-level restore, review the prerequisites in the section File-level
restore prerequisites, as well as File-level restore and SQL restore limitations to
ensure that you can perform file-level restores in your configuration.
File-level restore and SQL database/instance level restore only supported from primary or clone
backup on a Data Domain device
NetWorker only supports file-level restore and SQL database/instance level restore
operations from a primary or cloned backup when the save set is on a Data Domain
device.
If a cloned backup does not exist on the Data Domain device, you must manually clone
a save set from the tape device to Data Domain before launching the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client.
If backups reside on a non-Data Domain Device such as Cloud Boost, tape, Cloud Tier,
or AFTD, the backups do not display in the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore
Client. In this case, use NMC to identify and clone the save sets back to the Data
Domain device.
Note
Procedure
1. Log in to the system console as a non-root user.
2. Run the sudo passwd root command.
Enter the new password twice to set a password for the root account.
3. Run the sudo passwd -u root command to unlock the root account.
4. Specify the root user credentials in the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore
Client and proceed to complete the file-level restore operation at least once.
While performing the file-level restore operation for the first time, remember to
select Keep FLR agent.
5. After performing the above steps at least once, you can revert the root account
to the locked state and use non-root account for future file-level restore
requests. Non-root user can lock the root account with the sudo passwd -l
root command.
NetWorker privileges required by File-level restore and SQL database/instance level restore
users
A new user group, VMware FLR Users, requires NetWorker privileges for User and
Admin logins to perform file-level restore and SQL database/instance level restore
operations in the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client.
Specify the following privileges for the VMware FLR Users group by using the NMC
NetWorker Administration window or nsradmin.
User Admin
Remote Access All Clients Remote Access All Clients
restore and the types of disks or file systems in use, some of these standard utilities,
however, may not be included.
The following utilities and programs may be required for performing file-level restore.
On Windows:
l msiexec.exe
l robocopy.exe
l diskpart.exe
l cmd.exe
On Linux:
l blkid
l udevadm
l readlink
l rpm
l rsync
l bash
Note
On Linux LVM, LVM2 rpm version 2.02.117 or later is required. Also, additional binaries
required on Linux LVM include dmsetup, lvm, and vgimportclone.
Entering management credentials for the Data Domain resource (instant recovery and User
mode file-level restore only)
Before you perform an instant recovery of a virtual machine or file-level restore (User
mode), ensure that you provide the management credentials for the Data Domain
resource. For instant recovery, these credentials are required when performing the
recovery using the NMC Recover wizard or the VM Backup and Recovery interface
in the vSphere Web Client.
Procedure
1. In the NMC Administration window, click Devices.
The Devices window displays.
2. In the expanded left navigation pane, select Data Domain Systems.
3. In the right details pane, right-click the Data Domain system, and then select
Properties.
The NSR Data Domain Properties window displays.
Note
The NetWorker Data Domain Boost Integration Guide provides information about
the Cloud unit field and use of the Cloud tier device.
Note
Steps 1 through 3 provide high level information for running authc_config. More
detailed steps might be required if configuring AD authentication in the NetWorker
environment. The NetWorker Security Configuration Guide provides more information.
Procedure
1. Create a tenant user on NetWorker by running the authc_config command.
For example, open a command prompt and cd to C:\Users\Administrator,
and then type authc_config -u administrator -e add-tenant -D
tenant-name=FLR -D tenant-alias FLR -p password
2. Obtain the tenant ID by running the following command:
8. Navigate to the NMC Enterprise window, right-click the server and select
Launch Application... to open the NMC Administration window.
9. Click Server to open the Server window.
10. In the left navigation pane, select User Groups to display the users in the right
pane.
11. Type the Domain FLR user details in the External Roles field for the following
User groups:
l Application Administrators:
cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
l Users: cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
l VMware FLR Users:
cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
12. Type the Domain FLR user details in the External Roles field for the following
User group:
l VMware FLR Users:
cn=flrusergroup,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com
In the example, the Domain FLR user
"cn=flruser01,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com" is part of the Domain
FLR group "cn=flrusergroup,ou=users,ou=vproxy,dc=v12nblr,dc=com" in Active
Directory.
13. After registering the user as external domain, log in to the virtual machine as a
domain user.
14. Re-launch the NMC NetWorker Administration window or the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client with the Domain FLR user in the following format:
l In NetWorker Administration, v12nblr\flruser01
l In the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client, FLR\v12nblr\flruser01
Results
You can now perform file level recovery in the NetWorker Administration Recovery
wizard or the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client as a domain user.
Create a user in the NetWorker authentication service (User mode file-level restore only)
When performing file-level restore in User Mode, you must create a user in the
Networker Management Console (NMC) using the Manage Authentication Service
Users option, and make note of the password as you will require this information when
logging in to the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client.
Before you begin
For file-level restores on Linux virtual machines, the root account credentials are
required for the target virtual machine in order to install the FLR Agent. During the
file-level restore session, if non-root credentials are provided for the target virtual
machine, the FLR Agent installation fails, even if this user has privileges similar to a
root user. To perform a file-level restore using a non-root user, ensure that the FLR
Agent has already been installed on the target virtual machine using the root user
account.
For file-level restores on Windows virtual machines, if the provided credentials for the
target virtual machine do not have administrative privileges, theFLR Agent installation
fails. To perform a file-level restore using a non-administrator user, ensure that the
FLR Agent is already installed on the target machine using administrative privileges.
Procedure
1. In the NMC NetWorker Administration window, click Server to open the
Server window.
2. In the left navigation pane, highlight User Groups, and then right-click and
select Manage Authentication Service Users.
Figure 56 Manage Authentication service users
6. Right click VMware FLR Users and select Properties. In the User field, create
an entry for the user created in step 4 (for example, user1), in the format
user=user1,host=NW server FQDN.
Results
You can now use this new user to log into the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore
Client.
This message provides an option to deploy the FLR Agent by providing the appropriate
credentials.
On Linux, to perform a file-level restore using a non-root user, ensure that the FLR
Agent has already been installed on the target virtual machine using the root user
account. Otherwise, ensure that you are using a supported platform and the root user
is specified, and click OK. For Linux, file-level restore is only supported on Red Hat
Enterprise Linux versions 6 and 7, and SuSE Linux Enterprise Server versions 11 and
12.
On Windows, to perform a file-level restore using a non-administrator user, ensure
that the FLR Agent is already installed on the target machine using administrative
privileges. Otherwise, ensure that an administrative user is specified, and click OK.
FLR Agent installation on Windows virtual machines with User Account Control
(UAC) enabled
Performing the FLR Agent installation on UAC-enabled Windows virtual machine
requires you to either provide the credentials of the administrator user, or to disable
UAC during the FLR Agent installation, and then re-enable on completion.
On Windows versions 7, 8, and 10, the administrator account is disabled by default. To
enable the account, complete the following steps:
1. To activate the account, open a command prompt in administrative mode, and
then type net user administrator /active: yes.
2. To set a password for the administrator account, go to Control Panel > User
Accounts and select the Advanced tab. Initially, the account password is blank.
3. In the User Accounts pane, right-click the user and select Properties, and then
clear the Account is disabled option.
To disable UAC during the FLR Agent installation and then re-enable on completion of
the installation, complete the following steps:
1. Log in to the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client as an administrator user
to initiate a request to launch the FLR Agent installation window.
2. In the FLR Agent installation window, select the Keep vProxy FLR on target
virtual machine option.
3. Open regedit and change the EnableLUA registry key value at HKLM\SOFTWARE
\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System to
0x00000000. By default, this is set to 1.
4. Proceed with the FLR Agent installation.
5. Open regedit and reset the EnableLUA registry key to the previous value to re-
enable UAC.
VMware Backup appliance will not be visible in the Dell EMC Data Protection
Restore Client in Admin mode. You must log in using User mode to view and
recover from these backups.
l You cannot use clone volumes for file-level restore when the primary backup
volume is unmounted or unavailable. The restore will fail looking for backup
volumes. If this occurs, dynamic staging allows you to use the secondary copy by
staging the requested virtual machine backups from the clone to an available
backup volume and then recovering the virtual machine.
l Browsing a large number of files at once may cause Internet Explorer to become
slow or unresponsive. The Chrome and Mozilla browsers issue a warning when
encountering a difficulty handling many files, but Internet Explorer does not.
l In a large environment where many virtual machines appear in the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client, the navigation buttons (Back, Next, Finish) may
appear very small, requiring you to zoom in to see the options. It is recommended
that you use the latest versions of the Chrome or Firefox browsers to avoid the
issue.
l File-level restore supports direct restore from a cloned backup only if the clone
copy is on a Data Domain device.
l File-level restore does not restore or browse symbolic links.
l When you create partitions, fill the lower ordered indices first. For example, you
cannot create a single partition and place it in the partition index 2, 3, or 4. You
must place the single partition in partition index 1.
Using the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client for file-level restore and
SQL restore
The Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client, which you access through a web
browser, allows you to select specific virtual machine backups as file systems, and
then browse the file system to locate the directories and files you want to restore. The
browser also allows you to restore individual SQL databases and instances.
The login page of the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client features two tabs—
an FLR tab for virtual machine file and folder restore, and an App tab for SQL
database and instance restore.
Additionally, the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client operates in one of two
user modes:
l User—For file-level restore, a user account that can restore folders or files to the
original virtual machine, as described in the section Restoring specific folders or
files to the original virtual machine (User mode).
For SQL restore, a user account that can restore individual SQL databases and
instances to the original machine from the virtual machine you are logged into.
This user can be an Authentication Service user, as described in the section
Restore of SQL Server application-consistent backups.
l Admin—For file-level restore, a NetWorker administrator account or
Authentication Service user that can restore folders or files from a different virtual
machine to any available destination client, as described in the section Restoring
specific folders or files from a different virtual machine (Admin mode).
For SQL restore, a NetWorker administrator account or Authentication Service
user that can restore individual SQL databases and instances to the original
machine from any virtual machine you have access to that contains an SQL Server
application-consistent backup, or restore to a different virtual machine, as
described in the section Restore of SQL Server application-consistent backups.
Note
Restoring specific folders or files to the original virtual machine in User mode
To restore specific folders and files to the original virtual machine on Windows and
Linux virtual machines, select the User tab in the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore
Client login page. In this mode, you connect to the Dell EMC Data Protection
Restore Client from a virtual machine that has been backed up by the vProxy
Appliance.
Before you begin
For the Data Domain resource, ensure that you provide the management credentials
and, if required, enter the export path appropriately. The section Entering
management credentials for the Data Domain resource (instant recovery and User
mode file-level restore only)provides detailed steps.
Additionally, you must create a user in the NetWorker Authentication Service by using
the NetWorker Management Console (NMC), as described in the section Create a
user in the NetWorker authentication service (User mode file-level restore only).
Procedure
1. Open a browser from the virtual machine that the restored files will be
recovered to, and enter a URL that points to the NetWorker server host and
indicates file-level restore. For example:
https://NetWorker server:9090/flr
Note
For User recoveries, you must connect to the NetWorker server from a web
browser on the virtual machine that will receive file-level restore data.
The Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client login window appears.
2. Select the User tab and the FLR tab, and then log in to the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client with the user credentials of the virtual machine to
which you are logged in. This user account should also belong to the NetWorker
user group "VMware FLR Users" in order to be authorized to perform file-level
restore. The section NetWorker privileges required by File-level restore users
provides more information.
When you log in, the Select Backups page displays with a list of backups for
the local virtual machine.
3. On the Select Backups page, use the drop-down list to view the available
backups. You can set the backup filter to view backups on a specific day or
within a specific date range. Highlight a backup and double-click or drag and
drop to move the backup to the Selected Items pane. Click Next.
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Note
When you click Next, if a folder hierarchy does not appear, the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client may not support the file system in use on the virtual
machine. The section File-level restore limitations provides more information.
4. On the Restore Options page, navigate to the file system drive where you want
to restore the items and select an existing folder, or specify a new folder name
in the restore destination, and then click Next.
Figure 61 Select restore location
Note
Additionally, you can select the Overwrite existing files and folders option if
you want to replace the existing files with the recovered files.
5. On the Select items to restore page, browse and select the files and folders
available for recovery. Note that you can sort items by Name, File size, or Date,
and you can also search for a specific file or folder name. To mark an item for
recovery, double-click the item, or drag and drop the item into the Selected
Items pane.
Figure 62 Select items to restore
clicking the icon located in the upper right-hand corner of the window.
When you click the icon, the Restore Detail pane slides into view on the
right side of the window, displaying the ongoing restore operations. Clicking the
entry displays the progress of the restore and a recovery logs download option.
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Restoring specific folders or files from different virtual machines in Admin mode
To restore specific folders or files from a different virtual machine, select the Admin
tab in the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client login page. Once connected, you
can browse, select, and restore files and folders from any virtual machine that you
backed up with the vProxy Appliance. You can then restore items to the virtual
machine on which you are currently logged in, or to any available destination virtual
machine.
Procedure
1. Open a browser and specify a URL that points to the NetWorker server and
indicates FLR, as in the following example:
https://NetWorker server:9090/flr
The Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client login window appears.
2. Click the Admin tab and the FLR tab, and then log in to the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client with the NetWorker Authentication Service User
credentials.
Note
When using Admin mode, ensure that the user you specify for the NetWorker
server login has the correct privileges to use this option.
When you log in, the Select Backups page appears with a list of all the virtual
machines that were backed up by using the vProxy Appliance. The available
backups appear under each virtual machine, as shown in the following.
Note
After migrating from the VMware Backup appliance to the vProxy appliance,
new vProxy backups of virtual machines that were previously backed up with
the VMware Backup appliance will not be visible in the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client in Admin mode. You must log in using User mode to
view and recover these backups.
3. On the Select Backups page, use the arrows to the right of the entry to view
the available backups. You can set the backup filter to view backups on a
specific day or within a specific date range. Highlight a backup and double-click
or drag and drop to move the backup to the Selected Items pane. Click Next.
4. On the Restore Options page, select a destination virtual machine.
A login dialog box similar to the following figure appears for the restore
destination.
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5. Log in to the destination virtual machine to initiate the mounting of the backup.
6. After you successfully log in, select the restore location. If desired, specify a
new folder name in this location. Click Next.
Note
Additionally, you can select the Overwrite existing files and folders option if
you want to replace the existing files with the recovered files.
7. On the Select items to restore page, browse and select the files and folders
available for recovery. Note that you can sort items by Name, File size, or Date,
and you can also search for a specific file or folder name. To mark an item for
recovery, double-click the item, or drag and drop the item into the Selected
Items pane.
Within this window, you can also discover and select the total number of items
available for recovery by scrolling to the far right of the directory structure and
right-clicking the icon located on the vertical scroll bar, as shown in the
following figure.
Figure 67 Total items available for recovery
clicking the icon located in the upper right-hand corner of the window.
When you click the icon, the Restore Detail pane slides into view on the
right side of the window, displaying the ongoing restore operations. Clicking the
entry displays the progress of the restore and a recovery logs download option.
Using the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client for file-level restore and SQL restore 179
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machine does not have any running SQL Instances, an error will be displayed. You may
select the SQL instance from this where you want to restore the database. The ability
to select a different SQL Instance is only possible for individual database restore, and
when performing SQL Instance restore you are restricted to selecting the original SQL
Instance.
NetWorker automates the complete restore of SQL databases, restoring the database
FULL and any transaction log backups as a single operation according to the following
sequence:
l The primary FULL database backup is identified, mounted on the original virtual
machine, and the SQL database files from the FULL backup are restored to the
original database.
l If a transaction log backup was selected, the series of transaction logs that
occurred after the FULL backup to the selected transaction log are restored in
sequence.
NetWorker automates the complete restore of SQL instances according to the
following sequence:
l The master database is restored first, then msdn, then model. During this
restore, the SQL instance restarts in single-user mode as required by the
Microsoft SQL Server to restore the master database. When the restore
completes, the SQL services restart in multi-user mode.
l Each remaining database is restored individually, and includes the backup versions
present in the currently selected backup.
The Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client provides the ability to monitor the
restore operations while in progress by enabling the Polling feature, which is disabled
by default. Once enabled, when you click the icon, the Restore Detail pane slides
into view on the right side of the window, displaying the ongoing restore operations.
Clicking the entry displays the progress of the restore and a recovery logs download
option.
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Microsoft SQL Server instances in the original virtual machine to allow SYSTEM
account login and membership in the SQL sysadmin role.
