Legato Storage Manager Administrator's Guide
Release 8.0.4

A58373-01

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3
Media Management

This chapter provides details about how to configure and manage the storage devices and volumes LSM uses for Oracle backup and restore operations. It explains how LSM sorts Oracle data onto volumes that are grouped into volume pools and how you can label and mount volumes in the storage devices in preparation for Oracle backups. It also reviews the procedures LSM uses to track Oracle storage volumes and manage the data on them.

Major Topics:

Configuring Storage Devices

An Oracle storage device is the drive on the LSM Server that LSM uses to write data during an Oracle backup and to read data during an Oracle restore operation. Before LSM can recognize an attached storage device, you must configure a device resource for it in the LSM Server.

Keep the following LSM Server features in mind when you plan the configuration of the Oracle backup devices to be used by LSM:

LSM supports the following types of storage devices:

The specific device models supported by LSM are:

HP-UX does not support Sony SDX 500C or DLT 7000.

You can configure up to a maximum of four storage devices on the LSM Server for Oracle backup and restore operations.


Note:

When you configure a tape device, you must specify a no-rewind device name. When backing up to a tape volume, the LSM Server writes a file mark on the volume at the end of each backup and uses the position of that file mark to append data onto the volume during the next backup. If the device rewinds the volume at the end of a backup, the file mark position is lost and the existing data on the volume is overwritten during the next backup.

 

Device Resources

During the LSM installation process on UNIX, you can specify up to four backup devices; LSM automatically creates the required device resource for each of those devices. LSM installation on a Windows NT system also includes the automatic configuration of an LSM device resource for a 4mm tape device. For details about LSM installation procedures, refer to the Oracle installation guide for your particular system.

If your LSM Server is installed on a Windows NT system, see the next section "Device Considerations on Windows NT". Otherwise, proceed to "Preparing for Device Configuration".

Device Considerations on Windows NT

On a Windows NT system, you need to use the Tape Devices program in the Windows NT Control Panel to install the device driver for a storage device before you configure the LSM resource for that device.

Only devices currently registered with the Windows NT Registry are available for use with LSM. To determine what devices are available, follow these steps:

  1. Open an MS/DOS window.
  2. Change to the LSM directory (%SystemDrive%\win32app\nsr\bin, by default).
  3. Enter the following command at the system prompt to display all the devices currently available:
    inquire
    
    

Devices that have a Registry entry of \\.\TAPE# are tape devices. Devices that have a Registry entry of \\.\PHYSICALDRIVE# are regular disk drives.

Some physical hard drives can also have a \\.\PHYSICALDRIVE# Registry entry but are not compatible with LSM. Any devices not listed, or listed without a Registry entry, are unavailable to LSM.

If a tape device does not appear in the Windows NT Registry, consider one of the following reasons:

Now, proceed to "Preparing for Device Configuration".

Preparing for Device Configuration

After you install the LSM Server, you can view, add, modify, or remove LSM device resources by means of the LSM Administrator GUI. You must have a separate LSM device resource configured for each attached Oracle storage device, up to a maximum of four device resources.

For details about running the LSM Administrator GUI, see "Using the LSM Administrator GUI" in Chapter 2. If the LSM Administrator GUI is on a Windows system separate from the Oracle Server, remember to connect to the LSM Server in the GUI by one of the methods outlined in "LSM Administrator GUI on Windows" in Chapter 2.


Note:

You must run the LSM Administrator GUI as one of the users listed in the Administrator attribute of the server resource to be able to create, modify, or remove an LSM device resource. To simply view LSM resources, you do not need to run the GUI as an LSM Administrator.

 

To view or modify the LSM device resource configurations in the LSM Administrator GUI, open the Devices window by one of the following methods, depending on the type of system running the GUI:

The Devices window lists each configured device on the LSM Server. On a UNIX system, the window also shows all the attribute settings of the device resource that is highlighted in the Devices scrolling list at the top of the window.

On a UNIX system, the Devices window is displayed as shown in Figure 3-1.

Figure 3-1 Devices Window on UNIX

This example shows a single device listed in the Devices scrolling list. With the /dev/rmt/0hbn device name highlighted in the list, the resource attributes for the device with that name are displayed in the lower part of the window. The Media type attribute for the device is 8mm 5GB.

On a Windows system, the Devices window itself (shown in Figure 3-2) does not show the attribute settings of the device resources.

