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Symantec NetBackupPureDisk™ NetBackup 5000Product Description Guide
Release 6.6.0.2
Publication release 6.6.0.2, revision 1
The software described in this book is furnished under a license agreement andmay be usedonly in accordance with the terms of the agreement.
Documentation version: 6.6.0.2, revision 1
PN: 21058199
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Symantec Corporation350 Ellis StreetMountain View, CA 94043
http://www.symantec.com
Printed in the United States of America.
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■ Premium service offerings that include Account Management Services
For information about Symantec’s support offerings, you can visit our Web siteat the following URL:
www.symantec.com/business/support/
All support services will be delivered in accordance with your support agreementand the then-current enterprise technical support policy.
Contacting Technical SupportCustomers with a current support agreement may access Technical Supportinformation at the following URL:
www.symantec.com/business/support/
Before contacting Technical Support, make sure you have satisfied the systemrequirements that are listed in your product documentation. Also, you should beat the computer onwhich theproblemoccurred, in case it is necessary to replicatethe problem.
When you contact Technical Support, please have the following informationavailable:
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■ Hardware information
■ Available memory, disk space, and NIC information
■ Operating system
■ Version and patch level
■ Network topology
■ Router, gateway, and IP address information
■ Problem description:
■ Error messages and log files
■ Troubleshooting that was performed before contacting Symantec
■ Recent software configuration changes and network changes
Licensing and registrationIf yourSymantecproduct requires registrationor a licensekey, access our technicalsupport Web page at the following URL:
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Customer Service is available to assist with non-technical questions, such as thefollowing types of issues:
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Support agreement resourcesIf youwant to contact Symantec regarding an existing support agreement, pleasecontact the support agreement administration team for your region as follows:
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semea@symantec.comEurope, Middle-East, and Africa
supportsolutions@symantec.comNorth America and Latin America
Technical Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Chapter 1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Purpose .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Product and version numbers ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Intended audience .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Product Features ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10Product configuration information .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Chapter 2 Hardware . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Front panel ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Rear panel ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15Ports ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16Indicators ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17Hardware structure ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19Chassis ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20Disk module functions .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21Disk module components ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21Disk type, dimensions, capacity, and rotational speed .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22System disk .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22Mainboard .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23RAID card .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24Network interface card .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25Expansion board .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26Fan module ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27Power entry modules ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29Cables ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Chapter 3 Technical specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
About technical specifications .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33Reliability specifications .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33Power safety specifications .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34Power consumption parameters ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34Dimensions and weight ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Contents
Temperature and humidity requirements ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35Heat dissipation and air flow requirements ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36Noise specifications .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37Protocol standard compliance .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37Safety and EMC standards compliance .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37Industrial standards compliance .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38Certifications .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Appendix A Acronyms and abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Acronyms and abbreviations .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Contents8
Introduction
This chapter includes the following topics:
■ Purpose
■ Product and version numbers
■ Intended audience
■ Product Features
■ Product configuration information
PurposeThis document introduces the functions, features, hardware, managementsoftware, and technical specifications of the NetBackup 5000.
Product and version numbersTable 1-1 lists the product versions that are related to this document.
Table 1-1 Related versions
VersionProduct name
Release 6.6.0.2NetBackup 5000
Intended audienceThis document is intended for the following individuals:
■ Management and maintenance engineers
1Chapter
■ Technical Support Engineers
Product FeaturesThe NetBackup 5000 has the following features:
■ Large capacityA single node supports a maximum of 16-TB capacity , and two nodes supporta maximum of 32-TB capacity .
■ Smooth expansionThe NetBackup 5000 supports online single-node expansion to improve thestorage capacity and backup performance of the whole system. Two nodessupport a maximum of 32-TB capacity .
■ High reliabilityThe key components such as fans and power supplies are redundant. Thebackup data is protected through RAID 6. Multiple disaster recovery policiesare provided to prevent data loss resulting from damaged devices. Global hotspare disks are provided. If a disk fails, a hot spare disk is used to replace thefaulty disk and reconstruct the backup data.
■ High securityThe NetBackup 5000 provides the data encryption function to preventunauthorized data access, thus improving data security.
■ Easy managementWith the Web-based management interface, the NetBackup 5000 can easilyback up and recover data,monitor system software andhardware, andmanagefault alarms.
■ Energy savingsThe NetBackup 5000 is configured with high-efficiency power entry modules(PEMs), fanswith intelligent speed control technology, and optional low-powercentral processing units (CPUs). These allow the NetBackup 5000 to meet theusers' requirements on low consumption. The NetBackup 5000 uses theintelligent dissipation technology to reduce the power consumption duringthe normal running of the device. The NetBackup 5000 uses the optimizedvent to reduce the noise and the power consumption of the device.
Product configuration informationThis section describes the configuration information of the NetBackup 5000.
Table 1-2 lists the major components of the NetBackup 5000.
IntroductionProduct Features
10
Table 1-2 System components
DescriptionItem
Two Intel E5405 CPUsCPU
■ Eight memory slots
■ 24 GB DDR2 memory in standard configuration
Memory
■ Supporting a maximum of 24 SATA disks, each of which is 1TB
■ Using two disks as the system disks that are configured inRAID 1
■ Configuring data disks in RAID 6
Storage device
LSI MegaRAID card is the disk management deviceDisk management
Four 1 GB Ethernet backup network portsServer ports
■ One FE management network port
■ One VGA port
■ Two USB 2.0 ports
■ One system serial port
Other I/O ports
■ Redundant PEMs and fan modules
■ Hot-pluggable disk modules and PEMs
Reliability design
11IntroductionProduct configuration information
IntroductionProduct configuration information
12
Hardware
This chapter includes the following topics:
■ Front panel
■ Rear panel
■ Ports
■ Indicators
■ Hardware structure
■ Chassis
■ Disk module functions
■ Disk module components
■ Disk type, dimensions, capacity, and rotational speed
■ System disk
■ Mainboard
■ RAID card
■ Network interface card
■ Expansion board
■ Fan module
■ Power entry modules
■ Cables
2Chapter
Front panelThis section describes the front view and indicators of the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 2-1 shows the front view of the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 2-1 Front view of NetBackup 5000
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1. Disk handle
2. Disk module
3. System power indicator
4. System alarm indicator
5. System location indicator
6. Subrack handle
7. Disk read-write indicator
8. Disk online indicator
From right to left and from bottom to top, the 24 slots in the NetBackup 5000 arelettered from a to x. The slot on the lower right of the NetBackup 5000 is slot a.
