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Manage backup policy for Nutanix AHV
Updated over 8 months ago

Overview

A backup policy is a set of rules that define the schedule and retention of backups of virtual machines configured for backup. When you assign a backup policy to one or more virtual machines, the machines are backed up according to the schedule in the policy. Backup policies help administrators simplify data management of data backups across multiple virtual machines.


πŸ“ Note


​ Backup operations follow the time zone of the Backup proxy pool.


Managing retention period

Retention defines the rules for retaining your backups (recovery point) within the storage. Use the retention period to define the duration for which you want to retain your historical backups.

The objective of retention is to keep important data for future access, depending on how critical it is. Retention also ensures that backups that are no longer required are cleaned from your storage periodically, resulting in less storage utilization and costs.


❗ Important

The retention period would not be honored for the most recent recovery point when a server or VM or backup set is disabled. This allows you to restore the latest recovery point later if required.


Retention should consider the value of your data and the compliance requirements. The different types of data will be retained for different durations. For example, a bank's retention period for customers' financial records is different from facilities inventory records.

The main factors to consider while defining a retention period are:

  • Compliance requirements

  • Storage costs

  • Type of data

Retention period settings

Druva follows the Grandfather-Father-Son (GFS) retention model wherein, in case of an overlap, the retention setting of the longer period (Son-Father-Grandfather relation) is considered. The recovery point is expired as per the settings of the higher period. For example, in case there is an overlap between the daily and weekly retention period, the weekly retention period is considered. So daily is the smallest unit and weekly overrides daily > monthly overrides weekly > yearly overrides monthly.

Also, Druva follows the Gregorian calendar for tracking days.

While backup schedules are configured on an hourly, daily, or weekly basis the last recovery point created by the backups on that particular day will be retained as per the retention setting.

You can define the following durations to retain recovery points.

Retention Period

Description

Daily recovery points

Druva retains all the recovery points that are created for the number of days specified in Daily recovery points.

Druva considers midnight as the end of a day.

If you have configured Druva to back up your server multiple times within a day, Druva retains all the recovery points for the days specified.

Weekly recovery points (Son)

The number of weekly recovery points that Druva should retain. Druva treats the latest recovery point in the week as the weekly recovery point.

Druva considers midnight on Sunday as the end of the week.

Monthly recovery points (Father)

The number of monthly recovery points that Druva should retain. Druva treats the latest recovery point in the month as the monthly recovery point.

Druva considers midnight of the last day of a month as the end of the month.

Yearly recovery points (Grandfather)

The number of yearly recovery points that Druva should retain. Druva treats the latest recovery point in the year as the yearly recovery point.

Druva considers the midnight of the last day of the year as the end of the year.

The recovery point name displayed on the Management Console is recovery point creation time as per the server time zone, on which the backup occurred. Druva considers the time zone of the server for retaining the recovery points as per the retention setting.

Default retention period settings

If you are registering the server under default organization, Druva provides a default backup policy with the following retention settings:

  • Daily recovery points: 14 days

  • Weekly revisions: 4 weeks

  • Monthly revisions: 3 months

  • Yearly revisions: 3 years


πŸ“ Note


​ The above default retention settings are applicable for Warm storage and Long Term Retention (LTR) tiers.


Example

The following diagram illustrates the recovery points that will be available on a given day ( Feb 9 in this example) based on the retention settings you have configured. In this example the policy is created and backups start on Dec 30 of the previous year.

Retention for Enterprise workloads.png

On 9 Feb you will have 17 recovery points or recovery points to restore as described in the table.


πŸ“ Note


​Daily is the smallest unit and weekly overrides daily and monthly overrides weekly and yearly overrides monthly.


Recovery points resulting from

Description

Daily retention setting

You will have 11 ( 14 daily less 2 weekly less 1 monthly) recovery points (starting from 27 Jan) created due to the daily retention settings.

Weekly retention setting

You will have 4 recovery points for 14 Jan, 21 Jan, 28 Jan and 4 Feb created due to the weekly settings.
​
The weekly recovery points that coincide with the daily recovery points (28 Jan and 4 Feb) will be considered and retained as per the weekly setting. So, even though the daily retention period expires for these dates the recovery points will be retained as per the weekly settings (4 weeks).

Monthly retention setting

You will have 1 monthly recovery point of 31 Jan. This recovery point will be available for the next 3 months as it is a monthly retention point. So even though the 14 days daily retention period expires after 9 Feb, the recovery point will be available for the next 3 months.

