Rob,
I'm not sure if you previously stated, what is this guest LPAR used for?
Paul.
-----Original Message-----
From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of rob@xxxxxxxxx
Sent: Saturday, April 26, 2014 7:00 PM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Re: Distribute IBM i on available disk units Was: 70GB load source and 5 other drives
I'm digging what you're saying there.  I'm no stranger to TRCASPBAL.
Rob Berendt
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From:   Sue Baker <sue.baker@xxxxxxxxxx>
To:     midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Date:   04/26/2014 02:46 PM
Subject:        Re: Distribute IBM i on available disk units Was: 70GB 
load source     and 5 other drives
Sent by:        midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
rob@xxxxxxxxx wrote on Sat, 26 Apr 2014 15:58:16 GMT:
At which point do you run:
STRASPBAL TYPE(*ENDALC)
of the load source?
1:  After Task 8:  Restore the operating system, beginning
with ƒ oTask 1: Starting to restore the
operating systemƒ  ?
2:  In the middle of the task 8 above?  If so, at which step?
When?
If i is hosting i, I thing I would elect to attempt to run with 
no drives in *ENCALC status until I actually see some sort of a 
performance issue where high I/Os to the load source can be 
clearly identified as the culprit.
At that time, I would run STRASPBAL *ENDALC for UNIT(1) followed 
by a STRASPBAL *MOVDTA. 
Other options could be to run a TRCASPBAL followed by a 
STRASPBAL *USAGE to rearrange "cold" data.  This would be in the 
hope the hot load source becomes warm.
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