Back in March, I watched a recorded presentation about DB2 reorgs within TSM server 6.2.2.0, and discovered that OnTap will only allow snapdiff backups to work correctly with releases 7.3.3 and 8.1, NOT 8.0. Apparently OnTap 7.3.3 and 8.1 contain the File Access Protocol (FAP), but 8.0 does not, so snapdiff would fail. - Margaret Clark
-----Original Message----- From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU] On Behalf Of David Bronder Sent: Monday, June 27, 2011 1:24 PM To: ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU Subject: [ADSM-L] snapdiff advice Hi folks. I'm trying to get snapdiff backups of our NetApp (OnTAP version 8.0.1P5) working so I can move away from everybody's favorite NDMP backups... So far, I'm not having much luck. I don't know whether I'm just Doing It Wrong (tm) or if something else is going on. In particular, on both Windows 2008 R2 (6.2.3.0) and RHEL 5.6 (6.2.2.0), I'm getting failures like the following, depending on the dsmc invocation: ANS1670E The file specification is not valid. Specify a valid Network Appliance or N-Series NFS (AIX, Linux) or CIFS (Windows) volume. ANS2831E Incremental by snapshot difference cannot be performed on 'volume-name' as it is not a NetApp NFS or CIFS volume. (These are shares at the root of full volumes, not Q-trees. I'm using a CIFS share for the Windows client, and an NFS share for the Linux client, with the correct respective permission/security styles. TSM server is still 5.5, but my understanding is that that should be OK.) For those of you who have snapdiff working, could you share any examples of how you're actually doing it? E.g., your dsmc invocation, how you're mounting the share (must a Windows share be mapped to a drive letter?), or anything relevant in the dsm.opt or dsm.sys (other than the requisite testflags if using an older OnTAP). Or anything else you think is useful that the documentation left out. (Also of interest would be how you're scheduling your snapdiff backups, and how you have that coexisting with local filesystems on the client running the snapdiff backups.) Thanks, =Dave -- Hello World. David Bronder - Systems Admin Segmentation Fault ITS-EI, Univ. of Iowa Core dumped, disk trashed, quota filled, soda warm. david-bron...@uiowa.edu