Converse agora com nosso suporte
Chat com o suporte

vRanger 7.6.3 - Installation/Upgrade Guide

Introduction Before you install System requirements and compatibility Installing vRanger Upgrading vRanger About us

Bandwidth to repositories

Previous Next



Bandwidth to repositories

While performance varies based on environmental factors, data throughput during a single backup task can reach up to 100 MB/s. If you assume a standard case of a repository connected by using a Gigabit network, as little as 10 concurrent jobs can saturate the link to that repository.

Although there is no ability to throttle data transmissions from a source server, vRanger can limit the number of simultaneous backup tasks on a per-repository level.

Repository size

Previous Next



Repository size

There is no limit to the number of savepoints that can be stored in a vRanger repository. There are, however, environmental limits on the size of a single directory. The available options, and their limits, are described in the following list.

Default configuration: A standard volume, with an MBR partition on a basic disk, has a limit of 2 TB. This configuration is the default for Windows Server® 2003. In this configuration, the vRanger repository cannot exceed 2 TB.
Dynamic disks: Dynamic disks contain dynamic volumes, including simple volumes, spanned volumes, striped volumes, mirrored volumes, and RAID-5 volumes. A repository on dynamic disk volumes can be as large as 64 TB.
GPT volumes: GUID partition table (GPT) volumes provide a more flexible mechanism for partitioning disks than the older Master Boot Record (MBR) partitioning scheme that has been common to PCs. GPT partitions are supported on Windows Server 2003, SP1 and later, and can reach up to 256 TB. For more information, see http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/device/storage/GPT_FAQ.mspx

Configuring vCenter permissions

Previous Next


Before you install > Configuring vCenter permissions

Configuring vCenter permissions

vRanger requires a VMware® vCenter™ account to function properly. To comply with security best practices, Quest recommends creating a vCenter user account with the minimum required permissions for vRanger to use.

The procedures differ slightly depending on which version of vCenter you are using. For VMware vSphere® 5 or later, see the following topic.

Using vSphere 5.5 or later

Previous Next



Using vSphere 5.5 or later

Starting with VMware vSphere® 5.5, the permissions required for backup and restore operations in a vSphere environment differ slightly from the permissions required for previous versions of VMware® vCenter™. If you have migrated to vSphere 5 or later after creating a vRanger user account, update the permissions accordingly to avoid job interruption.

To create a vRanger user on vSphere 5 or later:
1
Navigate to Administration > Roles.
2
Select Add Role.
4
In the Privileges section, set the permissions according to the following table:

Section

Privileges

Datastore

Global

Host > Local Operations

Host > Inventory

Network

Profile-driven storage

 

Resource

vApp

Virtual Machine > Configuration

Virtual Machine > Interaction

Virtual Machine > Inventory

Virtual Machine > Provisioning

Virtual Machine > Service Configuration

 

Virtual Machine > Snapshot management

 

5
Navigate to the Inventory view.
8

 

Documentos relacionados

The document was helpful.

Selecione a classificação

I easily found the information I needed.

Selecione a classificação