Adding a physical machine
To add a physical machine:
1
2 In the DNS Name or IP field, enter the FQDN or IP address of the server.
3 In the User Name field, enter an account for the server.
4 In the User Password field, enter the password for the preceding account.
5 If this server is new, or if you have removed the vRanger agent, select Install agent on machine.In the Agent Location field, enter the preferred directory — on the physical machine — to which the physical client should be installed. The default is C:\Program Files\Dell\vRangerPhysicalClient.
6 In the Port Number field, enter the preferred port for vRanger to use to communicate with the physical client on the source server.This port must be open between vRanger and each physical server — the default is 51000.
7 Click Connect.The server appears in the My Inventory pane. You may also create a backup group to combine multiple physical servers into one backup job. For more information, see Adding a custom backup group.
Selecting physical machines for licenses
To select physical machines for licenses:
1 In the Currently Installed Licenses section, view the Machines Allowed value to confirm the total number of physical machines licenses available.The number of licenses currently allocated is shown in the Machines Used column. The Licensed Physical Machine section lists the physical machines in the vRanger inventory, and indicates whether each machine is licensed for backup.
2 In the Physical Backup column, select or clear machines until you have used all the available licenses, or until all your machines are protected.
3 Click OK.
Deploying and configuring the VA from the Startup Wizard
vRanger uses a virtual appliance (VA) for Linux® file-level restore (FLR), standard backup and restore, and for replication to and from VMware® ESXi™ servers.
There are two ways to deploy and configure a VA: the Startup Wizard and the Tools menu.
To deploy and configure the VA from the Startup Wizard:
1 On the Virtual Appliance Information page of the Startup Wizard, start the Virtual Appliance Deployment Wizard from the Startup Wizard by clicking Deploy Virtual Appliance.
2
3 To add a VA configuration, click Add, and then complete the following steps:
a In the Add Virtual Appliance Configuration dialog box, select a VA from the inventory tree.
b Under Virtual Appliance Properties, do any of the following:
▫
▫ Enter a root password for the VA in the Root Password field.
▫ Select Use as default virtual appliance for cluster, to use this VA for all machines that are a part of the associated cluster.
c Click OK.In the Modify Virtual Appliance Configuration dialog box, edit any of the following settings:
▪For more information, see Changing the VA configuration.
b Click Remove.The Removing VA dialog box appears.
dIf you want to remove the entire VA rather than a single job, first select Delete the virtual appliance from the host, and then click OK.
7 Click Next.
Adding a repository
• NFS (version 3)
• NetVault SmartDisk (NVSD): The Quest disk-based data-deduplication option which reduces storage costs with byte-level, variable-block-based software deduplication. For more information on NetVault SmartDisk, see http://quest.com/products/netvault-smartdisk/ or the Quest vRanger Integration Guide for Quest NetVault SmartDisk.
• EMC Data Domain Boost (DDB): Integrating EMC Data Domain Boost (DD Boost) with vRanger is achieved by adding a Data Domain appliance running DD Boost to vRanger as a repository. Backups written to that repository are deduplicated according to your configuration. For more information on DD Boost, see http://www.emc.com/data-protection/data-domain/data-domain-boost.htm or the Quest vRanger Integration Guide for EMC Data Domain Boost (DD Boost).
• Quest Rapid Data Access (RDA): Provided by the Quest DR Series appliances — purpose-built, disk backup appliances that use Quest deduplication technology to improve backup and recovery processes. For more information on Quest DR Series appliances, see http://quest.com/products/dr-series-disk-backup-appliances/ or the Quest vRanger Integration Guide for Quest DR Series Disk Backup Appliance.
The following procedure shows mounting a CIFS share to the My Repositories pane. The procedures for the other repository types are described in Supplemental instructions: additional repository types
To add a repository:
1 Under Repositories, select Windows Share (CIFS).
2 Populate the Repository Name field.This value appears in the My Repositories pane.
3 Populate the Description field.
4
5 Select a Security Protocol from the drop-down list: NTLM (Default), or NTLM v2
6 In the Server field, type the UNC path to the preferred repository directory.Alternatively, enter a partial path, and click Browse to find the target directory.
CAUTION: If you use the Encrypt all backups to this repository feature, make certain to retain the password you enter. There is no back-door or administrator-level password. If the password is unknown, the backups are not usable.
7 If you want these backups password-protected, select Encrypt all backups to this repository, enter a Password for the encrypted repository, and then confirm the password by re-entering it.
9 Click Save.The connection to the repository is tested and the repository is added to the My Repositories pane and the Repository Information dialog box.
▪ Import as Read-Only: To import all savepoint data into the vRanger database, but only for restores, click this button. You cannot back up data to this repository.
▪ Import: To import all savepoint data into the vRanger database, click this button. vRanger is able to use the repository for backups and restores. vRanger requires read and write access to the directory.
▪ Overwrite: To retain the savepoint data on the disk and not import it into vRanger, click this button. vRanger ignores the existence of the existing savepoint data and treats the repository as new.
11 Click Next.
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Nutzungsbedingungen Datenschutz Cookie Preference Center