Figure 2-2 shows the disk slots.
HardwareFront panel
14
Figure 2-2 Disk slots of the NetBackup 5000
Slot aSlot bSlot cSlot dSlot eSlot f
Slot g
Slot lSlot rSlot x
Slot s Slot m
The system disk that contains the OS of the NetBackup 5000 is installed in slot aand slot b.
Rear panelThis section describes the review view and indicators of the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 2-3 shows the rear view of the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 2-3 Rear view of the NetBackup 5000
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141617
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1. Active indicator of the service network port
2. Link indicator of the service network port
3. System power switch
4. System reset switch
15HardwareRear panel
5. RAID card panel
6. Service network port
7. Link indicator of the management network port
8. Management network port
9. Active indicator of the management network port
10. Service network port
11. Active indicator of the service network port
12. Link indicator of the service network port
13. VGA port
14. System serial port
15. USB 2.0 port
16. Power module ejector lever
17. Power running and power alarm indicator
18. Power-fan module
19. Power module handle
20. Power socket
21. Power module
22. Filler panel of the power module
PortsThis section describes the ports of the NetBackup 5000.
Table 2-1 lists the ports on the NetBackup 5000.
Table 2-1 NetBackup 5000 ports
DescriptionPort
Manages and maintains the NetBackup 5000 through thenetwork.
Management network port
Connects the NetBackup 5000 to the application server(AS). Data in the AS is backed up and recovered to theNetBackup 5000 through the service network port.
Service network port
Connects the NetBackup 5000 to a display.VGA port
HardwarePorts
16
Table 2-1 NetBackup 5000 ports (continued)
DescriptionPort
Expands the functions of the operating system (OS) andthird-party software. Should only be used at the directionof Symantec Technical Support.
System serial port
Connects the mouse, keyboard, and other USB 2.0 devices(such as the USB driver) to the NetBackup 5000.
USB 2.0 port
IndicatorsThis section describes the indicators on the NetBackup 5000. You can determinethe running status of the NetBackup 5000 by observing the indicators.
Table 2-2 lists the indicators on the NetBackup 5000.
Table 2-2 NetBackup 5000 indicators
DescriptionStatusColorIndicatorLocation
The device is turned on .OnGreenSystem powerindicator
Chassis
The device is not turned on .Off-System powerindicator
Chassis
The device is out of server or analarm is generated.
OnRedSystem alarmindicator
Chassis
The device operates properly.Off-System alarmindicator
Chassis
A device is located.OnOrangeSystemlocationindicator
Chassis
The disk is turned on properly.OnGreenDisk onlineindicator
Disk module
An alarm is generated on the disk.OnRedDisk onlineindicator
Disk module
The disk is not turned on .Off-Disk onlineindicator
Disk module
Data is being transmitted.BlinkingGreenDisk read andwrite indicator
Disk module
17HardwareIndicators
Table 2-2 NetBackup 5000 indicators (continued)
DescriptionStatusColorIndicatorLocation
No data is being transmitted.Off-Disk read andwrite indicator
Disk module
The power is normal.OnGreenPowerrunningand alarmindicator
Powermodule
The AC power is normal but thedevice is not turned on .
BlinkingGreenPowerrunningand alarmindicator
Powermodule
An alarm is generated on the powermodule.
OnOrangePowerrunningand alarmindicator
Powermodule
The power module is not turned on .Off-Powerrunningand alarmindicator
Powermodule
The fan is running properly.OnGreenFan runningand alarmindicator
Mainboard
An alarm is generated on the fan.OnRedFan runningand alarmindicator
Mainboard
The link of themanagement networkport is normal.
OnGreenLink indicatorof themanagementnetwork port
Rear panel
No link.Off-Link indicatorof themanagementnetwork port
Rear panel
Data is being transmitted.BlinkingYellowActiveindicator ofthemanagementnetwork port
Rear panel
HardwareIndicators
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Table 2-2 NetBackup 5000 indicators (continued)
DescriptionStatusColorIndicatorLocation
No data is being transmitted.Off-Activeindicator ofthemanagementnetwork port
Rear panel
The speed of the data transmissionbetween theNetBackup 5000 and theAS is 1000 Mbit/s.
OnGreenLink indicatorof the servicenetwork port
Rear panel
The speed of the data transmissionbetween theNetBackup 5000 and theAS is 100 Mbit/s.
OnOrangeLink indicatorof the servicenetwork port
Rear panel
The speed of the data transmissionbetween theNetBackup 5000 and theAS is 10 Mbit/s or no link.
Off-Link indicatorof the servicenetwork port
Rear panel
Data is being transmitted.BlinkingYellowActiveindicator ofthe servicenetwork port
Rear panel
No data is being transmitted.Off-Activeindicator ofthe servicenetwork port
Rear panel
Hardware structureThe NetBackup 5000 uses the modular structure and is composed of eight parts.
The disk module is in the front of the chassis. The fan module, mainboard, andexpansion board are in the middle of the chassis. The power module is in the rearof the chassis.
TheRAIDcard andNICare configured in thePCIe expansion slots of theNetBackup5000.
Figure 2-4 shows the overall structure of the NetBackup 5000.
