RDF System Management Manual for J-series and H-series RVUs (RDF 1.10)
SHOW NETWORK Command
Suppose that a series of SET NETWORK commands specifies \RDF04 as the network master’s
primary system, \RDF06 as the network master’s backup system, RDF04 as the network master’s
remote control subvolume, and $DATA07 as the network master’s PNETTXVOLUME volume.
To display the values specified by those SET NETWORK commands, enter:
]SHOW NETWORK
RDF displays:
NETWORK PRIMARYSYSTEM \RDF04
NETWORK BACKUPSYSTEM \RDF06
NETWORK RCSV RDF04
NETWORK PNETTXVOLUME $DATA07
SHOW TRIGGER Command
If you have entered a series of SET TRIGGER commands and you want to review them before
issuing the ADD TRIGGER command, type:
]SHOW TRIGGER
RDF displays a list like this:
TRIGGER PROGRAM $SYSTEM.RDF.RDFCOM
TRIGGER INFILE $DATA01.RDF.RDFCONF
TRIGGER OUTFILE $DATA01.RDF.OUTFILE
TRIGGER CPUS 0:1
TRIGGER PRIORITY 150
TRIGGER NOWAIT
START RDF
The START RDF command starts RDF.
START RDF [, UPDATE {ON | OFF}]
UPDATE ON
Enables update processing on the backup system; this is the default value.
UPDATE OFF
Disables update processing on the backup system.
RDF image files are not purged from the backup system.
Where Issued
Primary system only.
Security Restrictions
You can issue the START RDF command if you are the member of the super ID group that initialized
RDF and have a remote password from the RDF primary system to the backup.
RDF State Requirement
You can issue the START RDF command only after TMF has been started and RDF has been
previously initialized.
Usage Guidelines
The decision to start RDF is a management decision that should be carefully planned and performed.
Operators should never issue this command strictly on their own initiative.
For information about when to use the START RDF command and how it affects the primary and
backup databases, see “Restarting RDF” (page 127).
RDFCOM Commands 231










