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  1. Home
  2. NetBackup™ for Hadoop Administrator's Guide
  3. Introduction
  4. NetBackup for NetBackup for Hadoop terms
NetBackup™ for Hadoop Administrator's Guide

NetBackup for NetBackup for Hadoop terms

The following table defines the terms you will come across when using NetBackup for protecting NetBackup for Hadoop cluster.

Table: NetBackup terminologies

Terminology

Definition

Compound job

A backup job for NetBackup for Hadoop data is a compound job.

  • The backup job runs a discovery job for getting information of the data to be backed up.

  • Child jobs are created for each backup host that performs the actual data transfer.

  • After the backup is complete, the job cleans up the snapshots on the NameNode and is then marked complete.

Discovery job

When a backup job is executed, first a discovery job is created. The discovery job communicates with the NameNode and gathers information of the block that needs to be backed up and the associated DataNodes. At the end of the discovery, the job populates a workload discovery file that NetBackup then uses to distribute the workload amongst the backup hosts.

Child job

For backup, a separate child job is created for each backup host to transfer data to the storage media. A child job can transfer data blocks from multiple DataNodes.

Workload discovery file

During discovery, when the backup host communicates with the NameNode, a workload discovery file is created. The file contains information about the data blocks to be backed up and the associated DataNodes.

Workload distribution file

After the discovery is complete, NetBackup creates a workload distribution file for each backup host. These files contain information of the data that is transferred by the respective backup host.

Parallel streams

The NetBackup parallel streaming framework allows data blocks from multiple DataNodes to be backed up using multiple backup hosts simultaneously.

Backup host

The backup host acts as a proxy client. All the backup and restore operations are executed through the backup host.

You can configure media servers, clients, or a primary server as a backup host.

The backup host is also used as destination client during restores.

BigData policy

The BigData policy is introduced to:

  • Specify the application type.

  • Allow backing up distributed multi-node environments.

  • Associate backup hosts.

  • Perform workload distribution.

Application server

Namenode is referred to as a application server in NetBackup.

Primary NameNode

In a high-availability scenario, you need to specify one NameNode with the BigData policy and with the tpconfig command. This NameNode is referred as the primary NameNode.

Fail-over NameNode

In a high-availability scenario, the NameNodes other than the primary NameNode that are updated in the hadoop.conf file are referred as fail-over NameNodes.

Table: NetBackup for Hadoop terminologies

Terminology

Definition

NameNode

NameNode is also used as a source client during restores.

DataNode

DataNode is responsible for storing the actual data in NetBackup for Hadoop.

Snapshot-enabled directories (snapshottable)

Snapshots can be taken on any directory once the directory is snapshot-enabled.

  • Each snapshot-enabled directory can accommodate 65,536 simultaneous snapshots. There is no limit on the number of snapshot-enabled directories.

  • Administrators can set any directory to be snapshot-enabled.

  • If there are snapshots in a snapshot-enabled directory, it can cannot be deleted or renamed before all the snapshots are deleted.

  • A directory cannot be snapshot-enabled if one of its ancestors or descendants is a snapshot-enabled directory.

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