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From: Adrienne McConnon Evan, I thank you for your respnse, and will try to clarify the issues below. We appreciate all of your patience with my attempts to reiterate this problem we are having. 1. We have 2 iSeries - both on V5R4. One is local, one remote. Also we have a remote tape drive. 2. We must backup an iSeries in Timbuktu. That system does NOT have enough disk space to backup all user data to virtual tape. 3. We can create a tape in Timbuktu but we can't pick it up or have it delivered. 4. We thought we might backup Timbuktu to a physical tape and then copy that Timbuktu physical tape one file at a time to a small virtual tape that could be sent to a backup iSeries that is offsite from Timbuktu. 5. Our stumbling blocks are that we are short on disk space - and approval to purchase additional will not occur at theis time. We have enough for production purposes only. 6. Our remote iSeries and tape drive are virtually non-accessible.
Adrienne, the "primary purpose" of a virtual tape is to break up the two parts of the save process: grabbing an image of the data and then saving that data to tape. Typically with a SAVxxx operation, these steps occur at the same time. A virtual tape allows you to perform normal save procedures as quickly as possible and then copy that data to tape asynchronously. This really isn't what you are looking for. To me, it seems that you want to simply transfer these files from the remote machine to the local machine and back them up locally. I would consider performing a save to a save file for small groups of files and then transmitting that save file via FTP to the local machine. Once you've done that, save the save file to a tape drive locally. Then signal the remote machine to save the next group of files, and so on. Joe
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