Emcopy usage
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NFS Clients: NFS is a stateless protocol.A stateless server does not keeps state between connections.NFS version 3 is the standard for NFS and is the most stable and mature version of the NFS protocol. To extend a Filesystem nas_fs -xtend testnfs size=500M pool=poolname Check/set speed and duplex server_sysconfig server_2 -pci cge0 -o duplex=full,speed=100 Configure server_3 to be a standby for server_2 (presuming server_3 is currently a primary data mover): server_standby server_2 -c mover=server_3 -policy=auto Confgure server_3 to be a primary data mover… How will clients be affected during Data Mover failover VMAX R1 Frame : 1344VMAX R2 Frame : 1719Device Group : njserver_dg Device Group (DG) Name : njserver_dg DG's Type : RDF1DG's Symmetrix ID : 000192601344 (Microcode Version: 5876)Remote Symmetrix…
#EMCOPY USAGE HOW TO#
In this example I will show you how to add new dynamic pairs to an existing device group in srdf. symrdf -g dgname enable (Enables consistency protection for SRDF/A pairs in device group).symrdf -g dgname set mode async (Change the Copy mode to Asynchronous).Wait until the invalid track count is under 30,000 tracks Symrdf -g dgname query (To query a device Group) symrdf -g dgname est (This initiates an establish for all the SRDF pairs in the device group).
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#EMCOPY USAGE WINDOWS#
Otherwise you'll find it as a Windows 2000 Resource Kit Tool download. Grab the latest versions from a copy of Windows 2003 or later. There are some nice GUIs for robocopy which can assist with the syntax, but anyone with a Linux background will grok it easily.
#EMCOPY USAGE ZIP#
I'm not sure how granular the resume bit is, because I've never really tested for example a single 40GB ZIP file. Robocopy has another switch /z allowing for "resumeable" transfers, so if the transfer is interrupted you can pick up where you left off, and don't need to shift the whole 40 GB again. I've done just this when I didn't want to overload the WAN during the business day with massive replications. You can always specify some number of milliseconds and let it run for a bit, then CTRL+C to interrupt, adjust your command as needed, then resume. It's not exactly "use no more than 30% of the available bandwidth", but you can acheive the same effect with a little math. Robocopy.exe has a switch called inter-packet gap, allowing you to insert a time window in between the packets of your copy, and thereby reduce the impact on the channel.