May as well convert to VSS now. It is no longer there in 7.0. I swapped
all my 2003 and 2008 clients and things have never work3ed better, no
more status code 156 errors. There is a good vss enabler script on the
Symantec Forums. 

 

From: veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
[mailto:veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu] On Behalf Of Ed Wilts
Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2010 11:49 AM
To: pranav batra
Cc: Veritas
Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] VSP versus VSS

 

On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 10:12 AM, pranav batra
<pranav_vent...@hotmail.com> wrote:

 

I have a small question on VSP/VSS.

 

As symantec recommends VSS for 2003 clients over VSP then why  it is the
defauly snap-shot provider option ?


It's historical and is no longer the default in NetBackup 7.0. 
 

        Any specific reason for this recommendation as i can't find any
tech note specifying why VSS:

         

        They all just explain that VSS is for 2003 and VSP for 2000.

        I agree but why?


Windows 2000 did not have a snapshot service provided by the operating
system so Veritas had to write their own.  Microsoft added it in Windows
2003. 

VSS has a HUGE advantage for the backup administrator because snapshots
are now the responsibility of the server administrator, not the backup
administrator.  If snapshots fail, it's usually because the server
administrator doesn't have something configured correctly or the admins
have neglected to install patches to VSS (there are some but some
Windows admins seem to install ONLY security patches and ignore all
reliability/functionality fixes).
 

        What happened two weeks ago:-There are our two cluster server
and both got hung while getting backed up.

        We are still looking for the root cause but couldn't find
yet...The thing we suspect is that they were using VSP and when we
changed snapshot provider to VSS( As they are 2003) ,backups and server
both running fine from 2 weeks and didn't hung once.

         

        Does VSP plays some part in making the server hung?

        What could be the possible reasons?

        Does VSP plays some part in making the CPU utilisation high?


VSP is evil.  Don't try and debug it - just quit using it. 


   .../Ed



Ed Wilts, RHCE, BCFP, BCSD, SCSP, SCSE 
ewi...@ewilts.org

Linkedin <http://www.linkedin.com/in/ewilts> 

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