This subject looked like burnt potatoes the last time it was discussed. It is finished being discussed here, the archives are the answer!
Paul D. Seay, Jr. Technical Specialist Naptheon Inc. 757-688-8180 -----Original Message----- From: Mark D. Rodriguez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 20, 2002 1:31 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: incrbydate option Thomas Denier wrote: >The documentation for the incrbydate options states that it will "back >up new and changed files with a modification date later than the last >incremental backup stored at the server". This is somewhere between >ambiguous and incoherent. An incremental backup takes place over a time >interval, not at a specific moment. Does anyone know exactly what time >is compared to the file modification times? > >The clocks on most if not all of our client systems are synchonized to >an NNTP server. The clock on our OS/390 TSM server is synchronized to >the operator's wristwatch. As a result, the mainframe clock is often as >much as several minutes out of synchronization with the client clocks. >How does this affect the behavior of the incrbydate option? > >I am getting extremely tired of spending time dealing with amgiguities, >omissions, and outright errors in the TSM documentation. > > Thomas, Rather than re-hash an old subject, may I suggest you look in the archives of 3 or 4 months ago. There was a rather long thread that covered this subject at length. However, I will give you the short version. Every time you do a regular incremental backup there is a time stamp(TS) that is set in ITSM DB. It is that TS that is used by the INCRBYDATE option. It simply checks to see if the file modification time is newer than the TS I just mentioned. There are many draw backs to using INCRBYDATE, if you don't need it I recommend that you don't use it. On another note a strongly agree with what Richard said about giving feedback to the Documentation group. -- Regards, Mark D. Rodriguez President MDR Consulting, Inc. ============================================================================ === MDR Consulting The very best in Technical Training and Consulting. IBM Advanced Business Partner SAIR Linux and GNU Authorized Center for Education IBM Certified Advanced Technical Expert, CATE AIX Support and Performance Tuning, RS6000 SP, TSM/ADSM and Linux Red Hat Certified Engineer, RHCE ============================================================================ ===