Yearly retention setting

You will have one recovery point for 31 Dec due to the yearly retention setting. This recovery point will be available for 3 years.

Impact of retention period settings on recovery point objective (RPO)

In continuation with the example above, so let us say malware was detected on 9 Feb evening. After investigation, it was discovered that the data till 7 Feb is corrupted. In that case, the recovery point available to you will be of 6 Feb which is available due to the daily recovery point. However, there could be a data loss of data backed between 7 Feb and 9 Feb.
​

Retention Setting and RPO.png

Considerations

  • Any changes that you make to the existing retention policies will be applied to all the new as well as the existing recovery points.

  • Retention periods are applicable for recovery points that reside on CloudCache and Druva Cloud.

  • Druva runs a retention expiration algorithm to delete the recovery points that have crossed the expiration period. This algorithm does not delete thawed recovery points. For more information, see Recovery points.

Create a Nutanix backup policy

Create new Nutanix AHV backup policies to backup virtual machines on different schedules and retain the backups for different durations. You can also create a copy of existing backup policies and modify them as per requirements.

Procedure

  1. Log in to the Management Console.

  2. Select your Organization if Organizations are enabled

  3. On the menu bar, click Protect > Nutanix AHV.

  4. On the Nutanix AHV page, in the navigation pane on the left, click Backup Policies.

  5. On the Backup Policies page, click New Backup Policy.

    New Backup Policy.png
  6. In the New Backup Policy dialog box, perform the following tasks:

    • General tab

      General tab.png
      • Name: Enter a name for the backup policy.

      • Description (optional): Enter an optional description for the backup policy.
        ​

    • Backup Schedule tab

      Backup schedule tab.png
      • Backup Frequency: Select a frequency for the scheduled backups from Daily, Weekly, or Hourly. Also, select the days of the week when the backups should run if the frequency is Weekly or Hourly.

      • Start At (Server Timezone): Select a time when the scheduled backups must start. Ensure that the backups start during off-peak hours. Backup operations follow the time zone of the Backup proxy pool.

      • Backup Window: Enter the number of hours for which the backup must run. Example
        If you set Start At to 01:00 AM and you set the duration to 6 hours, backups of your server start at 01:00 AM and stop at 07:00 AM, even if they do not complete

      • Max Bandwidth: The maximum bandwidth that each virtual machine can consume while backing up data to Druva. You can enter the bandwidth in Mbps or Gbps.


        πŸ“ Note


        ​ The maximum bandwidth that a backup job can consume is 2 Gbps (2048 Mbps).



        For a scheduled backup, the job will consume the assigned bandwidth. However, for manually triggered backups, the job will consume the available bandwidth on your network

      • Ignore backup window for first backup: By default, the Ignore backup window for the first backup option is enabled. When this option is enabled, it ignores the specified backup duration until the first backup job is complete. The first backup job is complete when the first recovery point is created. You can disable this option to enforce backup duration for the first backup job.
        ​

  7. Click Add Schedule to add multiple schedules, and then click Next.

  8. In the Retention tab, perform the following tasks:

Expand to view image

LTR_retention.png

Field

Task

Daily recovery points for

Enter the number of days for which you want to retain all the daily recovery points.

Monthly recovery points for

Enter the number of months for which you want to retain the latest monthly recovery points.

Weekly recovery points for

Enter the number of weeks for which you want to retain the latest weekly recovery points.

Yearly recovery points for

Enter the number of years for which you want to retain the latest yearly recovery points.

Enable Long Term Retention

Toggle to enable or disable LTR for the backup policy. You can enable LTR only if the retention period is greater than or equal to one year. To know more about LTR, refer to About Long Term Retention.
In the Keep recovery points in warm tier drop-down list, specify the duration in days to retain the recovery points in the warm tier. For example, 15, 30, 45, and 60 days. To know more about the impact of changing the threshold on the existing recovery points, see Impact of changing threshold on existing snapshots.

Enable Data Lock

Toggle to enable the Data Lock for the backup policy. For more information about Data Lock, refer to Data Lock.


πŸ“ Note


​Once you apply Data Lock to the backup policy, you cannot:

  • Disable Data Lock.

  • Delete the recovery points, backup sets, and backup policy.

  • Edit the retention period in the backup policy.

  • Associate another backup policy to the Data Lock-enabled backup set.



