Data Protector also assigns each medium a media ID that uniquely identifies this
medium.
An ANSI X3.27 label is also written on the tape for identification on other systems.
Data Protector writes these labels with other information to a medium header and to
the IDB.
If you change the medium label, Data Protector modifies the medium label in the IDB
and not on the medium itself. Therefore, if you export and import media that have
not been updated, the medium label in the IDB is replaced with the medium label
from the media. The media label on the tape can be changed only by re-initializing
(formatting) the media.
How are labels used?
These labels identify the medium as a Data Protector medium. When loading a
medium for backup or restore, Data Protector checks the medium for the medium ID.
The media management system maintains the information about this medium, which
tells Data Protector whether the requested action is allowed for this medium. For
example, if you try to write a new backup to this medium, the media management
system checks whether the data protection for the data already contained on this
medium has expired. The user defined label is used to identify a specific medium.
Location field
Backup media are usually stored in different locations. For example, a backup needs
to be available on site for fast restore access, whereas a medium containing a copy
of the backed up data is often stored off-site for safety reasons.
Data Protector provides a location field for each medium, which can be used freely
by the operator(s). This field can help to track the location of the media. Examples
of meaningful location fields would be: In Library, off-site, and vault_1.
The media location setting is also useful if an object version that you want to restore
exists on more than one media set. You can set the media location priority, which
influences the selection of the media set that will be used for the restore. For more
information on the selection of media for restore, see “
Selection of the media
set
” on page 126.
Media management and devices
146
Summary of Contents for B6960-96035
Page 17: ...Overview of backup and automated media copy sessions 340 105 Concepts guide 17 ...
Page 20: ...20 ...
Page 22: ...Publication history 22 ...
Page 132: ...Planning your backup strategy 132 ...
Page 182: ...Media management and devices 182 ...
Page 186: ...Users and user groups 186 ...
Page 204: ...The Data Protector internal database 204 ...
Page 218: ...Figure 62 Direct SIP integration example Service management 218 ...
Page 242: ...Integration with database applications 242 ...
Page 264: ...Synthetic backup 264 ...
Page 274: ...Split mirror concepts 274 ...
Page 288: ...Snapshot concepts 288 ...
Page 344: ...Further information 344 ...
Page 402: ...Glossary 402 ...