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Backup and Recovery of MSSQL databases with TSM TDP

If you are using TSM, you have three options available to get a good backup of an SQL database
1.

Stop the SQL Server and backup the databases with the TSM Windows client - lots of messy scripting

2.

Using the MSSQL backup utility, back the database up to a file on disk, then back that file up to tape using the TSM
Windows client - needs extra disk space, and a way to resolve the scheduling issues between database backup and TSM
backup

3.

Back the database up with the TDP for MSSQL databases

I'd recommend the third method as it is simple, allows you to backup the databases with the SQL server active, and
interfaces with the SQL server utilities. This page discusses using Tivoli Data Protection (TDP) for MSSQL databases
The TDPSQL client will only backup SQL databases, you also need a normal TSM client to backup all the nondatabase files on the Windows server.

Backing up SQL databases


Scheduling backups
You need three different Windows services defined when you want to run SQL TDP backups on a server. If you are
using the Tivoli Client Acceptor then you will have this defined as a Windows service, to start automatically at system
boot time. The actual TSM client scheduler runs as a Windows service but is not started automatically, it runs in
manual mode. These two are the traditional services used for general file backups.
You also need a TSM TDPSQL Scheduler service, which must be started automatically at system boot time.
You will start the services manually when you first set the TDP up. It seems that the Client Acceptor must be started
before the TDPSQL service or the schedule misses.
The TDPSQL scheduler does not backup the databases directly, but executes a command file. This file is defined in
your TSM schedule and needs to have the same name for all your windows servers, unless you use multiple
schedules. A suggested file name is c:/tdpsql.exe
Within the exe file, you will have commands to backup the databases. The option below shows how to take a full
backup of all databases defined to this server. There are lots of other backup options, including differential, partial, file
based and transaction log. Take a look at the MSSQL database backup section for details. The command for a full
backup is
cd /d c:\program files\Tivoli\tsm\tdpsql tdpsqlc backup * full

The first line navigates to the location of the TDPSQL code, and you should change this to match your location. The
second line invokes the tdpsqlc command to take a full backup of all databases. The '*' means all databases
Another possible command option to just backup changed data in the northwind database is
tdpsqlc backup northwind differential

These commands assume that you are only running one instance of SQL server on your machine. If you run two or
more servers then these commands will only backup the default instance. You need to specifically select each
instance with the /SQLSERVER switch.

Manually backing up databases

There are two types of MSSQL backups these days, legacy and VSS.
Taking a legacy backup

Open up the TDP for SQL Data Protection GUI using Start - Programs - Tivoli Storage Manager - Data Protection for
Microsoft SQL server - SQL Client Gui. If you are running in either a Microsoft or Veritas cluster you need to use the
/sqlserver option.

The GUI should default to the 'Backup Databases' tab, but if not, click on it

The server options are on the left hand side of the window. Expand the SQL server tree to see the individual databases

Click on the database in the server tree that you want to backup.

If you click on the SQLserver node at the second level of the tree, you will backup all the databases. Databases that will
be backed up will be highlighted yellow, with a red tick.

Select 'Legacy Backup' from Backup Options section.

Select the backup type you want by clicking in the appropriate backup radio button

Click on the backup button

You can also use the SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) GUI for scheduled or manual backups.
When you define the TSM node for the SQL database. you will see an option called BACKDELETE. This should be
set to YES then TSM will clean up backups that have failed.

Handling the backup Metadata


The Backup metadata includes stuff like the names and sizes of database files and file groups. If you want to query a
backup to find out what is on the tape, or checkout the database schema for that backup, it is a real pain to have to
wait for a tape to be mounted to get that info. You should send the meta data to a disk only storage pool. These meta
data objects are always quite small, usually less than 100K and to put them to a tape is not good for performance.
You put them to disk by binding the meta objects to a management class that points to a disk only storage pool. That
is done using the INCLUDE option. For example
INCLUDE "\...\meta\...\" MetaMgmtClass

Where 'MetaMgmtClass' is the management class that writes to a disk only storage pool.
VSS backups
TSM can use Microsoft Volume Shadow Copy Services to backup MSSQL databases. VSS takes a space efficient
snapshot copy of the database using pointers, so the database is in backup mode for a very short time, even for very
large databases. You have two options with VSS backups, you can keep the backup on a local disk for rapid restore,
or you can offload it to a remote server. If you chose to keep it on local disk then you must make sure that sufficient
space is available to support it. If you chose to use TSM with VSS, then you need the TSM for Copy Services module
licensed.
To take a VSS backup manually

start up the TSMTDP GUI as for a legacy backup

Click on Edit - Configuration - VSS Backup Tab and make sure that a Local DSMAGENT Node name is specified.

The server options are on the left hand side of the window. Expand the SQL server tree to see the individual databases

Click on the database in the server tree that you want to backup.

