It used to be 20 or 25 buffers to establish the I/o sweet spot.  Maybe with
the faster dasd the amount is different.

Rob

On Tue, Feb 20, 2018, 7:53 PM Tommy Tsui <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Ron,
> You are right when I changed BUFNO to 255,
>  The overall elapsed time reduce from 12mins to 6 mins,
> So what can I do now,? Change BUFNO only ? How about vsam or db2
> performance?
>
>
> Ron hawkins <[email protected]> 於 2018年2月21日 星期三寫道:
>
> > Tommy,
> >
> > With PPRC, TrueCopy or SRDF synchronous the FICON and FCP speed are
> > independent of one another, but the stepped down speed elongate the
> Remote
> > IO.
> >
> > In simple terms a block that you write from the host to the P-VOL takes
> > 0.5ms to transfer on 16Gb FICON, and but then you do the synchronous
> write
> > on 2Gb FCP to the S-VOL it will take 4ms, or 8 times longer to transfer.
> > This time is in addition to command latency and round-trip delay time. As
> > described below, this impact will be less for long, chained writes
> because
> > of the Host/PPRC overlap.
> >
> > I'm not sure how you simulate this on your monoplex, but I assume you set
> > up a PPRC pair to the remote site. If you are testing with BSAM or QSAM
> > (like OLDGENER), then set SYSUT2 BUFNO=1 to see the single block impact.
> If
> > you are using zHPF, I think you can vary the BUFNO or NCP to get up to
> 255
> > chained blocks.
> >
> > I'm not aware of anything in GRS that adds to remote IO disconnect time.
> >
> > Ron
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On
> > Behalf Of Tommy Tsui
> > Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2018 2:42 AM
> > To: [email protected]
> > Subject: Re: [IBM-MAIN] DASD problem
> >
> > Hi Ron,
> > What happens to if our ficon card is 16gb, and fcp connection is 2gb, I
> > try to do the simulation on monoplex  lpar , the result is fine, now we
> are
> > suspect the GRS or other system parm which will increase the disconnect
> time
> >
> > Ron hawkins <[email protected]> 於 2018年2月
> >
> > 15日 星期四寫道:
> >
> > > Tommy,
> > >
> > > This should not be a surprise. The name "Synchronous Remote Copy"
> > > implies the overhead that you are seeing, namely the time for the
> > > synchronous write to the remote site.
> > >
> > > PPRC will more than double the response time of random writes because
> > > they the Host write to cache has the additional time of controller
> > > latency, round trip delay, and block transfer before the write is
> > > complete. On IBM and HDS (not sure with EMC) the impact is greater for
> > > single blocks, as chained sequential writes have some overlap between
> > > the host write, and the synchronous write.
> > >
> > > Some things to check:
> > >
> > > 1) Buffer Credits on ISLs between the sites. If no ISLs then settings
> > > on the storage host ports to cater for 30km B2B credits
> > > 2) Channel speed step-down - If your FICON channels are 8Gb, and the
> > > FCP connections are 2Gb, then PPRC writes will take up to four times
> > > longer to transfer. It dep[ends on the block size.
> > > 3) Unbalanced ISLs - ISLs do not automatically rebalance after one
> drops.
> > > The more concurrent IO there is on an ISL, the longer the transfer
> > > time for each PPRC write. There may be one opr more ISL that are not
> > > being used, while others are overloaded
> > > 4) Switch board connections not optimal - talk to your switch vendor
> > > 5) Host adapter ports connections not optimal - talk to your storage
> > > vendor
> > > 6) Sysplex tuning may identify IO that can convert from disk to
> > > Sysplex caching. Not my expertise, but I'm sure there are some red
> books.
> > >
> > > There is good information on PPRC activity in the RMF Type 78 records.
> > > You may want to do some analysis of these to see how transfer rates
> > > and PPRC write response time correlate with your DASD disconnect time.
> > >
> > > Final Comment: do you really need synchronous remote copy? If your
> > > company requires zero data loss, then you don't get this from
> > > synchronous replication alone. You must use the Critical=Yes option
> > > which has it's own set of risks and challenges. If you are not using
> > > GDPS and Hyperswap for hot failover, then synchronous is not much
> better
> > than asynchronous.
> > > Rolling disasters, transaction roll back, and options that turn off
> > > in-flight data set recovery can all see synchronous recovery time end
> > > up with the same RPO as Asynchronous.
> > >
> > > Ron
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]]
> > > On Behalf Of Tommy Tsui
> > > Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2018 12:41 AM
> > > To: [email protected]
> > > Subject: Re: [IBM-MAIN] DASD problem
> > >
> > > Hi,
> > > The distance is around 30km, do you know any settings on sysplex
> > > environment such as GRS and JES2 checkpoint need to aware?
> > > Direct DASD via San switch to Dr site , 2GBPS interface , we check
> > > with vendor, they didn't find any problem on San switch or DASD, I
> > > suspect the system settings
> > >
> > > Alan(GMAIL)Watthey <[email protected]> 於 2018年2月15日 星期四寫道:
> > >
> > > > Tommy,
> > > >
> > > > This sounds like the PPRC links might be a bit slow or there are not
> > > > enough of them.
> > > >
> > > > What do you have?  Direct DASD to DASD or via a single SAN switch or
> > > > even cascaded?  What settings (Gbps) are all the interfaces running
> > > > at (you can ask the switch for the switch and RMF for the DASD)?
> > > >
> > > > What type of fibre are they?  LX or SX?  What kind of length are
> they?
> > > >
> > > > Any queueing?
> > > >
> > > > There are so many variables that can affect the latency.  Are there
> > > > any of the above that you can improve on?
> > > >
> > > > I can't remember what IBM recommends but 80% sounds a little high to
> > me.
> > > > They are only used for writes (not reads).
> > > >
> > > > Regards,
> > > > Alan Watthey
> > > >
> > > > -----Original Message-----
> > > > From: Tommy Tsui [mailto:[email protected]]
> > > > Sent: 15 February 2018 12:15 am
> > > > Subject: DASD problem
> > > >
> > > > >
> > > > > Hi all,
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Our shop found the most job elapse time prolong due to pprc
> > > > synchronization versus without pprc mode. It's almost 4 times faster
> > > > if without pprc synchronization. Is there any parameters we need to
> > > > tune on z/os or disk subsystem side? We found the % disk util in RMF
> > > > report over 80, Any help will be appreciated. Many thanks
> > > >
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Rob Schramm

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