Forum Discussion

derhoeppi85's avatar
10 years ago

VMware SAN restore very slow

Hi, i have a problem by restoring VM's over SAN. I want to restore different VM's (thick - eager zeroed vmdk's) over SAN. The troughput is less then 25 MB/s (20 MB/s in a middle). With an NBD rest...
  • Anonymous's avatar
    Anonymous
    10 years ago

    Confirm you have a VMware Restore ESX Server in the Virtual Machine Servers credentials, as well as a virtual center server credentials already.

    If you only have vcenter server credentials, and you choose to only restore over san. The restore will occur over the network via the vcenter server.

    See the following TN's and extract from the NBU for VMware guide.

    Enterprise Support - Symantec Corp. - Two causes of slow NetBackup for VMware restore performance
     
    Enterprise Support - Symantec Corp. - How To get the benefit of restoring directly to ESX when the ESX is managed by Virtual Center
     
    Read the section on Restores from the PDF guide for NBU for VMware
     
    Particularly around a designated Restore ESX Server
     
    When choosing a target host for the restore, note the following:
    ■ If NetBackup has credentials to access a vCenter server (but does not have
    credentials to access a VMware restore ESX server), note: You can restore
    the virtual machine through the vCenter server. In this case, the data
    movement for the restore passes through the vCenter server. Passing the
    virtual machine data through the vCenter server may increase the amount
    of time that is needed to complete the restore.
     
    The credentials must give NetBackup full access privileges to the vCenter
    server.
    See “Adding NetBackup credentials for VMware” on page 42.
    ■ If NetBackup has credentials to access a vCenter server as well as a VMware
    restore ESX server, the restore may complete faster. In this case, by default
    NetBackup passes the virtual machine data directly to the restore ESX server,
    bypassing the vCenter server. You can select a vCenter folder in which to
    place the restored virtual machine. The credentials must give NetBackup
    full access privileges to the restore ESX server.
    Select the vCenter Server, and click Search to select the VMware restore
    ESX server.
    Note: In vCenter 5.x environments, NetBackup uses the selected vCenter
    to create the virtual machine. NetBackup then writes the .vmdk files directly
    to the ESX server using the Restore ESX Server credentials to that server
     
    If NetBackup has credentials to access an ESX server, you can designate
    that server as the target for the restore. The credentials must give NetBackup
    full access privileges to the ESX server.
    Select None for the vCenter Server, and click Search to select the ESX
    server.
    Note: To restore to an ESX 5 server, the ESX must be standalone, not
    managed by vCenter 5. To restore to an ESX 5 under vCenter 5, NetBackup
    must have VMware restore ESX server credentials for the ESX. Select the
    vCenter, and click Search to select the VMware restore ESX server.
    ■ ESX Server
    Specifies the ESX server on which the restored virtual machine is to reside. To
    use the original ESX server (the default), verify that the original ESX server still
    exists.
    Click the Search option to browse for a different ESX server.
    See “Select ESX server dialog box (restore to alternate location)” on page 154.