19HardwareHardware structure
Figure 2-4 Overall structure of the NetBackup 5000
1. Chassis
2. Disk module
3. Power module
4. Fan module
5. Expansion board
6. Mainboard
7. NIC
8. RAID card
ChassisThe chassis provides the following functions:
HardwareChassis
20
■ Integrates all modules into one environment
■ Facilitates the heat dissipation for all modules through the venting and holesin the chassis
Figure 2-5 shows the appearance of the chassis.
Figure 2-5 Appearance of the chassis
Disk module functionsThe disk module has the following functions:
■ Hosting the OS. The OS of the NetBackup 5000 is installed on the system diskthat is in slot a and slot b.
■ Providing storage capacity. The NetBackup 5000 stores the system data onthe systemdisk. TheNetBackup 5000 uses the remaining unoccupied capacityon the system disk for backup storage.
Disk module componentsA disk module consists of the handle, disk tray, SATA disk, and SATA conversionboard.
Figure 2-6 shows the SATA disk module
21HardwareDisk module functions
Figure 2-6 Disk module
1. Disk handle
2. Disk tray
3. SATA disk
4. SAS conversion board
Disk type, dimensions, capacity, and rotational speedThe NetBackup 5000 supports a maximum of 24 hot-pluggable SATA disks.
The height, width, and depth of the NetBackup 5000 are 175 mm, 440 mm, and685 mm respectively.
The NetBackup 5000 supports SATA disks with the capacity of 1 TB at therotational speed of 7200 rpm.
System diskThe disk in slot a and slot b are the system disks. See Figure 2-2 on page 15. forthe location of slot a and slot b.
■ Donot remove or insert the systemdisks. These actions candamage the systemdata.
■ Do not use the system disks as hot spare disks.
HardwareDisk type, dimensions, capacity, and rotational speed
22
MainboardThemainboard is in themiddle of theNetBackup5000 chassis. It processes servicesand provides inband and outband management functions.
The following external ports and internal ports reside on the mainboard:
■ One management network port
■ Two service network ports
■ One VGA port
■ One system serial port
■ Two USB 2.0 ports
■ Two PCIe x8 slots that are used to connect the RAID card and NIC
Figure 2-7 shows the mainboard of the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 2-7 NetBackup 5000 mainboard
1. System power switch
2. System reset switch
3. PCIe x8 expansion slot (used to connect the RAID card)
4. PCIe x8 expansion slot (used to connect the NIC)
23HardwareMainboard
5. Management network port
6. Service network port
7. VGA port
8. System serial port
9. USB 2.0 port
10. Memory slot
11. CPU cooling fin
RAID cardThe redundant array of independent disks (RAID) controller (hereinafter referredto as the RAID card) is installed in the PCIe slot of the NetBackup 5000. The RAIDcard connectswith themini serial-attached SCSI (mini SAS) port of the expansionboard through two external mini SAS connectors. This allows the RAID cardsupports up to eight SAS ports.
The RAID card is installed in the PCIe slot that is furthest from the memory. SeeFigure 2-7 on page 23. for the location of the RAID card.
The LSI MegaRAID card is installed in the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 2-8 shows the appearance of the RAID card.
Figure 2-8 Appearance of RAID card
The RAID card has the following features:
■ Flexible SAS/SATA disk array structure
■ Supports RAID 1 and RAID 6 with integrating RAID functions to avoid extraconsumption on the CUP
HardwareRAID card
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■ Connects the SAS/SATA disks through the advanced serial technology
■ A battery Backup Unit (BBU), which provides power failure protection
Network interface cardThe network interface card (NIC) is installed in the PCIe slot. It connects theNetBackup 5000 to the network switch through Ethernet cables.
The NetBackup 5000 is configured with the dual-port Intel® Pro/1000 PT seriesNIC. It is connected to the GE switch through Ethernet Cables.
The dual-port NIC is a GENIC, and the type of the port is RJ45. The network cableis a category 5 unshielded twisted-pair cable.
Figure 2-9 shows the panel of the dual-port GE NIC.
Figure 2-9 NIC panel
Table 2-3 shows the indicators of the dual-port GE NIC.
Table 2-3 NIC indicators
DescriptionStatusColorIndicator
Data is being transmitted.BlinkingGreenActiveindicator
No data is being transmitted.OnGreenActiveindicator
The data transmission rate is 1000Mbit/s.
OnOrangeLinkindicator
25HardwareNetwork interface card
Table 2-3 NIC indicators (continued)
DescriptionStatusColorIndicator
The data transmission rate is 100Mbit/s.
OnGreenLinkindicator
The data transmission rate is 10Mbit/s or the link is down.
Off-Linkindicator
The NIC provides the following performance features:
■ High performance and support for 10/100/1000 Mbit/s Ethernet connection
■ Specialized I/O bandwidth for the dense networking applications through theexpandable PCIe port
■ A virtual connection and reduced I/O overhead in the virtual environment,which improves the performance of the entire system
Expansion boardThe expansion board is in the middle of the NetBackup 5000 chassis. It connectsto themainboard through amini SAS cable. It supports expansion to 24 SASportsthat are connected to 24 SATA disks.
Figure 2-10 shows the expansion board of the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 2-10 Expansion board
The expansion board of the NetBackup 5000 has the following advantages:
■ TheNetBackup5000expansionboard requires fewer cables than the traditionalsolution of integrating the servermainboardwith theHBA. That improves thereliability and the stability of the device.
HardwareExpansion board
26
■ Compared with the traditional solution of installing a just a bunch of disks(JBOD)groupoutside the server, theNetBackup5000expansionboard simplifiesthe device installation and maintenance. That improves manageability.
Fan moduleThe fan module provides the heat dissipation function for the NetBackup 5000.
The NetBackup 5000 chassis is configured with six fan modules. The six fanmodules are arranged in two lines, and each line contains three fanmodules. Theyare lettered from a to f, as shown in Figure 2-11. The NetBackup 5000 continuesto function even if a fan module fails.
