40
- Jesús Jiménez Coloma
-Mensaje original-
De: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] En nombre de
Shaffer, Keith C WDC31
Enviado el: viernes, 03 de agosto de 2007 1:53
Para: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Asunto: Re: How old are you?
26
-
Hi all
I am 26, but I am a learner, am I counted?
I voted :D
Shaffer, Keith C WDC31 wrote:
26
- keith
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List on behalf of Steve Samson
Sent: Thu 08/02/2007 7:12 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Cc:
Subject:Re: How old a
Binyamin Dissen wrote:
Looks like 1.8. Thanks.
Works nicely too!
LIST 081A8C14. ASID(X'0060') LENGTH(X'1000') INSTRUCTION
ASID(X'0060') ADDRESS(081A8C14.) KEY(00)
081A8C14 | D203 E000 A01C | MVC X'0'(X'4',R14),X'1C'(R10)
081A8C1A | 90FD E004 | STM R15,R13,X'4'(R14)
081A8C1E | 58E0
Hi Binyamin,
You could always cut/paste the hex into an empty sport of memory and use
TASID...
Regards
Bruce
TUTORIAL - Storage View Facility --
TUTORIAL
The Storage View Faci
Hello Willie,
If the dataset was SMS managed then you can use SMF Type 42 records.
I has SAS/MXG so I use this code to access SMF type 14,15,17,18, and 64.
//* SMF 1415 - Non-VSAM Open/Close records.
//* SMF 1718 - Non-VSAM Scratch/Rename records.
//* SMF 64 - VSAM Com
Eric Chevalier writes:
>Your example of Company XYZ, deciding to replace 100 Windows/Unix
>servers with z/VM and Linux, implies that the firm is purchasing its
>*first* System z box. After the server migration is completed, when
>XYZ decides they need that high-reliability database server, I suspec
Hello Lizette,
We were quite happy with 2 datacenters about 50 Km apart.
But then 911 happened. and SOX. etc...
so now the DR center has to be in a different country, about 3 hours flying
time away. Something about sovereign risk.
This new direction has caused many rethinks in how our DR
The following notice now appears when using 3270 IBMLink
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * *
* VM ServiceLink availability
update. *
*
*
*
Lester, Bob wrote:
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Steve Comstock
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 4:14 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: How old are you?
Jeez! I turned 63 in March. I _can't_ be the oldest guy on
the l
We should kill this thread, not because anyone may be sensitive to age, but the
subject is "old" and serves no value.
"Shaffer, Keith C WDC31" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news: <[EMAIL
PROTECTED]>...
26
- keith
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion Li
> My Z/OS support is going to set up a Linux LPAR and wants to know if
> there are any Linux specific DASD requirements.
>
> Or should I just give him 10 3390-3s and tell him to have fun?
>
> For my own edification, where might I find Linux doc?
Try http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/linux3
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on 08/01/2007
at 05:31 AM, Steve Comstock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>Seems a bit off topic for ibm-main,
Only if he's looking for a generic answer rather than one specific to,
e.g., z/OS compilers.
--
Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz, SysProg and JOAT
ISO position;
26
- keith
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List on behalf of Steve Samson
Sent: Thu 08/02/2007 7:12 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Cc:
Subject:Re: How old are you?
Gotcha beat. I'm 70.
Steve Samson
Steve Comstock wrote:
> Stephen Wolf wrote:
>> I t
The user is the one that is wrong. HSM is telling you where the dataset was
backed up from. It is possible that the dataset was in a SG that contained
other volumes and that the dataset itself was moved under space management
and then replaced on next access to the volume that it was backed up fr
Listers,
In base JCL there is a parameter SUBSYS= for file allocations on a DD
statement.
Does anyone happen to know what the equivalent parameter is when using
TSO ALLOCATE command? I've looked at the TSO Command Reference and
don't see anything like a Subsys parm.
Darren
-
Gotcha beat. I'm 70.
