During the use of EMC timefinder, did you use the BCV (third mirror) to
perform backups?  If so
how does IBM Flash Copy compares to your backup stragety?

-----Original Message-----
From: Caffey, Jeff L. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, February 23, 2001 11:38 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FIVE questions for TSM 4.1.2 (server on AIX, clients on
Windo ws)


REALLY...?   Are you using SAN connection agents or is that performance
increase still going across your network?

Thank you,

Jeff Caffey
Enterprise Systems Programmer
Pier 1 imports, Inc.  -  Information Services
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Voice: (817) 252-6222
Fax:   (817) 252-7299

 -----Original Message-----
From:   Carl Makin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Thursday, February 22, 2001 5:46 PM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        Re: FIVE questions for TSM 4.1.2 (server on AIX, clients on
Windows)

On Thu, 22 Feb 2001, Caffey, Jeff L. wrote:

>
> We are in the process of implementing TSM, an IBM Shark, and a SAN all at
> the same time (I'm swamped)!  We are replacing EMC's Data Manager, an EMC
> Symmetrix, and Veritas' Backup Exec with one brand new TSM server running
on
> an IBM RS/6000 (H80, 1GB RAM, 500GB Internal SSA Disk for storage pools,
> Gigabit Ethernet to LAN, Fibre Channel to SAN, 5 LTO tape drives, and as
> much additional 'shark' disk as necessary) performing backups on the
> following server platforms:

We moved our 120Gb disk backup pool from a SSA D40 drawer (RAID5) to the
Shark and got an order of magnitude improvement in backup times.  40Gb
NOTES backups went from 20 hours to 4 hours.  The shark outperforms the
SSA disk by a significant amount.  If you start having performance
problems then I'd recommend moving all your TSM data to the shark and
using the SSA somewhere else. (That's what we're doing now)

We have 83 nodes (mixed AIX, Solaris, NT and FreeBSD) and the ADSM server
is a H70.


Carl.

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