Procedure
1. Open a browser from the virtual machine that the SQL databases or instances
will be recovered to, and enter a URL that points to the NetWorker server host
and indicates file-level restore. For example:
The Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client login window appears.
2. Select the User or Admin tab, and then select the App tab.
Note
For User mode recoveries, you must connect to the NetWorker server from a
web browser on the virtual machine that the SQL database or instance will be
restored to.
Note
4. On the Select App Backups page, use the arrows to the right of the entry to
browse and select from the available SQL Server application-consistent
backups, including all SQL instances, databases, and backup versions.
To select a backup version, expand the SQL instance and database to display
the backup versions pane, and then click the backup version item once or drag
and drop the item to move the backup to the Selected Items pane. You may be
required to scroll right to view the backup versions.
To select a SQL database or instance, drag and drop the entry to move the item
to the Selected Items pane. Note that you cannot drag and drop the SQL
database or instance when the entry has been expanded to view its children. If
you expanded the entry, reselect the virtual machine, and then select the SQL
database or instance to enable drag-and-drop.
Note
The backup filter is set to the last seven days by default. You can expand the
date range further back if desired.
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When the mount completes, all SQL instances running on the selected virtual
machine display in this window.
Note
If the SQL Server is not installed, or there are no SQL instances running, an
error displays. If this occurs, log out of the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore
Client to cancel the mount.
6. Select the SQL instance where you want to restore the database, and then click
Next.
The Restore Options page displays.
7. On the Restore Options page, set the Diagnostic logging level, if required.
The default level is 0.
8. Select Leave the DB in recovery state if you want to activate the SQL Server
NORECOVERY database restore option, which places the database in a
recovering state upon completion of the restore and is useful for special
situations such as restoring transaction log backups taken by third-party
applications. Note that this option is not available for SQL instance restore. This
option also overwrites the database and then leaves the database in restoring
state.
9. In the Target Database Name field, you can type a new name if you want to
change the name of the database, or leave the current name. By default, this
field displays the name of the database at the time of backup.
Note
If you change the database name, the new name must comply with the
Microsoft SQL Server rules for database naming. Also, if you change the name
and another database with the same name already exists on the target virtual
machine and SQL instance, a warning displays that this database will be
overwritten if you proceed.
10. For the restore location, select from one of the following options under Restore
files to:
l Original Location—Select this option to restore the database files to the
original, or current, location. This option is only available if the original virtual
machine and SQL instance were selected as the restore target. By default,
the files are restored to the database location as it was at the time of
backup. Note, however, that if the database file locations were changed
after the backup, the files will be restored to the changed location.
l Default data path—Select this option to restore the database files to the
default data path for the target SQL Server instance. Each SQL Server
instance has a configuration variable for the default database data path and
log file path. When you select this option, all SQL data files will be restored
to the default data path, and all log files will be restored to the default log
path.
l Folder —Allows you to specify the folders where you want to restore the
database and log files. With this option, you can specify two folder locations
on the target virtual machine; one folder to store all the data files for the
database, and another folder to store all the log files for the database. Click
Browse to navigate the file system on the target virtual machine and select
the desired folders. By default, both folder locations are populated with the
SQL default data paths for the target SQL Server instance. Note that you
can only select an existing folder and cannot create a new folder using the
Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client.
Figure 71 Restore Options page
11. Select Restore Stop At Time if you want to restore transaction logs from the
backup version that occurred before the specified restore date and time. This
option is only available when you select a specific transaction log backup.
12. Click Restore.
Note
A restore of individual SQL Server databases or instances in the Dell EMC Data
Protection Restore Client will overwrite the existing database.
13. In the Restore Confirmation dialog, click Yes to continue the restore and
overwrite the existing database, or No to exit the restore.
If you changed the name of the database and another database with the same
name already exists on the target virtual machine and SQL instance, an
additional warning displays that this database will be overwritten if you proceed.
If you changed the name of the database and the name does not match any
available databases on the target virtual machine and SQL instance, an
additional warning displays indicating that a new database will be created.
14. To enable the polling feature so that you can monitor the status of the restore,
click the hourglass icon located in the upper right-hand corner of the window
and set to ON. By default, the polling feature is set to OFF due to the memory
consumption that occurs when the server is queried every few seconds for the
restore status.
15. Once the polling feature is enabled, you can monitor the status of the restore by
clicking the icon located in the upper right-hand corner of the window.
When you click the icon, the Restore Detail pane slides into view on the
right side of the window, displaying the ongoing restore operations. Clicking the
entry displays the progress of the restore and a recovery logs download option.
For SQL database restore, a single line displays. For SQL instance restore, one
line per database displays. In both cases, the Target field indicates the database
associated with the progress line.
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Note
Backup and recovery operations in the vSphere Client Dell EMC NetWorker
interface are not supported for SQL Server advanced application-consistent
protection policies. Perform these operations from the NMC NetWorker
Administration window or the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client.
A prompt displays in the right pane with fields required to connect to the
NetWorker server.
3. For the NetWorker server, type the following information:
a. In the Username field, type the NetWorker administrator username.
b. In the Password field, type the NetWorker administrator password.
c. In the NetWorker Server field, type the IP address of the NetWorker
server.
d. In the Port field, type 9090.
Figure 74 NetWorker connection information in the vSphere Client
cn=VMwareUser,cn=Users,dc=vproxy,dc=com
where VMwareTeam is the security group name, and VMwareUser is the Active
Directory user name.
4. Log in to the vSphere Web Client as the Active Directory user, in the format
<tenant>\<domain>\<userid>. For example:
default\vproxy\VMwareUser
Results
The Active Directory user that you create using these steps will only have access to
the vSphere Client Dell EMC NetWorker interface, and cannot be used to log in to
NetWorker Management Console. If you also need to provide access to NMC, then
add those required privileges accordingly.
Note
If this list does not contain a virtual machine that was recently backed up,
refresh the window.
3. From the Client pane, click the radio button next to the virtual machine that
you want to recover.
A list of available restore points for that virtual machine displays in the right
pane. You can also specify a date range to view only the virtual machine
backups that were performed within that range.
4. Within the Restore pane, click the radio button next to the desired restore
point.
5. In the top-right of the Restore pane, click the Action icon and select Restore
from the drop-down.
Figure 77 Select Restore from the Action drop-down
Results
You can monitor the progress of the recovery in the Recent Tasks pane. Once the
recovery completes successfully, power ON the virtual machine to validate the
recovery.
Note
If this list does not contain a virtual machine that was recently backed up,
refresh the window.
3. From the Client pane, click the radio button next to the virtual machine that
you want to recover.
A list of available restore points for that virtual machine display in the right
pane. You can also specify a date range to view only the virtual machine
backups that were performed within that range.
4. Within the Restore pane, click the radio button next to the desired restore
point.
5. In the top-right of the Restore pane, click the Action icon and select Restore
from the drop-down.
Note
If this list does not contain a virtual machine that was recently backed up,
refresh the window.
3. From the Client pane, click the radio button next to the virtual machine that
you want to recover.
A list of available restore points for that virtual machine displays in the right
pane. You can also specify a date range to view only the virtual machine
backups that were performed within that range.
4. Within the Restore pane, click the radio button next to the desired restore
point.
The Content pane displays the virtual disks available for recovery.
5. Select the checkbox next to the disk(s) in the Content pane that you want to
recover. When selected, the disk will appear in the Restore Selection pane.
6. Click the Action icon and select Restore from the drop-down.
Figure 83 Select Restore from the Action drop-down
13. In the Summary page, review the information and then click Finish to start the
recovery.
WARNING
When you start a VMDK recovery, the virtual machine will be powered off
automatically without issuing a warning message.
Results
You can monitor the progress of the recovery in the Recent Tasks pane. Once the
recovery completes successfully, power ON the virtual machine to validate the
recovery.
Note
If this list does not contain a virtual machine that was recently backed up,
refresh the window.
3. From the Client pane, click the radio button next to the virtual machine that
you want to recover.
A list of available restore points for that virtual machine display in the right
pane. You can also specify a date range to view only the virtual machine
backups that were performed within that range.
4. Within the Restore pane, click the radio button next to the desired restore
point.
5. Click the Action icon and select Restore from the drop-down.
Figure 86 Select Restore from the Action drop-down
7. Click Next.
The Advanced Config page displays.
8. Specify a name for the new virtual machine, and then click Next.
The Location page displays.
9. Expand the vCenter server tree and select a destination for recovery within the
vCenter server, and then click Next.
The Host/Cluster page displays.
10. Select a host within the destination datacenter, and then click Next.
The Resource Pool page displays.
11. Select a resource pool, and then click Next.
12. In the Summary page, review the information and then click Finish to start the
recovery.
Results
You can monitor the progress of the recovery in the Recent Tasks pane. Once the
instant restore completes, use storage vMotion to save the virtual machine, and then
cancel the vSphere NetWorker Recovery task to delete the datastore. Power ON the
virtual machine to validate the recovery.
vProxy recovery in the vSphere Web Client's VM Backup and Recovery interface 197
Recover virtual machines and data
Results
The Active Directory user that you create using these steps will only have access to
the vSphere Web Client VM Backup and Recovery interface, and cannot be used to
log in to NetWorker Management Console. If you also need to provide access to NMC,
then add those required privileges accordingly.
If you do not see the virtual machine backup listed, refresh the window.
4. Browse the list of virtual machines and select the virtual machine backup you
want to recover. You can expand the virtual machine backup to view a list of
restore points from which to select.
Figure 90 Select a restore point
5. Select one of the restore points by clicking the checkbox next to the backup
time, and then click Restore.
The Restore Backup wizard launches.
6. In the Set Restore Options page of the Restore Backup wizard, leave the
default Restore to original location selected and click Next.
Figure 91 Restore to original location
Results
You can monitor the progress of the recovery in the Running tab of the Recent Tasks
pane. Once the recovery completes successfully, power ON the virtual machine to
validate the recovery.
8. Specify a datastore for the virtual machine, and then click Next.
9. In the Ready to Complete page, click Finish to start the recovery.
Results
You can monitor the progress of the recovery in the Running tab of the Recent Tasks
pane. Once the recovery completes successfully, power ON the virtual machine to
validate the recovery.
7. In the Select Backup page, verify that the correct VMDK is selected and click
Next.
8. In the Set Restore Options page, uncheck the default Restore to original
location and then click Next.
9. Click Choose to browse the existing virtual machine where the VMDK needs to
be restored in the vCenter.
10. Specify a datastore for the VMDK, and then click Next.
11. In the Ready to Complete page, click Finish to start the recovery.
Results
You can monitor the progress of the recovery in the Running tab of the Recent Tasks
pane.
Note
When you start a VMDK recovery, the virtual machine will be powered off
automatically without issuing a warning message.
2. In the vSphere Web Client, click VM Backup and Recovery in the left pane.
When a connection to the NetWorker server is established, the Getting
Started pane displays.
3. Click the Restore tab to open the Restore pane.
If you do not see the virtual machine backup listed, refresh the window.
4. Browse the list of virtual machines and select the virtual machine backup you
want to recover. You can expand the virtual machine backup to view a list of
restore points from which to select.
5. Select one of the restore points by selecting the checkbox next to the backup
time, and then click Instant Access.
The Restore Backup wizard launches.
6. In the Set Instant Access Options page, specify a name for the new virtual
machine, and select a destination for recovery in the vCenter server, and then
click Next. You can ignore the text New or Existing.
Figure 95 Set Instant Access restore options
Results
You can monitor the progress of the recovery in the Running tab of the Recent Tasks
pane. Once the instant access recovery completes, use storage vMotion to save the
virtual machine, and cancel the vSphere NetWorker Recovery task to delete the
datastore. Power ON the virtual machine to validate the recovery.
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy) 207
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
Note
NetWorker 18.1 does not support the creation of new VMware Backup appliance
policies. After upgrading to NetWorker 18.1, you can only schedule a backup of
existing VMware Backup appliance policies created in NetWorker 9.0.x releases, or
modify what contents are included in the existing policies. For the creation of new
policies, use the vProxy appliance.
It is strongly recommended to upgrade both the NetWorker server and storage node
to the latest NetWorker release, and use the latest available VMware Backup
appliance. NetWorker 18.1 does not feature a new version of the VMware Backup
appliance, but supports the OVA and proxy version compatible with Networker 9.0 and
9.0.1 for running existing VMware Backup appliance policies.
Program/Role Task
NMC NetWorker Administration window l Modify Data Protection policies to
perform actions such as backup, clone,
and checkpoint backup for disaster
recovery.
l Assign a checkpoint discover policy to the
VMware Backup appliance.
l Assign virtual machines/VMDKs to the
policy.
Program/Role Task
EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in l Assign VMs/VMDKs to a VMware Backup
the VMware vSphere Web Client appliance policy workflow.
l Start an on-demand (ad-hoc) backup
using Backup Now, which runs the
entire workflow with associated backup
and clone actions, and Backup only out
of date sources options.
l Restore a FULL virtual machine (image-
level) backup.
l Restore a VMDK backup.
l Instant restore from a Data Domain
system.
System requirements
The following table lists the required components for NetWorker VMware Protection
with the VMware Backup appliance.
After upgrading to NetWorker 18.1, in order to continue using the VMware Backup
appliance to run or modify existing policies, ensure that the NetWorker server and
storage node are at the same version, and that you install or upgrade to the latest OVA
version of the VMware Backup appliance, which is version 1.5.1.7.
Note
Component Requirements
NetWorker NetWorker 18.1 server software with NMC.
NetWorker VMware Protection only supports
the following NetWorker server architectures:
l Windows 64-bit
l Linux x86_64
Component Requirements
Note
Note
Port requirements
The NetWorker VMware Protection solution with the VMware Backup appliance
requires the ports outlined in the following tables.
vCenter server VMware Backup 7778, 7779, 8509, EMC Backup and
appliance 9443 Recovery user
interface in the
vSphere Web Client
The following diagram shows the incoming firewall port configuration with the
VMware Backup appliance.
Figure 97 Firewall configuration (VMware Backup appliance with internal proxy)
VMware Backup Data Domain 7, 22, 80, 111, 131, 163, Data Domain
appliance and external 2049, 2052 management
proxy
VMware Backup ESX servers 443, 111, 902 Backup and recovery
appliance and operations
External Proxy
The following diagram shows the outgoing firewall port configuration with the VMware
Backup appliance.
Figure 98 Firewall configuration (VMware Backup appliance with external proxy)
To communicate with the VMware Backup appliance, the NetWorker server VM web
services (nsrvmwsd) listen on port 8080 by default. Ensure that no other services,
such as HBA, use port 8080. To check port usage for 8080 outside of NetWorker:
l On Windows, run netstat -anbo | findstr 8080
l On Linux, run netstat -anp | grep 8080
l On Solaris, run lsof -i :8080
If any software other than NetWorker listens on this port, you can change the
NetWorker web services port in NMC's NetWorker Administration window.
To change the port, right-click the server in the Server window and select
Properties. The VMWS port field is located under the Miscellaneous tab.
Pre-installation requirements
Before you upgrade to NetWorker 18.1, review the pre-installation requirements in this
section.
l Keep the default values for annotations for the VMware Backup appliance node
and external proxy.
DNS Configuration
The DNS server plays a very important role during the VMware Backup Appliance
configuration and backup/restore operations. You must add an entry to the DNS
Server for the VMware Backup Appliance IP address and Fully Qualified Domain
Names (FQDNs).
The DNS server must support both forward and reverse lookup for the following:
l VMware Backup Appliance
l External Proxy
l NetWorker server
l Data Domain device
l vCenter and ESXi hosts
NOTICE
Failure to set up DNS properly can cause many runtime or configuration issues. Do not
manually change entries in the /etc/hosts file on the VMware Backup appliance.
You can set details for the DNS server and network IP during deployment of the
VMware Backup Appliance in the Deploy OVF Template window, as described in the
section Deploy the VMware Backup Appliance.
To confirm your DNS configuration, open a command prompt and run the following
commands from the vCenter Server.
Procedure
1. To verify DNS configuration, type the following:
nslookup VMware_Backup_Appliance_IP_address DNS_IP_address
2. To verify that the FQDN of the VMware Backup appliance resolves to the
correct IP address, type the following:
nslookup VMware_Backup_Appliance_FQDN DNS_IP_address
Ensure this is the same IP as the previous command.
3. To verify that the FQDN of the vCenter Server resolves to the correct IP
address, type the following:
nslookup vCenter_FQDN DNS_IP_address
If the nslookup commands return the proper information, then close the
command prompt; if not, correct the DNS configuration. If you configure short
names for the DNS entries, then perform additional look-ups for the short
names.