Figure 2-11 Fan module of the NetBackup 5000
a
c
e
b
d
f
In Figure 2-11, a, c, and e are close to the mainboard. Fan modules b, d, and f areclose to the disk module.
Figure 2-12 shows a fan module of the NetBackup 5000.
27HardwareFan module
Figure 2-12 Single fan module
1 2
1. Fan module handle
2. Fan module ejector lever
The fan running and alarm indicator is located on themainboard of theNetBackup5000. See Table 2-2 on page 17. for a listing of the indicators for the fan module.
The fan module is located in the middle of a chassis. You need to open the middlecover of the chassis before you can replace the fanmodule. Figure 2-13 shows themiddle cover and rear cover of the chassis.
HardwareFan module
28
Figure 2-13 Middle and rear chassis cover
1
2
1. Middle cover of the chassis
2. Rear cover of the chassis
Power entry modulesThe power entry modules (PEM) provide power for the NetBackup 5000.
The PEM supplies power for the NetBackup 5000 in the ranges of 100 VAC to 127V AC or 200 V AC to 240 V AC. That assumes the ambient temperature rangesfrom 0° C to 49° C.
The rear chassis of the NetBackup 5000 provides two slots for the PEM, and thetwo PEMs are configured in 1+1 redundancy mode.
A single PEM allows the NetBackup 5000 to work normally in maximum powerconsumption mode. When two PEMs are installed, they provide a 1+1load-balancing power system. That ensures the normal running of the systemwhen one PEM is faulty. The PEMs are hot-pluggable.
Figure 2-14 shows the AC PEM of the NetBackup 5000.
29HardwarePower entry modules
Figure 2-14 AC PEM
1 2 3 4 5
1. Handle of the PEM
2. Power-fan module
3. Power running and alarm indicator
4. Power socket
5. Ejector lever of the PEM
See Table 2-2 on page 17. for a list of the indicators for the PEM.
CablesTable 2-4 describes the cables that the NetBackup 5000 uses.
Table 2-4 NetBackup 5000 cables
DescriptionCable
Connects the grounding hooks of theNetBackup 5000 to the grounding terminalof the cabinet that is installed with theNetBackup 5000.
Grounding cable
Connects the power socket of theNetBackup5000 to the power socket of the equipmentroom.
AC power cable
Connects the USB port of the NetBackup5000 to the USB port of the KVM controller.
KVM cable
Connects the network port of theNetBackup5000 to the network.
Network cable
HardwareCables
30
Table 2-4 NetBackup 5000 cables (continued)
DescriptionCable
Connects the serial port of the NetBackup5000 to the serial port of the maintenanceterminal.
Serial cable
Connects the Mini SAS connector of theRAID card to the Mini SAS port of theexpander board.
Mini SAS cable
31HardwareCables
HardwareCables
32
Technical specifications
This chapter includes the following topics:
■ About technical specifications
■ Reliability specifications
■ Power safety specifications
■ Power consumption parameters
■ Dimensions and weight
■ Temperature and humidity requirements
■ Heat dissipation and air flow requirements
■ Noise specifications
■ Protocol standard compliance
■ Safety and EMC standards compliance
■ Industrial standards compliance
■ Certifications
About technical specificationsThis section details the technical specifications of the NetBackup 5000.
Reliability specificationsTable 3-1 lists the reliability parameters of the NetBackup 5000.
3Chapter
Table 3-1 Reliability specifications
ValueParameter
> = 99.95%System availability
< 1 hourMean time to repair (MTTR)
Power safety specificationsTheNetBackup 5000 is configuredwith twoPEMs and one filler panel. It supports1+1 redundancy backup. When selecting the installation site of the NetBackup5000, consider the following factors:
■ AC power grounding protection.A grounding cable must be connected to the NetBackup 5000.
■ Overcurrent and overload protection.Circuits and related breakers must have power guarantee and protectionagainst overload.Separate the power supply fromapower supplywithheavypower distributionload. For example, the power supply of the air-conditioner engine, elevatorengine, factory engine. That helps prevent possible damage to the NetBackup5000.
Power consumption parametersTable 3-2 lists the power consumption parameters of the NetBackup 5000.
Table 3-2 NetBackup 5000 power consumption parameters
ValueSub-typeType
< 500 WPower consumption in theoperating mode.
System power consumption
100 V to 127 V, 200 V to 240V
Range of the input AC powervoltage
Power parameters
47 Hz to 63 HzRange of the input voltagefrequency
Power parameters
The system power consumption was calculated based a NetBackup 5000configurationwith twenty-four 1TBSATAdisks, six 4-GBmemoryDIMMs. It alsoassumes that the device is placed in the environmentwith thenormal temperature(25° C).
Technical specificationsPower safety specifications
34
Dimensions and weightTable 3-3 lists the dimensions and weight of the NetBackup 5000.
Table 3-3 NetBackup 5000 dimensions and weight
ValueSub-typeType
43.1 kgMaximum weightWeight
22.6 kgWeight of the emptysubrack
Weight
49 kgTransport weightWeight
175 mmHeightDimensions
440 mmWidthDimensions
685 mmDepthDimensions
Maximum weight is calculated based on the following configuration of theNetBackup 5000: twenty-four 1 TB SATA disks, two PEMs, six 4-GB memoryDIMMs, a RAID card, and a network interface card (NIC).
The weight of the empty subrack is the weight of the NetBackup 5000 withoutany of the subcomponents inside.
Transport weight is the sum of the maximum weight of the NetBackup 5000 andshipping materials.
Temperature and humidity requirementsTable 3-4 lists the requirements of the NetBackup 5000 on the temperature andhumidity.
