That sounds just about what I need for this situation. I am not sure about audit file size but I guess a whole pack should last a little while. Just at the moment I cannot see what happens if the audit file gets full (or how you automatically prevent that). I will keep reading and I am sure it will become clear.
Colin Allinson
Amadeus Data Processing
>You can turn SFS auditing on, it logs accesses to files, not to
>directories (if I remember well). It requires an SFS restart though :-(
>Kris,
>IBM Belgium, VM customer support
>> For performance & resilience reasons we want to migrate a heavily
>> used directory from a general filepool to another restricted use
>> high performance filepool.
>>
>> We can handle the migration for all the main code but we are aware
>> that there may be many users who access the directory in their own code.
>>
>> In order to identify these users is there any way to scan some log
>> to identify who has access the old directory over a period. (e.g.
>> Like checking RACF SMF records).
>>
>> I have checked back and there is an answer about checking who is
>> accessing a directory at a moment in time but this does not really help
me.
>>
>> Colin Allinson
- Logging accesses to a SFS directory over a period Colin Allinson
- Re: Logging accesses to a SFS directory over a period Kris Buelens
- Re: Logging accesses to a SFS directory over a per... Colin Allinson
