FWIW, I had a problem the other year where the TSM server was in SENDW for 30-40 seconds for every minute during a restore and it had to do with the filesystem attempting to check quotas for the 125k users in the filesystem. Disabling quota checks helped that one go much faster.
-Jonathan Kauffman, Tom said the following on 08/28/2007 01:57 PM:
Oh the bottleneck is definitely file create -- The top three directories (drive letters): Z -- userhome -- 764,184 files, 60,281 directories Y -- 'data' -- 636,514 files, 47,144 directories W -- 'engineering' -- 745,976 files, 134,863 files The TSM server is spending all it's time in SENDW, except for the roughly 2 hours (over the course of 60) that it was in mediaw waiting to get to the directory structure on the other tape pool. And I've got some ideas from Richard that will cut that right out. I seem to recall someone actually running a study on restore performance vs file count; I'm trying to find it in the mail archives. Maybe an image backup would help -- this is an active/passive windows cluster and 'offline' is not an available backup option. Can I get away with an online image backup? Also -- we restore to unlike hardware at the hot site (install Win2003 server, install TSM client, restore) -- would this be an issue for an image restore? Thanks -- Tom -----Original Message----- From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kelly Lipp Sent: Monday, August 27, 2007 5:40 PM To: ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU Subject: Re: Looking for suggestions to speed up restore for a Windows server How about periodic Image backups of the file server volumes? Couple that with daily traditional TSM backups and perhaps you have something that works out better at the DR site. The problem is as you described it: lots of files to create. Did you observe that you were pecking through tapes, or was the bottleneck at the file create level on the Windows box? Or could you really tell? Even if you create another pool for the directory data (which is easy to implement) you would still have that stuff on many different tapes. What about a completely new storage pool hierarchy for that one client? And then aggressively reclaim the DR pool to keep the number of tapes at a very small number. I'd really like to know where the bottleneck really was. If it's file create time on the client itself, speeding up other things won't help. If that's the case, then I like the image backup notion periodically. Even if you did this once/month, the number of files that you would restore would be fairly small compared to the overall file server. And the TSM client does this for you automagically so the restore isn't hard. And this also brings up the fact that a restore of this nature in the a non DR situation probably isn't much better! Thanks, Kelly Kelly J. Lipp VP Manufacturing & CTO STORServer, Inc. 485-B Elkton Drive Colorado Springs, CO 80907 719-266-8777 [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----Original Message----- From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kauffman, Tom Sent: Monday, August 27, 2007 12:40 PM To: ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU Subject: [ADSM-L] Looking for suggestions to speed up restore for a Windows server We had our fall D/R hotsite test last week and all went well -- except for the recovery of our primary Windows 2003 file sharing system. It just takes WAY too long. Part of the problem is the sheer number of files/directories per drive -- I'm working with the Intel/Windows admin group to try some changes when we swap this system out in November. Part of the problem is that the directory structure is scattered over a mass of other backups. I'm looking for suggestions on this. The system is co-located by drive, but only for five of the nine logical drives on the system. I may have to bite the bullet and run all nine logical drives through co-location. Is there any way to force the directory structure for a given drive to the same management class/storage pool as the data? I'm thinking I may have finally come up with a use for a second domain, with the default management class being the one that does co-location by drive. If I go this route -- how do I migrate all of the current data? Export/Import? How do I clean up the off-site copies? Delete volume/backup storage pool? I'm on TSM Server 5.3.2.0, with a 5.3 (not sure of exact level) client. TIA Tom Kauffman NIBCO, Inc CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email and any attachments are for the exclusive and confidential use of the intended recipient. If you are not the intended recipient, please do not read, distribute or take action in reliance upon this message. 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