Figure 3-2 Devices Window on a Windows System

With the Devices window open in the LSM Administrator GUI, you can perform LSM device configuration operations as described next. If the LSM Administrator GUI is running on a UNIX system, see "Device Configuration on UNIX". See "Device Configuration on Windows" if the GUI is on a Windows system.

Device Configuration on UNIX

On a UNIX system, the Devices window appears as shown in Figure 3-1. To view the attribute settings for any specific device, highlight the device name in the Devices scrolling list in the upper part of the window. The attributes for that device resource are then displayed in the lower part of the window.

If you attach a new Oracle backup device to the LSM Server, you need to create a new LSM device resource for it using the procedure in the next section "Adding a Device Resource on UNIX". To modify an existing LSM device resource, see "Modifying a Device Resource on UNIX". To remove an LSM device resource, see "Removing a Device Resource on UNIX".

You must run the LSM Administrator GUI as one of the users listed in the Administrator attribute of the server resource to be able to create, modify, or remove a device resource. For more information about LSM Administrator privileges, see "Specifying LSM Administrators" in Chapter 2.

After you have properly configured an Oracle storage device in the LSM Server, the device name is displayed in the Devices section of the main LSM Administrator window, as shown in Figure 2-3.

After you have completed the required resource configuration tasks for your storage devices, see the section "Using Volume Pools and Label Templates" for information about using volumes in the devices.

Adding a Device Resource on UNIX

To create a new device resource in the LSM Server, perform the following steps:

  1. In the Devices window, click the Create button under the Devices scrolling list.
  2. In the Name field, enter the correct device pathname for the storage device.
  3. For the Media type field, click the down arrow to the right of the field and select the correct type of media from the drop-down list.
  4. For the Read only field, select Yes to specify that the device be used only for restoring Oracle data. Select No if the device is to be used for both backup and restore operations.
  5. If the device resource is for a tape device, enable auto media management by selecting Yes for the final field. For more information about auto media management, see "Auto Media Management for Tape Devices".
  6. Click Apply at the bottom of the window to apply the device configuration settings.

Modifying a Device Resource on UNIX

To modify an existing LSM device resource, follow these steps:

  1. In the upper part of the Devices window, highlight the appropriate device name in the Devices scrolling list.
  2. Make the necessary changes to any of the following attribute fields:
    • Media type
    • Read only
    • Auto media management


      Note:

      Verify that the Enabled field is set to Yes to ensure that the device is enabled for Oracle operations.

       

  3. Click Apply at the bottom of the window to apply the changes to the device resource configuration.

Removing a Device Resource on UNIX

To remove an LSM device resource, follow these steps:

  1. In the upper part of the Devices window, highlight the appropriate device name in the Devices scrolling list.
  2. Click the Delete button under the Devices scrolling list.
  3. In the dialog box that pops up asking whether you are sure you want to delete the device, click OK.

Device Configuration on Windows

When you run the LSM Administrator GUI on a Windows system, the Devices window appears, as shown in Figure 3-2. To view the attribute settings for any specific device, right-click the icon of that device and select Edit from the pop-up menu. The Edit Device dialog box opens, displaying the attributes for the device.

If you attach a new Oracle backup device to the LSM Server, see the next section, "Adding a Device Resource on Windows" for instructions about how to create the required device resource for it. To modify an existing LSM device resource, see "Modifying a Device Resource on Windows". To remove an LSM device resource, see "Removing a Device Resource on Windows".

You must run the LSM Administrator GUI as one of the users listed in the Administrator attribute of the server resource to be able to create, modify, or remove a device resource. For more information about LSM Administrator privileges, see "Specifying LSM Administrators" in Chapter 2.

After you have properly configured an Oracle storage device in the LSM Server, the device name is displayed in the Devices section of the Monitor window. To make the Monitor window active, click the Monitor tab in the Server window (of the main Administrator window).

After you have completed the required resource configuration tasks for your storage devices, see the section "Using Volume Pools and Label Templates" for information about using volumes in the devices.

Adding a Device Resource on Windows

To create a new device resource using the LSM Administrator GUI on Windows, perform the following steps:

  1. In the Devices window, right-click the main Devices icon and select Create from the pop-up menu to open the Create Device dialog box.
  2. In the Name text box, enter the correct device pathname for the storage device.
  3. Select the correct type of media from the Media type drop-down list.
  4. Select Yes from the Read only drop-down list to specify that the device be used only for restoring Oracle data. Select No if the device is to be used for both backup and restore operations.
  5. If the device resource is for a tape device, enable auto media management by clicking the Operation tab and then selecting Yes from the final drop-down list. For more information about auto media management, see "Auto Media Management for Tape Devices".
  6. Click OK to apply the device configuration settings.

