Graduated delay sidefile management, Dummy pair mode, 5 graduated delay process for sidefile management – HP StorageWorks XP Remote Web Console Software User Manual

Page 33: Graduated delay sidefile management” on

Advertising
background image

TrueCopy for z/OS user guide

33

Graduated Delay Sidefile Management

The following figure shows the graduated delay process for TC390A sidefile management. When the

TC390A sidefile value reaches the high-water mark (threshold minus 20%), the

XP128/XP1024/XP10000/XP12000 begins command retry delay for host updates to TC390A M-VOLs

and reports a warning SIM to the host. As the amount of sidefile increases, the delay increases

incrementally as shown in the following figure. Use Mode 93 on the XP128/XP1024/XP10000/XP12000

SVP (refer to

Table 3

on page 20) to select the delay type (long or short). This graduated delay

methodology minimizes the potential for sidefile overcommitment, while at the same time providing another

level of automation control.
SIM reporting for TC390A sidefile conditions is enabled only when SVP mode 118 or 464 is ON (see

Table 3

on page 20). The reported SIMs when SVP mode 118 or 464 is ON, however, do not support a

CLPR. When this SIM is reported to the host, the SIM reference code is indicated as 490x-yy (“x” is CU

number, and “yy” is LDEV number). For more information about the SIM reference code, call your

HP Account Support Representative.
You can disable the command retry delay for a limited number of critical volumes using the special “No

delay” parameter for the CESTPAIR TSO command (see ”

CESTPAIR

” on page 152). When this parameter

is set, the XP128/XP1024/XP10000/XP12000 will not delay host write I/Os to the M-VOL until the

TC390A sidefile amount reaches the puncture threshold (threshold + 10%). This prevents performance

degradation for critical volumes and should be used only for a small number of volumes.

Figure 5

Graduated delay process for sidefile management

Dummy Pair Mode

TC390A performance can be limited due to RIO response through CNT/ATM. This is because only one

RIO at a time can transfer updates to remote side. RIO is issued with the device address of secondary

volume. ESCON protocol allows only one I/O at a time to the same device address. Dummy pair mode

addresses this limitation by providing additional device addresses for specific high-usage volumes.

1. For more information on sidefile thresholds for HXRC operations, refer to ”

HXRC Device Blocking and Load Balancing

” on

page 201.

Advertising