only way to reset is to delete both /nsr/res and /nsr/mm and restart, licensing information is contained in both these locations.
If your running an Eval you essentially have a time-limited Enterprise licenses (no restrictions), if one expires, you are correct, restores can still be done, but you wont have any jukebox functionality within networker.
A lot of people are aware of the restore functionality from an NSR server that is disabled/expired, what most dont consider is that the only "storage node" that will enabled devices will be the NSR server itself, all others will be disabled.
basically you will have LAN based recovery functionality
If you wish to continue to use this in a test environment, stop Networker, delete the directories under nsr of mm, index and res then restart, but this will be with a newly installed configuration. If this is not good enough you may be able to find another one if you do a search on the web, or you may be able to persuade your EMC account manager to give you an extended temporary enabler if you can convince them there may be some new business as a result of your testing...
That's not really what you asked. In your example you put base enabler and that is different from what eval is. With base enabler you are limited by features you can utilize (and their number).
The eval mode is stored in nsrdb like a base enabler. If you remove this "eval-base" with nsradmin off line and at the same time 'renew' (delete) the mediadatabase (mm-directory) you can play with your existing configuration.
Another way to extend the test period are the evaluation enabler that comes with the mediakit. And if you use a license server you can extend with the same enabler even more
cfaller
96 Posts
1
April 7th, 2009 22:00
If your running an Eval you essentially have a time-limited Enterprise licenses (no restrictions), if one expires, you are correct, restores can still be done, but you wont have any jukebox functionality within networker.
A lot of people are aware of the restore functionality from an NSR server that is disabled/expired, what most dont consider is that the only "storage node" that will enabled devices will be the NSR server itself, all others will be disabled.
basically you will have LAN based recovery functionality
DavidHampson
2 Intern
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April 8th, 2009 05:00
Hari5
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April 12th, 2009 07:00
NWadmin1
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April 12th, 2009 07:00
tbirkenbach
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May 19th, 2009 06:00
You CAN essentially reset the eval license(s) by (as done in UNIX)...
1) Stop all NetWorker daemons
# /etc/init.d/networker stop
2) Use nsradmin to edit the resource configuration file
# /usr/sbin/nsr/nsradmin -d /nsr/res/nsrdb/
3) Enter visual mode
NetWorker administration program.
Use the "help" command for help, "visual" for full-screen mode.
nsradmin> visual
4) Select [Select], then select [NSR license] to display licenses
5) Select [Next] as needed until you display the base enabler
6) Select [Delete] to remove the base enabler
7) After deleting the base enabler, quit out of nsradmin
8) Restart NetWorker daemons
# /etc/init.d/networker start
9) Launch /usr/bin/nsr/nwadmin or use /usr/sbin/nsr/nsrcap to install new base enabler
ble1
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May 19th, 2009 07:00
DavidHampson
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May 20th, 2009 01:00
Holger_Inf
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122 Posts
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May 20th, 2009 01:00
If you remove this "eval-base" with nsradmin off line and at the same time 'renew' (delete) the mediadatabase (mm-directory) you can play with your existing configuration.
Another way to extend the test period are the evaluation enabler that comes with the mediakit. And if you use a license server you can extend with the same enabler even more