Steve Samson
Steve Comstock wrote:
Stephen Wolf wrote:
I turned 61 this year (same as Gorge W. and William J.). DO I hear 62?
Jeez! I turned 63 in March. I _can't_ be the oldest guy on
the list, can I?
---
Steve Comstock wrote:
Jeez! I turned 63 in March. I _can't_ be the oldest guy on
the list, can I?
You're not; I'm 64, but I'm certain there is someone older.
Gerhard Postpischil
Bradford, VT
new e-mail address: gerhardp (at) charter (dot) net
> -Original Message-
> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Steve Comstock
> Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 4:14 PM
> To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
> Subject: Re: How old are you?
>
>
> Jeez! I turned 63 in March. I _can't_ be the oldest guy on
On Thu, 2007-08-02 at 15:27 -0400, Richards.Bob wrote:
> Not funny, Steve, not funny! (Well, actually it is, because I am
> smiling, but.) :-)
> -Original Message-
> On Behalf Of Steven Conway
>
> Bob Richards (And I do not even look 56!)
>
> Nope, you don't. Not any more. . .
Ge
On Thu, 2007-08-02 at 13:25 -0500, Brian Peterson wrote:
> When I tried to logon to ResourceLink this afternoon, I receive the following
> error message:
> HTTP 500 - Internal server error
> Is it just me?
As suggested recently, might be a crappy sign-on/authentication server
somewhere in IBM.
Stephen Wolf wrote:
I turned 61 this year (same as Gorge W. and William J.). DO I hear 62?
Jeez! I turned 63 in March. I _can't_ be the oldest guy on
the list, can I?
--
Kind regards,
-Steve Comstock
The Trainer's Friend, Inc.
303-393-8716
http://www.trainersfriend.com
z/OS Applicatio
On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 17:32:07 -0400 Robert Wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
:>Binyamin Dissen wrote on 2007-08-02 17:17:40:
:>> Anybody have an IPCS clist to disassemble?
:>Starting with z/OS V1R7 that should not be needed. IPCS added support for
:>an INSTRUCTION data type and companion support
4 miles is essentially around the corner. I am curious as to the
"hard facts" you are looking for? It is a business decision. And the
new center will be subject to potential disasters as well. It is best
to be geographically diverse. The second center I think should be in
another part of the co
SYS1.SCUNIMG is only needed if you expect DB2 to load its default
unicode image without having to build and load it at ipl time
Mark Jacobs
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Chase, John
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 4:02 PM
To:
The only time I have seen an existing dataset deleted when JCL specified or
defaulted to disposition new was when the job was being run under CA7
(actually CA11 rerun manager) and it deletes existing datasets of that name to
prevent "not cataloged 2" (even for normal runs).
Binyamin Dissen wrote on 2007-08-02 17:17:40:
> Anybody have an IPCS clist to disassemble?
Starting with z/OS V1R7 that should not be needed. IPCS added support for
an INSTRUCTION data type and companion support in the LIST subcommand to
format small blocks of instructions.
Bob Wright - MVS Se
Anybody have an IPCS clist to disassemble?
--
Binyamin Dissen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.dissensoftware.com
Director, Dissen Software, Bar & Grill - Israel
Should you use the mailblocks package and expect a response from me,
you should preauthorize the dissensoftware.com domain.
I very rar
Thanks for all suggestions. Right now I am leaning 95% toward an 2.0GHz
Intel Core 2 Duo iMAC.
Thanks again.
~~Carol
_
Tease your brain--play Clink! Win cool prizes!
http://club.live.com/clink.aspx?icid=clink_hotmailtextlink2
--
> -Original Message-
> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Eric Chevalier
> Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 3:32 PM
> To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
> Subject: Re: IBM's Project Big Green Spurs Global Shift to
> Linux on Mainframe
> As Mohammad sugges
On 2 Aug 2007 06:58:23 -0700, Art Celestini wrote:
>I think what Timothy and perhaps others are suggesting, is that Linux
>may serve as a kind of loss leader for System Z. Say Company XYZ
>decides to do like IBM and replace 100 Windows/Unix servers with z/VM
>and Linux. Then, a year later,
We had put Omegamon II for MVS v550 in a few months ago to bring us up
to date.
