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I actually have this poster as a PDF. I don't remember where I got it from. I searched the IBM sigh to no avail. I could send - or would someone like to post to a site?? Bryan Dietz "Phil" <sublime78ska@yahoo.com> Sent by: owner-midrange-l@midrange.com 04/25/01 11:00 AM Please respond to MIDRANGE-L To: <MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com> cc: Subject: RE: Backup Policy When I upgraded to V4R5 IBM included a poster entitled something like "Are you saving everything" or "Are you saving the right stuff" (don't remember exactly). It included every save option available, listed what it saved, and I think the corresponding restore command. Disaster recovery is much more than saving the right stuff. For me it's usually been CYA because if a disaster did occur then someone is going to get stuck holding the bag and a disaster recovery plan approved by top management is a good way to isolate you from being that someone. Offsite tape storage, physical security, etc. I have experienced simultaneous multiple disk crashes (which made raid-5 useless) and I was able to recover fully with a savsys tape and the nightly backup savlib/savobj tapes. Phil -----Original Message----- From: owner-midrange-l@midrange.com [mailto:owner-midrange-l@midrange.com]On Behalf Of D.BALE@handleman.com Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 9:39 AM To: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com Subject: Re: Backup Policy I have never given SAVSTG serious consideration. I have only heard negative opinions about it compared to doing a SAVE 21. How is a SAVSTG more complete for D.R. than SAVE 21? Are there certain scenarios where SAVSTG has disctinct advantages over SAVE 21? Perhaps when you know you *will*, and not just *if*, restore the entire contents on a "scratched" set of DASD? If you restore to a different box, how well-matched does the hardware have to be to the source box? (You mentioned disk config.) Dan Bale IT - AS/400 Handleman Company 248-362-4400 Ext. 4952 D.Bale@Handleman.com Quiquid latine dictum sit altum viditur. (Whatever is said in Latin seems profound.) -------------------------- Original Message -------------------------- For a complete disaster recovery (some restrictions on the disk config on the system config you restore on) run a SAVSTG. Neil Palmer DPS Data Processing Services Canada Ltd. 50 Acadia Avenue, Ste.102 AS/400~~~~~ Markham, Ontario, Canada. ____________ ___ ~ Phone:(905) 474-4890 x303 |OOOOOOOOOO| ________ o|__||= Cell.:(416) 565-1682 x303 |__________|_|______|_|______) Fax: (905) 474-4898 oo oo oo oo OOOo=o\ mailto:NeilP@DPSlink.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.DPSlink.com iSeries 400 The Ultimate Business Server D.BALE@handleman.com Sent by: owner-midrange-l@midrange.com 2001/04/24 18:36 Please respond to MIDRANGE-L To: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com cc: Subject: Re: Backup Policy Dang. I knew I should'a qualified that. Well, who cares about the bean counters, anyway, eh? <g> What do you do about the contents of >*JOBQs, *USRQs, *DTAQs, *MSGQs etc ??? How about the jobs on the job scheduler? Dan Bale IT - AS/400 Handleman Company 248-362-4400 Ext. 4952 D.Bale@Handleman.com Quiquid latine dictum sit altum viditur. (Whatever is said in Latin seems profound.) -------------------------- Original Message -------------------------- > A "SAVE 21" is the best you can do for backing up the AS/400. It gets > *everything*. If all your DASD suffered a meltdown, your "SAVE 21" backup and > your MULIC tape/CD puts you back in business. *Almost* everything. The contents of Queues are *NOT* Saved. Restore from these tapes and those )^)(*^%% accountants will NOT have all the reports they have been saving out there for months and months. Also *JOBQs, *USRQs, *DTAQs, *MSGQs etc will come back MT. If you really want the contents of these things to be saved you must put those contents somplace else (such as in a DB file.) - Larry D.BALE@handleman.com wrote: > > Jim, > > (Disaster Recovery is obviously much more complicated than that, but this was > specifically answering the "backup policy" question.) > > Dan Bale > IT - AS/400 > Handleman Company > 248-362-4400 Ext. 4952 > D.Bale@Handleman.com -- Larry Bolhuis | Cogito ergo mercari iSeries Arbor Solutions, Inc. | (616) 451-2500 | (I think, therefore I buy iSeries.) (616) 451-2571 -fax | lbolhuis@arbsol.com | #3 1951-2001 +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +--- _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? 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