I would be careful with locking a 1GbE NIC.  The definition of 1GbE mandates 
autonegotiation, i.e. it is not valid to lock the speed.  You can of course 
only advertise 1000/FDX, so that would be the only possibility for 
autonegotiation.

DNS can be slowed down if you have lots of domain names in the domain search 
list, as it will try them all.  You can avoid this by using fully-qualified 
names with a terminal dot (e.g. server.bigco.com.) but I must admit I don't as 
it would confuse people who don't know what it is for and some tools/scripts 
will just break with it.

Maybe worth checking with traceroute to your DNS servers and between your 
servers, to make sure it is using the NICs that you expect (if you have > 1 in 
any server).

You can use a tool like 'ping plotter' to see if there is something really slow 
in your network, but it is more aimed at WAN testing.

William D L Brown

From: veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu 
[mailto:veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu] On Behalf Of Patrick
Sent: 27 September 2011 15:17
To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] HELP!!!!

I have cleaned up some of our "DNS" problems, although they were not the 
clients in question, and will see how it goes tonight. It also turns out that 
the medias servers had "files dns" in /etc/nsswitch.conf whereas the master had 
"dns host". I've changed the master to match. They also changed the NIC cards 
on the master to 1GB instead of auto negotiate. So we will see what happens 
tonight. If it is a problem with hitting the DNS servers too hard it should get 
worse tonight. :)

Thank all of you for your suggestions.

Regards,

Patrick Whelan
VERITAS Certified NetBackup Support Engineer for UNIX.
VERITAS Certified NetBackup Support Engineer for Windows.

netbac...@whelan-consulting.co.uk<mailto:netbac...@whelan-consulting.co.uk>


From: Bahnmiller, Bryan E. [mailto:bbahnmil...@dtcc.com]
Sent: 27 September 2011 15:44
To: Patrick
Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] HELP!!!!

Patrick,

                That is strange. I'm wondering if something else is going on. I 
have seen situations where you beef up your environment and it introduces you 
to other problems that used to be masked by a limited environment. With that 
many drives and that much memory, you are going to be able to queue up and run 
more jobs. If you are creating jobs faster, I wonder if you are running into 
name resolution problems now. Can you find out how loaded your DNS server is 
during the same time frame? I have seen where one of the older NBU environments 
I had was pounding the DNS servers to the point that they were running 100% 
cpu. I thought 6.x was much better at this, but it could possibly be related to 
the way your Linux servers are doing name caching and how hard they hit the DNS 
servers.

                One other possibility would be the VTL. I've had better luck 
with the newer DataDomain's from EMC than their older "DL's". It may be 
possible that they are slow in responding to requests when they get busy, but I 
wouldn't think those would show up as error 47's.

                Does /var/log/messages show anything around the same time frame?

                                Bryan

From: 
veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu<mailto:veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu>
 
[mailto:veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu]<mailto:[mailto:veritas-bu-boun...@mailman.eng.auburn.edu]>
 On Behalf Of Patrick
Sent: Tuesday, September 27, 2011 4:17 AM
To: veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu<mailto:veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu>
Subject: [Veritas-bu] HELP!!!!

Hi All,

The situation is getting crazy. Last night 17% of our backups failed with error 
code 47. It happened on only 6 of the 58 media servers. All the jobs were 
trying to backup up to one of two of the four VTL libraries. Looking at the 
<16> and <32> errors in /usr/openv/netbackup/logs I see CORBA errors on 3 of 
the six and Robot Failures on the other three. While we have many 47 errors on 
the weekends, this is a first of this magnitude for a week day. The only change 
I am aware of is: last week we increased the memory of 5 of the 6 media servers 
from 12GB to 32GB. Is it possible to have TOO much memory?

Environment:
RedHat Linux 64bit running 32Bit NetBackup 6.5.6
4 EMC VTL Libraries (sorry don't know model #) 164 drives configured on each.
The failing clients are both UNIX and Windoze with one Oracle backup failure.

OH, and they only seem to happen between 23:00 and 04:00 (approximately)

ANY suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Regards,

Patrick Whelan
VERITAS Certified NetBackup Support Engineer for UNIX.
VERITAS Certified NetBackup Support Engineer for Windows.

netbac...@whelan-consulting.co.uk<mailto:netbac...@whelan-consulting.co.uk>



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