Modifying a Device Resource on Windows

To modify an existing LSM device resource using the LSM Administrator GUI on Windows, follow these steps:

  1. In the Devices window, right-click the icon of the device that you want to edit and select Edit from the pop-up menu to open the Edit Device dialog box.
  2. Make the necessary changes to any of the following text boxes in the Edit Device dialog box:
    • Media type
    • Read only
    • Auto media management


      Note:

      Verify that the Enabled attribute is set to Yes to ensure that the device is enabled for Oracle operations.

       

  3. Click OK to apply the changes to the device resource configuration.

Removing a Device Resource on Windows

To remove an LSM device resource using the LSM Administrator GUI on Windows, follow these steps:

  1. In the Devices window, right-click the icon of the device that you want to remove and select Delete from the pop-up menu.
  2. In the dialog box that pops up asking whether you are sure that you want to delete the device, click Yes.

Using Volume Pools and Label Templates

An LSM volume pool is a set of storage volumes that LSM groups together according to specific common characteristics. LSM uses pools of volumes to sort and store Oracle backup data. Before LSM can back up Oracle data to a storage device, there must be a properly labeled volume mounted in the device. When LSM labels a volume, it assigns the volume to a volume pool.

Each LSM volume pool is defined by its pool resource in the LSM Server. The attribute settings specified in a pool's resource act as a filter LSM uses to determine which data to write to the volumes in that pool. Each pool configuration contains a list of criteria that data must meet for the data to be written to the volumes belonging to that pool.

Every volume belongs to a pool. Every pool has a specific label template associated with it. When LSM labels a volume for a specific pool, it automatically creates the label according to the rules of the label template associated with the pool. Label templates provide a method for consistently naming and labeling volumes so you do not have to keep track of how many volumes you have used. LSM uses pools of volumes in conjunction with their label templates to maintain information about what data is on which volume.

For more information about how LSM uses label templates please see Appendix C, "Appendix Title".

When an Oracle backup occurs, LSM tries to match the characteristics of the save stream to the resource attributes configured for a volume pool. If the save stream matches the criteria of a pool configuration, LSM directs the save stream to a labeled volume belonging to that pool. LSM then checks whether a correctly labeled volume is mounted on a configured device. If a correctly labeled volume is mounted on a device, LSM writes the backup data to the volume. If there is no correctly labeled volume mounted on a storage device, LSM's actions depend on whether there is a configured tape device with auto media management enabled:

Although LSM contains several preconfigured volume pools after installation, it only supports volume pools of the "Backup" type. Only one preconfigured volume pool of the "Backup" type is initially enabled for LSM use-the pool named "Default."

Legato recommends that you use the Default volume pool for all your Oracle backups to tape. See the next section, "Default Volume Pool", for more information about this preconfigured pool.

Default Volume Pool

The preconfigured resource for the Default volume pool has the following attributes:

Name: Default
Enabled: Yes
Pool type: Backup
Label template: Default
Store index entries: Yes
Auto media verify: No
Recycle to other pools: No
Recycle from other pools: No

You cannot modify the Default pool resource. You can view the Default pool resource configuration by running the LSM Administrator GUI and following these steps, depending on your particular type of system:

If you do not enable or create another "Backup" type of volume pool, LSM routes all Oracle backup data to the Default pool.

The preconfigured label template associated with the Default pool is also named Default. The LSM resource for the Default label template has the following attributes:

Name: Default
Fields: hostname, 001-999
Separator: .

LSM automatically uses this Default label template when it labels volumes for the Default pool. For example, if the hostname of the LSM Server is jupiter, LSM automatically labels the volumes for the Default pool as jupiter.001, jupiter.002, jupiter.003, and so on. Note that you can override this default labeling scheme when you manually label a backup volume. For more information about labeling volumes, see the next section "Labeling and Mounting Storage Volumes".

Labeling and Mounting Storage Volumes

Each configured Oracle backup device attached to the LSM Server must have a labeled storage volume mounted in it before the LSM Server can use it for backup and restore operations. Labeling a volume associates the volume with a particular volume pool. After a volume is labeled, it becomes eligible to be used for backup when LSM needs a volume from the volume pool. LSM must mount the volume in a configured storage device before it can back up Oracle data to it.

