NOTES - Names of NetBackup "SERVER" kits versus names of NetBackup "CLIENT" kits
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The following is regarding NetBackup Server and NetBackup Client kits for Linux and Unix.
The following does not cover either the NetBackup Server nor the NetBackup Client kits for Windows.
The NetBackup "server" kits come in "base" install kits, and "patch" update kits.
The NetBackup "client" kits also come in "base" install kits, and "patch" update kits...
...but - the server and client kits are formed differently.
..example "base" server kit names: ..example "patch" server kit names:
NetBackup_7.5_LinuxR_x86_64.tar.gz NB_7.5.0.7.linuxR_x86.tar
NetBackup_7.5_LinuxS_x86_64.tar.gz NB_7.5.0.7.linuxS_x86.tar
NetBackup_7.5_Solaris_Sparc64.tar.gz NB_7.5.0.7.solaris.tar
NetBackup_7.5_Solaris_x86.tar.gz NB_7.5.0.7.solaris_x86.tar
..example "base" client kit name: ..example "patch" client kit names:
NetBackup_7.5_CLIENTS.tar.gz NB_CLT_7.5.0.7.tar
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A typical problem for backup admins is that the "CLIENTS" base, and the "CLT" patch, kits are both quite large at around 4 GB each... which can quite often be too large to copy down to clients, especially small guest VM instances.
Also note that the base CLIENTS kit tar ball will untar into a folder named "NetBackup_7.5_Clients", whereas the patch kit effectively untars in to the current folder - i.e. if both tar files are unpacked, then the base kit will un-tar in to a sub-folder, whereas the patch kit does not.
And - yet another quirk/difference between the "client base" and "client patch" kits is that:
client base kit: contains a folder structure for different Unix/Linux O/S family variants
client patch kit: contains tar balls for different Unix/Linux O/S family variants
...and yet another point to make is that the folders (in the base kit) and the tar balls (in the patch kit) can themselves contain kits for multiple different variants of O/S family and type, e.g. the Solaris folder (in the base kit) and the Solaris tarball (in the patch kit) both actually contain three different kits:
one for Solaris 9 on Sparc
one for Solaris 10 on Sparc
one for Solaris 10 on Intel
What would be quite useful for backup admins is to have individual base, and individual patch, kits for each variant of Unix/Linux backup clients - e.g. to separate out the Linux and Solaris clients into their own base and their own patch kits.
Final point: certain platform folders within a family of O/S client kits can contain sym-links to files that are present in other nearby folders within the same family platform. For instance, the Linux SuSE folder references files in the Linux RedHat folder, which means that if (when) we try to create the smallest possible Linux "SuSE only" client files that we need to specifically reference certain files and folders, but also use the "--derefence" (aka "-h") of tar create, so that target files are included in the smaller kits, and not what would effectively be sym-links to non-existent files when un-tared.
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@pcm214 - if you post another thread requesting a process/procedure to make smaller kits - I'll reply with some example processes.