You're right.
Which, in part, is why my db volumes are on an ESS raid array, with the
mirrors on a separate array. One of these days my paranoia will take
over again, and I'll put the mirrors on the other ESS.
And, speaking of DB exposure -- WHEN are we going to get the ability to
do something like: backup db devclass=lto type=full scratch=yes copies=2
so I can cut two IDENTICAL database backup tapes?
I had the ability at the OS level to cut matching tapes back on GCOS-3
on a Honeywell system in 1984, fer cryin' out loud.
Tom Kauffman
NIBCO, Inc
-----Original Message-----
From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU] On Behalf Of
Allen S. Rout
Sent: Thursday, March 01, 2007 11:42 AM
To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
Subject: Re: Can I enlarge a dbvol by mirroring?
>> On Thu, 1 Mar 2007 09:01:33 -0500, "Kauffman, Tom"
<KauffmanT AT NIBCO DOT COM> said:
> If your Dbvbols are not in a hardware raid or mirrored environment,
> the correct (or paranoid) procedure would be to create a new 12 GB
> dbvol AND a 12 GB dbvol mirror -- and THEN delete the 9 GB dbvol and
> the 9 GB mirror. It takes a bit longer, but it is the clean way to
> go.
Actually, you're still exposed there.
The procedure goes:
DEF DBVOL new
DEF DBCOPY new new-copy
DEL DBVOL old-copy
[D'oh! old is now unmirrored]
DEL DBVOL old
and for however long it takes you to copy, you stay unmirrored.
Now, this is not a huge exposure, in the scheme of things. But it
-is- an exposure, and I don't see a reason for it. I've wished aloud
here in the past for something like 'EMPTY DBVOL' so you can move data
off a mirrored volume onto other mirrored vols.
- Allen S. Rout
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