If you click on the SQLserver node at the second level of the tree, you will backup all the databases. Databases that will
be backed up will be highlighted yellow, with a red tick.

Select the VSS Backup method from the Backup Options section and chose which storage type you want from the
Backup Destination drop-down menu. The back type has to be full.

Click on the backup button

Recovering SQL databases


Restoring a single database
This restore method works for either legacy of VSS restores

Open up the TDP GUI

Click on the 'Restore Databases' tab

Click on the 'show inactive and active backup' radio button

The server options are on the left hand side of the window. Expand the SQL server tree twice to see the individual
databases. The first click will show you the SQL servers that are on that node.

Click on the database in the server tree that you want to restore. Databases that will be restored will be highlighted
yellow, with a red tick.

Pick out the database that you want to restore then click the plus sign to the left of it. You will then see what kinds
backups are available for your restore. You can only do a VSS restore if there are full VSS backups available.

Click on the backup file you want from the file list box in the lower right. you can select full, differential or log
backups if these are available. The file list will show backup dates.

If you right click on the backup, you will get another menu to decide where you want the restore to go to. For legacy
restores, you can also select a point in time to restore to.

Click on the restore button

It takes a while for the restore process to start, it will hang for 3-4 minutes with a message 'waiting for the TSM
server'. The restore is waiting for a tape to be mounted in the automated tape library.
As the TSM backups are recognised by the SQL server, it is also possible to run a restore using the SQL Server
Management Studio (SSMS) recovery utility.

Restoring the whole SQL Server

To restore the entire system, the 'master' database must be restored first, with the dbms in single user mode. If
necessary you restore the model and msdb databases next, then finally the application databases.

Stop the DBMS

Start it again in single user mode, from a DOS window. The command is 'sqlservr.exe -m'

Restore the master database using the GUI as above. When the restore completes, it will close the sqlserver
automatically, and then issue an error message that it has lost communication to the database. This is expected, as the
restore just shut the database down. If you see 'restore completed successfully', all is well.

Start the sqlserver in normal mode

Restore the msdb and model databases using the GUI. You can click on both, and restore them with a single operation.
These restores should all work without errors.

Restore the application databases using the GUI. Again, they can all be restored in a single operation. These restores
should all work without errors.

You must have SQLserver running to do TDP restores, and the server must have a minimum of a master, msdb and
model databases allocated. If the SQL server is totally goosed, you have to rebuild the master database from the
SQL install CD. The Install CD has to be at the same SQL code level, release level and stuff as the server that you
are restoring from. You also need to know the schema definition of the database, which must EXACTLY match the
SQL server that you are restoring from. You can find all these definitions by using the TDP command
tdpsqlc query tsm master full /fromsqlserver=xxxxxxxx /tsmnode=xxxxx /tsmpw=xxxxxx /mountwait=yes
/fileinfo /compatibilityinfo

If you are recovering a database to a new location, the restore goes through a reformatting process at the end, and
this can take a while. This was an especial problem with large databases prior to SQL2005, as the MSSQL server
had to format the database files before the recovery could start. To prevent the restore from timing out, you may need
to up the communication timeout parameter on the TSM server. It is usually set to 30 minutes, but that may not be
enough. Use the SETOPT COMMT command on the TSM server to increase it.

Recovering to another server


The easiest way to restore SQL databases to a different Windows server is just to copy the dsm.opt file from the
source to the target server, so the target server thinks that it is the source as far as TSM is concerned. If you do this,
rename the dsm.opt file on the target server first, so you can put it back when you are finished. You will also need to
copy the tdpsql.cfg file, again renaming the original first for backout.
You can also do new server restores with commands, but you need to tell TSM that it is recovering to both a different
TSM node, and a different SQL server. You may also need to issue the command
SET ACCESS BACKUP * TARGET_TSMNODE

from the DSMC command line on the source tsm node


You may need to temporarily comment out PASSWORDACCESS GENERATE in the dsm.opt file in the tdpsql
directory, as you have to supply the password of the other node. Remember to put back PASSWORDACCESS
GENERATE when you are finished.
You can use the GUI for cross server restores by pointing it to a different dsm.opt file which contains a different node
name. Or you can the TDP command line. Open a DOS window, and 'cd' it to the tdpsql directory with the dos
command

cd /d c:\program files\Tivoli\tsm\tdpsql

If you want to restore a single database, it must be registered on the target SQL server with the same name as the
source. Database names are case sensitive If you want to restore the whole system, you start with the master
database as above. The syntax of the command to restore a database is
tdpsqlc res db_name full /fromsqlserver=source_server /tsmnode=source_nodename
/tsmp=password_of_source_node

This will restore the database to the same drive letter and path. If you want to go to a different physical location than
from the original backup using commands then you need to add /FROMSQLSERVER in the command list.
If you are restoring from the GUI it will default to backups from the current server. To find backups from a different
server, click on the RESTORE DATABASES tab to change the server name.
You can specify the /SQLSERVER= option to specifically state which SQL Server you want your restored databases
to go to.
/relocate /to=drive:new\file\location\

