RDF System Management Manual for H-Series and J-Series RVUs (RDF 1.9)

UPDATERDELAY attribute in the global RDF configuration record, the updaters can then read
the image trails and apply the freshly written audit to the backup database immediately, thereby
keeping updater RTD times to the lowest possible value. Because the receiver writes the audit
immediately to the image trails after processing each extractor message, having
FASTUPDATEMODE set ON can impact extractor-to-receiver throughput.
For a complete discussion of FASTUPDATEMODE, see the description involving the SET
RECEIVER command in Chapter 8 (page 187).
To configure an RDF receiver process named $RECV to run as a process pair in CPUs 0 and 2 of
the backup system at a priority of 185 with FASTUPDATEMODE off, and to have the RDF image
trail file (with a primary extent size of 3000 pages and a secondary extent size of 3000 pages)
reside on the volume $IMAGE, issue the following commands:
]SET RECEIVER ATINDEX 0
]SET RECEIVER PROCESS $RECV
]SET RECEIVER CPUS 0:2
]SET RECEIVER PRIORITY 185
]SET RECEIVER RDFVOLUME $IMAGE
]SET RECEIVER EXTENTS (3000,3000)
]ADD RECEIVER
You cannot start RDF until you have configured a master receiver process.
You can issue ADD RECEIVER commands only when RDF is stopped.
Purger Process
Use SET PURGER and ADD PURGER commands to configure the following purger attributes:
CPUS primary-CPU : backup-CPU
PRIORITY
PROCESS
RETAINCOUNT
PURGETIME
The CPUS attribute specifies the processors in the backup system in which the purger is to run.
The PRIORITY attribute specifies the priority at which the purger will run. You should set the
purgers priority higher than that of any application’s process and higher than that of any RDF
updater process.
The PROCESS attribute supplies a name for the purger process. You should specify a meaningful
mnemonic such as $PURG. The process name can be any unique valid process name up to 5
characters, including the $ symbol. However, you cannot specify HP reserved process names
that are of the form $X*, $Y*, or $Z*, in which * is any alphanumeric string.
The RETAINCOUNT attribute specifies how many of the most recent image trail files will be
retained on disk for each image trail. The default value is 2. For details about the RETAINCOUNT
attribute and triple contingency, see Chapter 10 (page 271).
The PURGETIME attribute specifies the number of minutes the purger process waits between
attempts to purge redundant image trail files. The default value is 60.
To configure an RDF purger process named $PURG to run as a process pair in CPUs 0 and 2 of
the backup system at a priority of 185, and to ensure that at least six image trail files are always
retained on disk, issue the following commands:
]SET PURGER PROCESS $PURG
]SET PURGER CPUS 0:2
]SET PURGER PRIORITY 185
]SET PURGER RETAINCOUNT 6
]SET PURGER PURGETIME 30
]ADD PURGER
You cannot start RDF until you have configured a purger process.
94 Installing and Configuring RDF