Unless we need to rework something for a new release of z/OS we should
be good.
-Original Message-
Kelman, Tom
Is there any possibility that you really needed to make some changes to
Omegamon? Like a new re
I turned 61 this year (same as Gorge W. and William J.). DO I hear 62?
--
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Better late than never?
> From: Michael Babcock
> Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2007 13:06:12 -0500
>
> If I remember correctly, you must have SYS1.SCUNIMG in the linklist
for
> the dynamic to work.
We don't, and it works (z/OS 1.7).
We'll learn more tomorrow, when we try the CICS sample web s
Is there any possibility that you really needed to make some changes to
Omegamon? Like a new release to support z/OS 1.7.
Tom Kelman
Commerce Bank of Kansas City
(816) 760-7632
> -Original Message-
> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Ken Porowsk
Not funny, Steve, not funny! (Well, actually it is, because I am
smiling, but.) :-)
Bob Richards
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Steven Conway
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 3:09 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Re:
Arghhh!!! I meant *loaner* program... :)
Rich Smrcina wrote:
IBM does have a loader program for IFLs and z/VM...
http://www-03.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS2545
--
Rich Smrcina
VM Assist, Inc.
Phone: 414-491-6001
Ans Service: 360-715-2467
rich.smrcina at vmassist.com
h
>PS: to the one who asked if there were any Job opening in the south of
France , the answer is NO .. we handle this locally :-))
>Bruno
C'est domage!
Jon L. Veilleux
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(860) 636-2683
This e-mail may contain confidential or privileged information. If
you think you have receive
IBM does have a loader program for IFLs and z/VM...
http://www-03.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS2545
O'Brien, David W. (NIH/CIT) [C] wrote:
Thanks Jon. I agree the optimum would be under Z/Vm however that costs money.
For the purposes of proof of concept it will have to be
Bob Richards (And I do not even look 56!)
Nope, you don't. Not any more. . .
Steve Conway
Lead Systems Programmer
Information Systems & Services Division
Computer & Network Operations
Phone: (703) 450-3156
Fax:(703) 450-3197
---
Just went live with z/OS 1.7 and noticed that CPU consumption by
Omegamon/MVS has gone up dramatically (CMS and HIST tasks) like +50% or
4 to 6 MIPS (FSVO MIPS.
In 30+ years with various flavors of OM, I have found that there are
really only 2 things that seem to matter.
1) Auto refresh interva
Thanks Jon. I agree the optimum would be under Z/Vm however that costs money.
For the purposes of proof of concept it will have to be native.
If you have z/VM available, I highly recommend installing Linux under
that; running it in an LPAR works fine, though.
Such choices are purely business.
Let's flip the coin. Why, exactly, is 4 miles too close? I can think of
some scenarios where being so close offers some business/technical
advantages.
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Liz
I agree that a risk/cost/impact on business analysis is critical. For
example some years ago I worked for a utility in downtown Chicago, that
at time had the datacenter in the headquarters, and had a DR cold site
at one of the companies outlying facilities (also in Chicago, but well
out of downtow
Anyone seen this?
Just went live with z/OS 1.7 and noticed that CPU consumption by
Omegamon/MVS has gone up dramatically (CMS and HIST tasks) like +50% or
4 to 6 MIPS (FSVO MIPS). No changes to Omegamon during the upgrade
(from z/OS 1.6).
Thanks all.
Ken Porowski
AVP Systems Software
CIT Group
On Aug 2, 2007, at 11:32 AM, Eric Bielefeld wrote:
I don't have any real answers, just some comments. One bank I worked
for had as their disaster recovery a 370/158 computer left in the
basement of the bank after the datacenter moved 4 blocks away. No I/O
equipment. My last full time job, we
A couple of links for Linux documentation:
The Linux documentation project: www.tldp.org
The Linux-390 list archives:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/index.html
CentOS: http://www.centos.org/
CentOS is a re-creation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux from source, without
any of Red Hat's
On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 13:25:44 -0500, Brian Peterson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>When I tried to logon to ResourceLink this afternoon, I receive the following
>error message:
>
>HTTP 500 - Internal server error
>
>Is it just me?
