AutoSYNC Software User's Guide (Update 18)
Command Interpreter
HP AutoSYNC User’s Guide—522580-019
8-50
ALTER SYNCFILESET
The mapnames-file entries are similar to, but not exactly the same as, the 
MAP NAMES option of RESTORE. Each line of the MAPNAMES file 
contains a single mapping of the form. 
The file name can be partially qualified; AutoSYNC replaces the missing 
portion of the name with the wild card asterisk (*). For example:
Are equivalent to:
Catalog name mapping:
The information in MAPNAMES is also used to perform SQL catalog 
volume mapping. You should include MAPNAME entries if catalogs are 
located on different volumes or subvolumes on the destination system. 
The entries follow file mapping entries and are preceded by the keyword 
"CATALOGS:", including the colon (:), as follows:
CATALOGS entries are checked for proper syntax, and passed along to 
the RESTORE process.
See discussion on the use of MAPNAMES in Alternate Key Files
 on page 3-6, 
SQL Tables and Catalogs on page 3-7, Partitioned Files and Tables on 
page 3-9 and File and Catalog Name Mapping using MAPNAMES
 on 
page 3-10.
MAXBACKUP num-of-files | NO MAXBACKUP
the maximum number of files to be processed by one BACKUP process.
When processing large file sets, AutoSYNC divides the synchronized files into 
subsets, each processed by a separate BACKUP process. BACKUP 
performance decreases significantly with the number of files it processes. To 
avoid performance degradation, AutoSYNC starts multiple BACKUP 
processes, in sequence, and assigns to each no more than the configured 
num-of-files.
source-file-pattern TO destination-file-pattern
$DATA TO $BACK
\NEWYORK.$DATA*.DB TO $BACK.BACKUPDB
$DATA*.DB.PARTFILE TO \TOKYO.*
\SOURCE.$DATA.*.* TO \DEST.$BACK.*.*
\NEWYORK.$DATA*.DB.* TO \DEST.$BACK.BACKUPDB.*
\SOURCE.$DATA*.DB.PARTFILE TO \TOKYO.*.*.*
$DATA TO $BACK
\NEWYORK.$DATA*.DB TO $BACK.BACKUPDB
$DATA*.DB.PARTFILE TO \TOKYO.*
CATALOGS:
$CATS.BACKCAT FOR $BACK.*.*
$CATS.DBCAT FOR $BACK.BACKUPDB.*
\TOKYO.$CATS.DBCAT for \TOKYO.*.*.*










