Curious. No, TSM is not psychic, as far as I know. Can you post the *complete* output from the following:
1) dsmadmc -id=youradmin -pa=xxxx q ev * * 2) dsmadmc -id=youradmin -pa=xxxx q sch <domain> <schedname> Specify the domain and schedule name for one of the scheduled events showing the goofy times. 3) dsmadmc -id=youradmin -pa=xxxx show time Regards, Andy Andy Raibeck IBM Software Group Tivoli Storage Manager Client Development Internal Notes e-mail: Andrew Raibeck/Tucson/[EMAIL PROTECTED] Internet e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] The only dumb question is the one that goes unasked. The command line is your friend. "Good enough" is the enemy of excellence. "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 07/14/2004 14:51:41: > We've been seeing this for some time now, and haven't really done anything > about it as it doesn't seem to affect actual backup success in any way. > But it is rather odd, and it's appearing more frequently now. Running a q > ev command at around 17:40 on 7/14 (in other words, just a few minutes ago) > brings up the following: > > > > 07/14/04 23:15:00 07/14/04 01:36:34 HE2UNX108.23- HE2UNX108 > Completed > 15.SOL.ANY > 07/14/04 23:15:00 HE2UNX109.23- HE2UNX109 > Future > 15.SOL.ANY > 07/14/04 23:15:00 07/14/04 01:36:25 HE2UNX111.23- HE2UNX111 > Completed > 15.SOL.ANY > 07/14/04 23:15:00 07/14/04 01:36:29 HE2UNX112.23- HE2UNX112 > Completed > > Is TSM psychic? How does it know that these events, which are scheduled > for several hours in the future, will complete successfully? We're running > TSM 5.2.2.0 on AIX 5.2, but I also used to see this intermittently on a 5.1 > version of TSM on AIX 4.3. > > Has anyone ever seen this, or heard what causes it? > > Thanks, > > Kathleen