Hi Farren, I'm not familiar with the vmstat command and Solaris but this is what I have learned during the last years as a TSM consultant:
- Use as much and as fast CPUs as possible for the TSM server. As every database-based application TSM is CPU-depending. I've seen very great performance differences between different TSM servers. At one time we upgraded a single CPU Windows TSM Box to a dual processor machine and the performance of the expiration process rose from 200 examined objects per second (EOPS) to more than 3.000 EOPS... Or the database backup process: I've seen systems backing up 30.000 pages per minute and other TSM servers accomplish over 60.000 pages (both using IBM LTO Ultrium drives). CPU power also affects the client performance because client and server have to search for eligible files to back up and the larger the number of files on a client or the higher the number of versions the longer does it take to back up the client. - Try to optimize your cache hit ratio at a level > 99%. The new SELFTUNEBUFPOOLSIZE option is very helpful for this task... - Use raw partitions rather than ufs or vxfs filesystems for the db, recovery log and disk storage pool volumes (if possible). - Look at the network settings for the affected clients. E.g. auto-sensing is known to cause problems for certain network adapter/switch combinations or different settings for full-/halfduplex. Or try an ftp transfer from the client to the TSM server and vice versa to see if the network is the bottleneck (Once one of our customers complained about the backup performance but he had forgotten that the leasing contract of his DNS server had expired and the system had been removed. I was just wondering that TSM was backing up data at all...). - Look at the memory consumption on the clients and the server during the backup. Tuning the memory subsystem can solve many performance issues... I don't know what type of clients you back up, what kind of hardware they are running on or which type of data they have but performance tuning can be a very difficult task. And you have to look at each client individually. Mit freundlichen Grüßen, Met vriendelijke groeten, With best regards, Bien amicalement, CU/2, Dirk Billerbeck Dirk Billerbeck CC CompuNet AG & Co. oHG Enterprise Computing Solutions Am Jaegersberg 20, 24161 Altenholz (Kiel), Germany Phone: +49 (0) 431 / 3609 - 117, Fax: +49 (0) 431 / 3609 - 190, Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED] This email is confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, you must not disclose or use the information contained in it. If you have received this mail in error, please tell us immediately by return email and delete the document.