>
>Brian
>
I got in just fine.
-
Was it really deleted or perhaps just uncataloged/renamed? When was the
last time is was used successfully?
You should also be looking at types 18, 65, and 66
-Original Message-
From: willie bunter [mailto:snip]
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 9:00 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: S
My Z/OS support is going to set up a Linux LPAR and wants to know if there are
any Linux specific DASD requirements.
Or should I just give him 10 3390-3s and tell him to have fun?
For my own edification, where might I find Linux doc?
--
Deja vu! Did we not discuss this before? http://tinyurl.com/2b9ums
The default disposition should be DISP=(NEW,DELETE,DELETE)
That being the case, the only dataset that should be deleted would be the newly
created one.
> Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2007 12:29:33 -0400> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sub
When I tried to logon to ResourceLink this afternoon, I receive the following
error message:
HTTP 500 - Internal server error
Is it just me?
Brian
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For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions,
send email
Deja vu! Did we not discuss this before? http://tinyurl.com/2b9ums
The default disposition should be DISP=(NEW,DELETE,DELETE)
That being the case, the only dataset that should be deleted would be the newly
created one.
> Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2007 12:29:33 -0400> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
You don't create a DR recovery for the heck of it. You do so because
you analyze the risks of various things happening.
If the sun goes nova, then you need several light years separation -
but the value of such doesn't help your company.
So what you need to start with is a list of risks with th
Sorry, just a little Oklahoma humor - except I got it bollixed..
Should have said NW/SE since tornadoes generally travel north east..
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Lizette Koehler
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 11:
Our DR site is about 20 miles from our Data Center.
Lizette Koehler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Listers -
Poll question of the day: How one goes about determining a good "distance"
between 2 data centers. One which is primary and one which could be used as a
DR site.
Is there any papers, manua
-
Back in the days following September 11, 2001 there were recommendations
and edicts floating around that 350 miles is a good number. Within the financial
markets industry, there was even talk that this would become part of SEC
rules and enforced. I don
I had a similar issue with a deleted dataset.
Turned out I had to go back 3 weeks to find the job that had deleted it. I
knew it was a nonvsam data set so I just scanned the 14, 15, 17, 18 records.
The 60 records are needed if it is VSAM.
What h
Just a bunch of babies. I turn 60 on September 4 and I'm proud I've
made it this far. :-)
Tom Kelman
Commerce Bank of Kansas City
(816) 760-7632
> -Original Message-
> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Richards.Bob
> Sent: Thursday, August 02,
Is it possible to find the probability of various disaster scenarios
occurring in your area? If you could find the probability of a
hurricane or tornado or flooding occurring at your primary site then you
would be better able to determine how far away your DR site would need
to be. Maybe some int
Lizette and Wayne
Thanks a lot for answering
Do not worry the young man has all the books you mention plus more ( some
of my old training books and else )
I already explained to him the meaning of RTFM :-))
I told him i'll get an answer quickly because of this community
Thanks and best rega
CA SYSVIEW can give you that information as well. Like the other
products mentioned, you can access SYSVIEW via VTAM, TSO or CA Roscoe.
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Lizette Koehler
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 8:35 AM
To:
Lizette,
I checked the dsn is a PDS. That's why I have been honing on to type 14,15,
& 17.
Lizette Koehler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I had a similar issue with a deleted dataset.
Turned out I had to go back 3 weeks to find the job that had deleted it. I knew
it was a nonvsam data set
> -Original Message-
> From: Lizette Koehler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 12:41 PM
> To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
> Subject: Re: COBOL Group moves
>
> I have one question on the following code snippet.
