Quoting Ted Byrne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Has anyone received a similar response from TSM support in the past? We > are working on an issue with a process running for a very long time, and > received the following as part of the response from TSM support: > > [W]as that the > run-time of a specific backup process, or was > that the run-time of the entire script. > > Since we do not support scripts, I need to verify > that this problem is not your script. Try running > each command in your script manually. > > The specific instance was a storagepool backup that was still running a day > later, parked on a 16+ GB file. The storagepool backup was tape to tape; > the drives are on separate, dedicated SCSI adapters. > > TSM Server is Win2k, > TSM version 4.2.1.0, > IBM 3583 Library >
TSM does not support scripting. I assumed at one point that meant the scripts per se, but no it's scripting. I tried to pin down the precise definition of scripting since in unix everything runs from a shell more or less, with an exec() system call, and with some tty and enviroment restrictions applied. No, just sh, ksh, and csh (the standard shells) from the command line. It doesn't say much for TSM that they cannot even state what their command runtime environment should be, and that they impose arbitrary restrictions on their command usage instead. Joe Seigh
