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Add a NAS device
Updated over 3 months ago

Enterprise Workloads Editions: βœ… Business | βœ… Enterprise | βœ… Elite

The next step in configuring a NAS share for backups is adding the NAS device and mapping it to a backup proxy pool. This article guides you through adding a NAS device in the Management Console and mapping it to a NAS proxy.
​

Procedure

  1. Log in to the Management Console.

  2. The Get Started with NAS Data Protection page is displayed if no NAS devices have been added yet. On this page, click Add NAS device under Add a NAS device.


    If NAS devices have already been configured, the Get Started page with NAS Data Protection is not available. To add additional NAS devices, click Add NAS Device.

  3. On the Add Device page, enter the following details:

Field

Description

Device IP/FQDN

IP or Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) of the NAS device. You can edit the IP/FQDN of the NAS device using the Edit Device option.


πŸ“ Note


​ There are β€˜system’ and β€˜custom’ zones in Dell EMC Isilon for different shares.
While registering a Dell EMC Isilon device in Druva, you must configure each zone as a separate device.
Therefore during registration, the IP of the zone will be the device/zone IP, and the IP to be entered in the OneFS Endpoint field should be the system zone IP.
For more information on user privileges, see Device Validations.


Credentials

  • Select existing device credentials or click New Credentials,to add new credentials.

  • Select Use device credentials for auto-discovered shares to assign NAS device credentials to automatically discovered shares. If this option is selected, device credentials will be used to back up and restore shares.

If you choose to create new credentials, enter the following details in the New Credentials dialog box:

  • Label: A unique label that identifies the credential

  • Username: Enter the device credential username in the Domain\username format for Windows, and in the NASUserName format for Linux. NASUsername is an account with appropriate access rights.

  • Password: Enter the password for the device credential

  • Confirm Password: Re-enter the password for the device credential


πŸ“ Note

  • Druva validates these credentials when you add shares under the NAS device on the Management Console.These credentials are required only for protecting SMB shares.

  • If one user account does not have all required permissions over all folders in an SMB share hierarchy on NetApp, see Least privileges to protect SMB shares on NetApp for the least privileges that need to be assigned to the account for successful backups and restores.


For more information on Dell EMC Isilon credentials and validations, see NAS Device Validations.

Display Name

NAS device name that will appear on the Management Console.

Vendor

Select the NAS vendor from the drop-down. The values are:

  • Dell EMC Isilon

  • Netapp

  • Hitachi Vantara (HNAS)

  • PureStorage FlashBlade NAS

  • Synology

  • Qnap

  • HPE Storeasy

  • Qumulo

  • Others

You can select Others to enter the name of the vendor of your choice. This field is mandatory. By default, the value in this field is freeNAS.


πŸ“ Note
​ Currently, Druva supports additional features for Dell EMC Isilon devices only, that is, recovery point based approach for backup and skipping stubs.


When you select Dell EMC Isilon, and need these features, then select the Use vendor APIs for faster incremental backups option.

Enter OneFS IP or FQDN and port information in the OneFS Endpoint field.


πŸ“ Note
​ The IP provided in the OneFS Endpoint field is the system zone IP. For more information about system zone, see Device IP/FQDN field.


OneFS is the API interface for Isilon. Based on vendor specific APIs, the above mentioned additional features are supported.

Backup Proxy Pool

Map this device to a backup proxy pool containing Windows and Linux proxies.

You can attach a device to more than one pool to handle SMB and NFS shares.

Initially, all the proxies created will go to the Default Proxy Pool. You can move or switch them to another pool. For more information, see Change Backup Proxy Pool.

On the Add Device page, click Save.

Validation checks are performed and the Device Validation window is displayed with the results.


πŸ“ Note
​
​ When the agent proxy discovers that a vendor is configured with native APIs, it runs vendor-specific validations that verifies all the privileges on the credentials. For more information on validations, see NAS Device Validations.


  • If both basic and vendor-specific (Isilon) validations are successful, then click Done. The NAS device is added. Druva performs backup using the recovery point-based approach. It also identifies and skips the stub files.

    Add device - success.png

πŸ“ Note
​
​ If all the Isilon validations are successful, then the vendor specific APIs are supported. OneFS API performs a check for all the stub files in the directory. If a stub file is found, it is skipped during backup. Also, a changelist is created from the recovery points, which helps to achieve faster incremental backups.


  • If the Isilon validation is not successful, then click Add Device on the Device Validation window. The NAS device is added and traditional backups will be performed.
    ​

    Add device - Failure.png

πŸ“ Note
​
​Basic Validations are performed first and then Isilon Validations are performed. If any Isilon validation fails, then the vendor's APIs are not supported and the Isilon backups will be performed by the traditional approach, and the stub files are processed as regular files.For more information, see NAS Device Validations.


Next steps

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