With the disks for your second level system defined like this:

 

MDISK 0100 3390 1 END TVM001 MR

MDISK 0101 3390 1 END TVM002 MR

MDISK 0102 3390 1 END TVM003 MR

MDISK 0103 3390 1 END TVM004 MR

MDISK 0104 3390 1 END TVM005 MR

MDISK 0105 3390 1 END TVM006 MR

MDISK 0106 3390 1 END TVM007 MR

MDISK 0107 3390 1 END TVM008 MR

 

The real labels are TVM001 to TVM008, while the 'virtual' labels
starting on cylinder one can be anything your like, even duplicates of
production volume labels.

 

Just do a DDR restore to device 100 while logged on to the second level
user. DDR will complain about the volume being too small, but will
restore from the beginning of the backup. Since the last cylinder on the
backup is empty, it doesn't matter that volume 100 is one cylinder
short.

 

Peter

 

-----Original Message-----
From: The IBM z/VM Operating System [mailto:ib...@listserv.uark.edu] On
Behalf Of George Henke/NYLIC
Sent: October 1, 2010 15:51
To: IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU
Subject: Re: Applying Maintenance - Best Practice

 


ty for this information, but I do not follow how the last cylinder of
any pack on the IIS being unused allows you to name the real packs
anything you want while still retaining the default names for the 2nd
Level system. 

Could you explain in a little more detail? 





Jeff Gribbin <jeff.grib...@gmail.com> 
Sent by: The IBM z/VM Operating System <IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU> 

10/01/2010 01:35 PM 

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

To

IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU 

cc

 

Subject

Re: Applying Maintenance - Best Practice

 

 

 




Just in case this helps ...

If your test system will never be IPLed 1st-level, are you aware that
IBM

deliberately does not allocate the last cylinder of any pack (3390-3 or
3390-9) that is part of an Initial Installation System? (That is,
540RES,
etc.)

because the last cylinder is not used, these packs can all be
accommodate
d
using minidisks that begin at real cylinder 1 - allowing you to name the
real packs whatever you wish and still retain the default names for your
virtual second-level packs.

I am trying to encourage IBM to make this information more obvious and
well-known but for some reason they feel reluctant so to do.  However, I
have had a clear indication (in reply to a Reader's Comment) that they
intend to continue to do this so I think it's fairly safe to go ahead on

the
assumption that the last cylinder of a, 'default installation' volume
wil
l
not be referenced.

In my view this approach makes much more sense than fiddling around with
real volsers - I am a great believer in keeping all guests away from
real

cylinder zero except when this is absolutely unavoidable.

Regards
Jeff



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