NOTICE
After deployment, check for DNS resolution (forward and reverse) from the
VMware Backup appliances and proxies for vCenter and the NetWorker hosts.
NTP Configuration
The VMware Backup Appliance leverages VMware Tools to synchronize time through
NTP by using the Sync guest OS time with host option by default.
On ESXi hosts, the vCenter server, and the NetWorker server, you must configure
NTP properly. Since the VMware Backup Appliance obtains the correct time through
VMware Tools, the appliance does not require configuration with NTP. However, you
must ensure that the time on the vCenter server and the ESX that hosts the VMware
Backup Appliance are as close as possible, for example, within 30 seconds of each
other. This will occur when the vCenter server is on same host as the ESX that hosts
the VMware Backup Appliance, but when this is not the case, you should configure
NTP on the VMware Backup Appliance in order to keep host times in sync.
Note
If you configure NTP directly in the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration
Utility window, then time synchronization errors occur.
ESXi and vCenter Server documentation provides more information about configuring
NTP.
Note
Three VMware bundles and one ISO update are available. Each fulfills a specific
requirement:
l 0.5 TB OVA
l 4 TB OVA
l EBR-Proxy OVA — download the external proxy appliance when performing more
than eight concurrent backups, or to improve performance in certain situations.
For example, you may need to deploy an external proxy to an ESX server in order
to perform hotadd backups of VMs on that server. The section Deploy an
external proxy appliance in vCenter provides the steps required to deploy an
external proxy.
l EBRUpgrade — download this ISO if you need to update the deployed VMware
Backup appliance to the latest version.
The following table provides recommendations on provisioning memory and swap
space based on the storage space in use.
Table 20 Recommended memory and swap space based on storage space utilization
Table 20 Recommended memory and swap space based on storage space utilization (continued)
Other system requirements for the appliances are provided in System requirements.
Download the desired OVA and place in shared storage.
Note
The VMware Backup appliance does not include security roll-ups. As a result, you may
also be required to manually install a security roll-up after you complete the appliance
deployment. You can access the latest version of the ESA for the security roll-up,
titled "EMC Avamar and NetWorker Security Update for Multiple Components", from
the NetWorker advisories page at https://support.emc.com/products/
1095_NetWorker/Advisories/. Scroll to the bottom of the page to view Security
Advisories. The Link to remedies section of the ESA provides instructions on how to
install the roll-up on the appliance.
4. In the filetype drop-down, select OVA Packages then navigate to the directory
that contains the ova files. Select the file and then click Open.
5. On the Deploy OVF Template window, click Next.
6. On the Review Details window, click Next.
7. Accept the EULA and click Next.
8. Specify a name for the VMware Backup appliance, and then select the folder or
datacenter to which you want to deploy the appliance. Click Next.
9. Select the resource where you want to deploy the VMware Backup appliance,
then click Next.
10. Select Storage, then select the virtual disk format and click Next. It is
recommended to use thin provisioning disk format.
11. On Setup Networks, select the destination network from the drop-down, then
click Next.
12. Provide the networking properties, including the correct IP (static IP), DNS,
and so on. Verify this information is correct, otherwise the appliance will not
work. Click Next.
13. In the Ready to Complete window, ensure that the Power-on after
deployment option is selected, then click Finish.
Results
After a few minutes a screen similar to the following figure appears in the console of
the VMware Backup Appliance in vCenter.
Note
The VMware Backup appliance version 1.5.1.7 supports vCenter server versions 5.5
Update 3e, 5.5 Update 3g, 6.0 Update 2a, 6.0 Update 3b, and vCenter 6.0 Update 3d,
but only with the workaround described at https://support.emc.com/kb/489490.
Note
The external proxy appliance does not include security roll-ups. As a result, you may
also be required to manually install a security roll-up after you complete the external
proxy appliance deployment. You can access the latest version of the ESA for the
security roll-up, titled "EMC Avamar and NetWorker Security Update for Multiple
Components", from the NetWorker advisories page at https://support.emc.com/
products/1095_NetWorker/Advisories/. Scroll to the bottom of the page to view
Security Advisories. The Link to remedies section of the ESA provides instructions on
how to install the roll-up on the proxies.
Procedure
1. Launch the vSphere client and log in to the vCenter server.
The vSphere Client window appears.
e. Click Next.
The OVF Template Details screen appears.
b. Select a datacenter and folder location for this proxy in the Inventory tree.
c. Click Next.
The Host / Cluster screen appears.
NOTICE
Proxy network settings are difficult to change after you register and activate
the Proxy. Therefore, ensure that you type the correct settings in this
screen.
19. Follow the prompts to register the proxy, as shown in the figure above.
a. Press 1 to register the proxy.
b. At the Enter the EMC Backup and Recovery Appliance address prompt,
type the FQDN of the VMware Backup appliance server name.
c. At the Enter the server domain [clients]: prompt, press enter and do not
modify.
d. Provide the VMware Backup appliance password if using a non-default
password.
e. Wait for the Attempting to connect to the appliance...Connection
successful message.
20. Validate the registration in the NMC Devices tab by ensuring that the external
proxy host appears under the External Proxy Hosts column of the VMware
Backup appliance that it is registered to.
Note
When you upgrade the VMware Backup appliance, you need to deploy a new
proxy appliance. After rebooting the VMware Backup Appliance, you do not
need to re-register the external proxy.
After you deploy external Proxy hosts, each Proxy provides all of the following
capabilities:
l Backup of Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs. This includes entire images or
specific drives.
l Restore of Microsoft Windows and Linux VMs. This includes entire images or
specific drives.
l Selective restore of individual folders and files to Microsoft Windows and
Linux VMs.
Although you can restore data across datacenters by using a proxy deployed in
one datacenter to restore files to a VM in another datacenter, the restores will
take noticeably longer than if the proxy and the target VM are both located in
the same datacenter. Therefore, for best performance, deploy at least one
proxy in each datacenter you are protecting.
l If you deployed and configured a VMware Backup Appliance with this non-root
user test in vCenter 5.1, you must perform the following steps in order to connect
to the VMware Backup Appliance after upgrading to vCenter 5.5:
1. From a web browser, type the following URL:
https://<IP_address_VMware_Backup_appliance>:8543/ebr-configure
The EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility window appears with a
tool icon from which you can select three options—Time zone, password, and
vCenter registration.
Figure 102 Select vCenter registration in the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration
Utility
2. From the tool drop-down, select vCenter registration to unlock the vCenter
registration.
The vCenter Registration window opens
3. From the vCenter Registration window, select vCenter Configuration.
Figure 103 vCenter Configuration in the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration
Utility
Note
In the example provided, a dedicated non-root user test has been set up with the
domain name system-domain and configured with a VMware Backup Appliance
previous to NetWorker 9.0.1. You will need to change the domain of the dedicated
non-root user from system-domain to vsphere.local by using the vSphere Web
Client, and change the vCenter username in the EMC Backup and Recovery
Configuration Utility window from test@system-domain to [email protected]
to re-register the VMware backup Appliance with vCenter.
Procedure
1. Upgrade vCenter 5.1 or vCenter 5.5 to vCenter version 6.0.
2. Open the vSphere Web Client for vCenter 6.0 with
[email protected] as the username and use the password you
set during the vCenter upgrade procedure, and perform the following:
a. In the left pane, select Administration > Users and Groups, and then click
the + sign to create a new user, test1.
b. In the Administration pane, select Roles.
c. Right-click on the role which you assigned to the user test and select Clone
to create a new role, test1role.
d. Select vCenter > Hosts and Clusters > Manage > Permissions, and then
click the + sign.
e. In the Users and Groups pane, click Add and select the user test1 with the
domain vsphere.local. Assign the role as test1Role and click Add.
3. Open the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility window as shown
in the figure above, and change the vCenter username from test@system-
domain to [email protected] to re-register the VMware backup Appliance
with vCenter, and then restart the appliance to apply the changes.
4. Upgrade the VMware Backup Appliance to version 1.5.1.7.
Note
When you upgrade to NetWorker 9.0.1 and later, you must also upgrade the
VMware Backup appliance to version 1.5.1.7.
l If the internal proxy is disabled before you upgrade the Virtual Backup appliance,
the proxy is reset to enabled when you reboot the appliance. However, NMC still
shows the internal proxy's state as disabled. If this happens, run the following
command on the NetWorker server:
nsrim -X -S -h <VBA hostname> -f
Note
Do not attempt to enable the proxy manually, because it could result in NetWorker
server connection issues with the appliance.
l You only need to upgrade to DDOS 5.7 or later if you upgrade the VMware Backup
appliance to version 1.5.1.7 and plan to use Networker 18.1.
l You cannot run backup and recovery operations during an appliance upgrade.
Before performing the upgrade, ensure that you complete any policies running or
disable active policies.
l You cannot upgrade external proxies. If using a previous version of the external
proxy and you want to upgrade, you must redeploy the external proxy.
2. If you made any changes to the /etc/hosts file, remove these changes. It is
not recommended to manually change entries in the /etc/hosts file on the
VMware Backup appliance.
3. Create and validate a checkpoint of the existing VMware Backup appliance by
running an integrity check.
a. Select the Configuration tab.
b. Select the Run integrity Check option, as shown in Running an integrity
check on page 273.
c. Make sure that the integrity check passes successfully.
4. Shut down the VMware Backup appliance, and then create a snapshot of the
EMC Backup and Recovery virtual machine by right-clicking the virtual machine
in the vSphere Client and selecting Snapshot > Take Snapshot..., as shown in
the following figure.
Figure 105 Take Snapshot in vSphere Client
8. Open the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility window. Post-
installation configuration on page 240 provides more information.
9. Navigate to the Upgrade tab and click Check Upgrades. The available upgrade
package appears.
10. Navigate to the Status tab to ensure all services are running.
11. Return to the Upgrade tab and click Upgrade EBR.
Note
If you want to access the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility
online help, click the Help Documentation link located on the Upgrade tab.
When the upgrade completes, the VMware Backup appliance shuts down
automatically.
12. Power on the VMware Backup appliance.
When you launch the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the
vSphere Web Client, and then connect to the upgraded appliance and navigate
to the Configuration tab, the new version appears.
Note
To see the new version of the appliance in the VMware console, log out and
then log back in. The previous version is shown in the console until you do this.
13. When you complete a successful upgrade and verify that all backup and restore
functionality is working as expected, return to the vSphere Client and delete
the snapshot taken in step 4.
14. Disconnect from the ISO image used for the upgrade by unmounting or
removing the image.
Note
Enable VMware View in NMC's Administration window after upgrading by creating a NSR
Hypervisor resource
When you upgrade the NetWorker server to NetWorker 18.1 and upgrade to the latest
VMware Backup appliance(s), VMware View may not appear in NMC's Administration
window until you create a NSR Hypervisor resource.
To create the NSR Hypervisor resource, download and deploy a NetWorker 9.0.1
VMware Backup Appliance (version 1.5.1.7) from vCenter, following the registration
steps described in EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility on page 235, or
perform the following to manually create a NSR Hypervisor resource by using the
nsradmin program.
1. Start the NetWorker administration program by running nsradmin. Use the help
command for help, or the visual command to enter full-screen mode.
2. Type the following:
Note
If using NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance, ensure
that the vCenter FQDN or IP for the NSR Hypervisor resource matches what you
specified in the vCenter Registration page of the EMC Backup and Recovery
Configure window. You must use only FQDN or only IP in both instances, not a
combination of the two.
Note
vApp l Export
l Import
l vApp application configuration
Virtual Machine
l Settings
l Swapfile placement
l Upgrade virtual machine compatibility
you must add these users as administrator on the vCenter root node. Users who
inherit permissions from group roles are not valid.
Note
In high-security environments, you can restrict the vCenter user account permissions
required to configure and administer the vProxy appliance. Table 9 on page 60
provides the account permission categories.
The following steps allow you to configure a VM Backup and Recovery user or SSO
admin user by using the vSphere Web Client.
Procedure
1. From a web browser, access the vSphere Web Client using the following URL:
https://<Ip_address_vCenter_server>:9443/vsphere-client/
Note
When assigning permissions, the vSphere Web Client places the curser in the
location last used. Depending on what level was selected the last time you used
this window, permissions might not get applied to the root level of the vCenter.
For example, if the last item you selected in this window was Cluster Name,
permissions will be assigned at the Cluster level. Review carefully to ensure that
permissions get assigned at the root level of the vCenter.
9. Click OK.
10. From the Assigned Role drop-down list, select the role you created.
11. Confirm that the Propagate to children box is checked.
12. Click OK.
Note
The EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility requires Adobe Flash
Player version 11.5 or later. If you do not have the appropriate version of Adobe
Flash Player installed, a message appears with a link to download it. If you are
still unable to connect after installing Adobe Flash Player, then check the
network configuration (IP address, DNS, and so on) by logging into the VMware
Backup Appliance registration screen. If any of the network information was
incorrectly entered, you must re-deploy.
2. Log in with the userid root, and create a password that is a minimum of 9
characters long and contains a combination of one more more upper and lower-
case letters, one or more numbers from 0-9, and at least one special character.
Note
You can use the previous default password 8RttoTriz or a password without
special characters only if you apply a hotfix to the OVA version 1.5.1.7 prior to
running the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility. The hotfix is
available in the same download location as the OVA.
3. Click Next.
The Network Settings page displays.
5. Set the time zone to match that of the vCenter appliance, and click Next.
Note
If the time zone does not match that of the appliance, you may encounter
issues connecting with EMC Backup and Recovery from the vCenter. The
default time zone for vCenter is UTC.
6. Specify a new EMC Backup and Recovery password for the root account, and
click Next.
The vCenter Registration page displays.
Figure 113 vCenter Registration configuration page
Note
When you use the FQDN or IP to register the vCenter server in this window and
with the NetWorker server, ensure that you specify only the FQDN or only the
IP in both instances, not a combination of the two.
Note
If the vCenter server host is different from the vSphere web server host, use
admin@system/domain as the user name along with the appropriate password.
Note
Note
Post-installation configuration
You can confirm that the installation process successfully registered and configured
the VMware Backup Appliance in NetWorker.
Procedure
1. Ensure that the Log window in NMC's Administration window displays the
following information:
NetWorker server, 'server_name' registration succeeded for
VMware Backup Appliance VBA_hostname
2. Log in to the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility window at the
following URL by using the new EMC Backup and Recovery password that you
defined during configuration:
http://VMware_Backup_appliance_IP:8580/ebr-configure
You should see the following window, in which you can verify information about
your configuration and ensure that required services are running. You can also
see a summary of storage and capacity usage, and perform tasks such as rolling
Service Description
Core Comprise the backup engine of the appliance.
If these services are disabled no backup jobs
(either scheduled or “on demand”) will run,
and no restore activities can be initiated.
Service Description
Backup Scheduler Allow mounting of backups for file-level
restore operations.
To stop a service, click Stop next to the service on the Configuration tab of EMC
Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility window. In general, you should only stop
running services under the direction of Technical Support.
If you stop a service, you can attempt to restart it by clicking Start. In some cases,
additional troubleshooting steps may be required for the service to work properly.
Note
When any service stops running, the action triggers an alarm on the vCenter server.
When the service restarts, vCenter clears the alarm. A delay of up to 10 minutes can
occur before vCenter clears or triggers an alarm.
The end of the output indicates the current settings for backup window and
maintenance window start times.
Next backup window start time: Sat Sep 28 20:00:00 2013
IST
Next maintenance window start time: Sat Sep 28 08:00:00
2013 IST
2. Change the backup start time (in format HHMM) and duration (in format
HHMM) by running:
The end of the output indicates the new backup window and maintenance
window start times:
Next backup window start time: Sat Sep 28 18:00:00 2013
IST
Next maintenance window start time: Sat Sep 28 14:00:00
2013 IST
Adding or swapping a NIC for VMXNET 3 on the VMware Backup appliance or external proxy 243
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
Figure 118 Swap network for NICs in the Virtual Machine Properties window
f. Select the appropriate virtual machine port group for the production
network/VLAN, and then click Next.
g. In the Ready to Complete page, verify the information and then click
Finish.
4. Right click the VMware Backup appliance and select Power > Power On.
5. Configure the second NIC on the VMware Backup Appliance:
a. After you power on the VMware Backup appliance, log in as root to the
VMware Backup appliance Console by using the vSphere Client.
b. Type yast2 to invoke the YaST configuration tool.
c. Select Network Devices and press Enter.
The Network Devices dialog appears.
d. Select Network Settings and press Enter.
