Paul, you wouldn't happen to know off hand the APAR for the horrible mirroring bug, would you?
tia lisa "Seay, Paul" <seay_pd@NAPTH To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] EON.COM> cc: Sent by: Subject: Re: RAID5 in TSM "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED] IST.EDU> 10/22/2002 04:51 PM Please respond to "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" We run on the ESS. No mirroring! You are paying for a solution that has such high availability numbers it makes no sense. If you want to improve your recovery, run more incremental backups so you can roll to the most current, do a volhistory dump, and put that information on the root disk (not on the ESS) or a different array in the ESS on OS/390. There is also a mirroring bug below 4.2.2.8 that can cause horrible database backup performance. You are correct, it is overkill for the database. The only thing I could possibly justify is mirroring the log on different SSA loops in the ESS so that if the log died I could recover from the last backup. There have been a handful of ESS array failures. For example, a microcode glitch that occurred if a DDM failed and a parity rebuild was in process because of a SSA adapter special condition. That was fixed in G5+1 of the ESS microcode about 8 months ago. Only one customer ever saw that problem to my knowledge. There was also a bad vintage of drives that has been cleaned up. But otherwise, things have been solid and we should trust this hardware. Paul D. Seay, Jr. Technical Specialist Naptheon Inc. 757-688-8180 -----Original Message----- From: Matt Simpson [mailto:msimpson@;UKY.EDU] Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2002 1:52 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: RAID5 in TSM At 9:27 AM -0400 10/22/02, Lawrence Clark said: >Even though there may be a slight performance hit on writes, I've >placed the TSM DB on RAID-5 to ensure availability and no down time in >case of a disk loss. With RAID 5, is there any point in software mirroring (dual copies of database)? Our DB is on RAID5 (Shark). We also have 2 copies of it, except for one extent that we added in a crunch when it filled up. Are the dual copies overkill on RAID 5? I know that even RAID is not totally infallible, and we could have a potential disaster that wipes out the whole Shark. But that's why we have backups. The chances of that are pretty slim, and I can't imagine any scenario where we could have a RAID failure that wouldn't leave us so dead that we'd have to restore anyway. -- Matt Simpson -- OS/390 Support 219 McVey Hall -- (859) 257-2900 x300 University Of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506 <mailto:msimpson@;uky.edu> mainframe -- An obsolete device still used by thousands of obsolete companies serving billions of obsolete customers and making huge obsolete profits for their obsolete shareholders. And this year's run twice as fast as last year's.