Setting Up the Dell™ DR Series System as a Backup Target on CA Arcserve Dell Engineering April 2015 A Dell Technical White Paper
Revisions Date Description January 2014 Initial release April 2015 Updated for DR Series system software release 3.2. THIS WHITE PAPER IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY, AND MAY CONTAIN TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS AND TECHNICAL INACCURACIES. THE CONTENT IS PROVIDED AS IS, WITHOUT EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND. © 2015 Dell Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction of this material in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of Dell Inc. is strictly forbidden.
Table of contents Revisions ...................................................................................................................................................................................................... 2 Executive summary ................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 3 1 Installing and configuring the DR Series system ............................
Executive summary This paper provides information about how to set up the Dell DR Series system as a backup target for CA ARCserve R16. For additional information, see the DR Series system documentation and other data management application best practices whitepapers for your specific DR Series system at: http://www.dell.
1 Installing and configuring the DR Series system 1. Rack and cable the DR Series system, and power it on. For more information, refer to the following topics in the Dell DR Series System Administrator Guide: “iDRAC Connection”, “Logging in and Initializing the DR Series System”, and “Accessing IDRAC6/Idrac7 Using RACADM.” 2. Log on to iDRAC using the default address 192.168.0.120, or the IP address assigned to the iDRAC interface. Use the user name and password: “root/calvin”. 3.
4. After the virtual console is open, log on to the system as the user administrator with the password: St0r@ge! (The “0” in the password is the numeral zero). 5. Set the user-defined networking preferences. 6. View the summary of preferences and confirm that it is correct.
. Log on to the DR Series system administrator console with the IP address you just provided for the DR Series system and with the username: administrator and password: St0r@ge! (The “0” in the password is the numeral zero.). 8. Join the DR Series system to Active Directory by completing the following steps. Note: if you do not want to add the DR Series system to Active Directory, please see the DR Series System Owner’s Manual for guest logon instructions. a.
b. Click Join to configure Active Directory. c. Enter your Active Directory credentials.
10. Create and mount the container. Select Containers in the left navigation area, and then click Create at the top of the page. 11. Enter a Container Name and click Next. 12. Select NAS as the storage access protocol. Click Next.
13. Enable the required protocol as CIFS and select the marker type as Auto. Click Next. 14. Select client access type and click Next.
Click Create a New Container. 15. Confirm that the container is added.
2 Creating a disk-based target device on CA ARCserve 2.1 For Windows environments 1. Open CA ARCserve Manager. In the Navigation pane, expand Administration, and click Device. 2. Select a Server and then click Disk-Based Device.
3. Select Windows File System Devices and then enter a Device name, Description, and the DR container share path as Data File Location. 4. Click Security, enter the credentials of the domain, and click OK.
5. Click Finish.
2.3 For Unix/Linux environments Note: Ensure that you can mount/verify the NFS share from the UNIX/Linux client system. See Appendix A.1 for information about how to mount/verify the NFS share. The procedure for the Unix/Linux environment is similar to the procedure for the Windows environment. The only difference is that DR container NFS export path is used instead of a UNC path, as described below, for Data File Location. For details, please refer to the preceding procedure for the Windows environment.
3 Creating a new backup job with the DR Series system as the target 1. In the Navigation pane, click Quick start -> Backup. Then, in the right panel, on the Start tab set Select backup types as Normal backup for both CIFS and NFS backup. 2. On the Source tab, select the backup source files.
3. On the Schedule tab, set a Custom Schedule or Use Rotation Schema, and Backup Method. 4. On the Destination tab, select destination device that is created on DR. Click Submit.
6. In the Security and Agent Information window, choose an agent server, and click OK. 7. 18 Enter the backup Job Name, select Job Execution Time, and then click OK.
9. When the backup job runs, check Job Queue display in Job Status window.
4 Setting up DR native replication and restore from replication target Note: The example used in this procedure assumes DR1 is the replication source DR Series system and DR2 is the replication target DR Series system. ‘ARCsource’ is the replication source container, and ‘ARCtarget’ is the replication target container. 4.1 Creating a DR native replication session 1. 20 Create a CIFS container 'ARCsource' on DR1; create a second CIFS container 'ARCtarget' on DR2.
2. From DR1's GUI, on the Replication page, click Create. Set 'ARCsource' container as the replication source, and set DR2 'ARCtarget' container as the replication target. Start the replication session, or make sure the replication session is Online. You can Stop and/or Delete the replication whenever it is in INSYNC mode.
4.2 Restoring from the replication target 1. Restart ARCserve services. Go to Administration -> Device. Check and verify the target device. 2. Go to Quick Start -> Restore. Configure a restore job. Run the job to restore from the target device.
5 Setting up the DR Series system cleaner Performing scheduled disk space reclamation operations are recommended as a method for recovering disk space from system containers in which files were deleted as a result of deduplication. The system cleaner runs during idle time. If your workflow does not have a sufficient amount of idle time on a daily basis, then you should consider scheduling the cleaner to force it to run during a scheduled time.
6 Monitoring deduplication, compression, and performance After backup jobs have run, the DR Series system tracks capacity, storage savings, and throughput on the DR Series system dashboard. This information is valuable in understanding the benefits of the DR Series system. Note: Deduplication ratios increase over time. It is not uncommon to see a 2-4x reduction (25-50% total savings) on the initial backup. As additional full backup jobs are completed, the ratios will increase.
A Creating a storage device for NFS For NFS backup using CA ARCserve, a target folder needs to be created as an NFS share directory. This is the location to which backup objects will be written. This is not required while adding CIFS share. 1. Mount the DR Series System NFS share onto the NFS share directory to which backup objects will be written in the CA ARCserve. Check the NFS access path: 2. Mount the NFS access path in the Linux agent server.