>
> If you code a VALUE on an 05 level, do you still have to
No, programs start with each field initialized properly according to
their value clauses.
However if you want to reset every item in a group in the middle of a
running program, then you would. The INITIALIZE statement comes in use
then.
Darren
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Disc
The poll is still open.
But it looks like some IP addresses are NAT'ed so some people will see
the results instead of the option to vote.
I'm looking into a way around that but it does not look promising at the moment.
What I was thinking because of the tremendous interest in the subject
is to ha
I have one question on the following code snippet.
If you code a VALUE on an 05 level, do you still have to INITIALIZE the group
level?
My cobol is very rusty.
Lizette
>> >
>> > I have a query regarding the following group move:
>> >
>> > 01 GRP1.
>> > 05 N1 PIC S9(9) COMP-
On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 11:33:24 -0400, Lizette Koehler wrote:
>>As long as each is 10 miles NE/SW from each other...
>Now, did I include Vector Analysis in this question?
>
>My issue with this problem is the "it depends" clause. I know that there are
hardware, telecom, power, etc... consideratio
I don't have any real answers, just some comments. One bank I worked
for had as their disaster recovery a 370/158 computer left in the
basement of the bank after the datacenter moved 4 blocks away. No I/O
equipment. My last full time job, we paid for a hot site. We never
did a disaster reco
Please stop. All polls, all listservers.
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Looks like an old homework question or job interview question.
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Lizette Koehler
Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2007 6:53 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: COBOL Group moves
Steve,
I am thinki
I had a similar issue with a deleted dataset.
Turned out I had to go back 3 weeks to find the job that had deleted it. I
knew it was a nonvsam data set so I just scanned the 14, 15, 17, 18 records.
The 60 records are needed if it is VSAM.
What happened was a batch job had failed to code the J
The poll is still open, but appears to be IP blocked. I suspect everyone
at your company goes through the same proxy, a single IP address. I pull
up the results page also, but I tried an alternate proxy and it pulled
up the voting page again. FYI.
> Original Message
> Subject: Re
> -Original Message-
> From: Ian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 8:53 AM
> To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
> Subject: How old are you?
>
> Hi List,
>
> We have created a new poll to determine the average age of mainframe IT
> people.
>
> If you are interested and wil
Old enough to know better but young enough to do it anyway (or at least
try).
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---
My sympathies. Turned 57 today
HBTY, HBTY, HBDR, HBTY! (AMM)
Thanks, John. Rather be "over the hill" than under it!!! :-D
HAHAHAHA - for about 6 and 1/2 months you are older than I am. HAHAHAHA
I keep forgetting that we are eligible for discounts on some things!
Bob Richards (And I do not even look 56!)
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Rick Foch
> -Original Message-
> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List On Behalf Of Rick Fochtman
>
> Maarten Slegtenhorst wrote:
>
> >Hmpf,
> >
> >Two and a half weeks ago, I would have been in a younger age-group :(
>
> My sympathies. Turned 57 today
HB
--
Poll question of the day: How one goes about determining a good
"distance" between 2 data centers. One which is primary and one which
could be used as a DR site.
---
Short answer: it depends on what kind of disas
the guys on the VM list seemed more optimistic
Mohammad Khan
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]
.COM>
On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 09:00:24 -0700, willie bunter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>Hallo,
>
> Anybody can suggest that there is something else I could try?
Wille - we also have a SAS job that we use to find out such information.
Here we also check record types of 17, 18, 61, 62, 64, 65, and 66.
H
I could not vote, but I fall in the highest percentage in the results 48
yrs old
"Thompson, Steve"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Willie,
Unless you enjoy re-creating the wheel, download the DAF (Dataset Audit
Facility) from the CBT.org.
It's free, reads SMF data and is designed to do exactly what you're looking for.
I am trying to track down the culprit who deleted a production
Hallo,
I am trying to track down the culprit who deleted a production library. I
ran a SAS/SMF job but no records were found. I ran it for TYPE 17 as well as
for TYPE14 & 15 but to no avail.
