... >What I want to do is to take an snapshot of our TSM data as it was at end >of year 1/1/04 and archive it away for 10 years. ...
This kind of requirement begs a lot of questions, as it tends to be one of those very vague management ideas which receives too little thought from the decision makers. - With organizations typically having terabytes of data in storage, does mgmt really expect to "snapshot" it in less than a day? - Are they imposing this requirement on a backup-restore system which has not been configured technologically to accommodate this huge incongruity in operation? - Do they have a clear idea of what they would later do with such snapshotted data (which drives a requirement for reintroduction of the data), or is this just a "warm feeling" exercise? - Do they realize that the hardware and software technology which produces such a snapshot today may no longer exist 10 years hence? There are a lot of implications to approaching an initiative like this. A Dilbert boss spur of the moment (i.e., after the first of the year has passed) assigned task of somehow making a snapshot of everything just doesn't cut it. Just commiserating amongst us technicians, Richard Sims BU