02-03-2013 10:25 PM
Hi,
Is netbackup " java" console affect the server performance?
Is netbackup " java" console affect network bandwith?
how can I determine the Java console session number?
how can I determine the java console users?
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
02-04-2013 02:42 PM
look at /usr/openv/java/auth.conf for controlling what can be done by a user.
use bpps and kill for users that login directly to master.
02-04-2013 02:30 AM
Is netbackup " java" console affect the server performance?
Where are you running the Java Console? On the NBU server or from your Windows desktop?
I have not experienced Master server performance issues when Java Console is run on Windows desktop.
Is netbackup " java" console affect network bandwith?
It all depends on where you running the Java Console:
On the master server: Yes
On your Windows desktop: No
how can I determine the Java console session number?
No sure what you mean with this question. Please explain?
how can I determine the java console users?
Currently logged in or just a list of authorised users?
Start with auth.conf file in /usr/openv/java.
Enable logging for Java users: /usr/openv/netbackup/logs/bpjava-susvc
Other logs that may be useful:
bpjava-msvc
bpjava-usvc
02-04-2013 03:25 AM
02-04-2013 02:42 PM
look at /usr/openv/java/auth.conf for controlling what can be done by a user.
use bpps and kill for users that login directly to master.
02-04-2013 09:38 PM
NBAC also should be helpful enough with Java console login more over You can explicitely set permissions on wht multiple backup admins can do with NBU
Give a try
02-05-2013 12:51 AM
02-05-2013 02:54 AM
Bob is right:
look at /usr/openv/java/auth.conf for controlling what can be done by a user.
See chapter 26 of NBU Admin Guide I : Using the NetBackup-Java administration console.
For users logging in directly to master (using utilities such as putty or telnet), you need to use Unix commands to trace who is logged on - e.g. 'last', 'who', 'w'.
bpjava-susvc log will tell you who is currently logged on.
There is no 'Java session number' - one Java logon session will list 3 Java processes in bpps output on the master.