If I'm not mistaken (and I very well may be!), the diskcachemethod works on a directory by directory basis. If you have a lot of objects in one "flat" directory (without subdirectories), it may not help that much. Alternatively, if your volume is spread well (deeply) across lots of directories, then it will be more helpful.
From the User's Guide: >Note that for file systems with large numbers (millions) of directories, the >client still might not be able to allocate enough memory to perform >incremental backup with memoryefficientbackup yes. Another option would be to use -incrbydate, but that has its own caveats. ..Paul At 07:29 AM 10/14/2013, Hans Christian Riksheim wrote: >We have a memory starved Windows 2003 server and incremental fails with >"ANS1030E The operating system refused a TSM request for memory allocation." > >So we try memoryefficient diskcachemethod. > >What we see is that dsmc reports diskcachemethod is in use for all >filesystems. We also see that the diskcachelocation is populated. > >However the dsmc process still increases to 1,3GB and eventually dies with >the error message above. Client is 6.4.0.10 32.bit. > >Any ideas before I raise a PMR? > >Hans Chr. Riksheim -- Paul Zarnowski Ph: 607-255-4757 Manager of Storage Services Fx: 607-255-8521 IT at Cornell / Infrastructure Em: [email protected] 719 Rhodes Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-3801