Table 3-4 NetBackup 5000 temperature and humidity requirements
ValueParameterCondition
5° C to 35° COperating temperatureTemperature
-30° C to +60° CNon-operating temperatureTemperature
-30° C to +60° CTransport temperatureTemperature
10° C / hourTemperature gradientTemperature
5% RH to 85% RMOperating humidityRelative humidity
35Technical specificationsDimensions and weight
Table 3-4 NetBackup 5000 temperature and humidity requirements(continued)
ValueParameterCondition
5% RH to 95% RMNon-operating humidityRelative humidity
5% RH to 95% RMTransport humidityRelative humidity
Heat dissipation and air flow requirementsThe NetBackup 5000 uses the heat dissipation mode of “front in and rear out”.The cool air enters from the gaps between the hard disks at the front and passesthrough the backplane into themainboard area. The air that enters the unit coolsdown the mainboard and the expander board and the fans discharge the air. Thebuilt-in fans of the PEMs dissipate the heat of the PEMs.
The entire heat dissipation system consists of six fan modules. When one fanmodule is faulty, the other five fan modules can satisfy the heat dissipationrequirement of the fully runningNetBackup 5000. That assumes an environmenttemperature of 5° C to 35° C.
Figure 3-1 shows the air flow of the NetBackup 5000.
Figure 3-1 Air flow in the NetBackup 5000
Technical specificationsHeat dissipation and air flow requirements
36
Noise specificationsTable3-5 lists themaximumnoise theNetBackup5000generateswhen theambienttemperature is 23° C.
Table 3-5 NetBackup 5000 noise specifications
Maximum noiseParameter
65.8 dBVoice pressure
Protocol standard complianceTable 3-6 lists the protocol standards the NetBackup 5000 follows.
Table 3-6 NetBackup 5000 protocol standard compliance
StandardName
Serial Attached SCSI-1.1 (SAS-1.1)
SFF 8087 Internal Mini SAS Cable Assembly
SAS
Serial ATA Specification 2.5SATA
PCI Express Base Specification 1.0aPCIe
PCI Local Bus Specification 2.3PCI
RFC2578 (SNMP v2)SNMP trap
Intelligent Platform Management Interface 2.0IPMI
Safety and EMC standards complianceTable 3-7 lists the safety and EMC standards with which the NetBackup 5000complies.
Table 3-7 NetBackup 5000 safety and EMC standards compliance
VersionStandard
UL 1950Safety and EMC standard in North America
UL 60950Safety and EMC standard in North America
LVD Directive 2006/95/ECEuropean safety regulation
37Technical specificationsNoise specifications
Table 3-7 NetBackup 5000 safety and EMC standards compliance (continued)
VersionStandard
EN 60950European safety standard
FCC, 47 CFR Part 15, Subpart BUSA EMC standard
EMC Directive 2004/108/ECEuropean EMC regulation
EN 55022: 2006+A1European EMC standard
EN 55024: 1998+A1+A2European EMC standard
EN 61000-3-2: 2006European EMC standard
EN 61000-3-3: 1995+A1+A2European EMC standard
Industrial standards complianceTable 3-8 lists the industry standards with which the NetBackup 5000 complies.
Table 3-8 NetBackup 5000 industrial standards compliance
VersionStandard
IEEE 802.3Ethernet
IEEE 802.3uFast ethernet
IEEE 802.3zGigabit ethernet
IEEE 1149.1-2001IEEE standard test access interface andboundary-scan architecture
IEC 812Procedure for failure modes and effectsanalysis (FMEA)
IEC 863Reliability, maintainability, and availabilitystandard
ECMA TR/70Environmental protection
CertificationsTable 3-9 lists the certifications that the NetBackup 5000 received.
Technical specificationsIndustrial standards compliance
38
Table 3-9 NetBackup 5000 certifications
DescriptionCertification
The IEC System for Conformity Testing to Standards for Safety ofElectrical Equipment (referred to as the IECEE) is based on the useof specific IEC standards for electrical equipment. The CB Schemeis applicable to electrical equipment within the scope of IECstandards for safety accepted for use in the IECEE. The Schemebecomes operative for such standards as soon as at least oneNational Certification Body has declared their recognition of CBTest Certificates. The purpose of the CB Scheme is to eliminate theinternational trade protection that is caused by the differentcertifications and standards of different nations.
CB
ChinaCompulsory Certification (CCC)mainly involves the productsrelated to life and health of human, animals, and plants,environmental protection, and public security.
CCC
European Union Notice: Products that bear the Conformity withEuropean (CE)markingcomplywith theEMCDirective (89/336/EEC)and the Low Voltage Directive (73/23/EEC) issued by theCommission of the European Union.
CE
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Part 15 is acommon testing standard formost electronic equipment. Thedevicecomplies with the requirements and standards for Class A DigitalDevice.
FCC
Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. (UL) is a nonprofit product safetytest and certification institute.
UL
Restriction of the Use of Certain Hazardous Substances (RoHS) isa set of environmental protection instructions issued by theEuropean Union in 2003. It is used to manage the environmentalimpacts exertedwhen electrical and electronic goods are producedand discarded. RoHS defines the maximum hazardous substancesthat are allowed during good production.
RoHS
The committee consisting of the commerce department, financedepartment, and economy planning department of Saudi Arabiastipulates thatwhen the products that are listed in the certificationare exported to SaudiArabia, the exporters canpass theCustomersonly after they obtain the authorized COC or ICCP RLC.
COC
39Technical specificationsCertifications
Table 3-9 NetBackup 5000 certifications (continued)
DescriptionCertification
According to the LawonConsumerRights Protection on7Feb1992,the consumables exported to Russia must meet the requirementson safety, electromagnetism compatibility, and sanitation.Meanwhile, according to the Law On Certification of Goods andServices adoptedon10 June1993, products should obtain theGOST.
GOST
Technical specificationsCertifications
40
Acronyms andabbreviations
This appendix includes the following topics:
■ Acronyms and abbreviations
Acronyms and abbreviationsTable A-1 lists the acronyms and abbreviations that are used in this manual.
