Thanks, Kris.

I knew about SFS (we dedicate whole volumes to individual SFS filepools 
and their servers, with no volumes shared by servers), and DB2 (tho we 
don't use DB2 on z/VM).

To answer George's question about "why not?"...'
PAV first became available for z/VM CMS mdisk use with z/VM 5.2. We're at 
z/VM 5.4.  I just didn't want to be one of the first folks on the block to 
actually use PAV for CMS minidisks, and then find my life complicated by 
more problems caused by a relatively new, lesser-used z/VM feature.  Just 
because something is documented as working and supported does not mean 
that it may be a good idea to try it at any given time without some 
research.  It *has* been a while since z/VM 5.2 came out, but even that 
doesn't mean that people have begun using PAV for CMS minidisks.  Our z/VM 
systems have been far too stable to risk trying something without due 
consideration.

And again, until this weekend, all the PAV DASD here was allocated to our 
many z/OS systems - so I never had to give it's actual use any serious 
consideration.  I just wanted to get hear if real people using PAV for CMS 
minidisks had experienced wonderful results, or awful headaches.  Sort of 
a "belts AND suspenders" approach.

Thanks!

Mike Walter
Aon Corporation
The opinions expressed herein are mine alone, not my employer's.







"Kris Buelens" <kris.buel...@gmail.com> 

Sent by: "The IBM z/VM Operating System" <IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU>
12/20/2010 11:24 AM
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"The IBM z/VM Operating System" <IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU>



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Re: General CMS minidisks and SFS on PAV DASD?






CMS IO can indeed profit from PAV: CP knows how to look at PAV aliases 
when a disk is busy.  

SFS is another story: the SFS SW knows where its minidisks are located.  
It will not attempt to launch an IO to a volume to which it has an active 
IO.  So: if you have multiple SFS servers on a given PACK, SFS will profit 
of PAV, else it won't.
(and, I do encounter many installations where people place all MDISKs of a 
given SFS on as few disks as possible.  It is better to spread).

DB2 is yet another story: if you use dataspaces, DB2's IOs are performed 
by CP's paging routines, so no PAV....  Else I think the same rules as for 
SFS apply.

2010/12/20 George Henke/NYLIC <george_he...@newyorklife.com>
Why would  you NOT want PAV for CMS mds? 

The IO Supervisor has not kept up with the hardware. 

It still thinks of a disk device as a "spinning platter" when in fact it 
is a rank of RAID devices striped over numerous HDs and cached in a disk 
controller from where it is actually being read thereby permitting 
multiple IOs to the same device number.. 

The problem is that the IO Supervisor checks the IOB Busy Bit before 
issuing a SIO and, if it is on, unnecessarilly suspends the SIO until the 
device is idle.   

Instead of changing the IO Supervisor, IBM has opted to fake it out by 
defining alias devices for the same device number in PAV. 

Since most workloads these days are still IO bound, why would you still 
want to unnecessarilly "single thread" IO, why would you NOT want PAV on 
CMS mds, SFS, or whatever? 





Mike Walter <mike.wal...@hewitt.com> 
Sent by: The IBM z/VM Operating System <IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU> 
12/20/2010 11:33 AM 


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The IBM z/VM Operating System <IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU>


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Subject
General CMS minidisks and SFS on PAV DASD?








We've always avoided using PAV volumes for general user (non-fullpack) CMS 

minidisks.  Instead we've only used DASD defined as 3390-3 so that I/O 
queueing is minimized.  That choice was in part due to management 
decisions.

Over the past weekend we needed to move some z/VM DASD quickly -- and the 
target DASD was already defined as PAV DASD.

The z/VM CP Planning and Administration manual clearly states that "z/VM 
Paging and SPOOLing operations do not take advantage of PAV." (no argument 

here).  We'll still plan to keep page and SPOOL volumes on non-PAV 3390-3 
DASD.

But the same manual also states that "When multiple CMS volumes are 
defined on a real PAV volume, I/O operations by CMS can be concurrently 
scheduled on any real PAV base or alias subchannel by z/VM.  The CMS user 
does not need to take any action for this to occur."

Well, that's "book larn'in".   Can anyone provide real-life results of 
using PAV volumes for general-purpose CMS user minidisks, and... for SFS 
filespaces?

Do you see real I/O improvement for those apps?  If so, the next time 
we're asked we might recommend larger 3390 volumes, mod 9's or 27's 
(depending on the number of available paths) to permit larger minidisks 
without SFS overhead, and improved SFS performance. 

Thanks!

Mike Walter
Aon Corporation
The opinions expressed herein are mine alone, not my employer's.



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Kris Buelens,
IBM Belgium, VM customer support



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