The Network Settings dialog appears.
e. In the Overview tab, select the Second Ethernet Adapter labeled eth1.
f. Use the tab key to select Edit and press Enter.
g. From the Network Card Setup, use the tab key to access Statically
assigned IP Address and select using the spacebar. Use the tab key to
select IP Address and enter the IP Address, the Subnet Mask, and the host
name of the VMware Backup appliance for the backup network.
h. Use the tab key to select Edit, and then press Enter.
i. (Optional when setting up second NIC) From Network Settings, use the tab
key to select Overview. Use the right-arrow key to select Hostname/DNS.
Use the tab key to select and then specify the following fields:
l Host name
l Domain name for the production network
Adding or swapping a NIC for VMXNET 3 on the VMware Backup appliance or external proxy 245
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
j. From Network Settings, use the tab key to select Hostname/DNS.Use the
right-arrow key to select Routing, and update the routing table by setting
the Default Gateway to the gateway/address for the production network, if
not already set, as shown in the following figure.
Figure 120 Routing table with production network gateway
k. Use the tab key to select OK, and then press Enter.
l. Use the tab key to select Quit, and then press Enter.
6. (Optional) If setting up vNIC on the external proxy, follow the instructions in
the section Re-registering the proxy with a different server.
Note
You can use a non-routable private address space for the subnet used for the backup
traffic/data, providing that:
l All devices/vNICs using a private IP address exist on the same physical switch, and
l There is a DNS server on the non-routed private network so that the proxies can
perform a reverse lookup for its host name.
Note
curl -O ftp://avamar_ftp:[email protected]/software/scripts/
proxycp.jar
For sites where direct download using curl is unavailable, use WinSCP to transfer
the script to the VMware Backup appliance or external proxy.
5. Change the permissions on proxycp.jar:
Setting user privileges for the root user in the NetWorker server
Before you access the VMware Protection solution in NMC to create and assign
policies, you must assign the appropriate user privileges to the root user in a user
group of the NetWorker server.
Procedure
1. Run nsradmin from a Windows command line or UNIX terminal.
2. Type the following command:
create type:NSR usergroup; name:user defined user group
3. When prompted with the question "Create?", type Y, and then exit from
nsradmin.
4. From NMC, navigate to NetWorker Administration > Server > User Groups.
5. Select the created user group for the root user and type the following in the
Users field:
username@VBA node
where username is the name of a user with root privileges.
Procedure
1. In the left panel of the Enterprise window, select the appropriate server.
2. Right-click the server, and select Launch Application.
The Administration window opens.
Figure 123 Protection window in the Administration window
You can access many of the options for the VMware Protection solution in the
Protection window.
Note
When you restrict the transport mode to Hotadd only, backups will fail for any VM
that does not meet the Hotadd criteria as outlined in the VMware knowledgebase
article 2048138. When such a failure occurs, the backup policy only reports that
the backup was “Interrupted.” The correct status displays when you run the
following command:
VMware data protection policies for the VMware Backup appliance in NMC
You can use the NMC NetWorker Administration window to schedule a backup of
existing VMware protection policies for the VMware Backup appliance that were
created in NetWorker 9.0.x releases, or to modify what contents are included in the
existing policies.
Note
NetWorker 18.1 does not support the creation of new VMware Backup appliance
policies. For the creation of new policies, use the vProxy appliance.
The sections Overview of data protection policies and Default data protection policies
provide more information about protection policies in NMC.
Note
3. Click Yes.
VMware data protection policies for the VMware Backup appliance in NMC 253
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
The Media window displays the save sets contained within the policy. If the save sets
are additionally part of an application-consistent policy, a green check mark appears in
the VM App Consistent column.
Figure 127 VMware protection policy save sets in Media window
Note
VMware data protection policies for the VMware Backup appliance in NMC 255
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
To refine items displayed in the right details pane, select containers in the
Virtualization node hierarchy in the left pane. For example, if an individual Cluster is
selected in the Virtualization node, only child elements associated with that Cluster
display.
To filter the visible items to show only protected VMs, unprotected VMs, or
overprotected VMs, click the links located above the right pane, as shown in the
following figure.
Figure 130 Filtering results in VMware View
VMware data protection policies for the VMware Backup appliance in NMC 257
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
Note
Table view only displays information for virtual machines. It does not show any details
about VMDKs. You must use Map view to display those details.
The filtering function works the same in Table view as in Map view. Links provided
above the details pane allow you to display only overprotected virtual machines,
unprotected virtual machines, or all virtual machines in the environment. The
NetWorker Administration Guide provides general information on using tables in the
Administration window.
Note
In Table view, the Host field contains an undefined value for virtual machines or
containers that are part of a cluster. The Map view provides a link to the cluster.
Note
Disconnecting an ESXi server from a vCenter server only temporarily disconnects the
server and does not remove the server. To permanently remove the ESXi server from
the vCenter inventory, use the Remove option from vCenter.
VMware data protection policies for the VMware Backup appliance in NMC 259
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
Note
Since this same functionality, described in the section Assigning groups within
VMware View on page 258, is available within NMC, EMC recommends that you
only use NMC to assign VMs/VMDKs to policies.
l Backups (Ad-hoc VM backups, also known as Backup Now and Backup only out
of date sources)
l Recoveries (FULLVM image-level recoveries, VMDK recoveries, and instant
access recovery)
l View reports and log files for policies run
l Configuration options such as email notifications
Note
You cannot use the VMware Backup Appliance without a vCenter Server. In linked
mode, the appliance works only with the associated vCenter server.
Benefits of EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web
Client
The EMC Backup and Recovery user interface provides the following benefits:
l Provides fast and efficient data protection for all of your virtual machines/VMDKs,
even those migrated between ESX hosts.
l Significantly reduces disk space consumed by backup data by using patented
variable-length deduplication with every backup operation. The section
Deduplication store benefits on page 261 provides more information.
l Reduces the cost of backing up virtual machines and minimizes the backup
window by using Changed Block Tracking (CBT) and virtual machine snapshots.
l Allows for easy backups without the need for third-party agents installed in each
virtual machine.
l Uses a simple, straight-forward installation as an integrated component within
EMC Backup and Recovery, which is managed by a web portal.
l Provides direct access to EMC Backup and Recovery configuration integrated into
the vSphere Web Client.
a restore process, EMC Backup and Recovery queries VADP to determine which
blocks have changed since the last backup, and then only recovers or replaces those
blocks during a recovery. This reduces data transfer within the EMC Backup and
Recovery environment during a recovery operation and reduces the recovery time.
Additionally, EMC Backup and Recovery automatically evaluates the workload
between both restore methods (full image restore or a recovery leveraging CBT) and
performs the method that results in the fastest restore time. This is useful in scenarios
where the change rate since the last backup in a virtual machine being restored is very
high and the overhead of a CBT analysis operation would be more costly than a direct
full-image recovery.
The advantages of image-level backups are:
l Provides full image backups of virtual machines, regardless of the guest operating
system
l Utilizes the efficient transport method SCSI hotadd when available and properly
licensed, which avoids copying the entire VMDK image over the network
l Provides file-level recovery from image-level backups
l Deduplicates within and across all .vmdk files protected by the EMC Backup and
Recovery appliance
l Uses CBT for faster backups and recoveries
l Eliminates the need to manage backup agents in each virtual machine
l Supports simultaneous backup and recovery for superior throughput
Connecting to the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere
Web Client
Perform the following to connect to the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface
within the vSphere Web Client.
Procedure
1. From a web browser, open the vSphere Web Client:
https://IP_address_vCenter_Server:9443/vsphere-client/
Note
If you receive an SSL certificate error in your web browser, refer to the
VMware knowledgebase article 1021514 at the following link:
http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?
language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1021514
2. In the Credentials window, type the vCenter user name and password for the
dedicated EMC Backup and Recovery user you created and then click Login.
3. In the vSphere Web Client, select EMC Backup and Recovery.
4. In the Welcome to EMC Backup and Recovery window, select an appliance
from the drop-down. This drop-down lists all the VMware Backup appliances
registered in the vCenter.
Each vCenter Server supports up to 10 appliances. The EBR Appliance field, as
shown in the following figure, displays the appliance names alphabetically in a
drop-down list. In the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface, the name of
the active appliance displays on the left pane, and the appliance name in the
drop-down list is the first in the list of available appliances.
Figure 133 Selecting the Backup Appliance
5. Click Connect.
Note
The maximum retry attempts for the VMware Backup appliance to connect to
the vCenter is two. Further attempts to connect to the vCenter requires
restarting the EMC Backup and Recovery server by typing the command
ebrserver.pl --restart.
Available tasks in the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface (VMware
Backup Appliance only)
The EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web Client allows you
to configure and manage the VMware Backup Appliance.
When you connect to the vSphere Web Client and then click EMC Backup and
Recovery in the left pane, the following page displays.
Available tasks in the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface (VMware Backup Appliance only) 263
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
Figure 134 EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web Client
The EMC Backup and Recovery user interface consists of five tabs:
l Getting Started—Provides an overview of functionality within the EMC Backup
and Recovery user interface along with quick links to assign virtual machines to a
workflow and to perform restores.
l Backup—Provides a list of scheduled backup workflows and details about each
workflow created in NMC. This window enables you to add the virtual machines/
VMDKs that you want protected to the workflows, and to run workflows on
demand.
l Restore—Provides a list of successful backups that you can restore.
l Reports—Provides backup status reports for the virtual machines on the vCenter
Server that you added to the workflow.
l Configuration—Displays EMC Backup and Recovery configuration information
and allows you to edit email settings. It also allows you to run integrity checks (for
example, checkpoint creation and validation).
Backup
The Backup tab displays information about available backup policies.
Column Description
Name The name of the backup policy.
State Whether the policy is enabled or disabled. Disabled backup policies will
not run. Also, a “No Schedule” state displays when you disable
Autostart in NMC for a policy.
Type The type of backup specified in the policy; for example, Image.
Last Start Time The last time the policy was started.
Duration The length of time the policy took to complete the last time it ran.
Next Run Time The next time the policy is scheduled to run.
Column Description
Success Count The number of virtual machines that were backed up successfully the
last time the policy ran. This number updates after each backup.
Changes to a policy between backups will not be reflected in this
number until after the policy runs again. For example, if a backup
reports that 10 virtual machines successfully backed up, and then you
edit the policy so that only one virtual machine remains, this number
remains at 10 until the policy runs again and, if successful, the number
changes to one.
Failure Count The number of virtual machines that did not back up successfully the
last time the policy ran. This number updates after each backup.
Changes to a policy between backups will not be reflected in this
number until after the policy runs again. For example, if a backup
reports that 10 virtual machines failed to back up, and then you edit the
policy so that only one virtual machine remains, this number remains at
10 until the policy runs again and, if the backup fails, the number
changes to one.
Available tasks in the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface (VMware Backup Appliance only) 265
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
Restore
The Restore tab displays a list of virtual machines that were backed up using the
VMware Backup Appliance. By navigating through the list of backups, you can select
and restore specific backups.
Figure 136 VMware Backup Appliance Restore tab
Over time, the information displayed on the Restore tab may become out of date. To
view the most up-to-date information on backups available for restore, click Refresh.
More information on restore is provided in the section Restoring the VMware
environment on page 276.
Reports
On the Reports tab, you can view lists of task failures, job details, and unprotected
clients. You can also export report information to a CSV file by selecting Actions >
Export to CSV.
The following figure shows the Reports tab with the Job Details report selected.
Figure 137 VMware Backup appliance Reports tab
Task Failures
The Task Failures tab lets you list all of the tasks that have failed, or filter the failed
tasks by Error, Job, or Client. When filtering task failures, select the options that
display depending on the type of failure you select.
You can rerun a failed task by selecting the task, and clicking Actions > Rerun Task.
The information displayed on the Task Failure tab is described in the following table.
Column Description
Failure Time The date and time that the task failed.
Client/Source The name of the client for which the task failed.
Name
Next Run Time The next time the job is scheduled to run.
Job Details
The Job Details tab lets you display information about backup and restore jobs that
have occurred and that are scheduled. You can view information about all backup or
restore jobs, or filter the jobs by Client, Last Execution, and Next Execution. When
filtering jobs, select the options that display depending on the type of job you select.
The information displayed on the Job Details tab is described in the following table.
Column Description
Client Information
Client Name The name of the client on which the job ran.
Last Execution
Job Name The name of the job that ran.
Completion The date and time the job completed. If the job has not run, this column
contains Never.
Next Execution
Job Name The name of the job that is scheduled to run.
Scheduled The date and time the job is scheduled to run again.
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NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
Unprotected Clients
The Unprotected Clients tab lets you display information about the clients the are
currently unprotected by the VMware Backup Appliance. You can list all unprotected
clients, or you can filter by Name, IP Address, or VM Path. When filtering clients,
select the options that display, and type the filter criteria in the text box.
The information displayed on the Unprotected Clients tab is described in the
following table.
Column Description
Client Name The name of the client on which the job ran.
Configuration
The Configuration tab allows you to manage the maintenance tasks for the VMware
Backup Appliance.
Figure 138 VMware Backup Appliance Configuration tab
Detail Description
Display name The name of the VMware Backup Appliance in the vCenter.
Detail Description
Product name The name of the product.
Major Version The main version number of the VMware Backup Appliance.
vCenter server The IP address of the vCenter managing the VMware Backup Appliance.
NetWorker The IP address of the NetWorker server on which the VMware Backup
server Appliance is managed.
EBR backup user The user name used to log in to the vSphere Web Client.
EBR appliance The current time in the time zone set on the VMware Backup Appliance.
time
Time zone The time zone in which the VMware Backup Appliance is running.
You can configure these options during the VMware Backup Appliance installation. You
can also edit these options by using the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration
utility as described in Post-installation configuration on page 240.
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NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
2. Scroll through the log information, using the scroll bar and the Show next 2000
lines and Show all navigation buttons as needed.
3. Click Export View if you want to save the details that are displayed on the
screen to a file on the machine where your browser is running.
The Save As dialog box opens, and you can select where to save the file.
Configuring email
The Email view on the Configuration tab lets you configure EMC Backup and
Recovery to send SMTP email reports to specified recipients.
Procedure
1. On the Configuration tab, click Email.
The Email configuration screen displays.
2. Click Edit.
3. Select the Enable email reports checkbox.
The configuration fields are enabled so that you can enter information.
4. Supply information in the fields using the definitions shown in the following
table.
Red asterisks indicate required information.
My server requires Check this box if your SMTP server requires authentication.
me to log in
Password Enter the password associated with the username. (EMC Backup and
Recovery does not validate the password in any way; the password
entered is passed directly to the email server.)
From address Enter the email address you would like the email report to be from. This
can only be a single address.
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Send day(s) Check the days you want the reports sent.
Report Locale From the drop-down list choose the locale for the email reports.
Enable CSV Select this option to enable the email to attach a CSV file.
Attachment
Results
EMC Backup and Recovery reports sent by email will contain information similar to
that shown below.
Example-6.2.30.40 - (10.5.123.45)
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
Report Date: February 27, 2012 - 15:12
Last Report Date: February 27, 2012 - 14:45
Even though you can use the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the
vSphere Web Client to assign virtual machines or VMDKs to a workflow that you
created in NMC, EMC recommends that you use NMC for this functionality.
You can assign collections of virtual machines (such as all virtual machines in a
datacenter), individual virtual machines, and VMDKs to be included in a policy's
workflow that you created in NMC using the EMC Backup and Recovery user
interface in the vSphere Web Client. If you select an entire resource pool, host,
datacenter, or folder, then subsequent backups will include any new virtual machines
in the container. If you select a virtual machine, then NetWorker includes any disk
added to the virtual machine in the backup. If you move the virtual machine from the
selected container to another unselected container, then the virtual machine is no
longer part of the backup.
You can also manually select a virtual machine for back up, which ensures that
NetWorker will back up the virtual machine, even when you move the virtual machine.
EMC Backup and Recovery will not back up the following specialized virtual machines:
l VMware Backup Appliances
l VMware Data Protection (VDP) Appliances
l Templates
l Secondary fault tolerant nodes
l Proxies
3. Select the workflow to which you want to add a virtual machine or VMDK, and
then click Edit.
The Editing backup policy wizard opens, and displays all of the virtual
machines in the vCenter.
4. Click the checkboxes to select the virtual machines that you want to include in
the selected workflow, as shown in the following figure, or expand the virtual
machines to select VMDKs. You can also select other inventory objects, for
example, Resource Pools or Clusters in addition to specific virtual machines.
