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If you are moving up in interactive CPW, it won't hurt.  However, CFINT is 
actually your interactive limiter job.  If that job is using CPU cycles you are 
reaching the interactive limit of the machine.
I would suggest doing some interactive modelling on your current box.  
Hopefully, you are collecting performance data.  Your business partner should 
be able to use that data to give you a good indication of what your current 
workload will look like on the new box.  Otherwise, go to www.mpginc.com and 
get a download of their product, Performance Navigator.  You'll have to request 
a temp key to do any modelling, but it will give you a graphical look at the 
differences in your current and proposed machines.

Wayne Johnston
Integrity Technology, LLC

Joe Cox Wrote.

message: 7
date: Mon, 17 May 2004 16:44:38 -0600
from: "Cox, Joe" <joecox@xxxxxxxxxxx>
subject: performance expectations from interactive CPW upgrade

We are thinking of migrating from a low end model 170 V5R2 with 20
interactive CPW to the low end i5 model 520 with 30 interactive CPW.  There
are many features in the i5 that should make the new system run
significantly faster.  My question is, are we likely to obtain significant
interactive performance improvements from the new hardware or will the
interactive performance improvement be limited to the difference in
interactive CPW?  In other words, will the same interactive workload run
many times faster than it currently does because of the new hardware or will
it run CFINT a lot faster?  I know that CFINT will no longer affect batch
processing.

Thanks.

joecox@xxxxxxxxxxx

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