RDF/IMP, IMPX, and ZLT System Management Manual
Entering RDFCOM Commands
HP NonStop RDF/IMP, IMPX, and ZLT System Management Manual—524388-002
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Command Overview
RDFVOLUME $volume
specifies which disk volume on the backup system is to be used for the receiver’s 
master image trail (the image trail to which the receiver writes all commit/abort 
records). The default is $SYSTEM.
Note that this attribute applies only to the master receiver (the receiver process 
configured with an ATINDEX value of 0). It is ignored for auxiliary receivers.
For best performance, do not use $SYSTEM as the RDFVOLUME.
If the backup system will run with updating disabled, be sure to specify an 
RDFVOLUME disk that has an adequate amount of available space.
If the RDFVOLUME disk becomes filled, the receiver process will receive error 
43 messages (Unable to obtain disk space for extent) from the file system until the 
situation is corrected.
PRIORITY priority
identifies the execution priority for the receiver process; priority is the execution 
priority, from 10 through 199. The default is 165.
PROCESS process-name
specifies the process name for the receiver process; process-name is any 
unique, valid process name of up to 5 characters; the first character must be a 
dollar sign ($). You cannot specify any of the reserved process names listed in 
Appendix B of the Guardian Procedure Calls Reference Manual. Names longer 
than 5 characters, including the $ sign, are invalid.
This parameter is not optional. You must explicitly name the receiver process.
SLOWMODE {ON | OFF}
During normal processing, the updaters’ RTD values are typically 4 to 20 seconds 
behind the extractor’s RTD value. This is expected and normal behavior, although 
it does not necessarily mean that the updaters are in fact running 4 to 20 seconds 
behind the extractor. The updaters cannot read past what the receiver deems 
safe, and that is determined by the frequency with which the receiver updates its 
context records. The receiver normally updates its context records every 5 to 15 
seconds, and the updaters’ RTD values reflect that interval.
Some customers would prefer the updaters to have the lowest possible RTD value 
at all times. This can be accomplished by setting SLOWMODE ON.
With SLOWMODE ON, the receiver updates its context records after processing 
each extractor message buffer. This enables the updaters to read and apply 
image records much faster. It also, however, slows the extractor-to-receiver 
throughput rate. You should only specify SLOWMODE ON if your throughput rate 
is typically low to moderate. In environments with high extractor-to-receiver 
throughput, specifying SLOWMODE ON will cause the extractor to fall behind TMF 
audit generation.










