There are several things you could look for in MVS for a reason it crashed. Some of the things you could look for are the MVS syslog and/or LOGREC (EREP) and/or RMF data. There could be one of more SVC dumps that got taken under MVS just before the crash. As stated in another email a large number of MVS (z/OS) system don't run under z/VM so MVS has its own ways of keeping track of what is happening.
Paul Feller AIT Mainframe Technical Support From: The IBM z/VM Operating System [mailto:IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU] On Behalf Of saurabh khandelwal Sent: Saturday, August 06, 2011 11:39 PM To: IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU Subject: Re: Performence Toolkit not working. So, does it mean, by installing z/VM performence tool kit will not tell us any detail about the guest running under z/VM ( MVS guest) . Basically my aim is to find out the reason behind crashing MVS guest suddenly , which are running under zVM. So can you please suggest, what will be the best solution to find root cause of MVS guest crashing. Thanks & Regards Saurabh On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 2:50 AM, Les Koehler <vmr...@tampabay.rr.com<mailto:vmr...@tampabay.rr.com>> wrote: Kris, Isn't MVS under VM different than just straight MVS on its own? Or have things changed since the old days? Les Kris Buelens wrote: MVS doesn't normally have anything to forward performance info to Perfkit. MVS has its own performance collection and reporting tools. 2011/8/6 saurabh khandelwal <sourabhkhandelwal...@gmail.com<mailto:sourabhkhandelwal...@gmail.com>> Thanks for reply. Yes, I am trying to reach out the person, who has configured Performance toolkit in my site. So that I can get exact detail, how he configured this. As I am new with performance toolkit, I also wanted to ask is it possible to get MVS guest information from performance toolkit , which are running under z/VM. Thanks & Regards Saurabh On Sat, Aug 6, 2011 at 1:44 PM, Jeff Gribbin <jeff.grib...@gmail.com<mailto:jeff.grib...@gmail.com>>wrote: Saurabh, You have almost-certainly indentified the cause of your problem - it is NEVER, EVER safe to share the same CMS minidisk accessed in write-mode by more than one CMS user at the same time - it almost-guarantees that the disk file system will be damaged. DASD sharing always requires the sharing systems to be aware that the DASD is shared and take measures to ensure that the data is not corrupted - these can be via hardware functions such as RESERVE / RELEASE or via software processes that use a communications link to agree amongst themselves which system has write-permission at any one instant. CMS contains no sharing mechanism at all for its minidisks (think of a CMS user as a virtual Personal Computer - write-sharing a minidisk is like connecting two personal computers that have no knowledge of each others' existence to the same hard drive!) If you wish to share data in write-mode among CMS users then you need to look at the CMS Shared File System which uses a server to co-ordinate the I/O among many CMS clients. (In this client/server setup, it's only the DATA that is shared - the actual DASD is only read/written by the server which (of course) has complete knowledge of which clients are accessing which data.) Sharing minidisk-containing volumes between separate z/VM systems requires a lot of care if it is to be successful. If you can tell us a little more about your configuration and how you run it I'm sure that we can offer you some suggestions about how to achieve what you wish to do but ... in the meantime ... yes, each PERFSVM requires a separate 191 (and 195) minidisk. Regards Jeff Gribbin -- Thanks & Regards Saurabh Khandelwal -- Thanks & Regards Saurabh Khandelwal