Chatee ahora con Soporte
Chat con el soporte

DR Series Software 3.2.0.2 - Administrator Guide

Introduction to the DR Series System Documentation Understanding the DR Series System Setting Up the DR Series System Hardware Configuring the DR Series System Settings Managing DR Series Storage Operations Monitoring the DR Series System Using Global View Using the DR Series System Support Options Configuring and Using Rapid NFS and Rapid CIFS Configuring and Using Rapid Data Access with Dell NetVault Backup and with Dell vRanger Configuring and Using RDA with OST
Understanding RDA with OST Guidelines Terminology Supported RDA with OST Software and Components Best Practices: RDA with OST and the DR Series System Setting Client-Side Optimization Configuring an LSU Installing the RDA with OST Plug-In Configuring DR Series System Information Using NetBackup Backing Up Data From a DR Series System (NetBackup) Using Backup Exec With a DR Series System (Windows) Understanding the OST CLI Commands Understanding RDA with OST Plug-In Diagnostic Logs Collecting Diagnostics Using a Linux Utility Guidelines for Gathering Media Server Information
Configuring and Using VTL Configuring and Using Encryption at Rest Troubleshooting and Maintenance Supported Ports in a DR Series System Getting Help

To open the Clients page, click Storage > Clients. This page displays the total number of clients that are connected to the DR Series system, which can be a combination of NFS, CIFS, RDS, OST, NDMP, iSCSI, and DR2000v clients. The total number of clients is listed above the tabs (NFS, CIFS, RDA, NDMP, iSCSI, and DR2000v tabs).

Depending on the tab you select, the number of clients for each connection type is displayed, as well as other information about the clients. For example, if you select the RDA tab, the number of current OST or RDA clients (OpenStorage Technology or Rapid Data Storage clients) that are connected to the system are displayed. The RDA tab also provides the following types of client-related information:

Number of RDA Clients — The number of OST and RDS clients.
Name — Each client referenced by name.
Type — The type of RDA clients.
Plug-In — The plug-in type installed on each client.
Backup Software — The backup software used with each client.
Idle Time — The idle time (non-activity) for each client.
Connection — The number of connections for each client.
Mode — The current mode type for each client.

Clients Page (Using the NFS or CIFS Tabs)

Clients Page (Using the NFS or CIFS Tabs)

On the Clients page (Storage→ Clients), click the NFS or CIFS tab to view the following information for NFS or CIFS clients.

Number of NFS (or CIFS) Clients — lists number of NFS (or CIFS) clients.
Name — lists each client by name.
Idle Time — lists idle time (nonactivity) for each client.
Connection Time — lists connection time for each client.

Clients Page (Using the RDA Tab)

Clients Page (Using the RDA Tab)

To display the Clients page, click Storage→ Clients. This page displays the total number of clients that are connected to the DR Series system, and this number reflects all of the clients based listed under the Clients tab (NFS, CIFS, and RDA). Using this page and the RDA tab lets you perform the following tasks for RDS or OST clients:

Update a client (you are limited to modifying the mode type)

This page displays an RDS or OST Clients Summary table that lists the following types of RDS or OST client-related information:

Auto: DR will set the deduplication to Dedupe or Passthrough, based on the client’s number of cores and whether it is 32– or 64–bit.
Passthrough: The client will pass all data to DR for deduplication processing (appliance-side deduplication).
Dedupe: The client will process hashing on data, so deduplication processing occurs on the server side (client-side deduplication).

If an OST or RDS client has four or more CPU cores, it is considered to be dedupe-capable. However, the OST or RDS client operating mode depends upon how it is configured in the DR Series system (Dedupe is the default RDA client mode).

If an OST or RDS client is set to run in Auto mode, the OST or RDS client will run in the mode setting determined by the media server.

The following table shows the relationship between the configured OST or RDS client mode types and the supported client mode based on client architecture type and corresponding number of CPU cores. For information about Rapid NFS and Rapid CIFS supported client modes based on architecture and CPU cores, see Best Practices: Rapid NFS and Best Practices: Rapid CIFS.

Table 1. Supported OST or RDS Client Modes and Settings

OST or RDS Client Mode Settings

32–Bit OST or RDS Client (4 or more CPU cores)

64–Bit OST or RDS Client (4 or more CPU cores)

32–Bit OST or RDS Client (Less than 4 CPU cores)

64–Bit OST or RDS Client (Less than 4 CPU cores)

Auto

Passthrough

Dedupe

Passthrough

Passthrough

Dedupe

Not Supported

Supported

Not Supported

Not Supported

Passthrough

Supported

Supported

Supported

Supported

Clients Page (Using the NDMP Tab)

Clients Page (Using the NDMP Tab)

On the Clients page (Storage > Clients), click the NDMP tab. On this tab, you can view the following information for NDMP clients.

Number of current NDMP sessions active — Lists the number of NDMP sessions that are currently active.
ID — NDMP session ID.
Duration — The duration of the current active session.
State — The current status, for example, Active.
Source — IP address of the source filer.
Target — The target tape drive being used for the current NDMP session.
Throughput — The current and average throughput.
Transfer size — The total size of data transferred in this backup session.
DMA — The IP address of the DMA initiating the backup.
NDMP Completed Sessions Statistics — Shows the above information for any completed NDMP sessions.
Documentos relacionados

The document was helpful.

Seleccionar calificación

I easily found the information I needed.

Seleccionar calificación