Just try it yourself and see...

--
Joshua S. Bassi
Sr. Solutions Architect @ rs-unix.com
IBM Certified - AIX 5L, SAN, Shark
eServer Systems Expert -pSeries HACMP
Tivoli Certified Consultant- ADSM/TSM
Cell (415) 215-0326

-----Original Message-----
From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Justin Bleistein
Sent: Monday, June 10, 2002 12:46 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: tsm internal design?

Explain what do you mean "eric", can you provide print screens?

--Justin Richard Bleistein




                    Alex Paschal
                    <AlexPaschal@FREIGHT        To:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                    LINER.COM>                  cc:
                    Sent by: "ADSM: Dist        Subject:     Re: tsm
internal design?
                    Stor Manager"
                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                    U>


                    06/10/2002 02:43 PM
                    Please respond to
                    "ADSM: Dist Stor
                    Manager"






I don't know about the internals documentation, but the dsmfmt command
just
writes "Eric" over and over again to create a file of the appropriate
size.
I wonder who Eric is.

   ./dsmfmt -m -db ./tempdbvol 5
   cat tempdbvol

Alex Paschal
Storage Administrator
Freightliner, LLC
(503) 745-6850 phone/vmail


-----Original Message-----
From: Justin Bleistein [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, June 06, 2002 6:29 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: tsm internal design?


I'm planning on taking over classes at a local community college
teaching
classes about Unix operating system design, teaching the super block
design, inode assignment design, system calls, file descriptor table
designs etc. I want to try to put together a TSM internals design
curriculum as well and I was wondering does anyone know of any books or
online documentation which explains the design of TSM from an internals
perspective? Is there any documentation for geeks like us?. Any
suggestions
would be appreciated thanks! The best I can do right now is explain the
different database tables. I'm looking for something more in depth. Like
what the "dsmfmt" command is actually doing, under the covers. thanks!

--Justin Richard Bleistein

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