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  1. Home
  2. NetBackup™ Troubleshooting Guide
  3. Disaster recovery
  4. About disk recovery procedures for UNIX and Linux
  5. About recovering the primary server disk on Linux
NetBackup™ Troubleshooting Guide

About recovering the primary server disk on Linux

The following procedures explain how to recover data if the system disk fails on a Linux NetBackup primary server, as follows:

  • The root file system is intact. The operating system, NetBackup software and some (if not all) other files are assumed to be lost.

    See Recovering the primary server when root is intact.

  • The root file system is lost along with everything else on the disk. This situation requires a total recovery. This recovery reloads the operating system to an alternate boot disk and starts from this disk during recovery. You then can recover the root partition without risking a crash that is caused by overwriting the files that the operating system uses during the restore.

    See Recovering the primary server when the root partition is lost.

For NetBackup primary and media servers, the directory locations of the NetBackup catalog become an integral part of NetBackup catalog backups. Any recovery of the NetBackup catalog requires identical directory paths or locations be created during the NetBackup software reinstallation. Disk partitioning, symbolic links, and NetBackup catalog relocation utilities may be needed.

NetBackup Bare Metal Restore (BMR) protects client systems by backing them up with a policy configured for BMR protection. Information is available that describes BMR backup and recovery procedures.

See the NetBackup Bare Metal Restore System Administrator's Guide.

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