Another advantage of cache is to increase the number of concurrent client sessions. Going direct to tape limits the number of concurrent sessions to the number of tape drives available, minus drives needed for ADSM maintenance processes (space reclamation most notable -- takes 2 drives).
Best regards,
Ray Kampa
MCI / WorldCom
-----Original Message-----
From: Richard Sims [SMTP:rbs AT BU DOT EDU]
Sent: Friday, December 18, 1998 11:42 AM
To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
Subject: Re: %Util vs %Migr
Betsy - One would not use caching if the recall pattern did not make
its use worthwhile, to eliminate some overhead. In most
shops, an initial disk in a backup storage pool hierarchy basically
serves as a buffer rather than a repository: it's usually "write-only"
with minimal prospect of retrieval. In such situations this just
presents ADSM with more work to do in maintaining the cache, including
rapidly having to dismiss cache images when more space is called for.
Caching makes a lot more sense for Archive and HSM storage pool disk,
where recall of files is more probable.
Richard Sims, BU
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