Hate to break it to you Mark, but here's the point. I (We) the customer are HELPING Tivoli to provide me (us) with a product to best suit me (us). Suggestions, thoughts from the customer are the best way to keep their software popular and useful. If they don't want to produce products that the customers want I (we) will go else where.
I don't think that bundling more than one server on 1 tape will present a problem. You have to load the client to view the backup sets anyways, so there is some organization in place to find the data in the first place. Of course if I could fill a 80gig tape all the time I would be happy, my employer will be happy, and I would not be asking for change with an option within TSM. If you don't want use the change, that's fine, don't use the extended features. But I for one would like to cut the number of tape I handle everyday. The less tapes I use a day the less chance corruption will set in. Have you ever preformed a actual disaster recovery before?. Joe Cascanette The Cumis Group Limited -----Original Message----- From: Mark Stapleton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2001 11:05 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Multiple Backup Sets on one tape - (Was Large TSM database due to no. of files and versions) On Fri, 30 Nov 2001 10:15:33 -0600, it was written: >Oh how I wish this were possible. I have submitted this requirement to >Tivoli and I believe others have also. > >We are currently using LTO tapes (100 GB uncompressed), it is just not >economical to only put 1 backupset per tape. One of the major purposes of backupsets is the ability to restore a system without the use of the TSM server. This can particularly useful in DR mode when you need to get some mission-critical TSM clients *immediately* while you're concurrently getting the TSM box rebuilt as well. In this mode, an LTO tape with a backupset on it won't do you much good if you can't locally mount the tape on the box to be recovered, and I don't know many folk that have a standalone LTO tape drive sitting around. The other problem is that of organization. If you put, say, three TSM clients' worth of backupsets on one tape, and you use the server-free mode when restoring, how will client #2 know how to distinguish its data from client #1's? If you've got a beef with using large-capacity tapes for backupsets, stick a standalone DLT or 8mm tape drive on your TSM server, and write the backupsets to that. Then move the drive to the client to be restored as necessary. >If enough people submit this requirement to Tivoli perhaps they will listen. Why make backupsets more complex? Leave the backupset design alone, I say. -- Mark Stapleton ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