LSM uses unique volume labels to maintain a record of each volume in its online media index. For more information about how LSM uses the media index for tracking storage volumes and the data on them, see "Overview of LSM Operations" in Chapter 2.

You can have LSM automatically label and mount volumes in a tape device by enabling the auto media management attribute in the tape device resource. For details, see "Auto Media Management for Tape Devices".

LSM must label a volume and mount it into a storage device before LSM can back up data to it or restore data from it. A volume must also be unmounted from the device before you can replace the volume in the device with another volume. The procedures for manually labeling, mounting, and unmounting a volume by means of the LSM Administrator GUI are included below.

You can have LSM label a storage volume, and optionally mount the volume after labeling it, by means of the LSM Administrator GUI. If the GUI is running on a UNIX system, follow the instructions in "Labeling a Volume on UNIX". To use the GUI on a Windows system, see "Labeling a Volume on Windows".

To mount a volume using the LSM Administrator GUI on UNIX, see "Mounting a Volume on UNIX". To mount a volume using the LSM Administrator GUI on Windows, see "Mounting a Volume on Windows".

To unmount a volume from a device by means of the LSM Administrator GUI, see "Unmounting a Volume on UNIX" or "Unmounting a Volume on Windows".

Labeling a Volume on UNIX

If you are running the LSM Administrator GUI on UNIX as an administrative user (a user listed in the Administrator attribute of the server resource), you can label a storage volume (and optionally mount it afterwards) by following these steps:

  1. If you are using a tape device, load an unlabeled or recyclable volume into the device.
  2. Highlight the device name in the Devices section of the main LSM Administrator window.
  3. Open the Label dialog box by clicking the Label speedbar button (if you selected Speedbar from the Options pull-down menu) or select Label from the Media pull-down menu.
  4. Select Default for the Pool for a tape volume.
  5. If you want to override the Volume name automatically displayed with an individual label name not associated with a template, edit the Volume name and enter a unique label name.
  6. To make the volume mode "manual recycle," select Manual recycle. The volume becomes exempt from automatic recycling and does not change its mode to recyclable automatically according to the retention policy. In this case, only an LSM Administrator can change the volume's mode to recyclable. For more information about storage volume modes, see Table 2-3.
  7. If you want to have LSM automatically mount the volume after labeling it, select Mount after labeling. To have LSM label the volume without mounting it, deselect Mount after labeling.
  8. Click OK to label (and optionally mount) the storage volume.

As the first step in the labeling process, LSM verifies that the volume is unlabeled. Then LSM labels the volume with the name specified in the Volume name field, you either the next sequential label from the label template associated with the chosen pool or an override volume name you entered.


Note:

If you relabel a recyclable volume from the same pool, the volume label name and sequence number remain the same, but access to the original data on the volume is destroyed and the volume becomes available for new data. For example, if LSM recycles a volume labeled empire.003 in the same pool, it leaves the volume label as empire.003, it does not assign a new label with the next available sequence number, such as empire.007. However the data on empire.003 is now permanently inaccessible.

 

Both the Devices and Messages sections of the main LSM Administrator window display information confirming the success of the volume labeling (and optional mounting) operation.

After LSM labels and mounts a volume in a device, the volume is available to receive backup data. Because the LSM label is internal and machine-readable, it is a good idea to put an adhesive label on a tape volume that matches the internal volume label.

Labeling a Volume on Windows

If you are running the LSM Administrator GUI on a Windows system as an administrative user, you can label a storage volume (and optionally mount it afterwards) by following these steps:

  1. If you are using a tape device, load an unlabeled or recyclable volume into the device.
  2. Click the Monitor tab in the Server window (of the main Administrator window) to make the Monitor window active. Highlight the device name in the Devices section of the Monitor window.
  3. Click the Configure tab to make the Configure window active and click Devices to open the Devices window.
  4. Right-click the icon for the specific storage device and select Operations from the pop-up menu to open the Device Operations dialog box.
  5. Click Label to open the Label dialog box.
  6. Select Default for the Pool for a tape volume.
  7. If you want to override the Volume Label automatically displayed with an individual label name not associated with a template, edit the Volume Label and enter a unique label name.
  8. To make the volume mode "manual recycle," select Manual Recycle. The volume becomes exempt from automatic recycling and does not change its mode to recyclable automatically according to the retention policy. In this case, only an LSM Administrator can change the volume's mode to recyclable. For more information about storage volume modes, see Table 2-3.
  9. If you want to have LSM automatically mount the volume after labeling it, select Mount after Labeling. To have LSM label the volume without mounting it, deselect Mount after Labeling.
  10. Click OK to label (and optionally mount) the storage volume.

