Andrew,
RESOURCEUTILIZATION may suffice but you might want to setup a few unique
node names, one for each table space or set of table spaces, and back them
up separately. This also gets you faster restores since you would have to
restore them the same way you backed them up.
Steffan
- Origi
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: 13 March 2002 11:38
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: TSM 4.2.1 and oracle
>
>
>Yes, it will. The time stamp of every database file changes when you shut
>down the database. Hence TSM sees the files as they were changed.
4.2.1 and oracle
Yes, it will. The time stamp of every database file changes when you shut
down the database. Hence TSM sees the files as they were changed.
Kurt
"ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I
If you use resourceutil=5 or greater and have a fast (and stable) network it
can be done.
-Oorspronkelijk bericht-
Van: Andrew Hull [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Verzonden: woensdag 13 maart 2002 11:05
Aan: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Onderwerp: TSM 4.2.1 and oracle
I want to be able to backup a m
Andrew,
directly backing up the database files tends to wasting lots of storage
space in TSM as you not only do uncompressed but very uncompressed
backups (especially when your db is quite new and has larger free
capacity). When you have enough diskspace on your Oracle server, why not
use RMAN to
Yes, it will. The time stamp of every database file changes when you shut down the
database. Hence TSM sees the files as they were changed.
Kurt
"ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I want to be able to backup a mixture