Note
You can only assign virtual machines and VMDKs to the workflows that you
create in NMC.
5. Click Finish.
A message indicates that the policy workflow was saved successfully.
6. Click the Refresh button to refresh your screen.
You may have to click Refresh more than once. When the editing process has
completed, the Backup and Edit buttons become active again.
Results
To see which backup sources are protected by a policy workflow, click Show items
next to Sources in the Backup policy details panel.
Note
If you disabled the Backup Now functionality in the NSR VBA Server
Properties window in NetWorker, as described in the section VMware Backup
Appliance monitoring and properties on page 251, a message displays when you
click this button indicating that Backup Now is locked and not available.
Otherwise, you can wait for NetWorker to start the workflow based on the
scheduled start time.
Stopping a workflow
Procedure
1. Select the Backup tab.
2. in the Recent Tasks pane, click the circular x symbol associated with the
workflow.
After the backup completes, you can recover the virtual machine in the vSphere Web
Client or use the EMC Data Protection Restore Client to perform a file-level
restore.
Figure 144 Restore tab in EMC Backup and Recovery user interface
Note
If there is no staging pool available when resurrecting from an AFTD, the restore does
not fail automatically after timing out. You must manually cancel the restore operation.
Note
2. In EMC Backup and Recovery, on the Restore tab, use the Restore points
from drop-down to select the appliance from which you want to restore.
EMC Backup and Recovery displays the virtual machines that are available to
restore.
3. Click the virtual machine that you want to restore to expand its backups.
Use the Filter drop-down to display a specific VM and related items. You can
also click a backup to display the VMDK level and select a single VMDK for
restore, if you only want to restore that disk.
4. Select a backup, and then click Restore.
The Restore Backup wizard launches.
5. On the Select Backup page, verify that the list of backups is correct. Remove
any backup that you want to exclude, and click Next.
6. On theSet Restore Options page, perform one of the following tasks:
l Select the Restore to original location option to restore the backup to its
original location. If the VMDK file still exists at the original location, the
restore process overwrites the file.
l Unselect the Restore to original location option, and specify a new name
and destination where the virtual machine or VMDK will be restored.
7. Optionally, select Advanced options to set the VM to Power On and
Reconnect NIC after the restore process completes.
Note
Reconnect NIC is enabled by default and greyed out. Only when you select
Power On are you given the option to clear the Reconnect NIC option.
8. Click Next.
9. On the Ready to complete page, verify the selections. The wizard displays a
summary of the number of machines that will be replaced (restore to the
original location) and the number of machines that will be created (restore to a
new location).
10. To change any of the settings for your restore request, either use the Back
button to return to the appropriate screen, or click the appropriate numbered
step title to the left of the wizard. If the settings are correct, then click Finish.
The Restore Backup wizard displays a message that the restore process
initiated successfully.
11. Click OK.
You can monitor the restore progress by using the Recent Tasks pane.
Note
If you selected Reconnect NIC during the restore process, then confirm the
network configuration for the newly-created virtual machine. Once the restore
completes, the new virtual machine NIC might use the same IP address as the
original virtual machine, which will cause conflicts.
Results
When the recovery starts, a recovery session also displays in NMC. Any activities that
occur on the vCenter side are visible on the NMC side.
Note
You cannot browse and select backup data at the disk level.
3. Select the backup that you want to restore, and click Instant Access.
The Instant Access wizard opens to the Select Backup page.
Figure 145 Select a backup
4. Verify that the list of backups is correct, remove any backups that you want to
exclude from the restore, and click Next.
The Set Instant Access Options page displays.
5. Specify a new name and destination for the restore, and click Next.
The Ready to complete page displays.
Figure 147 Ready to complete
Note
Before you use this option, make sure that you establish a connection to the VMware
Backup Appliance by selecting the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the
vSphere Web Client.
Note
You can only perform an emergency restore from a primary backup; you cannot use a
cloned backup.
Procedure
1. Log in to the EMC Backup and Recovery Configure window at the following
URL using the EMC Backup and Recovery username and password credentials
that you defined during configuration:
http://VMware_Backup_appliance_IP:8580/ebr-configure
File-level restore
Where FULLVM restore allows you to restore backups in their entirety using the EMC
Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web Client, file-level restore
(FLR) allows you to restore specific files and folders from virtual machines by using
the EMC Data Protection Restore Client, or from a command prompt by using the
nsrvbaflr command, which is part of the base NetWorker client install.
The following text is an example of how to use the nsrvbaflr command:
nsrvbaflr --vba 10.7.77.200 --adminuser [email protected] --
adminpass pw123 --sourceclient /10.7.84.219/VirtualMachines/jinTest4
--targetclient /10.7.77.227/VirtualMachines/lava12204-win --targetpath
C: --targetuser Administrator --targetpass pw456 --recover [Disk#1]
Note
If you plan to use the nsrvbaflr command, you must copy the nsrvbaflr java
script (nsrvbaflr.exe on Windows) to the virtual machine you want to restore from.
The NetWorker Command Reference Guide provides information about how to use the
nsrvbaflr command.
The EMC Data Protection Restore Client, which you access through a web browser,
allows you to select specific virtual machine backups as file systems, and then browse
the file system to locate the directories and files you want to restore.
The Restore Client operates in one of two modes:
l User—A local user account with administrative privileges that can restore folders
or files to the original virtual. The section Restoring specific folders or files to the
original virtual machine (User mode) provides more information.
l Admin—A vCenter administrator account that can restore folders or files from a
different VM to any available destination client. The section Restoring specific
folders or files from a different virtual machine (Admin mode) provides more
information.
Note
Before you start a file-level restore, review the limitations specified in the section FLR
limitations to ensure that you can perform FLR in your configuration.
Note
Before performing a file-level restore, make sure that your browser is updated to the
latest version.
l In a large environment where many virtual machines appear in the EMC Data
Protection Restore Client, the navigation buttons (Back, Next, Finish) may
appear very small, requiring you to zoom in to see the options. If this occurs, it is
recommended that you use the latest versions of the Chrome or Firefox browsers
to avoid the issue.
l You can only restore files and/or folders from a Windows backup to a Windows
machine, or from a Linux backup to a Linux machine.
l You must install VMware Tools to use file-level restore. For best results, ensure
that all virtual machines run the latest available version of VMware Tools. Older
versions are known to cause failures when you perform browse actions during the
file-level restore operation.
l You can perform file-level restore across vCenter servers as long as the vCenter
servers are configured in the same NetWorker server, and the source and target
virtual machine have the same guest operating system. For example, Linux to
Linux, or Windows to Windows.
l File-level restore does not support the following virtual disk configurations:
n Dynamic disks
n Unformatted disks
n FAT16 file systems
n FAT32 file systems
n Extended partitions (Types: 05h, 0Fh, 85h, C5h, D5h)
n Two or more virtual disks mapped to single partition
n Encrypted partitions
n Compressed partitions
n Btrfs
n XFS
l File-level restore does not restore or browse symbolic links.
l When you create partitions, fill the lower ordered indices first. For example, you
cannot create a single partition and place it in the partition index 2, 3, or 4. You
must place the single partition in partition index 1.
l File-level restore of Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 virtual machines is not
supported on the following file systems:
n Windows Dynamic Disks
n Deduplicated NTFS
n Resilient File System (ReFS)
n EFI bootloader
l File-level restore of ext4 file systems is supported only with external proxies. To
perform FLR of ext4 file systems, you must disable the internal proxies from the
NSR VBA Server Properties window in NMC. VMware Backup Appliance
monitoring and properties on page 251 provides more information.
l File-level restore does not support a direct restore from a cloned backup. To
recover individual files from a clone, you must first perform an image-level
recovery of the clone. This creates a primary copy on the VMware Backup
appliance, from which you can then perform file-level restore.
l File-level restore does not restore ACLs.
l File-level restore cannot restore more than 5,000 folders or files in the same
restore operation.
l File-level restore cannot browse more than 14,498 folders or files in the same
restore operation.
Restoring specific folders or files to the original virtual machine in User mode
Select the User tab in the EMC Data Protection Restore Client login page to restore
specific folders and files to the original virtual machine on Windows and Linux virtual
machines. In this mode, you connect to the Restore Client from a virtual machine that
has been backed up by NetWorker VMware Protection.
Procedure
1. Connect to the host that will receive the file-level restore with a user that is a
member of the administrations group.
2. Open a browser and enter a URL that points to the VMware Backup Appliance
and indicates file-level restore. For example:
http://VMware_Backup_Appliance_host:8580/flr
Note
You must connect to the VMware Backup Appliance from a web browser on the
virtual machine that the files will be restored to.
3. Select the User tab, and then log in to the Restore Client with the local
administrative credentials of the virtual machine to which you are logged in.
When you log in, the Select the backup(s) to restore from page displays with
a list of backups for the local virtual machine.
4. Use the drop-down list to view the available backups. You can view all backups,
or only backups on a specific date or within a specific range. Highlight a backup
and double-click or drag and drop to move the backup to the Select Items
pane. Click Next.
The following figure provides an example of the Select the backups to restore
from page.
Figure 150 Select the backups to restore from page
Note
When you click Next, if a folder hierarchy does not appear, the file system in
use on the virtual machine may not support file-level restore. The section File-
level restore limitations on page 283 provides more information.
5. On the Select items to restore page, browse and select the files and folders
available for recovery. You can sort items by Name, Date, and so on. Items
marked for restore appear in the Selected Items pane. To mark an item for
recovery, double-click the item, or drag and drop the item into the Selected
Items pane.
6. On the Select destination to restore to page, select the folder to which you
want to restore the items, and then click Finish.
The following figure provides an example of the Select destination to restore
to page.
Figure 152 Select destination to restore to page
When you select the arrow button, the Restore Monitor panel slides up. The
following figure provides an example of the Restore Monitor panel.
Figure 154 Restore Monitor panel
Click the Refresh button on the right-hand side of the panel to refresh the
contents as the restore occurs.
Restoring specific folders or files from a different virtual machine in Admin mode
To restore specific folders or files from a different virtual machine, use Admin mode in
the EMC Data Protection Restore Client login page. Once connected, you can
browse, select, and restore files and folders from any virtual machine that you backed
up by using NetWorker VMware Protection. You can then restore items to the virtual
machine on which you are currently logged in, or to any available destination virtual
machine.
Procedure
1. Open a browser and specify the URL that points to the EMC Backup and
Recovery appliance and indicates file-level restore (FLR), as in the following
example:
http://VMware_Backup_Appliance_host:8580/flr
Ensure that you launch the EMC Data Protection Restore Client from a virtual
machine that you backed up using the NetWorker VMware Protection solution.
2. Click Admin, and then log in to the Restore Client with the vCenter
administrative credentials that you used to register the VMware Backup
appliance to the vCenter Server.
The following figure provides an example of the Admin login window.
Note
When you use Admin mode, ensure that the user you specify for the vCenter
login has the correct privileges to use this option.
When you log in, the Select the backup(s) to restore from page appears with
a list of all the virtual machines that were backed up by using NetWorker
VMware Protection. The available backups appear under each virtual machine.
3. Use the drop-down list to view the available backups. You can view all backups,
or only backups on a specific date or within a specific range. Highlight a backup
and double-click or drag and drop to move the backup to the Select Items
pane. Click Next.
4. On the Select items to restore page, browse and select the files and folders
available for restore. You can sort items by Name, Date, and so on. Items
marked for restore appear in the Selected Items pane. To mark an item for
recovery, double-click the item, or drag and drop the item into the Selected
Items pane.
5. In the Select Restore Client page, select a destination virtual machine.
A login dialog box similar to the following figure appears for the destination
client.
10. To monitor the progress of the restore operation, click the arrow button located
at the lower right-hand corner of the restore client screen.
The following figure provides an example of the arrow button.
Figure 157 Accessing the restore monitor
When you select the arrow button, the Restore Monitor panel slides up. The
following figure provides an example of the Restore Monitor panel.
Figure 158 Restore Monitor panel
Click the Refresh button on the right-hand side of the panel to refresh the
contents as the restore occurs.
Viewing Alarms
EMC Backup and Recovery can trigger the following alarms:
EBR: [003] The VMware Backup appliance is The VMware Backup Appliance does not have
full. any disk space for additional backups. The
appliance will run in read-only (or restore-
only) mode until you make additional space
available. You can free space on the appliance
by manually deleting unnecessary or older
backups and by changing retention policies on
backup jobs to shorten the backup retention
time.
EBR: [004] The VMware Backup appliance The datastore that contains the disks
datastore is approaching maximum capacity. provisioned for the VMware Backup Appliance
is approaching maximum capacity. When
datastore reaches the maximum capacity, the
VMware Backup Appliance will be suspended.
The appliance cannot be resumed until
additional space is made available on the
datastore.
EBR: [005] Core services are not running. The Core services are not running. Start the
Core services by using the EMC Backup and
Recovery Configure window.
EBR: [007] File system services are not The File system services are not started. Start
running. the File system services by using the EMC
Backup and Recovery Configure window.
Note
EBR: [008] File level restore services are not The File level restore services are not started.
running. Start the File level restore services by using
the EMC Backup and Recovery Configure
Note window.
This alarm does not apply to EBR version
1.5.1.7.
EBR: [009] Maintenance services are not The Maintenance services are not running.
running. Start Maintenance services by using the EMC
Backup and Recovery Configure window.
EBR: [010] Backup scheduler is not running. The Backup scheduler is not running. Start
Backup scheduler by using the EMC Backup
and Recovery Configure window.
Note
See the VMware documentation for details on inflating thin provisioned disks to thick
provisioned disks. This procedure requires that you shut down the VMware Backup
appliance. This may take several hours to complete.
nsrmm -d -S ssid/cloneid
where ssid/cloneid is the SSID and cloneID of the save set that you want to delete.
When you delete a save set from NetWorker server, NetWorker will also remove the
corresponding backup from the EMC Backup and Recovery Appliance.
Creating a checkpoint using the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface
You can create a validated checkpoint by using the command line or the EMC Backup
and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web Client. The section Preparing the
VMware Backup appliance for disaster recovery on page 298 provides information on
creating and validating checkpoints from the command line.
Procedure
1. In the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface, select the Configuration tab.
2. Click the gear icon, and then select Run integrity Check as shown in the
following figure.
Figure 159 Running an integrity check
Note
NetWorker does not support disaster recovery from a checkpoint backup that
was performed with a VMware Backup Appliance version earlier than the
currently installed version. For example, if you upgrade to a NetWorker 18.1
server and VMware Backup Appliance version 1.5.1.7 from NetWorker 8.2 SP1
and VMware Backup Appliance version 1.1.1.50, you cannot perform a disaster
recovery from a checkpoint backup created with OVA 1.1.1.50. Backup and
restore operations will hang in "Waiting: Queued" state.
You should run backups once or twice daily that occur a couple hours after checkpoint
creation, to secure the checkpoint files on the NetWorker media. Preparing the
VMware Backup appliance for disaster recovery on page 298 provides a list of
checkpoint locations.
Cross Sync
A cross sync operation synchronizes the VMware Backup Appliance and NetWorker
databases for backups and configurations. A VMware Backup Appliance rollback
automatically starts a cross sync operation on the NetWorker server. You can also
perform a cross sync manually from the command line to check the consistency of the
NetWorker metadata. Before you perform a cross sync, ensure that the VMware
Backup Appliance is online.
Use the following command to manually perform cross sync from the command line of
the NetWorker server:
nsrim -X -S -h EMC_Backup_and_Recovery_appliance_hostname -t last
checkpoint time -f
where:
l -S initiates the VMware Backup appliance cross sync.
l -h specifies the VMware Backup appliance server name.
l -t is an optional parameter that specifies the last checkpoint time. EMC Backup
and Recovery performs a cross sync for the backups that occur only after the
specified time. Specify the time in a format that NetWorker accepts. The
nsr_getdate man page provides information on acceptable formats.
l -f synchronizes the entire database and deletes out of sync backups. If the
backups exist only on the VMware Backup appliance, then you can only delete the
backups by using this option.
To cross sync the entire database, specify -f without specifying the time.
If you do not specify a time when you perform a manual cross sync, NetWorker
retrieves the most recent validated checkpoint from the VMware Backup appliance
and performs a cross-sync starting from that time.
If you perform a cross sync on an entire database and the database is very large, the
synchronization process may take longer than normal.
Cross sync generates the following NMC events:
l “Cross sync with appliance name VMware Backup Appliance is
started.”
l “Cross sync with appliance name VMware Backups Appliance is
successful for configuration and backups.”
