No copy storage pools... how do you handle damaged tapes?
_____________________________ William Mansfield Senior Consultant Solution Technology, Inc "Cook, Dwight E" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent by: "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 04/30/2002 07:48 AM Please respond to "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: Subject: Re: Recovering from a disaster .... OK, I've been working with TSM (ADSM) for about 6 years now and you can call me cheap but I never (personally) though DRM was worth the money. We do operate in a unique environment here so I shouldn't say that DRM has no place in the market, it is just that I was doing DRM before DRM came out and once it did I couldn't justify the cost just to replace all that I had done over the years. We don't really run with copy storage pools... our TSM servers are located offsite to the production boxes that they backup so backups are effectively "offsite" as soon as they are created. We also deal with so much data across our 10 TSM servers on a daily basis that we would have to make them 20 if we were to copy all the data on a daily basis, and that just isn't going to happen. Now what sort of disaster am I protecting against ? Total loss of environment due to hardware failure. Not really counting fire, flood, water, etc... If my actual server goes dead, AS LONG AS I HAVE MY ATL, well at least the tapes, I'm OK. So to answer your question, almost yes. You need your db backup (from tape, disk, somewhere), you need definitions of your data base & log files (I always allocate them the same size as they were), the device configuration file is nice (just about necessary). With that info you can get back your environment as long as you have your tapes. Dwight E. Cook Software Application Engineer III Science Applications International Corporation 509 S. Boston Ave. Suit 220 Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103-4606 Office (918) 732-7109 -----Original Message----- From: Sandra Ghaoui [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2002 5:43 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Recovering from a disaster .... Hello everybody, I have one more question ... is it possible to recover from a disaster just by having the TSM database backup and our data backup on tapes? I've been reading about the Disaster Recovery Manager and if I got it right, I would need to have copy storage pools to recover from disaster? thx for helping ... Sandra __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Health - your guide to health and wellness http://health.yahoo.com