Hello Birgitta,
This looks very interesting and certainly has possibilities. I'll do some
experimentation with it. Thank you.
Rich Loeber
Kisco Information Systems
http://www.kisco.com
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Birgitta Hauser wrote:
Hi,
have you already thought about to use the data area QDFTJRN?
If you create the QDFTJRN data area in the data library, you can specify the
journal where the files must be registered.
You also have different options, to specify when the registration to this
journals starts (for example when restoring a file)
For more information read the following technote:
http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/abstracts/tips0604.html?Open
Mit freundlichen Gru:ssen / Best regards
Birgitta Hauser
"Shoot for the moon, even if you miss, you'll land among the stars." (Les
Brown)
"If you think education is expensive, try ignorance." (Derek Bok)
"What is worse than training your staff and losing them? Not training them
and keeping them!"
-----Urspru:ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] Im Auftrag von Rich Loeber
Gesendet: Tuesday, 07. October 2008 15:10
An: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Betreff: File Journal Reference on File Restore
I have a customer who is trying to restore a file to a different library
for testing purposes. The file is being journaled and when the restore
is
done to the alternate library, it is connected to the product file's
journal. The customer does not want this connection established for the
test file. Does anyone know of a way around this other than removing the
journal connection before saving the file in the first place?
Rich Loeber
Kisco Information Systems
http://www.kisco.com
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.