You can also use combinations of /into=dbname /replace to force an overwrite of an existing database. Use /into to
restore a database to a different logical database name (as opposed to a different physical location).
If you use /into=newdbname and the newdbname already exists, you need to use /replace. You also use /replace if
your target file exists and is different from the source file. Does all this sound confusing? Try reading the manual!
Here's a couple of examples
To restore the master database from an MSSQL database server called CLS_canary that was on tsm client called
Norwich with password kettle4, onto a TSM client called Ipswich running an MSSQL database server called
CLS_tractor, you need the SQL server started in single user mode, and the actual command is
tdpsqlc res master full /fromsqlserver=CLS_canary /tsmnode=Norwich /tsmp=kettle4 /replace

You don't specify your local node and server, as you are 'pulling' the restore from there.
To restore a user database called Keeper from the CLS_canary MSSQL database server, to a different path,
d:\devdb\copy\norwich\ on the Ipswich server, to replace an existing database called Striker, you run the Ipswich SQL
server in normal mode, and the command is
tdpsqlc res Keeper full /fromsqlserver=CLS_canary /tsmnode=Norwich /tsmp=kettle4 /relocate
/to=d:devdb\copy\norwich\ /into=Striker /replace

Remember, to restore between databases, the database schemas must match.


Cross Server Database restore problem
Sometimes you can get a problem when trying to restore a database onto a new server, using the /relocatedir option
to move the database to a new location. In our case we had /relocatedir=g:\restore\ but the restore kept trying to put
the database back in the original location, then failed because the files were in use (luckily!). The error message said
something like 'file xxxx cannot be overwritten, it is being used, use WITH MOVE to identify a valid location'.
WITH MOVE does not seem to exist, but the solution was to identify all the database components and add them to
the /relocate option as component names and the /to option as path/file names like this

/relocate=SDB_UR,SDB_UR2,SDB_UR3
/to=g:\restore\SDB_UR.mdf,g:\restore\SDB_UR2.ndf,g:\restore\SDB_UR3.ndf
VSS restores
There are two types of VSS restores, 'instant' restores that uses hardware snap shot features, and 'fast' restores that
use backups from local shadow volumes. Both these restores are full database, not incremental or differential
restores. Both these restores also require that the the transaction logs be applied, so while the database restore
might be instant or fast, the overall recovery time might take a while.

Buffers and performance tuning


The TSM TDP uses two sets of buffers to stage the data that it is restoring. The data is initially stored in the
SQLBUFFERS then transferred to the TDPBUFFERS before being passed over to the TSM server. You can adjust
the SQL buffer settings with the restore parameters BUFFERS=n and BUFFERSIZE=kk, where n is a value between
2 and 8, and kk is between 64 and 8192. The default values are 3 and 1024 respectively. You can potentially improve
restore performance by using more, larger buffers but if you start hitting the memory limits on the SQL server and it
starts paging, then performance will be worse.
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TSM 6.3: Restore SQL Database

1 Vote

TSM SQL database restoration method is very flexible. My example is just a small taste of it.
Example 1: Restore DB with same name to the same server
1) Delete the table dbo.ChunkData from the ReportServerTempDB to simulate the scenario
of data loss.

2) Open flash copy manager on TSM_Client01 and set Replace=True in the restore option.

3) Choose the backup DB and click restore.

4) Confirm the removed table is restored

Example 2: Restore DB with different name to the same server


1) Right click the backup DB and choose Restore to Alternate Location

2) Set the new name of the database to be TEST, and new location of the file is C:\Backup

3) Confirm the new DB in SQL server

Example 3: Restore DB from TSM_Client02 to TSM_Client01


1) Change nodename to TSM_Client02_SQL in the file C:\Program
Files\Tivoli\TSM\TDPSql\dsm.opt on TSM_Client01
NODename TSM_Client02_SQL
2) Launch tdpsql.exe and click Restore Databases tab. A warning may pop up, just click OK.
(or grant the proxynode on TSM_Sandbox first: grant proxynode
target=TSM_Client02_SQL agent=TSM_Client01)

3) The DB on the source server will be listed now. Just choose the DB and click restore. (You
can specify the new DB name in Restore Into, and new location in Relocate)

4) Confirm the database has been restored. And change the setting that is modified in step
1) back.

Example 4: Use tdpsqlc to restore DB from a different server


1) Uncomment the password settings in the dsm.opt on TSM_Client01
*PASSWORDAccess generate
2) Run the following command to restore database named Profile DB from TSM_Client02 to
TSM_Client01
tdpsqlc restore Profile DB full /tsmnode=TSM_client02_SQL
/fromSQLServer=Sbox-Sql

3) Confirm the profile DB has been restored, and change the password settings back.

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