I have seen people discuss full-volume backups for various systems, using *SM. How is this done? I am interested in this for NT and AIX. Thanks for any info... Tom Melton Emory HealthCare Emory Unive
Author: ZEIDA HEAVENER <ZHEAVENER AT CO.BROWARD.FL DOT US>
Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 07:58:53 -0400
Is anyone doing full volume backups? We have a requirement for weekly full volume backups in addition to our daily incrementals. This is for the purposes of saving time during restore after a disk cr
Author: Robert Tetstall <ciw240 AT BE.IBM DOT COM>
Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 12:23:06 +0000
FormName: SwipeFrom: Robert Tetstall/Belgium/Contr/IBM @ ValidationTesting: 0 oldfrom: Robert Tetstall/Belgium/Contr/IBM I use this method with great success for one of our customers and I have been
Author: Mauro-Frank <MSMAIL.MAUROF AT TSOD.LMIG DOT COM>
Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 09:07:09 GMT
I would go with method number 2 but I would not create a new Management Class. This is what I have done to run a full volume backup (this will not include files which have been excluded.) 1) I have c
Author: ZEIDA HEAVENER [SMTP:ZHEAVENER AT CO.BROWARD.FL DOT US]
Date: Sun, 04 Oct 2015 18:07:24 -0500
Is anyone doing full volume backups? We have a requirement for weekly full volume backups in addition to our daily incrementals. This is for the purposes of saving time during = restore after a disk
Remember that the ADSM developers recently introduced the boffo capability to collocate by filespace as well as by node, thus alleviating the need to be concerned about periodic "full backups" to con
Dave - Collocation by filespace was introduced in AIX server level 8, and I believe MVS server level 10, and so should be propagating to other platforms. As a former VM guy, I commiserate with you on