πŸ“ Note


​Ensure that you enter a value in at least one of the Daily, Weekly, Monthly, or Yearly recovery point fields. Hybrid Workloads treats the values in the empty fields as zero.


Click Finish. The backup policy is created and listed on the Backup Policies page. You can now assign the backup policy to virtual machines.

Update a backup policy

You can update existing Nutanix backup policies at any time as per your requirements.

Procedure

  1. Log in to the Management Console.

  2. Select your Organization if Organizations are enabled.

  3. On the menu bar, click Protect > Nutanix AHV.

  4. On the Nutanix AHV page, in the navigation pane on the left, click Backup Policies.

  5. On the Backup Policies page, click the backup policy that needs to be edited.
    ​

    Update a backup policy.png
  6. On the backup policy details page, you can update the following:

    1. Overview: You can edit the policy name and description.

    2. Backup Schedule: You can edit the backup frequency, start time, backup window, and maximum bandwidth. You can also add or delete schedules.

    3. Retention: You can change the duration for which you want to retain the daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly recovery points.

Duplicate a Nutanix backup policy

Duplicating existing Nutanix backup policies allows you to create copies of existing policies and edit only the required sections. The duplicated policies are identical to the original backup policy and save you the hassle of creating a policy from scratch.

Procedure

  1. Log in to the Management Console.

  2. Select your Organization if Organizations are enabled.

  3. On the menu bar, click Protect > Nutanix AHV.

  4. On the Nutanix AHV page, in the navigation pane on the left, click Backup Policies.

  5. On the Backup Policies page, select the policy that must be duplicated and click Duplicate Policy.

    Duplicate policy.png
  6. In the Duplicate Policy dialog box, enter the following details:

    1. Selected backup policy: This field is greyed out and is the name of the backup policy that is being duplicated.

    2. New backup policy name: Enter the name for the new backup policy.

    3. Description (Optional): Enter an optional description for the backup policy.

  7. Click Save. This creates a new backup policy with settings similar to the original backup policy. The new policy is listed on the Backup Policies page.

Click the name of the new backup policy to view details. You can edit the backup policy as per your requirements and save it. You can then assign this backup policy to one or more virtual machines. The virtual machines are then backed up as defined in the policy.

View list of virtual machines associated with a backup policy

  1. Log in to the Management Console.

  2. Select your Organization if Organizations are enabled.

  3. On the menu bar, click Protect > Nutanix AHV.

  4. On the Nutanix AHV page, in the navigation pane on the left, click Backup Policies.

  5. On the Backup Policies page, click the policy for which you want to see the list of associated virtual machines.

  6. On the Backup Policies details page, click the VMs tab.

    VMs associated with a backup policy.png
  7. The VMs tab displays the list of virtual machines that use this backup policy. You can click the VM name to view VM details.

Delete a backup policy

Only a cloud administrator can delete a Nutanix backup policy from the Management Console provided no virtual machines are using the backup policy you want to delete. If a backup policy you want to delete is associated with one or more virtual machines, reconfigure the virtual machines one by one and select a different backup policy for them. For details, see Reconfigure a virtual machine.


πŸ“ Note


​ You can delete a backup policy only after 7 days of the deletion of the last configured virtual machine mapped to the policy.


Procedure

  1. Log in to the Management Console.

  2. Select your Organization if Organizations are enabled.

  3. On the menu bar, click Protect > Nutanix AHV.

  4. On the Nutanix AHV page, in the navigation pane on the left, click Backup Policies.

  5. Click the Nutanix backup policy that you want to delete.

  6. On the backup policy details page, click Delete.

    Delete a backup policy.png
  7. Click Yes on the confirmation dialog box.

Change a backup policy

You can change the backup policy for one or more existing virtual machines (VMs) anytime as per your requirements.

Procedure

  1. Log in to the Management Console.

  2. Select your Organization if Organizations are enabled.

  3. On the menu bar, click Protect > Nutanix AHV.

  4. On the Prism page, click the Prism Element or Prism Central that manages the virtual machine for which you want to change the backup policy. Alternatively, select the Prism Element or Prism Central from the Prism dropdown menu.

  5. In the left navigation pane, click Configured VMs.

  6. Select one or more VMs for which you need to change the backup policy.

  7. Click more options and then select Change Backup Policy.

    Change backup policy.png
  8. In the Change Backup Policy dialog box, select the desired policy from the available policies in the Change Backup Policy to dropdown list.

    Change backup policy dialog.png
  9. Click Save. The backup policy is successfully changed for the selected VMs.

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