Disaster Recovery
In the event of failure, as a first course of action, NetWorker VMware Protection will
perform a rollback to a known validated checkpoint. To recover from a VMware
Backup Appliance failure, refer to the following disaster recovery guidelines.
l Although the 0.5TB appliance contains 3 * 256 GB disks and the 4TB appliance
contains 6 * 1TB disks, NetWorker only creates one checkpoint save set for all the
disks. Ensure that you know which VMware Backup Appliance (0.5 or 4TB) that
you deployed before you perform a disaster recovery. This information is not
required when performing the checkpoint backup, but you will require this
information during the re-deployment of the appliance. To help identify the
deployed appliance and verify the checkpoint backup, you can review the log
messages that appear in the daemon.raw file on the NetWorker server, and
within the policy logs. The location of the logs files differ on a Windows and Linux
NetWorker server.
n Linux—By default the daemon.raw file appears in the /nsr/logs directory.
The policy log files appear in the /nsr/logs/policy directory.
n Windows—By default the daemon.raw file appears in the C:\Program
Files\EMC NetWorker\nsr\logs folder. The policy log files appear in the
C:\Program Files\EMC NetWorker\nsr\logs\policy folder.
l Before you shut down the VMware Backup Appliance, verify that there are not any
backup or maintenance tasks running. Depending on the backup method used and
how long it takes, schedule your checkpoint backup during a time when no tasks
are scheduled. For example, if your backup window is eight hours and backups only
take one hour to complete, you have an additional seven hours before maintenance
tasks are scheduled. This is an ideal time to shut down and backup the appliance.
l To shutdown the appliance, use the vSphere Client to perform a Shut Down
Guest OS task on the virtual machine. Do not use a Power Off task, which is the
equivalent to unplugging the power cord on a physical server and may not result in
a clean shut down process. Shutdown and Startup Procedures on page 292
provides more information.
Note
When you perform a disaster recovery for a VMware Backup Appliance without using
checkpoints, you can only perform a FULL VM (image-level) restore. VMDK, FLR, and
instant access restores are not supported in this case. You can, however, perform
these types of restore after a resurrection restore.
Procedure
1. Deploy a new VMware Backup Appliance and specify the same IP address that
was used at the time of the backup, from which you are recovering.
EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility on page 235 provides
instructions.
2. Configure the new VMware Backup Appliance.
During the NetWorker Registration step, select the Override NetWorker
registration check and the Force cross sync with NetWorker after re-
deployment options.
Note
When you use ssh to connect to or log in to the EMC Backup and Recovery console,
ensure that you log in with admin account instead of the root account. Log in to the
EMC Backup and Recovery Console as admin instead of root on page 312 provides
more information.
Procedure
1. If you do not have a recent checkpoint or want to create a new checkpoint
backup, create the checkpoint by running the following command:
# mccli checkpoint create --override_maintenance_scheduler
2. Use the mccli command to verify that you have created a successful
checkpoint by running:
mccli checkpoint show
An output similar to the following displays:
Tag Time Validated Deletable
----------------- ----------------------- ---------
---------
cp.20130206170045 2013-02-06 09:00:45 PST Validated Yes
4. Use the NetWorker Administration GUI to add two actions to a workflow for the
VMware Protection Policy, in the following order:
a. VMware checkpoint discover action.
b. VMware checkpoint backup action.
Note
Optionally, add a clone action after the checkpoint backup action to clone
the checkpoint backup to a Data Domain system, AFTD, or tape.
For any disaster recovery, you must repeat any changes previously made to the
configuration files. For example, the changes performed in the section Restrict
mapping of datastores on page 235.
Procedure
1. Redeploy the VMware Backup Appliance with the same network configuration
that was used at the time of the checkpoint. Use the Override button within
the EMC Backup and Recovery Configure window.
Note
Ensure that the password for the system that you plan to recover to matches
the password that was defined for the system when the checkpoint was taken.
3. Use NMC to connect to the NetWorker server, and then select the Devices tab
in Administration GUI.
4. In the left pane, select VMware Backup Appliance.
The backup appliances display in the right pane.
5. In the right pane, right-click the VMware Backup Appliance that you want to
recover, and then select Start VBA Recover for Checkpoints, as shown in the
following figure.
7. Check for restores of old backups and that the policies are intact as per the
checkpoint.
Complete disaster recovery of the VMware Backup Appliance and the Data
Domain or tape device
The following sections describe the steps that are required to a complete disaster
recovery, where you need to restore both the connection to the VMware Backup
Appliance, and the Data Domain or tape device that has completely failed.
Note
Ensure that the password for the system that you plan to recover to matches
the password that was defined for the system when the checkpoint was taken.
3. Use NMC to connect to the NetWorker server, and then select the Devices tab
in Administration GUI.
4. In the left pane, select VMware Backup Appliance.
The backup appliances display in the right pane.
5. In the right pane, right-click the VMware Backup Appliance that you want to
recover, and then select Start VBA Recover for Checkpoints, as shown in the
following figure.
Figure 163 Starting a VMware Backup Appliance disaster recovery
Results
After performing these steps, you can now replace the primary Data Domain device
and either configure NetWorker Data Domain Boost devices the same way you set up
Complete disaster recovery of the VMware Backup Appliance and the Data Domain or tape device 301
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
the devices prior to the failure, or create new Data Domain Boost devices and adapt
your VMware policy and pools accordingly.
3. Type the username and password for the VMware Backup Appliance, and click
OK.
4. Browse restores from the VMware Backup Appliance and select the VMs/
VMDKs that you want to restore to the new location. Performing a FULLVM
restore on page 277 provides more information.
Note
Backups from the VMware Backup Appliance and external proxy create sessions with
NetWorker devices. The count of sessions is driven by the number of appliances,
external proxies, clone jobs and other backups running through this server. Every
VMware Backup Appliance and external proxy can run up to 8 sessions. If using
external proxies, EMC recommends that you disable the internal proxy on the VMware
Backup Appliance. The values calculated in the table above reflects a disabled internal
storage.
External proxy 8 concurrent hotadd sessions External proxy has one SCSI
of VMDKs controller which limits the
concurrent hotadd sessions to
8 per external proxy.
Note
For more best practices related specifically to the deployment of the VMware Backup
Appliance in new or upgraded installations of NetWorker, review the section VMware
Backup Appliance requirements.
l Ensure that the NetWorker server and storage node are at the same version, and
that the VMware Backup Appliance you deploy is compatible with this version, for
example, NetWorker 18.1 with OVA 1.5.1.7.
l Use Hotadd transport mode for faster backups and restores and less exposure to
network routing, firewall, and SSL certificate issues. To support Hotadd mode,
deploy the VMware Backup Appliance on an ESXi host that has a path to the
storage that holds the target virtual disk(s) for backup. In environments that use
the older VMFSv3 format datastore, deploy the proxy on the datastore with the
largest block size.
Note
Hotadd mode requires VMware hardware version 7 or later. Ensure all Virtual
Machines that you want to back up are using Virtual Machine hardware version 7
or later.
For sites that contain a large number of Virtual Machines that do not support
Hotadd requirements, NBD backups will be used. This can cause congestion on the
ESXi host management network. Plan your backup network carefully for large
scale NBD installs. You may consider configuring one of the following options:
n Set up Management network redundancy.
n Set up backup network to ESXi for NBD.
n Set up storage heartbeats. http://www.vmware.com/files/pdf/techpaper/
vmw-vsphere-high-availability.pdf provides more information.
l Avoid deploying VMs with IDE virtual disks; using IDE virtual disks degrades
backup performance. Use SCSI virtual disks instead whenever possible.
Note
You cannot use hotadd mode with IDE Virtual disks and therefore backup of these
disks will be performed using NBD mode.
l During policy configuration, assign clients to a policy based on logical grouping to
allow for better scheduling of backups that will help you avoid resource contention
and create more organized logs for review.
l It is recommended that you perform regular checkpoint backups to protect the
VMware metadata in your environment. You can schedule daily checkpoint
discover and checkpoint backup actions for a VMware Protection Policy, within
NetWorker.
l When you plan the backups, ensure that NetWorker VMware Protection supports
the disk types that you use in the environment. Currently, NetWorker VMware
Protection does not support the following disk types:
n Independent (persistent and non-persistent)
n RDM Independent - Virtual Compatibility Mode
n RDM Physical Compatibility Mode
l When you enable Change Block Tracking (CBT) NetWorker can achieve faster
incremental backup performance. The default VMware Backup Appliance
configuration has a threshold of 25% change per client, which means that if the
particular Virtual Machine has changed more than 25% since the last backup,
NetWorker will perform a level full backup. In order to support Changed Block
Tracking (CBT):
n Ensure that all Virtual Machines run VMware hardware version 7 or higher.
n If you add a disk or dynamically expand a disk on a Virtual Machine, you must
take a new full backup for CBT to function.
For Incremental backups with CBT, remove any existing snapshots of a Virtual
Machine before you add the VMware Backup Appliance.
Note
When you mount a backup or clone pool volume on a remote storage node, then
modify the client properties for the VMware Backup Appliance resource in
NetWorker to add the remote storage node names to the Storage nodes attribute
on the Globals (2 of 2) tab.
l Resource contention can occur at various points during the backup cycle. When
NetWorker runs larger policies issues due to contention of resources can occur,
which impact all running operations. Adjust your resources and times for other
larger policies to avoid overlaps, and avoid resource contention.
For example, you configure one pool named Bronze, with one device. If you set up
a policy where every day at 10 pm two policies called 'Bronze1' and 'Bronze2' with
400 clients each start writing to the device in the 'Bronze' pool, then the long wait
for device availability may cause unexpected delays or timeouts. To fix this, set the
policy start times 4 hours apart and add more devices, to allow for stable backups.
Note
VMware Backup appliance versions must be the same when deploying multiple
VMware Backup appliances in same vCenter
When you deploy more than one VMware Backup appliance in your environment and
the appliances are registered to the same vCenter, then these VMware Backup
appliance versions must be the same.
Incremental backups across Data Domain systems not supported
Performing incremental backups across Data Domain systems is not supported for
VMware Backup appliance policies.
Recovery of virtual machine configured with EFI firmware fails to find operating
system during virtual machine startup
When a virtual machine is configured with EFI firmware, backup and recovery
completes successfully. However, when the restore is performed and the virtual
machine is powered on, the virtual machine fails to find an operating system during
startup. To work around this issue, perform an Instant Access recovery of the virtual
machine.
Cannot add Actions to workflows that have the same name in different policies
For traditional workflows, VMware allows you to use the same workflow name in
different policies. However, if you add such a workflow to a policy, you cannot add
actions to the workflow.
Datastore names cannot contain special characters
Using special characters in datastore names can cause problems with the Virtual
Backup appliance, such as failed backups and restores. Special characters include the
following: % & * $ # @ ! \ / : * ? " < > | ;, etc.
Higher default target session and max session values for VMware Backup
appliance
NetWorker creates the default VMware Backup appliance with the values target
session=50 and max session=200. These values are higher than normal default values
for a device created in NetWorker because each appliance or external proxy comes
with 8 proxy agents.
Backup of individual folders within a Virtual Machine is not supported
The NetWorker VMware Protection solution only supports image-level backup and
disk-level backup. You cannot perform backups of individual folders within the Virtual
Machine.
VMware View in the NetWorker Administration map view does not display when
configuration for Virtual Machines within the vCenter is incomplete
When you use VMware View, the map view does not appear when the configuration
for one or more Virtual Machines in the vCenter is incomplete. To avoid this issue,
remove the incomplete Virtual Machine configurations from vCenter.
I/O contention when all Virtual Machines on a single data store
I/O contention may occur during snapshot creation and backup read operations when
all Virtual Machines reside on a single datastore.
No automatic migration tool to move from previous solution to NetWorker
VMware Protection
An automatic migration tool to move from the previous Virtual Machine backup
solution to the NetWorker VMware Protection solution does not exist.
Only English keyboards supported in vSphere Web Client's EMC Backup and
Recovery user interface
The EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web Client only
supports English language keyboards.
Configuration checklist
The following configuration checklist provides best practices and troubleshooting tips
that may help resolve some common issues.
Basic configuration
l Synchronize system time between vCenter, ESX/ESXi/vSphere, and the vProxy
appliance
l Assign IPs carefully — do not reuse any IP address
l Use FQDNs (Fully Qualified Domain Names) everywhere
l For any network related issue, confirm that forward and reverse DNS lookups
work for each host in the datazone.
NetWorker configuration
l Ensure that the relevant devices are mounted
l Wait until you successfully configure a policy before you run the policy.
l A message appears after successful registration in NMC.
IPv6 considerations
The following considerations apply when using IPv6 instead of IPv4 for NetWorker
VMware Protection.
Register with FQDN instead of IP in EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration
Utility
During registration of the VMware Backup Appliance in the EMC Backup and
Recovery Configuration Utility window, if using IPv6 do not specify the IPv6
address. Use the FQDN of the vCenter server to register the appliance instead.
Additional zeros display in IPv6 address in EMC Backup and Recovery
Configuration Utility
The IPv6 static address tab in the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility
window displays additional zeros in the address.
Remove the extra zeros, or re-type the correct IPv6 address prior to clicking Next.
Emergency restore (Direct to host recovery) unavailable
Emergency restore, also referred to as Direct to host recovery, is currently unavailable
in an IPv6 environment.
Log in to the EMC Backup and Recovery Console as admin instead of root
When you use ssh to connect or login to the EMC Backup and Recovery Console,
ensure that you login as the admin user instead of root. Direct login as the root user is
not permitted.
EMC does not recommend that you modify the ssh configuration file in /etc/ssh so
that a user can ssh into the appliance directly as root. Changes this file can result in
future upgrade failures.
After you ssh to the Console as admin, you can then switch to the root user, as
shown in the following example:
If you use the vSphere Client to connect to the EMC Backup and Recovery Console,
you can log in as the root user.
Note
The password for the admin user is the same as the password that you specified in the
EMC Backup and Recovery Configure window during the initial installation of the
VMware Backup Appliance.
Launching the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client after upgrade on
Mozilla Firefox browser
After upgrading the VMware Backup Appliance from a NetWorker 8.2 release to
NetWorker 9.0 and later, the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client window
might not launch when using the Mozilla Firefox browser.
If you cannot launch the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client window, run the
following commands on the VMware Backup Appliance as the root user:
l /usr/java/latest/bin/keytool -delete -alias tomcat -storepass
changeit
l /usr/java/latest/bin/keytool -genkeypair -v -alias tomcat -keyalg
RSA -sigalg SHA256withRSA -keystore /root/.keystore -storepass
changeit -keypass changeit -validity 3650 -dname
"CN=localhost.localdom, OU=Avamar, O=EMC, L=Irvine, S=California,
C=US"
l emwebapp.sh --restart
If you use the Mozilla Firefox browser on a Linux machine and are unable to browse
the backups even after you upgrade the browser to the latest version, an error
message similar to the following might appear: sec_error_ca_cert_invalid
issue
To resolve this issue, perform the following steps:
1. Open the Mozilla Firefox browser.
2. In the Location bar, type about:config and press Enter.
You may see a warning that says This might void your warranty!
Click I'll be careful, I promise! to continue to the about:config page.
3. Set security.use_mozillapkix_verification to True, if the value is set to False.
Launching the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility after upgrade
on Mozilla Firefox browser
After upgrading the VMware Backup Appliance from a NetWorker 8.2 release to
NetWorker 9.0.1 and later, the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility
window may not launch when using the Mozilla Firefox browser.
If you cannot launch the EMC Backup and Recovery Configuration Utility window,
perform the following:
1. Login via SSH to the VMware Backup Appliance Console as the admin user.
2. Switch to the root user by running the following command:
su -
Password:
3. Run the following commands on the VMware Backup Appliance:
Launching the Dell EMC Data Protection Restore Client after upgrade on Mozilla Firefox browser 313
NetWorker VMware Protection with the VMware Backup Appliance (legacy)
emwebapp.sh --stop
emwebapp.sh --start
2. Restart the EMC Backup and Recovery database by running:
emwebapp.sh --stop
su – admin
ebrdbmaint.pl --startdb
exit
emwebapp.sh --start
3. Patch the EMC Backup and Recovery server by running:
emwebapp.sh --stop
cd /usr/local/avamar/lib/ebr
mv ebr-server.war ebr-server.war.orig
4. Use SFTP to upload the new war file to this location:
emwebapp.sh --start*
Note
When you use ssh to connect or log in to the EMC Backup and Recovery Console in
the vSphere Client, ensure that you login as admin instead of root. Log in to the EMC
Backup and Recovery Console as admin instead of root on page 312 provides more
information.
