Re: [ADSM-L] Migrating from AIX to Linux (again)
2011-11-17 02:58:59
You have to move off TSM 5 sooner or later. Any reasonably sized TSM
installation takes too long to practically convert in place so you are
forced to install TSM 6 on a new server, start new backups and then
export/import the old data. This is an ideal time to change platform in
the process.
Other than that take a look at www.butterflysoftware.com
Regards
Steve
Steven Harris
TSM Admin, Canberra Australia
On 17/11/2011 8:43 AM, Hans Christian Riksheim wrote:
I am not of any help here but you say you are moving to Linux because
it is cheaper.
Our Power servers running TSM accounts for less than 3% of the yearly
total cost for our backup infrastructure. Then we include licenses and
man hours in addition to hardware and data center costs(floor space,
power and cooling).
Cutting off a little of those 3% is not an option for us if it means
moving away from a rock solid platform. Even if Linux on Dell was
handed to us free of charge we would stay on Power. But YMMV.
Anyone else done the same calculation and found out what the cost of
the physical servers amount to compared to total cost for the TSM
infrastructure? Maybe you should.
Hans Chr.
On Wed, Nov 16, 2011 at 4:47 PM, Dury, John C.<JDury AT duqlight DOT com>
wrote:
Our current environment looks like this:
We have a production TSM server that all of our clients backup to throughout
the day. This server has 2 SL500 tape libraries attached via fiber. One is
local and the other at a remote site which is connected by dark fiber. The
backup data is sent to the remote SL500 library several times a day in an
effort to keep them in sync. The strategy is to bring up the TSM DR server at
the remote site and have it do backups and recovers from the SL500 at that site
in case of a DR scenario.
I've done a lot of reading in the past and some just recently on the possible ways to
migrate from an AIX TSM server to a Linux TSM server. I understand that in earlier
versions (we are currently at 5.5.5.2) of the TSM server it allowed you to backup the
DB on one platform (AIX for instance) and restore on another platform (Linux for
instance) and if you were keeping the same library, it would just work but apparently
that was removed by IBM in the TSM server code to presumably prevent customers from
moving to less expensive hardware. (Gee, thanks IBM!<sigh>).
I posted several years ago about any possible ways to migrate the TSM Server
from AIX to Linux.
The feasible solutions were as follows:
1. Build new linux server with access to same tape library and then
export nodes from one server to the other and then change each node as it's
exported, to backup to the new TSM Server instead. Then the old data in the
old server can be purged. A lengthy and time consuming process depending on the
amount of data in your tape library.
2. Build a new TSM linux server and point all TSM clients to it but keep
the old TSM server around in case of restores for a specified period of time
until it can be removed.
There may have been more options but those seemed the most reasonable given our
environment. Our biggest problem with scenario 1 above is exporting the data
that lives on the remote SL500 tape library would take much longer as the
connection to that tape library is slower than the local library. I can
probably get some of our SLAs adjusted to not have to export all data and only
the active data but that remains to be seen.
My question. Has any of this changed with v6 TSM or has anyone come up with a
way to do this in a less painful and time consuming way? Hacking the DB so the
other platform code doesn't block restoring an AIX TSM DB on a Linux box?
Anything?
Thanks again and sorry to revisit all of this again. Just hoping something has
changed in the last few years.
John
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