ADSM-L

Re: TSM Server Hosting - dedicated vs. shared

2006-03-13 15:30:22
Subject: Re: TSM Server Hosting - dedicated vs. shared
From: Orville Lantto <orville.lantto AT GLASSHOUSE DOT COM>
To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
Date: Mon, 13 Mar 2006 15:26:22 -0500
TSM licenses (and pricing) has been based on the environment for some years.  
Check with your IBM Business Partner to get the details.
 
Orville L. Lantto
Glasshouse Technologies, Inc.
Cell:  952-738-1933
 

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From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager on behalf of Robin Sharpe
Sent: Mon 3/13/2006 2:19 PM
To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
Subject: [ADSM-L] TSM Server Hosting - dedicated vs. shared



Orville,
Thanks for your thoughts.  We do use Control-M for all of our scheduling in
the Unix environment, and are moving towards Windows deployment too.
I am surprised, though, about your comment on licensing.  I thought each
TSM server instance on a separate physical server needed a license (per
processor).  Is this not true? Is it a new policy?

Robin Sharpe
Berlex Labs


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The approach is valid and can reap significant backup/restore time benefits
for the clients.
Two points:

                         1) No new licensing cost are involved.  TSM is
licensed by the environment, not the number of TSM servers.

                         2) Consider the complexity of resources scheduling
between many servers.  Most sites have a limited number of tape drives and
contention can be a bear to schedule out with so many independent servers
and their separate schedulers.  An external admin scheduling utility may be
needed.


Orville L. Lantto
Glasshouse Technologies, Inc.



________________________________

From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager on behalf of Robin Sharpe
Sent: Mon 3/13/2006 11:03 AM
To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
Subject: [ADSM-L]



Dear colleagues,

It's time for us to split our TSM into several new instances because our
database is now just too large -- 509GB -- and still growing.  My initial
plan is to create five TSMs - four plus a library manager - on the existing
server (an 8-way, 12GB HP rp7410 with 15 PCI slots).  This is cost
effective since no additional hardware or license is needed - just lots of
SAN disk for the databases, which we have available.  But, I've been
thinking.... what do you think about the following:

A more "creative" approach is to place the "new" TSM servers on existing
large clients.  This has several advantages:
-     eliminates need to acquire new servers, saving physical room, power
and cooling requirements, additional maintenance.
-     client benefits by sending its backup to local disk using shared
memory protocol. Eliminates potential network bottleneck.
-     Client sends data to tapes using library sharing; no need for storage
agent.
-     Use of local disk eliminates the need for SANergy
-     heavy clients "pay" for their usage by providing backup services for
smaller clients.

There are also some concerns (not necessarily disadvantages):
-     May require CPU, memory, and/or I/O upgrades (still cheaper than
buying a server)
-     TSM operation may impact client's primary app.  Can be controlled by
PRM on HP-UX.
-     Incurs licensing cost.

Thanks for any insights....
Robin Sharpe
Berlex Labs