On 10/09/2009, at 09:01 , dfields wrote:
I just found out something interesting that I thought that everyone
else would want to know. First, my environment: Backup server is
Windows 2003 running Networker 7.4.4 with some hotfixes. The linux
client is 7.4.4 also.
We've been having a problem lately with backups either taking an
extremely long time to run, or with the backup server crashing for
no apparent reason. Last night, I was watching the backups, and I
think I finally figured out why.
We use an Equallogic SAN, and I've created several LUN's that I'm
mapping to some of our Linux Redhat servers. On a couple of them,
I've got a directory structure similar to the following:
/u00
/u00/work
/u00/staging
Where /u00, /u00/work, and /u00/staging are all ISCSI LUNs. The
last two LUNs are just mounted over top of directories in /u00 (and
they are obviously mounted after /u00 is mounted). This isn't too
different than doing this with NFS mounts.
During backups, the client is backing up the server with a saveset
of All, which works ok in that it backs up /u00, /u00/work, and /u00/
staging as different save sets, which is what you would expect it to
do. But what it's not doing is skipping the "work" and "staging"
directories when it's backing up the /u00 save set. I think it's
because the client doesn't know that the work and staging
directories are ISCSI mounts. If these were NFS mount points, then
they would be skipped as part of the backup of /u00.
I ran some reports after the backup finished, and the backup for /
u00 was much larger than it should have been.
I'm going to open up a ticket with EMC once I do some more testing
and I can give them more information.
Opening a case with EMC on this would be a waste of time because
NetWorker is behaving as intended and as we'd expect.
iSCSI is effectively meant to be presented as local storage, in the
same way that a SAN/FC presented LUN should appear as local storage.
As such, NetWorker is doing the right thing - it wants to back it up.
To work around it - e.g., if you want to backup the LUN via the RedHat
host or in some other fashion, you need to setup directives to skip/
ignore those filesystems.
Cheers,
Preston.
--
Preston de Guise
"Enterprise Systems Backup and Recovery: A Corporate Insurance Policy":
http://www.amazon.com/Enterprise-Systems-Backup-Recovery-Corporate/dp/1420076396
http://www.enterprisesystemsbackup.com
NetWorker blog: http://nsrd.wordpress.com
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