Operating System Software Owner manual

<pattern> - Pattern of volume group names (for example, Group*)
3. On the primary system (for example, System1), add the pre-existing virtual volume(s) to the
newly created volume group:
# admitrcopyvv <VV_name> <group_name> <target_name:sec_VV_name>
<VV_name> - Name of the virtual volume (vv1) to add to the primary volume group on
the primary system
<group_name> - Name of the primary volume group (Group1) on the primary system
<target_name> - Name of the target system (System2)
<sec_VV_name> - Name of the corresponding secondary virtual volume on the target
system (vv1_remote).
or:
# admitrcopyvv -pat <pattern> <group_name> <target_name:sec_VV_name>
<pattern> - Pattern of virtual volume names (for example, vv*)
The admitrcopyvv command:
Adds the specified virtual volume (vv1) to the primary volume group (Group1) on the
primary system (System1)
Adds the specified virtual volume (vv1_remote) [which you verified already exists on the
target system (System2)] to the corresponding secondary volume group on the target
system (System2).
Because Remote Copy created this secondary volume group (Group1.r112) when you
created the primary volume group (see Creating Remote Copy Volume Groups), Remote
Copy automatically adds vv1_remote to Group1.r112.
SolutionProblem
To redo volume groups: 1. Use the removercopygroup command.
2. Repeat the setup from step 1.
To redo virtual volume placement: 1. Use the dismissrcopyvv command.
2. Repeat the setup from step 3.
For more information on these commands, see “About the Remote Copy
Commands” (page 222).
Creating Remote Copy Volume Groups 73