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Interface information tab, Interface – HP StoreOnce Backup User Manual

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Table 9 Emulation types for tape devices (continued)

Description

Emulation type

NOTE:

Symantec prefers their customers use this emulation type with BackupExec and

Netbackup.

An enterprise tape library solution that allows you to configure up to 500 drives and up to
4096 cartridges per library (HP 4900 = up to 16384 cartridges per library).

EML E Series

An enterprise tape solution that allows you to configure up to 500 drives and up to 4096
cartridges per library (HP 4900 = up to 16384 cartridges per library).

ESL E Series

A tape library device that appears as a native IBM TS3500 device in a TSM environment
to allow use of standard IBM drivers. The emulation type is configured at the library level.

IBM-TS3500

Therefore, all drives on a library configured with the IBM-TS3500 emulation type will use
the IBM-LTO3 drive emulation type. If the library is then changed to a different emulation
type, the drives will change to the new emulation type.

A tape library device with a maximum of two embedded Ultrium tape drives and 24 cartridge
slots. It should be used when implementing rotation schemes which involve simultaneous
backup jobs to two devices. This emulation type is widely supported by backup applications.

MSL G3 Series (2x24)

A tape library device with a maximum of four embedded Ultrium tape drives and 48 cartridge
slots. It should be used when implementing rotation schemes which involve simultaneous

MSL G3 Series (4x48)

backup jobs to more than two devices or those that use a large number of cartridges devices.
This emulation type is widely supported by backup applications.

A tape library device with a maximum of eight embedded Ultrium tape drives and 96
cartridge slots.

MSL G3 Series (8x96)

Flexible emulation

The ESL, EML and D2DBS emulations are particularly flexible because they allow you to configure
a large number of drives per library. The main benefits are that a large number of drives allows:

more concurrent streams on backups which are throttled due to host application throughput,
such as multi-streamed backups from a database.

a single library (and therefore deduplication store) to contain similar data from backups that
must run in parallel to increase deduplication ratio.

If using these flexible emulation types, the following factors should also be considered:

An important consideration when configuring VTL devices is that the library and each drive
that you configure for it counts as a separate device. There are practical limitations on the
number of devices that each host and Fibre Channel switch or HBA can access. See

StoreOnce

key parameters (page 183)

.

For iSCSI VTL devices, a single Windows or Linux host can only access a maximum of 64
devices. A single library with 63 drives is the most that a single host can access. Configuring
a single library with more than 63 drives will result in not all devices in the library being seen
(which may include the library device). The same limitation could be hit with multiple libraries
and fewer drives per library.

The total device value also applies to NAS shares and Catalyst stores. If you configure the
full value as VTL devices, you will not be able to configure any NAS shares or Catalyst stores
for that appliance.

Refer to the HP StoreOnce Backup system Concepts and Configuration Guidelines for maximum
and recommended values.

Interface Information tab

This tab shows interface information for the media changer and drives on the selected library.

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VTL (Virtual Tape Libraries) functions