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We keep a history of RCLSTG times: Model Date of Disk RCLSTG of Downtime (MB) HH:MM system 40S-2109 1998-09-18 7,086 1:05 400-2132 1998-09-18 8,038 1:26 50S-2121 1998-09-18 8,038 1:00 9402-E04 1998-09-18 1,978 35 600-2134 1998-09-18 12,058 2:51 510-2143 1998-09-18 38,035 2:37 200-2030 1998-09-18 3,934 1:25 S20-2166 1998-09-18 45,009 37 400-2130 1998-09-18 5,099 1:23 S20-2163 1998-09-18 89,052 - 400-2132 1998-09-18 19,067 3:26 170-2160 1998-09-18 12,058 1:06 600-2134 1998-08-21 12,058 2:01 400-2132 1998-08-21 6,016 1:39 400-2132 1998-08-21 7,086 1:48 600-2136 1998-08-21 18,048 1:11 30S-2412 1998-07-24 19,806 4:48 We skip running the RCLSTG on the S20-2163 (the programmers machine). The last time we ran it, it took over 10 hours. The above contains all of our 18 AS/400's except one in Canada. acentea@forzani.com on 10/01/98 11:12:33 AM Please respond to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com@Internet To: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com@Internet cc: Subject: Re: The RCLSTG mystery... <HTML> Dan Rasch wrote: <BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE>What does RCLSTG accomplish, and is there a method to predict it's outcome? ( ... )</BLOCKQUOTE> <UL>RCLSTG targets the logical level, not the physical one as Microsoft SCANDISK does on PC's. It isolates damaged and lost objects and tries to recover them. <P>It's a good tool since on a big system it's tricky to predict how many damaged objects you may encounter. It should be a must for heavy journalized systems, since many damaged objects regard the receivers. <P>RCLSTG touches ownership and addressability too. A power failure or an abnormal *IMMED job end can leave traces. If an *AUTL remains damaged the real adresability of an object is affected, since a lot of information gather to define it ( *AUTL, *USRPRF, *OBJD, ... ). The RCLSTG will do a RCLAUTL that can enlighten or solve the bug. Not owned objects are sent to QDFTOWN. <P>You may have other lost objects. Make a RTVDSKINF then a PRTDSKINF. Page 1 gives you ' OBJ NOT IN A LIBRARY ' information. Page 3 gives you estimated space gain after RCLSTG. <P>You have a DTAARA somewhere in QUSRSYS ( QSYS ? ) to pick up information about your system's last RCLSTG, to estimate the time effort. IBM docs must explain somewhere the structure of this DTAARA. <P>Damaged objects are sent to LIB ( QRCL ). Study them, restore useful ones and delete the others. If the size of those objects is significant, RCLSTG can indeed improve the % of used storage. If nobody cleaned QRCL after several RCLSTG, it's size could be increased. See in page 3 of PRTDSKINF the actual size of your QRCL lib. Follow the rules from the books : Sys Oper, Basic Backup & Basic Security if you need recovery. <P>Be sure to have enough auxiliary storage for swapping operations internal to RCLSTG. <P>Personally I use it every three months, as you also did. On all CISC & RISC machines I met it ran no more than four hours, but the system must be restricted so it requires ... another lost week-end if you are in charge ...</UL> <UL>For a storage gain if you use big outputs, also consider RCLSPLSTG. On old systems with little maintenance it will help. <BR> </UL> Andre <BR>_________________________ <BR>acentea@forzani.com <BR>centea@dsuper.net</HTML> +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +--- +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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