Table A-1 Acronyms and Abbreviations
DefinitionAcronyms orabbreviation
Basic Input/Output SystemBIOS
Baseboard Management ControllerBMC
Backup Battery UnitBBU
Central processing unitCPU
Dynamic Host Configuration ProtocolDHCP
Electro Magnetic InterferenceEMI
Fully Buffered-DIMMFB-DIMM
Fiber ChannelFC
Gigabit EthernetGE
Graphic user interfaceGUI
AAppendix
Table A-1 Acronyms and Abbreviations (continued)
DefinitionAcronyms orabbreviation
Host bus adapterHBA
Internet small computer systems interfaceiSCSI
Keyboard Video MouseKVM
Line CardLC
Link Security ProtocolLinkSec
Mean Time To RepairMTTR
NetBackupNBU
Peripheral Component Interconnect ExpressPCI-E
Redundant Array of Independent DisksRAID
Storage area networkSAN
Serial Attached SCSISAS
Serial Advanced Technology AttachmentSATA
Storage management initiative specificationSMI-S
Simple Network Management ProtocolSNMP
Video Graphics ArrayVGA
Acronyms and abbreviationsAcronyms and abbreviations
42
absolute path The location of a given file or directory on a file system regardless of the currentworking directory.
ACL (access control list) The information that identifies specific users or groups and their access privilegesfor a particular file or directory.
active agent The PureDisk software that is enabled for use within a PureDisk environment.The PureDisk “agent” (the software) is installed on “clients” (the hardware).
active node The nodes in a high availability cluster on which services are running.
Agent Files and Folders
data selection
A collection of files, folders, or directories to be backed up. PureDisk creates thisdata selection automatically when you perform a full system backup.
All-in-one storage pool A PureDisk storage pool with all PureDisk services installed on one node.
alternate client A client other than the source client that receives restored files. If the data is notrestored to the original client, the client that is designated to receive the data isthe alternate client.
ATOP (All Through One
Port)
See single-port communication.
attended installation An installation that requires active interaction with a person.
authentication broker The process that communicates with a root broker to verify user identities.
backup A process where selected files on a computer drive are copied and stored on areliable form of media.
backup operator A user or a group of users with the rights to initiate client backups.
backup streams Aconnectionbetween thePureDisk client and thePureDisk content router throughwhich data is sent. In case of multistreaming, the client establishes multipleconnections to the same content router and distributes the total volume of backupdata over all available connections. Multistreamed backups (vs. single streamed)increase the aggregated throughput from client to content router, thus allowingbackups to finish sooner.
backup window The timeframe in which backups are permitted.
CA (Certificate
Authority)
A trusted third-party organization or company that issues digital certificates thatare used to create digital signatures and public-private key pairs. The role of theCA in this process is to guarantee that the entity granting the unique certificate
Glossary
is, in fact, who it claims to be. Thismeans that the CA usually has an arrangementwith the requesting entity to confirm a claimed identity. CAs are a criticalcomponent in data security and electronic commerce because they guarantee thatthe two parties exchanging information are really who they claim to be.
central reporting A PureDisk feature in which one or more storage pools send reporting data toanother storage pool.
CIFS (Common Internet
File System)
A protocol that defines a standard for remote file access. CIFS allows users withdifferent platforms and computers can share files.
cluster A set of hosts (each termed a node) that share a set of disks and are connected bya set of redundant heartbeat networks.
common root A shared directory structure. Common root is a concept applicable to data restore.When the user restores the data, there is a “Do not restore common root” option.The user can enable or disable the feature.
configuration files The files that definePureDisk’smethods andassumptions.A customconfigurationfile for each component is created automatically by the storage pool authority. Itis pushed out to the component for which this file is created. If you need to tuneany of the default PureDisk processes, you can edit the configuration files.
content router A service that stores and retrieves file content. PureDisk breaks larger files intosegments and distributes the segments across the available content routers.
content router garbage
collection
The process of removing unneeded data objects and files from the content router.Thisworkflow removes files andobjects that cannot be removedduring thenormaldata removal process.
CSV (comma-separated
variable) file
A text file that uses commas as data delimiters.
data lock password An option that allows the administrator to require users to enter a passwordbefore they perform certain operations. These operations include any operationthat exposes directory names, directory content, file names, or file content.
data mining The process of collecting information about all the files in a PureDisk storagepool.
data removal The process of removing old and unneeded versions of the files that PureDiskpreviously backed up.
data selection A list of files, directories, or other data objects that you want PureDisk to backup. They can be used to specify files and folders, databases, system information,and other types of data. After a data selection is created, it can be backed upautomatically (through a policy) or on demand (initiated by a backup operator).
Glossary44
data selection removal The process of removing the entire data selection (including file content data)from the content router. This process also removes the associated metadatainformation from the metabase engine.
data selection template Apattern that is used for creating the list of files, directories, or other data objectsfor PureDisk to back up. Templates can be developed that include or excludecertain file types, or that back up a specific directory. PureDisk includes somedefault data selection templates.
deduplication The process of dividing a file into segments, comparing each segment with thepreviously stored file segments, and then storing only the unique segments.Deduplication significantly reduces the amount of data that is stored becauseredundant data is replaced with a pointer to the unique data copy.
department A logical collection of client systems.
disabled data selection A data selection that PureDisk ignores when it performs policy-based actions. Ifa policy includes deactivated data objects, the policy does not include them whenthe policy runs.
disabled policy Apolicy that exists in thePureDisk environment but that is currentlynot activated.No jobs are created for this policy.
disaster recovery The process of restoring information from a backup after the original data waslost (due to a disaster) or deleted.
