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Hi Bryan

I don't know if they use the same API, but some testing I did for a SAVRST
scenario indicated that as data was restored it was removed from whatever
buffer the saved data was held in. The storage used never went as high as
doing a complete save of the library in question. In fact it didn't take a
lot of storage at all, but that might be dependent on what was being saved

The scenario I tested was doing a SAVRST to a different library on the same
machine so the amount actually used may vary depending on how fast the link
is and how fast the restore occurs.

Regards
Evan Harris


-----Original Message-----
From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of bryan dietz
Sent: Saturday, 4 April 2009 9:46 a.m.
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Re: SAVLIB to FTP where files > 1tb

Bruce If I read this API correctly, it allows for the save operation
to "intercept" the savefile records and do something with them, like
sending to the remote system, provided you had created sending
/receiving programs.

Do you know if the SAVRSTxxx commands work this way? Meaning that they
do not consume(much) DASD on the source system but do on the target.


Thanks,
Bryan




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