As the first step in the labeling process, LSM verifies that the volume is unlabeled. Then LSM labels the volume with the name specified in the Volume Label field, you either the next sequential label from the label template associated with the chosen pool or an override volume name you entered.


Note:

If you relabel a recyclable volume from the same pool, the volume label name and sequence number remain the same, but access to the original data on the volume is destroyed and the volume becomes available for new data. For example, if LSM recycles a volume labeled empire.003 in the same pool, it leaves the volume label as empire.003-it does not assign a new label with the next available sequence number, such as empire.007. However the data on empire.003 is now permanently inaccessible.

 

Both the Devices and Messages sections of the Monitor window (of the main Administrator window) display information confirming the success of the volume labeling (and optional mounting) operation.

After LSM labels and mounts a volume in a device, the volume is available to receive backup data. Because the LSM label is internal and machine readable, it is a good idea to put an adhesive label on a tape volume that matches the internal volume label.

Mounting a Volume on UNIX

If you are running the LSM Administrator GUI on UNIX as an administrative user, you can mount a labeled storage volume in a configured device by following these steps:

  1. If you are using a tape device, ensure that the appropriate labeled volume is loaded in the drive.
  2. Highlight the device name in the Devices section of the main LSM Administrator window.
  3. Click the Mount speedbar button (if you selected Speedbar from the Options pull-down menu) or select Mount from the Media pull-down menu.

Both the Devices and Messages sections of the main LSM Administrator window display information confirming that the volume has been mounted in the device.

Mounting a Volume on Windows

To mount a labeled volume in a specific storage device by using the LSM Administrator GUI on a Windows system, ensure that you are running the GUI as an administrative user and then follow these steps:

  1. If you are using a tape device, ensure that the labeled volume is loaded in the drive.
  2. Click the Monitor tab in the Server window (of the main Administrator window) to make the Monitor window active. Highlight the device name in the Devices section of the Monitor window.
  3. Click the Configure tab to make the Configure window active and click Devices to open the Devices window.
  4. Right-click the icon for the specific storage device and select Operations from the pop-up menu to open the Device Operations dialog box.
  5. Click Mount.

LSM mounts the volume into the selected storage device. When the mounting operation is complete, the Device Operations dialog box displays the following message:

mounted <media type and label name>

where it had previously displayed

unmounted <label name>

Also, the Devices and Messages sections of the Monitor window (of the main Administrator window) both display information confirming the success of the volume mounting operation.

Unmounting a Volume on UNIX

To unmount a volume from a specific storage device by means of the LSM Administrator GUI on UNIX, ensure that you are running the GUI as an administrative user and then follow these steps:

  1. Highlight the device name in the Devices section of the main LSM Administrator window.
  2. Click the Unmount speedbar button (if you selected Speedbar from the Options pull-down menu) or select Unmount from the Media pull-down menu.

Both the Devices and Messages sections of the main LSM Administrator window display information confirming that the volume has been unmounted from the device.

Unmounting a Volume on Windows

To unmount a volume from a specific storage device by means of the LSM Administrator GUI on a Windows system, ensure that you are running the GUI as an administrative user and then follow these steps:

  1. Click the Monitor tab in the Server window (of the main Administrator window) to make the Monitor window active. Highlight the device name in the Devices section of the Monitor window.
  2. Click the Configure tab to make the Configure window active and click Devices to open the Devices window.
  3. Right-click the icon for the specific storage device and select Operations from the pop-up menu to open the Device Operations dialog box.
  4. Click Unmount.

LSM unmounts the volume from the selected storage device. When the unmounting operation is complete, the Device Operations dialog box displays the following message:

unmounted <label name>

where it had previously displayed

mounted <media type and label name>

Also, the Devices and Messages sections of the Monitor window (of the main Administrator window) both display information confirming that the volume has been unmounted from the device.

Auto Media Management for Tape Devices

LSM supports auto media management for tape devices. The auto media management feature gives LSM automatic control over a tape volume (which is manually) loaded in a configured tape device. If the auto media management feature is enabled in the tape device's resource, LSM can automatically label, mount, and overwrite a volume that it considers unlabeled, and automatically recycle a volume eligible for reuse when it is loaded in the device.

