Greetings, My question is, is it necessary to use a production client for this sort of testing? Couldn't they use a test client, take backups, play with the time however they want, and then when they are all done, just delete that TSM client and all it's backups? Even during Y2K testing we used test systems whereever possible. Those test systems were built out of the production systems so the applications were just the same. But in the event of problems there wouldn't be any residual gotchas to contend with after testing was done. If it is absolutely necessary to use a production server, maybe you could still use a test TSM client. If the production TSM client is called MYCLIENT, you could register a TSM client called MYCLIENT_TEST, then on the day you want to time-travel, name the client MYCLIENT_TEST in the TSM options files, and authenticate, and take a first backup. Then they can do any testing they want during the day, and any backups. Then sometime before the nightly backup comes along, switch the TSM client back to MYCLIENT, and restart the services. You could switch back and forth every day they wanted to test if you needed to. Eventually when all the testing is done, you just delete MYCLIENT_TEST from TSM. The only problem with this plan is it still doesn't address the fact that, while time travelling, MYCLIENT may get a bunch of files with future dates. This could still contaminate MYCLIENT's backup data if steps aren't taken to touch each of those files to get the datestamps right again, or restore them from MYCLIENT's last good backup to be sure. Which brings me back to, why use a production server for this sort of testing? Wouldn't a test server be safer?
Best Regards, John D. Schneider The Computer Coaching Community, LLC Office: (314) 635-5424 / Toll Free: (866) 796-9226 Cell: (314) 750-8721 -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Re: [ADSM-L] TSM time Travel From: Robert Clark <robert_cl...@mac.com> Date: Mon, March 01, 2010 9:20 am To: ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU Back during the run up to Y2K, I was doing storage/backup admin. The team doing Y2K testing didn't tell us anything about what they were doing, and they started to get weird results with attempted restores when they took systems forward and backwards in time. My first reaction was that they were endangering the production TSM servers by testing against them. My second reaction was that they needed to seek out a Time Lord. Part of the problem was the havok the time travel rasied with retention, the other part was the difficulty in figuring out what to restore. Our work around was to script a call to from the time-traveling system to a not-time-traveling system to get the real world time, and then use that text in the description of an archive. When folks wanted to do a retrieve, all they needed to do was look over the description fields to see what dates were available. I was happy to see testing completed, and the archived filespaces/ nodes deleted. Thanks, [RC] On Feb 22, 2010, at 2:42 PM, Steve Harris wrote: > Hello Again, > > > I have a client with a requirement to perform testing at different > times > into the future. They wish to set the clocks, backup, do some > testing, > backup, set the clock again, and so on. > > They wish to be able to roll forward and *backward* to any time > that they > have tested at. > > Now I realize that the TSM scheduler will have conniptions if the > server > time is too far out. Assuming that we kick off a backup by some other > means, will TSM handle being able to roll back and forth in this > manner? > Will the client be able to see a backup on march 1 that was taken at a > client time setting of October 1 2010? > > Any pointers/gotchas gladly received. > > Regards > > Steve > > Steven Harris > TSM Admin > Paraparaumu, New Zealand.