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  1. Home
  2. Veritas NetBackup™ Deduplication Guide
  3. Configuring deduplication
  4. Configuring MSDP replication to a different NetBackup domain
  5. About trusted master servers for Auto Image Replication
Veritas NetBackup™ Deduplication Guide

About trusted master servers for Auto Image Replication

No trust relationship

NetBackup replicates to all defined target storage servers. You cannot select a specific host or hosts as a target.

Trust relationship

You can select a subset of your trusted domains as a target for replication. NetBackup then replicates to the specified domains only rather than to all configured replication targets. This type of Auto Image Replication is known as targeted A.I.R.

About adding trusted master server using NetBackup CA-signed certificate

With targeted A.I.R., when establishing trust between the source and the remote target server, you need to establish trust in both the domains.

  1. In the source master server, add the target master server as a trusted server.

  2. In the target master server, add the source master server as a trusted server.

Note:

The NetBackup Administration Console does not support adding a trusted master server using an external CA-signed certificate.

See Adding a trusted master server using external CA-signed certificate.

See About the certificate to be used for adding a trusted master server.

The following diagram illustrates the different tasks for adding trusted master servers when NetBackup CA-signed certificate (or host ID-based certificate) is used for establishing trust between the source and the target master servers.

Figure: Tasks to establish a trust relationship between master servers for targeted A.I.R. using NetBackup CA-signed certificate

Tasks to establish a trust relationship between master servers for targeted A.I.R. using NetBackup CA-signed certificate

Table: Tasks to establish a trust relationship between master servers for targeted A.I.R.

Step

Task

Procedure

Step 1

Administrators of both the source and target master servers must obtain each other's CA certificate fingerprint and authorization tokens or the user credentials. This activity must be performed offline.

Note:

Veritas recommends using an authentication token to connect to the remote master server. An authentication token provides restricted access and allows secure communication between both the hosts. The use of user credentials (user name and password) may present a possible security breach.

To obtain the authorization tokens, use the bpnbat command to login and nbcertcmd to get the authorization tokens.

To obtain the SHA1 fingerprint of root certificate, use the nbcertcmd -displayCACertDetail command.

To perform this task, see the NetBackup Commands Reference Guide.

Note:

When you run the commands, keep the target as the remote server.

Step 2

Establish trust between the source and the target domains.

  • On the source master server, add the target master server as trusted server.

  • On the target master server, add the source master server as trusted server.

To perform this task in the Veritas Administration Console, see the following topic:

See Adding a trusted master server using NetBackup CA-signed (host ID-based) certificate.

To perform this task using the nbseccmd, see the NetBackup Commands Reference Guide.

Step 3

After you have added the source and target trusted servers, they have each other's host ID-based certificates. The certificates are used during each communication.

Master Server A has a certificate issued by Master Server B and vice versa. Before communication can occur, Master Server A presents the certificate issued by Master Server B and vice versa. The communication between the source and target master servers is now secured.

To understand the use of host ID-based certificates, see the Veritas Security and Encryption Guide.

Step 3.1

Configure the source media server to get the security certificates and the host ID certificates from the target master server.

See Configuring NetBackup CA and NetBackup host ID-based certificate for secure communication between the source and the target MSDP storage servers.

See Configuring a NetBackup Deduplication Engine user with limited permissions for Auto Image Replication.

Step 4

Create an import storage lifecycle policy in the target domain.

See About storage lifecycle policies.

Step 5

On the source MSDP server, use the Replication tab from the Change Storage Server dialog box to add the credentials of the target storage server.

See Configuring a target for MSDP replication to a remote domain.

Step 5.1

Create a replication storage lifecycle policy in the source domain using the specific target master server and storage lifecycle policy.

The backups that are generated in one NetBackup domain can be replicated to storage in one or more target NetBackup domains.

See About storage lifecycle policies.

Step 6

The backups that are generated in one NetBackup domain can be replicated to storage in one or more target NetBackup domains. This process is referred to as Auto Image Replication.

See About NetBackup Auto Image Replication.

If your source and target trusted servers use different NetBackup versions, consider the following.

Note:

When you upgrade both the source and the target master server to version 8.1 or later, you need to update the trust relationship. Run the following command:

nbseccmd -setuptrustedmaster -update

See the NetBackup Commands Reference Guide.

Table: Trust setup methods for different NetBackup versions

Source server version

Target server version

Trust setup method

8.1 and later

8.1 and later

Add a trusted master server using authorization token.

Complete action on both the servers.

8.1 and later

8.0 or earlier

On the source server, add the target as the trusted master server using the remote (target) server's credentials.

8.0 or earlier

8.1 and later

On the source server, add the target as the trusted master server using the remote (target) server's credentials.

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