Anybody can suggest that there is something else I could try? Below is my
code for type 14
Have there been any 'disasters' or near disasters in the area (go back
10-20-30 years).
If there was a (pick disaster of your choice) how close did it come to
affecting you AND the area 4 miles away and did it affect an area
10-20-50 miles away.
-Original Message-
Lizette Koehler
>As lon
Maarten Slegtenhorst wrote:
Hmpf,
Two and a half weeks ago, I would have been in a younger age-group :(
My sympathies. Turned 57 today
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For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / arc
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Ken Porowski
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 10:50 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: How old are you?
Did the poll close already, I voted then passed around the link but
everyone else here
It's a simple case of "NO SOUP FOR YOU DINOS" with strong hint about what
we should be learning.
On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 08:19:02 -0500, Eric Chevalier
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Now, maybe the CNN article got the details wrong. But IBM's own press
>release[1] _also_ states "Linux", not z/OS. (I
Did the poll close already, I voted then passed around the link but
everyone else here just sees the results and can't vote. Does it do
some sort of IP blocking?
-Original Message-
Ian
Hi List,
We have created a new poll to determine the average age of mainframe IT
people.
If you are
> But I cannot convince management to go 10, 20, 50 miles, just because it
feels "right". They want hard facts.
You need a BIA - Business Impact Analysis - to show how much it costs your
business to be down. That then gets weighed against the cost of providing
protection for certain disasters an
On 2 Aug 2007 07:52:37 -0700, in bit.listserv.ibm-main you wrote:
>Poll question of the day: How one goes about determining a good "distance"
>between 2 data centers.
>One which is primary and one which could be used as a DR site.
Consider what disasters might befall that might require activa
>As long as each is 10 miles NE/SW from each other...
Now, did I include Vector Analysis in this question?
My issue with this problem is the "it depends" clause. I know that there are
hardware, telecom, power, etc... considerations.
However, if I am trying to pursuade management that our cu
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Lizette Koehler
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 9:52 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Poll - Distance between Data Center and DR
I have been trying to determine this in a generic way. Not b
As long as each is 10 miles NE/SW from each other...
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of O'Brien, David W. (NIH/CIT) [C]
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 11:02 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: Poll - Distance between D
> Lizette Koehler
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 2. August 2007 16:52
>
>
> Listers -
>
> Poll question of the day: How one goes about determining a good
> "distance" between 2 data centers. One which is primary and one
> which could be used as a DR site.
>
> Is there any papers, manuals, redbooks
I doubt there is a single answer, it all depends on where your data
center is located.
Look at power grid, telecom, flood plain, tornado/hurricane paths, fault
lines, transportation, etc.
Your idea of staying far enough away to ensure relative safety from a
regional issue sounds about right.
B
My first post yesterday was sent in HTML format...I've made a
modification to convert the HTML to TEXT format automatically. I hope
this works...
George Rodriguez
(561) 357-7652
School District of Palm Beach County
3348 Forrest Hill Blvd.
Room B301
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Rated "A
On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 10:52:23 -0400 Lizette Koehler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
:>Poll question of the day: How one goes about determining a good "distance"
between 2 data centers. One which is primary and one which could be used as a
DR site.
:>Is there any papers, manuals, redbooks that give a
> Poll question of the day: How one goes about determining a good "distance"
> between 2 data centers. One which is primary and one which could be used as
> a DR site.
In the good old days, at least 50 megatons away.
--
Will
Lizette,
It depends! (Of course)
What are the naturally occurring problems within the primary data
centers location? Things like power grids, weather problems,
transportation issues, telco coverage, etc.
What are the business reasons for a PPRC setup over an XRC setup?
What is the cost of downt
IBM answer #3 - It depends
It depends on the risks in your operating environment.
If you're in Oklahoma and the primary threat to life and limb stems from
tornadoes then 10 miles might be enough.
If you're located on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico and the threat is
hurricanes, then 10 miles do
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