Paul,
It has always been my belief that there is only A and B side for
microcode (5722-999 or 5761-999). You can remove a PTF which is Temporarily
applied because there is a *SAVF in the product library that has the
original objects to return to before the PTF was applied.
I don't think there really is an A side for anything other than
microcode.
JMHO
Pete
Pete Massiello
iTech Solutions
http://www.itechsol.com
-----Original Message-----
From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of PaulMmn
Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2009 2:52 PM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Cc: Mark.Bazer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Cumulative PTF package downloaded
Mark--
The image catalogs take the CD swapping and slow reading out of the
equation-- the system just has to read, read, read those changes and
stuff them where they belong.
As far as the "Side A" and "Side B" that IBM talks about, my
sneaking suspicion is that there aren't 2 complete copies of the OS.
I think IBM uses the library list to its advantage-- and library
"QSYS" is actually "QSYS_SIDE_B" + "QSYS_SIDE_A." All PTFs apply on
Side B, running in place of those on Side A. We're always told that
we can IPL from "Side A" in case of problems with a PTF... which
would just remove the "QSYS_SIDE_B" from the list. Applying a PTF
permanently moves the appropriate pieces from the B library to the A
library as we've always been told.
Does anyone know if I'm just blowing smoke or not??
--Paul E Musselman
PaulMmn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
At 9:17 AM -0400 3/21/09, Mark.Bazer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
I just completed the cume PTF install and it took only 45 minutes! Not
even close to previous installs. It's the first time I did it on a Power 6
box, so I can only attribute part of the time gain to the image catalog
process.
Mark Bazer
Director, Information Systems
Dyno Merchandise
954-971-2910 ext. 202
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