Example – HP NonStop G-Series User Manual

Page 44

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Tape File Concepts

DSM/Tape Catalog User’s Guide — 520233-008

2 - 4

Relative Generations

Example

This example shows four generations of CALIF_ACCOUNTS in a file catalog as of
January 27:

On January 27, a special report is needed from the data in the second generation of
CALIF_ACCOUNTS on tape X00025. This DEFINE is used to retrieve that generation:

6> ADD DEFINE =REPORT_IN, CLASS TAPECATALOG,&

6> & USE IN,&

6> & FILEID CALIF_ACCOUNTS,&

6> & GEN -3

On January 28, the catalog entry for the second generation of CALIF_ACCOUNTS is
deleted using the DELETE TAPEFILE command because the tape was destroyed. The
catalog entries and their generations numbers are now:

There is a numbering gap between absolute generation 1 and 3, but the relative
generation numbers have no gap. A tape file request by absolute generation number is
possible for generations 1, 3, and 4 only.

You can still request each entry by a relative generation number but asking for relative
generation -3 on January 28 now retrieves CALIF_ACCOUNTS on tape X00015.
Requesting generation -3 on the previous day would have retrieved
CALIF_ACCOUNTS on tape X00025.

Tape File Name

Tape Name

Absolute

Generation

Relative

Generation

Date Created

CALIF_ACCOUNTS

X00015

1

-4

January 6

CALIF_ACCOUNTS

X00025

2

-3

January 13

CALIF_ACCOUNTS

X00032

3

-2

January 20

CALIF_ACCOUNTS

X00045

4

-1

January 27

Tape File Name

Tape Name

Absolute

Generation

Relative

Generation

Date Created

CALIF_ACCOUNTS

X00015

1

-3

January 6

CALIF_ACCOUNTS

X00032

3

-2

January 20

CALIF_ACCOUNTS

X00045

4

-1

January 27

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