IBM Z10 BUISNESS CLASS Z10 BC User Manual

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16 allows one of these protocol exchanges to complete

asynchronously. This allows faster duplexed request ser-

vice time, with more benefi ts when the Coupling Facilities

are further apart, such as in a multi-site Parallel Sysplex

environment.

List notifi cation improvements: Prior to CFCC Level 16,

when a shared queue (subsidiary list) changed state from

empty to non-empty, the CF would notify ALL active con-

nectors. The fi rst one to respond would process the new

message, but when the others tried to do the same, they

would fi nd nothing, incurring additional overhead.

CFCC Level 16 can help improve the effi ciency of coupling

communications for IMS Shared Queue and WebSphere

MQ Shared Queue environments. The Coupling Facility

notifi es only one connector in a sequential fashion. If the

shared queue is processed within a fi xed period of time,

the other connectors do not need to be notifi ed, saving the

cost of the false scheduling. If a shared queue is not read

within the time limit, then the other connectors are notifi ed

as they were prior to CFCC Level 16.

When migrating CF levels, lock, list and cache structure

sizes might need to be increased to support new function.

For example, when you upgrade from CFCC Level 15 to

Level 16 the required size of the structure might increase.

This adjustment can have an impact when the system

allocates structures or copies structures from one coupling

facility to another at different CF levels.

The coupling facility structure sizer tool can size struc-

tures for you and takes into account the amount of space

needed for the current CFCC levels.

Access the tool at:

http://www.ibm.com/servers/eserver/zseries/cfsizer/.

CFCC Level 16 is exclusive to System z10 and is sup-

ported by z/OS and z/VM for guest exploitation.

Coupling Facility Confi guration Alternatives

IBM offers multiple options for confi guring a functioning

Coupling Facility:

Standalone Coupling Facility: The standalone CF

provides the most “robust” CF capability, as the CPC is

wholly dedicated to running the CFCC microcode — all

of the processors, links and memory are for CF use

only. A natural benefi t of this characteristic is that the

standalone CF is always failure-isolated from exploiting

z/OS software and the server that z/OS is running on for

environments without System-Managed CF Structure

Duplexing. The z10 BC with capacity indicator A00 is

used for systems with ICF(s) only. There are no software

charges associated with such a confi guration.

Internal Coupling Facility (ICF): Customers consider-

ing clustering technology can get started with Parallel

Sysplex technology at a lower cost by using an ICF

instead of purchasing a standalone Coupling Facility.

An ICF feature is a processor that can only run Coupling

Facility Control Code (CFCC) in a partition. Since CF

LPARs on ICFs are restricted to running only CFCC,

there are no IBM software charges associated with

ICFs. ICFs are ideal for Intelligent Resource Director and

resource sharing environments as well as for data shar-

ing environments where System-Managed CF Structure

Duplexing is exploited.

System-Managed CF Structure Duplexing

System-Managed Coupling Facility (CF) Structure Duplex-

ing provides a general purpose, hardware-assisted, easy-

to-exploit mechanism for duplexing CF structure data. This

provides a robust recovery mechanism for failures such

as loss of a single structure or CF or loss of connectivity to

a single CF, through rapid failover to the backup instance

of the duplexed structure pair. CFCC Level 16 provides CF

Duplexing enhancements described previously in the sec-

tion titled “Coupling Facility Control Code (CFCC) Level 16”.

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