NetWorker operations
The following troubleshooting items provide some direction on how to identify and
resolve common issues with NetWorker and VMware Protection Policies.
VMware Protection Policy fails for manually created client resource with DataDomain backup
attribute enabled
When you manually create a client resource and enable the DataDomain backup
attribute (using nsradmin or the NMC Client Properties window), the default VMware
Protection Policy fails with the following error:
“No proxies running on VBA {appliance name} for backing up VM {VM name}”
When the avagent is not running, or no proxies are running, this error appears in the
VMware Protection Policy details window in NMC.
If you see this error, log in as root from the EMC Backup and Recovery Console in the
vSphere Client and invoke service avagent restart:
/etc/init.d/avagent restart
Note
Changes to these values may depend on the operating system of the NetWorker
server. The sections "Setting environment variables on UNIX" and "Setting
environment variables on Windows systems" in the NetWorker Administration Guide
provide more information. If VMware Backup Appliance registration fails with the
Networker server after the initial deployment and registration, you can also set
NSR_VBA_CONNECT_TIMEOUT at the operating system level for successful
registration.
On Linux, login to the NetWorker server and perform the following:
1. Run # printenv | grep NSR_VBA_CONNECT_TIMEOUT export
NSR_VBA_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=900.
2. Restart NetWorker services by using the command /etc/init.d/networker
restart.
3. Run emwebapp.sh --restart on the VMware Backup Appliance.
To re-register the VMware Backup Appliance on Windows:
1. Right-click My Computer > Select Environment Variables.
2. Add a new variable NSR_VBA_CONNECT_TIMEOUT with the value 900.
3. Restart NetWorker services on the NetWorker server and run emwebapp.sh --
restart on the VMware Backup Appliance.
Note
Allow a couple of minutes after making the changes for times to merge.
4. Log in to the vSphere Web Client. If the time synchronization message does not
appear when you launch the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface, the times
have been synchronized successfully.
Start user interface does not display as available in vSphere Web Client
If the user interface does not display as available in the vSphere Web Client, log into
vCenter and restart the vSphere Client Services by running the following from a
command prompt:
cd /usr/lib/vmware-vsphere-client
./vsphere-client stop
./vsphere-client start
When you deploy a VM, do not change the default network (VM Network) provided by
the wizard. After the deployment completes and prior to powering on the VM,
reconfigure the VM to use the appropriate network if VM Network is not correct. If
you change the network in the wizard, EMC Backup and Recovery looks for eth1
instead of eth0, and network connectivity fails.
If you see this message, do not shutdown the VM, and allow time for the reboot to
complete.
The EMC Backup and Recovery appliance is not responding. Please try your request again
If you were previously able to connect to EMC Backup and Recovery and this message
appears, check the following:
l Confirm that the user name or password used to validate EMC Backup and
Recovery to the vCenter Server has not changed. Only one user account and
password are used for EMC Backup and Recovery validation. This is configured
through the EMC Backup and Recovery Configure window.
l Confirm that the name and IP address of the appliance have not changed since the
initial EMC Backup and Recovery installation. DNS Configuration on page 215
provides additional information.
Integrity Check
After you start an integrity check, a delay of several seconds may occur before the
“EBR: Integrity Check” task shows up in the Recent Tasks pane of the EMC Backup
and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web Client. Similarly, when you cancel an
integrity check, a delay of several seconds may occur before the task is cancelled.
In some cases (for example, when the integrity check progress is above 90%), the
integrity check may actually complete before the cancel operation completes. Even
when the integrity check completes successfully, the Task Console may still show an
error indicating that the integrity check was cancelled.
If you knew that the Integrity Check Status of the appliance (shown on the Reports
tab) was “Out of Date” before you started the integrity check, then you can look at
the status immediately after you cancel the job to see if the cancel operation
succeeded. If the Integrity Check Status is “Normal,” then the check was successful.
If the status is “Out of Date,” then the check was cancelled.
Backup operations
The following troubleshooting items provide some direction on how to identify and
resolve common issues with NetWorker VMware Protection backups for the VMware
Backup Appliance (VBA).
Backups fail with external proxy after upgrading from NetWorker 8.1.x to 18.1
Backups may fail with the external proxy after an upgrade from NetWorker 8.1.x to
version 18.1 has occurred.
If this happens, delete the peer information for the external proxy from the NetWorker
server.
Backups fail when EMC Backup and Recovery plug-in registers with an incorrect version string
in vCenter
Backups may fail when the EMC Backup and Recovery plug-in registers with an
incorrect version string in vCenter. Additionally, EMC Backup and Recovery cannot
co-exist with VMware VDP or any third-party backup plug-in in the same vCenter. If a
conflict occurs, then unregister the EMC Backup and Recovery plug-in extension from
the managed object browser (MOB):
1. Navigate to http://vcenter-ip/mob.
2. In the Properties table, select the content link.
3. Select Extension Manager and verify that the Properties table lists
“com.vmware.ebr2”.
4. From the Methods table, select UnregisterExtension.
5. Type com.vmware.ebr2 and select Invoke Method.
Note
This name will be different if removing VDP or a third party backup plug-in.
6. Verify in Extension Manager that the plug-in is no longer listed in the Properties
table, and then restart vCenter services or the vCenter server.
7. Restart emwebapp on the EMC Backup and Recovery appliance by using the
command emwebapp.sh --restart.
you select a very large number of jobs. This message disappears when the action is
completed, which can take up to five minutes.
“Unable to add client {client name} to the EMC Backup and Recovery appliance while creating
backup job {backupjob name}.”
This error can appear when there is a duplicate client name on the vApp container or
the ESX/ESXi host. In this case only one backup job is added. Resolve any duplicate
client names.
“The following items could not be located and were not selected {client name}.”
This error can occur when the backed up VM(s) cannot be located during Edit of a
backup job. This is a known issue.
Windows 2008 R2 VMs may fail to backup with “disk.EnableUUID” configured to “true.”
Windows 2008 R2 backups may fail if the VM is configured with the disk.EnableUUID
parameter set to true. To correct this problem, manually update the vmx configuration
parameter disk.EnableUUID to false by using the vSphere Web Client:
1. Shut down the VM by right clicking the VM and selecting Shut Down Guest OS.
2. Right click the VM and select Edit Settings.
3. Click VM Options.
4. Expand the Advanced section and click Edit Configuration.
5. Locate the name disk.EnableUUId and set the value to false.
6. Click OK on the next two pages.
7. Right click the VM and select Power On.
After you update the configuration parameter, the backups of the Windows 2008 R2
VM should succeed.
Backup fails if EMC Backup and Recovery does not have sufficient datastore capacity
Scheduled backups fail at 92% complete if there is insufficient datastore capacity. If
you configured the EMC Backup and Recovery datastore with thin provisioning and
maximum capacity has not been reached, then add additional storage resources. If you
configured the EMC Backup and Recovery datastore with thick provisioning and it is
at full capacity, see EMC Backup and Recovery Capacity Management on page 292.
When VMs are moved in or out of different cluster groups, associated backup sources may be
lost
When you move hosts into clusters with the option to retain the resource pools and
vApps, the containers get recreated, not copied. As a result, the container is no longer
the same container even though the name is the same. To resolve this issue, validate
or recreate any backup jobs that protect containers after moving hosts in or out of a
cluster.
After an unexpected shutdown, recent backup jobs and backups are lost
When an unexpected shutdown occurs, the VMware Backup appliance performs a
rollback to the last validated checkpoint. This is expected behavior.
Backups fail if certain characters are used in the virtual machine name, datastore, folder, or
datacenter names
When you use spaces or special characters in the virtual machine name, datastore,
folder, or datacenter names, the .vmx file is not included in the backup. The vProxy
appliance and VMware Backup appliance do not back up objects that include the
following special characters, in the format of character/escape sequence:
l & %26
l + %2B
l / %2F
l = %3D
l ? %3F
l % %25
l \ %5C
l ~ %7E
l ] %5D
Restore operations
The following troubleshooting items describe how to identify and resolve some
common issues with restores.
Restore to new virtual machine not available for backups that included physical RDM disks
When you back up a virtual machine that contains both virtual disks and physical Raw
Device Mapping (RDM) disks, the backup successfully processes the virtual disks and
bypasses the RDM disks, which are not supported for backup. However, when you
restore data from one of these backups, you cannot restore the data to a new virtual
machine because data residing on the physical RDM disks that were bypassed during
the backup cannot be restored.
If you need to restore the data to a new virtual machine, perform the following:
1. Manually create a new virtual machine in vCenter. This new virtual machine must
contain the same number of virtual disks as the original virtual machine from which
the backup was taken.
2. Manually add the new virtual machine to NetWorker.
Restore tab shows backups taken after checkpoint backup as "not available"
When you complete a successful disaster recovery of the VMware Backup appliance,
and then attempt to restore a backup performed after the last checkpoint backup, the
Restore tab in the EMC Backup and Recovery user interface in the vSphere Web
Client displays these backups as "not available." This occurs because no account for
these backups exists, since the client or VM was added to the policy after the
checkpoint backup.
When you add the client or VM back into a policy, backups display correctly with a
valid path in the Restore tab.
Message appears during FLR indicating “error finding vm by ipAddr” when you do not install
VMware Tools
You must install VMware Tools to perform FLR. When you do not install VMware
Tools, a message appears indicating the restore client is unable to find a backup of a
VM by IP.
Note
NetWorker 18.1 releases do not feature a new version of the VADP proxy. For VADP,
NetWorker 18.1 only supports recoveries that were configured in a previous release.
The NetWorker Online Compatibility Guide available on the Dell EMC Online Support
site at https://support.emc.com/products/1095_NetWorker provides the most up-
to-date compatibility information.
Note
'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE/SOFTWARE/Wow6432Node/VMware, Inc./VMware
Virtual Disk Development Kit'
Note
Attempting to launch the VADP recovery dialog without following this procedure
results in the overwriting of the local system files, which can lead to machine
corruption.
Transport modes
The VADP proxy host supports advanced transport modes for image-level recovery.
You can set the configured network transport mode to the following values during
recovery:
l SAN (Storage Area Network)—Selecting this mode completely offloads the CPU,
memory or I/O load on the virtual infrastructure. The I/O is fully offloaded to the
storage layer where the data is read directly from the SAN or iSCSI LUN.
SAN mode requires a physical proxy with SAN access, and the VMs need to be
hosted on either Fibre Channel or iSCSI-based storage. The corresponding VMFS
volumes must be visible in the Microsoft Windows Disk Management snap-in of
the VADP proxy host.
l Hotadd—In this mode, the I/O happens internally through the ESX I/O stack using
SCSI hot-add technology. This provides better I/O rates than NBD/NBDSSL.
However, selecting this mode places CPU, memory and I/O load on the ESX
hosting the VADP proxy.
Hotadd mode requires a virtual proxy, and the ESX hosting the virtual proxy should
have access to all the datastores where the VMs are hosted So, if the datastores
are SAN/iSCSI/NFS and if the ESX server where the VADP proxy resides is
separate from the ESX server where the VMs are hosted, then:
n In the case of SAN LUNs the ESX hosting the proxy and the ESX hosting the
VMs should be part of the same fabric zones.
n In the case of iSCSI LUNs the ESX hosting the proxy and the ESX hosting the
VMs should be configured for the same iSCSI-based storage targets.
n In the case of NFS datastores, the ESX hosting the proxy and the ESX hosting
the VMs should be configured for the same NFS mount points.
l NBD (Network Block Device): in this mode, the CPU, memory and I/O load gets
directly placed on the ESX hosting the production VMs, because the data has to
move through the same ESX and reach the proxy over the network. NBD mode
can be used either for physical or virtual proxy, and also supports all storage types.
l NBDSSL (Network Block Device with SSL): NBDSSL transport mode is the same
as NBD except that the data transferred over the network is encrypted. Data
transfer in NBDSSL mode can therefore be slower and use more CPU due to the
additional load on the VADP host from SLL encryption/decryption.
You can set multiple transport modes to be used by the VADP proxy host using the
pipe symbol “|” (for example, san|nbd|nbdssl).
By default, the transport mode field in the NetWorker User program is blank. Specify
one transport mode to use for recovery.
More information on configuring transport modes is provided in Configuring the VADP
proxy host and Hypervisor resource. The transport modes are outlined in the table
Table 33 on page 330.
were skipped. If using independent persistent disks, you must use traditional
NetWorker recovery.
Note
If multiple client instances of the same VADP proxy host exist in the NetWorker
server, ensure that all the instances have the same application information attributes
related to VADP. Manually copy the application information attributes into all the
VADP proxy client instances. Note, however, that when a virtual proxy is used, it
cannot be created by copying the template of other VMs that are being protected.
Creating a NetWorker client for the VADP Proxy host by using the Client
properties windows
Table 33 Application information values
Procedure
1. In the NMC NetWorker Administration Protection window, right-click
Clients, and select New.
The Create Client dialog box displays.
2. Select the General tab.
3. In the Name attribute field, type the name of the proxy.
4. Select the Apps and Modules tab, shown in the following figure.
Figure 165 Apps and Modules tab in NMC
VADP_HYPERVISOR=any.vc
VADP_HYPERVISOR=another.vc
VADP_BACKUPROOT=G:\mnt
VADP_TRANSPORT_MODE=Hotadd
6. Click OK.
2. From the vCenter Server, select View > Administration > Roles.
3. Click Add Role.
4. Name the role VADP User.
5. Assign the required permissions to the VADP User role and click OK.
Assigning the VADP User role to the user specified in the NetWorker
Hypervisor resource
Note
Setting Privileges
Global l Cancel task
l Licenses
l Log Event
l Settings
Setting Privileges
Virtual machine > Inventory l Create new
l Register
l Remove
l Unregister
Setting Privileges
l Configure
Procedure
1. Launch the NetWorker User program on the NetWorker server or VADP proxy.
2. Browse the file system for the VM client and select file to recover, as outlined in
the NetWorker Administration Guide’s Recovery chapter.
3. Set the destination directory to the CIFS share of the VM client.
4. Recover the files onto the CIFS share.
5. At the VM client, move the files from the CIFS share to the appropriate
directory.
Note
The user must have the Remote Access All Clients privilege.
For example, a Linux client has a schedule of daily level FULL client-based backups
along with monthly VADP image based backups. In this case, it is recommended to
set the browse policy of the client-based backups to a maximum of 1 month.
l If the image level backup of the VM being recovered was performed with the
Encryption directive, the current Datazone pass phrase by default is automatically
used to recover the VM image. If the current Datazone pass phrase was created
after a password-protected backup was performed, you must provide the
password that was in effect when the VM image was originally backed up.
Note
Only level full of FULLVM save sets are supported for VM image restore.
5. In the VADP Restore dialog box, type the following information depending on
the type of recovery and then click the Start button.
Restore to VMware vCenter (VC):
Note
Only level FULL of FULLVM save sets are supported for VM image recovery.
VADP:datastore=”config=stor1#disk1=stor2#disk2=stor3”
recover.exe -S 413546679 -o
VADP:host=esxDemo1.emc.com;
VADP:transmode=Hotadd
Recover VMs that have a mix of VADP image-level and traditional guest based backups
If your VMs have a mix of both VADP image level backups and traditional guest based
(also known as client based) backups, you may have to use the following recovery
procedure.
Example
The following VM (host name mars) has a mix of both VADP and traditional guest
based backups. This example shows how to recover a traditional backup save set on
the VM by first locating the time of the backup save set using the mminfo command
and then by using that time with the recover command. The host name of the
NetWorker server in this example is jupiter.
full FULLVM
kuma-6.RO Data Domain mars 5/24/2011 10:59:22 PM 5243 MB 1440475890
cb full FULLVM
C:\recover -t "5/24/2011 10:38:39 PM" -s jupiter -c mars
Notice that in the previous example output from the mminfo command, the first two
lines listed are for traditional backup and the last two lines are for a VADP backup,
which is denoted with the save set name, FULLVM. The NetWorker Command
Reference Guide provides more information about using the recover command to mark
(select) files and to perform the recovery.
DISKPART
SAN POLICY=OnlineALL
Note
After the recovery is successful, SAN POLICY can be changed back to the
default value (SAN POLICY=offline or SAN POLICY=offlineshared).
Note
If recovery is initiated from a Windows machine other than the proxy, these steps
need to be performed on the machine where the recovery is initiated.
