RDF/IMP and IMPX System Management Manual (RDF 1.4+)
Introducing RDF
HP NonStop RDF/IMP and IMPX System Management Manual—524388-001
1-31
Online Product Initialization
2. On the backup system that received the least audit, use RDFCOM to execute the 
COPYAUDIT command. This command copies all the missing audit from the 
system that received the most audit to your present local system—the one that 
received the least audit.
3. Still on your same local backup system, use RDFCOM to execute a TAKEOVER 
command. When this command completes execution, the databases on both 
backup systems will be fully synchronized and logically identical to each other.
Now, you can configure a new RDF environment between the two backup systems, so 
that one operates as the primary and the other as the backup system. Then, you can 
start your applications on the new primary and have full RDF protection on the backup.
For situations where the backup systems are very far apart when the primary fails, for 
example when an Expand line between systems is down for several hours, you must 
take steps to ensure that the audit missing from the system with the least audit is still 
on disk at the backup system with the most audit. Normally, an RDF purger process 
purges image files as soon as it determines that they are no longer needed. For triple 
contingency, however, the purger on the system with the most image audit must retain 
all files that might be needed for this feature, even if those files are no longer needed in 
that purger’s own RDF configuration. To support this need, RDF provides the PURGER 
RETAINCOUNT configuration parameter, which lets you specify the number of image 
files that should still remain on disk when they are no longer needed. You set 
RETAINCOUNT to a value that reflects how far apart you believe your two backup 
systems are likely to be, depending on the image file rollover rate expected at your 
site. (RETAINCOUNT should always be the same value on both backup systems.)
To achieve this type of protection, it is imperative that you carefully follow the 
instructions presented in Section 10, Triple Contingency.
Online Product Initialization
You can initialize RDF/IMP and IMPX while your applications continue to run. This is 
particularly useful for installing new versions of RDF into existing production 
environments where you cannot afford to stop your applications even briefly to 
generate a TMF shutdown timestamp. It is also useful if you encounter a problem for 
which you would like to reinitialize RDF without stopping your applications.
For information about this capability, see Online Product Initialization and the 
INITIALIZE RDF command description.
Online Database Synchronization
With RDF/IMPX you can synchronize entire databases or selected volumes and files 
while your applications continue to run. For information about this capability, see 
Section 7, Online Database Synchronization.










