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Brian:

If you have open ports on Ethernet cards on both systems, you can simply put
a patch cable between them (no crossover needed) and configure up a line.
Make sure to set up jumbo frames and the speed at 1Gb. You might also
consider looking at the TCP buffer size to increase that too.

--
Jim Oberholtzer
Chief Technical Architect
Agile Technology Architects

-----Original Message-----
From: MIDRANGE-L [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Brian
Piotrowski
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2014 6:59 AM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx)
Subject: Transferring Data from One iSeries box to another

Good morning, everyone.

In the past our development box was in another building relative to our
production box. What we did on a nightly basis was copy over the previous
day's production data from PRD to DEV over the network. This made it quite
a task to copy all this data over and took up a lot of bandwidth and time.

However, I have migrated the boxes and now have both the PRD and DEV in the
same rack. Instead of copying everything across the network I would prefer
to link the boxes directly into each other so that movement of the data
would be much faster. I'm guessing I simply cannot connect the boxes
directly using a crossover cable, so what is the best method to link these
boxes together and copy everything over? Should I look at some type of
fiber channel solution? If so, what part numbers would I need.

Incidentally the PRD box is a 520 series box (i5) and the production box is
a 720+. Both are running 6.1.1.


Thankee-sai!

/b;

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Brian Piotrowski
Manager - I.T.
Simcoe Parts Service, Inc.
Ph: 705-415-0995
Fx: 705-435-5029
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
http://www.simcoeparts.com<http://www.simcoeparts.com/>

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