DMP (dynamic
multipathing)
An input/output (I/O) enhancement technique that balances I/O across manyavailable paths from the computer to the storage device to improve performanceand availability.
enabled data selection An activated list of files, directories, or other data objects that PureDisk uses forback ups and other policy-based actions.
enabled policy A policy that exists in the PureDisk environment that is currently activated andrun according to a schedule. PureDisk automatically creates jobs to run this policy.
escalation action A defined procedure that takes place when an event occurs.
event A significant occurrence in a systemor application that a programdetects. Eventstypically trigger actions, such as sending a user notification or adding a log entry.
event escalation action A defined procedure that takes place when a specific notable occurrence takesplace.
exclude files A listing of files or file patterns that are not included in a data selection.
exclusion rules The means by which PureDisk determines the files or folders that should not bepart of a given data selection. See also inclusion rules.
expert installation
method
The process of loading the PDLinux software onto a computer withmultiple harddrives where none of the options is predefined.
45Glossary
external authentication A credential verification authority that resides on a computer that is not part ofa PureDisk storage pool.
failover The process of moving services from the active node in a cluster to a passive one.
file change rate The frequency with which files on a client system are modified.
file pattern A character sequence that includes wild cards and instructs PureDisk to selectmultiple files based on the character sequence.
file system browsing The ability to search through a graphic representation of a computer system’sfile structure.
Files and Folders data
selection
A data selection that is used to back up files, folders, and directories.
fingerprint A unique sequence of digits identifying a file or a file segment. The fingerprint ofa file or segment is computed from the file or segment’s content and is unique forthat file or segment.
folder pattern An absolute path that may contain wild cards and instructs PureDisk to selectfolders based on the character sequence.
FQDN (fully qualified
domain name)
An unambiguous domain name that specifies the exact location of a computerwithin the domain's hierarchy.
garbage collection The process of removing stale data or records from PureDisk that cannot beremoved during the normal data removal process.
HCL (hardware
compatibility list)
A document that indicates the various components that are known to work witha given software product.
heartbeat A signal sent at regular intervals to indicate that a host and its connections areoperating normally.
high availability A system or a resource that is continuously operational.
host address The TCP/IP address of a computer.
inactive agent A client computer that is registered to the storage pool authority, but which isnot yet acknowledged as part of the PureDisk environment.
include files A listing of files or file patterns that are included in a data selection.
inclusion rules The means by which PureDisk determines the files to consider as part of a givenbackup. See also exclusion rules.
inheritance The process of receiving attributes from a parent object, such as a template.
job An operation that has been scheduled for processing. Jobs contain source ordestination information, settings, and a schedule.
Glossary46
LDAP (Lightweight
Directory Access
Protocol)
A software protocol that enables anyone to locate organizations, individuals, andother resources such as files and devices in a network, whether on the Internetor on a corporate intranet. LDAP is a lightweight (smaller amount of code) versionofDirectoryAccess Protocol (DAP), which is part of X.500, a standard for directoryservices in a network.
location A logical grouping of one or more departments. A location does not need to be aphysical or a geographic location.
mapped network drive A persistent connection within Microsoft Windows to a shared directory on aremote server that is assigned a drive letter. The drive mapping may or may notsurvive a restart, depending on how it is configured.
mapping file A two-column file that lists both IP addresses and fully qualified domain names(FQDNs) for each node. Mapping files are used when redefining a PureDiskenvironment to use either FQDNs or IP addresses.
metabase A distributed database that contains all the metadata about the files that arebacked up by PureDisk.
metabase engine The service thatmaintains andmanages filemetadata information in themetabasedatabase. During backup, the PureDisk agent records all relevant metadatainformation (the file attributes) of each file it backs up. File attributes include thefile name, its location, its size, its type, and so on. The metabase engine storesthesemetadata records in its database. Themetabase enginemanages an inventoryof all files that are backed up.
metabase garbage
collection
The process of removing the stale, unneeded information from themetabase thatcannot be removed during the normal data removal process.
metabase server The service that redirects metabase queries to the correct metabase engine(s).Eachmetabase engine in the storagepool is responsible formanaging themetadatarecords from a group of agents. Queries for a file or files do not go directly to themetabase engine but instead are directed to the metabase server. The metabaseserver redirects the query to the metabase engine that manages the metadatarecords of the agent that made the query or to which the query is associated. Insome cases the metabase server may have to redirect the incoming query tomultiple metabase engines.
metadata Structural data describing the attributes of files on a disk.
Microsoft Exchange
data selection
A predefined data selection within PureDisk that backs up Microsoft Exchangeserver databases.
Microsoft SQL data
selection
A predefined data selection within PureDisk that backs up Microsoft SQL serverdatabases.
multinode storage pool A storage pool that includes more than one PDLinux server node and can beclustered.
47Glossary
multistreaming The process of establishing multiple connections to the content router for thepurposes of backing up data faster.
NetBackup export
engine
An optional service that allows backed up PureDisk Files and Folders dataselections to be exported to NetBackup. The NetBackup export engine does notexport other PureDisk data selection types.
network drive A directory on a remote server that is designated as shared.
node A computer in a storage pool that hosts PDLinux and other PureDisk services.
OpenLDAP (Open
Lightweight Directory
Access Protocol)
A network protocol that is designed to work on TCP/IP stacks. It extractsinformation fromahierarchical directory such asX.500. This software gives usersa single tool to find a particular piece of information. For example, a user can finda user name, an email address, security certificate, or other contact information.
Oracle data selection A predefined data selection within PureDisk that backs up Oracle databases.
parallel rerouting Theprocess of redistributingdata among the content routers in aPureDisk storagepool. All content routers are actively involved in the redistribution at the sametime.
passive node Anynode in ahighly available, clustered environment that is not runningPureDiskservices.
path The directory location of a given file or directory on a file system. Paths can beeither relative or absolute.
PDDO (PureDisk
deduplication option)
Aplug-in that uses the NetBackupOpenStorage API to enable NetBackup towritebackups to a PureDisk storage pool. All NetBackup data that is written to aPureDisk storage pool is deduplicated.