Note
Note
Double quotes should be specified in the path even though the path is already
present.
l It is recommended to use the VADP proxy host as the storage node. This provides
the optimal configuration for any given transport mode as data transfer occurs
directly from the ESX/ESXi datastore to the storage node.
l If reattaching RDM disks after recovery, make note of all LUNs that are zoned to
the protected VMs.
Note
ESX/ESXi refers to the actual host system and not the VMs to be backed up.
Disable IPv6 using Network Connections in the Control Panel, then add an IPv4
entry like the following to the hosts file on the system where vCenter is
installed:
After this entry has been added, run the following command in the VADP proxy
host to verify that the IPv4 address is being resolved:
VMDirectPath restrictions
The following restrictions apply during the configuration of VMDirectPath:
l The ESX host must be rebooted after VMDirectPath is enabled.
l The VM must be powered down when VMDirectPath is enabled in order to add the
PCI/PCIe device directly to the VM.
l Using Fibre Channel tape drives in a VM is not supported without VMDirectPath in
production environments due to the lack of SCSI isolation. Tape drives can be
configured and used without VMDirectPath, but the support is limited to non-
production environments.
The VMware knowledge base article http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1010789 provides
information on configuring VMDirectPath.
The following features are not available for a VM configured with VMDirectPath, as
the VMkernel is configured without the respective device under its control when
passed to a VM:
l vMotion
l Storage vMotion
l Fault Tolerance
l Device hot add (CPU and memory)
l Suspend and resume
l VADP Hotadd transport mode (when used as virtual proxy)
Note
If using VMDirectPath in a NetWorker VADP virtual proxy host, then the transport
modes are limited to either NBD or NBDSSL. This is due to a VMware limitation.
http://www.vmware.com/pdf/vsp_4_vmdirectpath_host.pdf
l VMs having IDE virtual disks are not supported for Hotadd mode. Instead, nbd
mode is recommended for these.
l The VM to restore and the VM where the restore is initiated must reside in the
same VMware datacenter.
l The virtual proxy might fail to unmount Hotadd disks. In such cases, you must
manually unmount the Hotadd disks from the virtual proxy. If any of the client VM
disks are still attached to the virtual proxy, perform the following:
1. Right-click the virtual proxy and go to Edit Settings.
2. Select each of the Hotadd disks and choose Remove.
Note
Ensure that you select Remove from virtual machine and not Remove and
delete… when unmounting.
Note
In the following examples, the backup group parallelism would take effect
only if the VADP proxy host client parallelism is set to an equal or higher
number.
One proxy in the environment, all VMs on the same ESX (no cluster)
In the following example, there is a single proxy in the environment and 11 VMs need to
be backed up via NBD/NBDSSL. All 11 VMs are hosted on the same ESX, which is not
part of a cluster, and both of these jobs have to be run at the same time:
Note
Steps 1 and 2 are only applicable in the case of SAN transport mode where SAN fabric
zoning is already in place such that the VADP proxy host is already displaying the SAN
LUNs in Windows disk management. If this does not apply, skip to Step 3.
Prerequisites
Domain Name System (DNS) resolution is critical for NetWorker deployment and
configuration. All infrastructure components should be resolvable through a fully
qualified domain name (FQDN). This is especially important for the NetWorker Server,
NetWorker vProxy, Data Domain appliance, and CloudBoost appliance. Resolvable
means that components are accessible through both forward (A) and reverse (PTR)
look-ups.
Review the following prerequisites prior to configuring NetWorker in a VMware Cloud
on AWS. Also, ensure that you plan your firewall according to these prerequisites.
VMware Cloud on AWS web portal console
In the VMware Cloud on AWS web portal console, note the following requirements:
l If using NSX-T, configure the DNS to resolve to the internal IP address of the
vCenter server. Navigate to SDDC Management > Settings > vCenter FQDN and
select the Private vCenter IP address so that you can directly access the
management network over the built-in firewall. Additionally, ensure that you open
TCP port 443 of the vCenter server in both the management gateway and the
compute gateway.
l By default, there is no external access to the vCenter Server system in your SDDC
(Software Defined Data Center). You can open access to your vCenter Server
system by configuring a firewall rule. Set the firewall rule in the compute gateway
of VMware Cloud on AWS to enable communication to the vCenter public IP
address from the desired logical network of your SDDC. The NetWorker server will
not allow you to add the vCenter Server if this firewall rule is not configured in the
SDDC.
l The default compute gateway firewall rules prevent all virtual machine traffic from
reaching the internet. To allow your NetWorker Server virtual machine to connect
to the internet, you need to create a compute gateway firewall rule to allow
outbound traffic on the logical network that your NetWorker Server virtual
machine is connected to.
l Configure DNS to allow machines in your SDDC to resolve fully-qualified domain
names (FQDNs) to IP addresses belonging to the internet. The NetWorker Server
will not allow you to add the vCenter Server using the server's public FQDN or IP
address if the DNS server is not configured in your SDDC.
l It is recommended that you deploy the Data Domain system as a virtual appliance
in the Amazon VPC (Virtual Private Cloud) of your choice. During the SDDC
creation, ensure that you connect your SDDC to an AWS account, and select a
VPC and subnet within that account.
l The Data Domain system running in your Amazon VPC must be connected to your
VMware SDDC by using the VMware Cloud Elastic Network Interfaces (ENIs),
allowing your SDDC and services in the AWS VPC and subnet in your AWS
account to communicate without requiring the routing of traffic through the
internet gateway. The same ENI channel is recommended for access to Data
Domain systems (for the vProxy solution) and access to cloud object storage (for
the CloudBoost solution). Detailed steps on configuring ENI are provided by
VMware at https://vmc.vmware.com/console/aws-link.
l Ensure that you configure the inbound and outbound firewall rules of your
compute gateway for Data Domain connectivity if DDVE is running in your Amazon
VPC.
Amazon AWS web portal
In the AWS web portal, note the following requirements:
l Configure the inbound and outbound firewall rules of your Amazon VPC security
group to provide connectivity between the VMware SDDC compute gateway and
Data Domain connectivity if Data Domain is running in your Amazon VPC.
l If cloning from one Data Domain system to another, ensure that you configure the
inbound rule for the security group in AWS to allow all traffic from the respective
private IPs of Data Domain Virtual Editions running in your Amazon VPC.
l If you have more than one Data Domain running in AWS to perform cloning, then
ensure that both Data Domain systems can ping each other using the FQDNs.
vCenter server inventory
In the vCenter Server inventory of your SDDC, note the following requirements:
l An internal DNS name lookup server must be running inside the vCenter inventory.
This will be referenced by all the workloads running in the VMware SDDC.
l The internal DNS server must have Forwarders enabled to access the internet.
This is required in order to resolve the vCenter Server's public FQDN
Prerequisites 351
NetWorker VMware Protection in VMware Cloud on Amazon Web Services
8. On the Review details window, review the product details such as the product
name, version, vendor, publisher, and download size, and then click Next.
9. On the License agreements window, review and accept the EULA, and then
click Next.
10. On the Select storage window, select the disk format and the destination
datastore where the virtual appliance files will be stored, and then click Next.
It is recommended that you select Thick Provision Lazy Zeroed to ensure that
amount of storage space allocated to the virtual appliance is available.
11. On the Select networks window, select the Destination Network. Provide the
IP address in the text box and click Next.
12. On the Customize template window, expand Networking properties, and then
specify the following attributes:
a. In the Network IP address field, specify the IP address for the vProxy
appliance.
b. In the Default gateway field, specify the IP address of the gateway host.
c. In the Network Netmask/Prefix field, specify the netmask for an IPv4
Network IP address. vProxy backups do not support the use of IPv6
Network IP addresses.
d. In the DNS field, specify the IP address of the DNS servers, separated by
commas.
e. In the FQDN field, specify the fully qualified domain name of the vProxy
appliance.
13. Expand Timezone settings, and then perform the following tasks:
a. in the Timezone setting field, select the time zone.
b. SSH into the vProxy appliance using root credentials and run the following
command: /usr/bin/timedatectl set-timezone new-timezone.
Note
To set a time zone outside of the list supported by the vProxy appliance, you
need to change the time zone manually.
14. Expand Password settings, and then perform the following tasks:
a. In the Root password field, specify a password for the root account or leave
the field blank to use the default password. The default password is
changeme.
b. In the Admin password field, specify a password for the admin account or
leave the field blank to use the default password. The default password is
a3dp@m8n.
15. Click Next.
The Ready to Complete window displays.
16. On the Ready to Complete window, review the deployment configuration
details, and then click Finish.
Deploy the vProxy OVA on a vCenter server in VMware Cloud on AWS 353
NetWorker VMware Protection in VMware Cloud on Amazon Web Services
Results
The Deploying template task appears in the vCenter and provides status information
about the deployment.
l Add the vCenter Server to the NetWorker Server using either the public FQDN of
the vCenter Server or the public IP address of the vCenter Server. It is
recommended to use the FQDN.
l When adding the vCenter Server to the NetWorker Server, specify the login
credentials for the cloudadmin user
l When configuring the vProxy in the NetWorker Server, set the Maximum NBD
sessions for the vProxy to zero. VMware Cloud on AWS does not support NBD
transport mode.
Regular expressions for NetWorker vProxy dynamic policies rule definitions 357
Regular expressions for NetWorker vProxy dynamic policies rule definitions
Composites
xy x followed by y
x|y x or y (prefer x)
Repetitions
x* zero or more x, prefer more
x{n} exactly n x
Repetitions
x{n}? exactly n x
Note
The counting forms x{n,m}, x{n,}, and x{n} reject forms that create a minimum or
maximum repetition count above 1000. Unlimited repetitions are not subject to this
restriction.
Grouping
(re) numbered capturing group (submatch)
Flags
i case-insensitive (default false)
\A at beginning of text
\z at end of text
Escape sequences
\a bell ( ≡ \007 )
\n newline ( ≡ \012 )
Escape sequences
\v vertical tab character ( ≡ \013 )
\s whitespace ( ≡ [\t\n\f\r ] )
Cc control
Cf format
Co private use
Cs surrogate
L letter
Ll lowercase letter
Lm modifier letter
Lo other letter
Lt titlecase letter
Lu uppercase letter
M mark
Mc spacing mark
Me enclosing mark
Mn non-spacing mark
N number
Nd decimal number
Nl letter number
P punctuation
Pc connector punctuation
Pd dash punctuation
Pe close punctuation
Pf final punctuation
Pi initial punctuation
Po other punctuation
Ps open punctuation
S symbol
Sc currency symbol
Sk modifier symbol
Sm math symbol
So other symbol
Z separator
Zl line separator
Zp paragraph separator
Zs space separator
\D not \d VIM
\W not \w VIM
This glossary contains terms related to disk storage subsystems. Many of these terms
are used in this manual.
Backup proxy The system designated as the off-host backup system. This is a host with NetWorker
client package installed and the VADP software.
changed block tracking A VMkernel feature that keeps track of the storage blocks of virtual machines as they
change over time. The VMkernel keeps track of block changes on virtual machines,
which enhances the backup process for applications that have been developed to take
advantage of VMware’s vStorage APIs.
checkpoint A system-wide backup, taken only after 24 hours (and at the time of the checkpoint
after that first 24 hours have elapsed), that is initiated within the vSphere Web Client
and captures a point in time snapshot of the EMC Backup and Recovery appliance for
disaster recovery purposes.
client Host on a network, such as a computer, workstation, or application server whose data
can be backed up and restored with the backup server software.
client file index Database maintained by the NetWorker server that tracks every database object, file,
or file system backed up. The NetWorker server maintains a single index file for each
client computer. The tracking information is purged from the index after the browse
time of each backup expires.
EMC Backup and The EMC Backup and Recovery appliance (or VMware Backup Appliance) is an
Recovery Appliance appliance that, when deployed, enables VMware backup and clone policy creation in
NMC, and enables the EMC Backup and Recovery plug-in in the vSphere Web Client to
assign VMs to those policies.
EMC Data Protection A browser that allows for file-level restores, where specific folders and files are
Restore Client restored to the original virtual machine on Windows and Linux virtual machines.
file-level restore (FLR) Allows local administrators of protected virtual machines to browse and mount backups
for the local machine. From these mounted backups, the administrator can then restore
individual files. FLR is accomplished using the EMC Data Protection Restore Client. See
“Using File Level Restore” on page 63 for additional information on FLR.
hotadd A transport mode where the backup related I/O happens internally through the ESX I/O
stack using SCSI hot-add technology. This provides better backup I/O rates than NBD/
NBDSSL.
inactivity timeout Time in minutes to wait before a client is considered to be unavailable for backup.
JAR (Java Archive) A file that contains compressed components needed for a Java applet or application.
managed application Program that can be monitored or administered, or both from the Console server.
media database Database that contains indexed entries of storage volume location and the life cycle
status of all data and volumes managed by the NetWorker server.
metadata VSS-defined information that is passed from the writer to the requestor. Metadata
includes the writer name, a list of VSS components to back up, a list of components to
exclude from the backup, and the methods to use for recovery. See writer and See VSS
component.
NBD A transport mode over LAN that is typically slower than hotadd mode. In NBD mode,
the CPU, memory and I/O load gets directly placed on the ESX hosting the production
VMs, since the backup data has to move through the same ESX and reach the proxy
over the network. NBD mode can be used either for physical or virtual proxy, and also
supports all storage types.
NBDSSL A transport mode that is the same as NBD except that the data transferred over the
network is encrypted. Data transfer in NBDSSL mode can therefore be slower and use
more CPU due to the additional load on the VADP host from SLL encryption/
decryption.
NetWorker administrator NetWorker server user who may add, change, or delete NetWorker server users.
NetWorker Management Software program that is used to manage NetWorker servers and clients. The NMC
Console (NMC) server also provides reporting and monitoring capabilities for all NetWorker processes.
NetWorker server Computer on a network that runs the NetWorker server software, contains the online
indexes, and provides backup and restore services to the clients and storage nodes on
the same network.
online indexes Databases located on the NetWorker server that contain all the information pertaining
to the client backups (client file index) and backup volumes (media index).
recover To restore data files from backup storage to a client and apply transaction (redo) logs
to the data to make it consistent with a given point-in-time.
SAN (storage area A transport mode that, when used, completely offloads the backup related CPU,
network) memory or I/O load on the virtual infrastructure. The backup I/O is fully offloaded to
the storage layer where the data is read directly from the SAN or iSCSI LUN. SAN
mode requires a physical proxy.
save NetWorker command that backs up client files to backup media volumes and makes
data entries in the online index.
save set 1. Group of tiles or a file system copied to storage media by a backup or snapshot
rollover operation.
2. NetWorker media database record for a specific backup or rollover.
single step backup and See image level backup and recovery.
recovery
storage node Computer that manages physically attached storage devices or libraries, whose backup
operations are administered from the controlling NetWorker server. Typically a
“remote” storage node that resides on a host other than the NetWorker server.
update enabler Code that updates software from a previous release. It expires after a fixed period of
time.
VADP An acronym for vStorage APIs for Data Protection. VADP enables backup software to
perform centralized virtual machine backups without the disruption and overhead of
running backup tasks from inside each virtual machineVADP supersedes the VCB
framework for VMware backups.
vCenter An infrastructure management tool that provides a central point for configuring,
provisioning, and managing virtualized IT environments, and is part of the VMware
Virtual Infrastructure package.
Virtual machine Software that creates a virtualized environment between the computer platform and its
operating system, so that the end user can install and operate software on an abstract
machine.
VMDK Virtual Machine Disk (VMDK) is a file or set of files that appears as a physical disk drive
to a guest operating system. These files can be on the host machine or on a remote file
system. These files are commonly called VMDK files because of the .vmdk extension
that VMware adds to these files.
VMware Backup The VMware Backup Appliance (or EMC Backup and Recovery appliance) is an
Appliance appliance that, when deployed, enables VMware backup and clone policy creation in
NMC, and enables the EMC Backup and Recovery plug-in in the vSphere Web Client to
assign VMs to those policies.
VMware Tools Installed inside each virtual machine, VMware Tools enhance virtual machine
performance and add additional backup-related functionality.
VSS (Volume Shadow Microsoft technology that creates a point-in-time snapshot of a disk volume.
Copy Service) NetWorker software backs up data from the snapshot. This allows applications to
continue to write data during the backup operation, and ensures that open files are not
omitted.
writer Database, system service, or application code that works with VSS to provide metadata
about what to back up and how to handle VSS components and applications during
backup and restore. See VSS (Volume Shadow Copy Service).