LSM considers a volume unlabeled if one of the following conditions apply:

If the auto media management feature is not enabled for a tape device, LSM ignores an unlabeled tape in the device and does not consider it for backup.

If the auto media management feature is enabled for a tape device, LSM exhibits the following behavior when a volume becomes full during a backup:

  1. LSM issues a notification that it is waiting for a writable volume. At the same time, LSM waits for the full, verified volume to be unmounted.
  2. LSM monitors the device, and waits for the operator to insert another volume into the device.
  3. After LSM detects a new volume, it checks that the volume is labeled. If so, LSM mounts the volume. LSM checks to see whether the volume is a candidate to which to write data. If so, the write operation continues. If not, LSM waits for a writable volume to continue the backup.
  4. If the volume is recyclable and is a member of the required pool, LSM recycles it the next time a writable volume is needed-in this case, immediately.
  5. If the volume is unlabeled, LSM labels it when the next writable volume is needed for a backup-in this case, immediately.

In general, if a non-full volume is unmounted from a tape drive and auto media management is enabled, LSM waits for 60 minutes before the volume is automatically remounted in the drive. This hour is considered a reasonable delay to give an administrator or operator time to unload the volume after unmounting it.

If you want to enable auto media management for a tape device, you can modify the device resource for the tape drive by means of the LSM Administrator GUI. Follow the procedure in "Modifying a Device Resource on UNIX" or "Modifying a Device Resource on Windows". The value of Yes in the Auto media management attribute of the tape device resource enables the feature.

Using the Volumes Window

"Overview of LSM Operations" in Chapter 2 describes the process that LSM uses to track each Oracle backup volume and the backup sets (save sets) on it. That section also describes the "status" value that LSM assigns to each save set and the "mode" value given to each volume. See Table 2-2 for details about the save set status values and Table 2-3 for all the possible storage volume modes.

You can use the Volumes window in the LSM Administrator GUI to view information about the complete inventory of Oracle backup volumes and the save sets on them. If you run the GUI as an administrative user, you can also use the Volumes window to perform the following volume operations:

You can open the Volumes window by running the LSM Administrator GUI and following these steps, depending on your particular type of system:

On UNIX, the Volumes window has two separate sections, each displaying different types of information about the storage volumes:

On a Windows system, only volume-specific information is displayed in the Volumes window. For information about a volume's save sets, right-click the specific volume name in the list and select Show Save Sets from the pop-up menu to open the Volume Save Sets dialog box. If you leave the Volumes window open for an extended period of time, you can occasionally refresh the information displayed in the Volumes window by right-clicking anywhere in the window and selecting Refresh from the pop-up menu.

Volume Operations

The system of volume labeling used by LSM provides unique names for tracking and recognizing the Oracle backup volumes. LSM refers to volume labels in the records that it stores in the online media index. LSM uses the records in the media index to determine which volumes are needed for backing up or restoring data.

If you place a new label on a storable volume or recycle a volume by relabeling it, any existing data stored on the volume becomes unavailable for recovery.

During a backup, LSM searches for a volume from the appropriate pool to accept the backup data. The storage volumes available for use are the ones mounted in configured devices and the volumes accessible to LSM through auto media management.

If you try to back up Oracle data when an appropriate volume is not mounted, LSM requests a writable volume by displaying a message similar to the following in the Pending Messages window:

media waiting: backup to pool `Default' waiting for 1 writable backup tape or 
disk

You receive one of three messages suggesting that you mount a volume, relabel a volume, or label a new volume.

If you are restoring files, LSM requests the volume name you need to mount in the device by displaying a message similar to the following in the Pending Messages window:

media waiting: recover waiting for 8mm 5GB tape_volume_name

If you need more than one volume to restore the files, the Pending Messages window lists all the volumes in the order they are needed. During the restore process, LSM requests each volume it needs, one at a time.

If more than one volume is mounted in the configured devices, LSM uses the following hierarchy to select a volume on which to write data:

Backup data is destined for a specific pool. When the data is ready to be written, LSM monitors the active devices to locate a volume from the appropriate pool.

If only one volume from the pool is mounted and appendable, the data is directed to that volume.

If two volumes from the same pool are mounted on devices, LSM factors in the following considerations to guide its volume selection:

If LSM cannot find a mounted volume from the appropriate pool, it initiates a mount request. If Auto media management is not enabled, mount requests continue to be generated until a volume is mounted and writing begins.




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