PDLinux (PureDisk
Linux)
The operating system that hosts the PureDisk application. Symantec developedPDLinux based on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.
policy A method for managing backup jobs and strategies. Policies contain settings forjobs.
policy escalation action A procedure that is defined to take place when a specific policy event (such as abackup failure) takes place.
private network A computer network that is accessible only by other servers, not by the generaluser base.
private NIC A network interface card that communicates to a private network.
public network A computer network that is accessible to the general user base.
public NIC A network interface card that communicates to a public network.
registration The process of enrolling with the storage pool authority.
Glossary48
relative path The directory location of a given file or directory on a file system that dependson the current working directory.
replication Theprocess of copying backed updata selections fromone storage pool to anotherstorage pool.
rerouting The process of redistributing data over all available content routers. When theprocess finishes, each content router stores a volume of data proportional to itsrelative capacity. Rerouting is necessary when a new content router is activated,or an existing content router is deactivated.
resource name The unique identifier for a service on a PureDisk node.
root broker The authentication authority in thenetwork. A root broker is localwhen it resideson the same physical computer as the PureDisk storage pool authority. A rootbroker is remotewhen it resides on a different PureDisk computer in the network.A root broker is externalwhen it does not reside on anyPureDisk computerwithinthe storage pool.
segment A piece of a file.
segmentation The process of breaking a file down into smaller pieces for backup.
segmentation threshold The maximum allowable size for a file fragment.
serial rerouting Theprocess of redistributingdata among the content routers in aPureDisk storagepool. Only one content router redistributes data at a time.
service A PureDisk software component. The possible services are as follows: contentrouter,metabase engine,metabase server, storage pool authority, andNetBackupexport engine.
service address The TCP/IP address associated with a service group.
service group A collection of PureDisk services.
shared disk A physical hard drive on a computer that can be remotely accessed from anothercomputer. In a highly available cluster, the shared disk is normally a drive thatdoes not physically reside in any of the cluster nodes. Any resources that canfailover among cluster nodes must reside on a shared disk.
shared folder A network directory, to which multiple users have read and write access, used toexchange files with other users.
silent installation An installation in which the user sees no indication that the installation isoccurring. The user is not prompted to enter any information and the user doesnot see status messages. See also attended installation.
single port
communication
A PureDisk feature that directs all network communication through one port.Storage pools that implement single-port communication require fewer firewallports to be open between PureDisk service agents and clients.
49Glossary
snapshot A consistent point-in-time view of a volume that is used as the reference pointfor the backup operation. After a snapshot is created, the primary data cancontinue being modified without affecting the backup operation.
SPA (storage pool
authority)
The service that manages a storage pool.
SPAR (storage pool
authority replication)
The replication of storage pool authority configuration information from anall-in-one local storage pool to a main storage pool.
storage pool The main data repository in PureDisk. PureDisk writes backup copies of contentand metadata to the disk storage that is associated with a storage pool. A storagepool consists of one or more PureDisk nodes.
stream A sequence of digital data.
SUSE A distribution of Linux software. The name is an acronym for the German phrase“Software-und System-Entwicklung” (Software and system development).
System State and
Services data selection
A data selection that is used to back up Microsoft system data on Windowsplatforms.
template inheritance The process of receiving attributes from a parent template.
TLS (transport security
layer)
An encrypted protocol that provides secure communications in the PureDiskenvironment.
topology The types of PureDisk services that a storage pool includes. All storage pooltopologies include one or more of the following services: storage pool authority,content router, metabase engine, metabase server. A controller is installed on ametabase engine. Optionally, a storage pool can also include a NetBackup exportengine.
unattended install An installation that does not require human interaction.
UNCpath data selection A data selection that backs up data on a CIFS network drive on a Windows client.Also use this data selection to indicate the path for a NetApp Filer.
user An individual with rights to access your protected network resources. Users aredefined by creating a user account that consists of a unique user name andauthentication method.
user group Acollection of userswith identical permissions. These users canperformcommonfunctions within a PureDisk environment.
vacuuming The process of cleaning up and optimizing a database. Vacuuming removes therecords that are no longer needed and results in better database performance.
VCS (Veritas cluster
server)
High-availability cluster software developed by Symantec for UNIX, Linux, andWindows platforms.
Glossary50
VEA (Veritas Enterprise
Administrator)
A separate middleware server used by the SAN Access Layer and other processesto provide client-server communication. TheVEA infrastructure enables softwarecomponents to share information about objects, manage those objects, and effectchange on those objects.
CommandCentral
Console
A graphical user interface that displays reports and other information for usersof CommandCentral Service through a standard Web browser. The Consoleprovides a central point to manage cost analysis and chargeback for services,managing workflow, displaying and managing reports, and other tasks.
VSP (Volume Shapshot
Provider)
Symantec software that backs up open files. PureDisk uses VSP onWindows 2000clients.
VSS (Volume Shadow
Copy Service)
A set of application programming interfaces (APIs) that creates a framework.Within this framework, volume backups and application write can occur at thesame time. PureDisk uses Microsoft’s VSS technology to back up open files onWindows 2003 and Windows XP clients.
VxVM (Veritas Volume
Manager)
A Symantec product installed on storage clients that enables management ofphysical disks as logical devices. It enhances data storage management bycontrolling space allocation, performance, data availability, device installation,and system monitoring of private and shared systems.
wildcard character A symbol that enablesmultiplematching values to be returned based on a sharedfeature. Two wildcards are available: the question mark (?) and the asterisk (*).The question mark stands for any single character, and the asterisk stands forany character string of any length. For example, the file specification *.* returnsall files, regardless of their file names; the file specification *.sc? would return allfile names that have a three-character extension beginning with sc (such ascompusrv.scr, compusrv.scx, and so on).
workflow A collection of steps that the software completes to accomplish a task.
XFS (Extended File
System)
A journaling file system that you can configure on a PureDisk node.
YaST (Yet another Setup
Tool)
The operating system installation tool for SUSE Linux.
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