Preparing Magneto-Optical (MO) Disks [ STORE and TurboSTORE/iX Products Manual ] MPE/iX 5.5 Documentation
STORE and TurboSTORE/iX Products Manual
Preparing Magneto-Optical (MO) Disks
TurboSTORE/iX II and TurboSTORE/iX 7x24 True-Online Backup support the
use of HP magneto-optical (MO) devices. The MO devices currently
supported include product numbers:
C1700A
C1700T
C1708T
C1100B
NOTE After MPE/iX Release 5.5, TurboSTORE/iX II and TurboSTORE/iX 7x24
True-Online Backup will only support the above three devices. New
MO devices will not be supported.
Check with your HP representative or the HP 3000 Configuration Guide for
the most recent information on what types of MO devices are supported by
TurboSTORE.
Use of magneto-optical disk is recommended for the daily backup of large
amounts of data. When TurboSTORE/iX's low data compression is used
during a magneto-optical backup, the capacity of the MO device is
increased to almost 40 Gbytes of data and the potential backup rate is
increased to up to 2.8 Gbytes per hour.
When high compression is used, the capacity of each MO device is
increased to almost 64 Gbytes of data. Note, however, that compression
ratios depend on the data being stored, and may be lower than or exceed
these capacities.
Preparing for Backup to Optical Disk
When using MO devices, it is important that you ensure that enough
scratch media is mounted before you issue the STORE command. The media
preparation tasks are performed using the Magneto-Optical Utility
(MOUTIL), a utility program provided with MPE/iX. Use of the MOUTIL
program is documented in the Magneto-Optical Media Manager User's Guide
(36398-90001).
Determining the Number of Disks Needed
You should compute the number of disks needed for a backup by dividing
the total number of sectors to be stored by the capacity of one MO disk
surface. For example, each single density optical disk surface can hold
approximately 290 MBytes of uncompressed data (depending on the type of
data and assuming there are no bad sectors on the disk). By comparison,
2400 feet of 1/2 inch backup holds approximately 140 MBytes of data.
Therefore, one optical disk surface is equivalent to approximately two
tapes. If your backup normally takes four magnetic tapes, plan on using
two optical disk surfaces.
Again, using single density disks as an example, you could estimate the
number of optical disk surfaces needed by dividing the total amount of
disk sectors in use to be stored by 1,187,840.
1. First, use the DISCFREE command to determine the amount of disk
sectors in use on your system. For example:
_________________________________________________________________________________
| |
| :DISCFREE E,101 |
| |
| DISCFREE A.01.03 Copyright (C) Hewlett-Packard 1989. All rights reserved.|
| WED, OCT 31, 1990, 04:59 AM |
| |
| | Configured | In Use | Available | |
| -----------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------------+ |
| |
| TOTALS : |
| Device | 4464384 | 3136672 ( 70%) | 1327712 ( 30%) | |
| Permanent | 3906336 ( 88%) | 3002160 ( 67%) | 904176 ( 20%) | |
| Transient | 3348288 ( 75%) | 134512 ( 3%) | 1327712 ( 30%) | |
_________________________________________________________________________________
Figure 3-11. DISCFREE
In this example, a total of 3,136,672 sectors are in use.
2. Divide the total number of sectors to be stored by 1,187,840 and
round up to the nearest whole number to determine the number of
disk surfaces required.
3136672 / 1187840 = 2.6 disk surfaces
In this example you would need three disk surfaces.
Remember to use the actual capacity of your MO disks when doing these
computations.
Specifying the Magneto-Optical Device
When storing to a magneto-optical device, you do not use file equations
as you do when using backup drives. Nor do you use the STORESET
parameter to backreference the device. Instead, you specify the devices
to be used for a MO backup through the MOSET parameter of the STORE
command. Specify the LDEV number of the magneto-optical device as a
parameter to MOSET. For example:
;MOSET=(101)
or
;MOSET=(MO)
NOTE Actual LDEV numbers are only necessary if you have multiple
magneto-optical devices and you want to specify a particular
magneto-optical device. Using the keyword "MO" instead of a number
causes STORE to use the first available scratch media.
Naming the Backup
You can optionally use the NAME parameter of the STORE command to name
the backup with a name that logically relates the media as being from the
same backup. The name specified must be unique so that it can be found
when restoring files. For example, a monthly backup for September, 1990
on a system called "KING" could be named "MONTHLY.SEPT1990.KING". Note
that the backup name is a three-field name separated with periods. Each
of the three fields can be up to eight alphanumeric characters. If a
backup name is not specified, a default name is created using the time,
date, and system name. For example, "BK1130PM.D23OCT90.KING".
NOTE The backup name must be unique for RESTORE to be able to find it.
If media is removed from the magneto-optical device, use an external
label with the same backup name as you specified with the STORE command.
The media subname of the MEDIASUB parameter to the MOUTIL command SCRATCH
is used to hold the media number and set number for each side of the
media.
Storing to a Single Magneto-Optical Device
The following example illustrates the STORE command to backup files to a
single magneto-optical device with the LDEV number 101.
:STORE @.@.@;;MOSET=(101);SHOW;NAME=BK1130PM.D23OCT90.KING
Storing to Multiple Magneto-Optical Devices
Multiple magneto-optical devices can be used in parallel (sequential use
is not supported) for backup by specifying each magneto-optical device
drive with the MOSET parameter. For example, to use LDEV 102 and 103 in
parallel, the MOSET entry would be:
;MOSET=(102),(103)
For example, to use the first available media in parallel, the MOSET
entry is:
;MOSET=(MO),(MO)
Do not mix alphanumeric with numeric allocation requests. For example:
;MOSET=(M1),(102)
MPE/iX 5.5 Documentation