InfoSphere Data Replication for DB2 for z OS and WebSphere Message Queue for z OS Performance Lessons

InfoSphere Data Replication for DB2 for z OS and WebSphere Message Queue for z OS  Performance Lessons
Author: Miao Zheng,Ning Jiang Bin,Song Xiao Yu,Serge Bourbonnais,Yi Jin,IBM Redbooks
Publsiher: IBM Redbooks
Total Pages: 66
Release: 2012-12-22
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780738450957

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Understanding the impact of workload and database characteristics on the performance of both DB2®, MQ, and the replication process is useful for achieving optimal performance.Although existing applications cannot generally be modified, this knowledge is essential for properly tuning MQ and Q Replication and for developing best practices for future application development and database design. It also helps with estimating performance objectives that take these considerations into account. Performance metrics, such as rows per second, are useful but imperfect. How large is a row? It is intuitively, and correctly, obvious that replicating small DB2 rows, such as 100 bytes long, takes fewer resources and is more efficient than replicating DB2 rows that are tens of thousand bytes long. Larger rows create more work in each component of the replication process. The more bytes there are to read from the DB2 log, makes more bytes to transmit over the network and to update in DB2 at the target. Now, how complex is the table definition? Does DB2 have to maintain several unique indexes each time a row is changed in that table? The same argument applies to transaction size: committing each row change to DB2 as opposed to committing, say, every 500 rows also means more work in each component along the replication process. This RedpaperTM reports results and lessons learned from performance testing at the IBM® laboratories, and it provides configuration and tuning recommendations for DB2, Q Replication, and MQ. The application workload and database characteristics studied include transaction size, table schema complexity, and DB2 data type.

IBM GDPS Active Active Overview and Planning

IBM GDPS Active Active Overview and Planning
Author: Lydia Parziale,Juliet Candee,Jiong Fan,Paulo Shimizu,Sidney Varoni Jr,Shu Xie,IBM Redbooks
Publsiher: IBM Redbooks
Total Pages: 120
Release: 2015-12-15
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780738440620

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IBM® Geographically Dispersed Parallel SysplexTM (GDPS®) is a collection of several offerings, each addressing a different set of IT resiliency goals. It can be tailored to meet the recovery point objective (RPO), which is how much data can you are willing to lose or recreate, and the recovery time objective (RTO), which identifies how long can you afford to be without your systems for your business from the initial outage to having your critical business processes available to users. Each offering uses a combination of server and storage hardware or software-based replication, and automation and clustering software technologies. This IBM Redbooks® publication presents an overview of the IBM GDPS active/active (GDPS/AA) offering and the role it plays in delivering a business IT resilience solution.

End to End High Availability Solution for System z from a Linux Perspective

End to End High Availability Solution for System z from a Linux Perspective
Author: Lydia Parziale,Guillaume Lasmayous,Manoj S Pattabhiraman,Karen Reed,Jing Xin Zhang,IBM Redbooks
Publsiher: IBM Redbooks
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2014-10-30
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780738440064

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As Linux on System z becomes more prevalent and mainstream in the industry, the need for it to deliver higher levels of availability is increasing. This IBM Redbooks publication starts with an explanation of high availability (HA) fundamentals such as HA concepts and terminology. It continues with a discussion of why a business needs to consider an HA solution and then explains how to determine your business single points of failure. We outline the components of a high availability solution and describe these components. Then we provide some architectural scenarios and demonstrate how to plan and decide an implementation of an end-to-end HA solution, from Linux on System z database scenarios to z/OS, and include storage, network, z/VM, Linux, and middleware. This implementation includes the IBM Tivoli System Automation for Multiplatforms (TSA MP), which monitors and automates applications distributed across Linux, AIX®, and z/OS® operating systems, as well as a GDPS based solution. It includes the planning for an end-to-end scenario, considering Linux on System z, z/VM, and z/OS operating environments, and the middleware used. The TSA MP implements HA for infrastructure, network, operating systems, and applications across multiple platforms and is compared to a Linux HA implementation based on open source Linux-HA, which is Linux only.

The Value of Active Active Sites with Q Replication for IBM DB2 for z OS An Innovative IBM Client s Experience

The Value of Active Active Sites with Q Replication for IBM DB2 for z OS An Innovative IBM Client s Experience
Author: Serge Bourbonnais,Jiong Fan,Michael Fitzpatrick,Wei He,Xiang Wei Zhou,IBM Redbooks
Publsiher: IBM Redbooks
Total Pages: 82
Release: 2015-01-23
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780738454030

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Any business interruption is a potential loss of revenue. Achieving business continuity involves a tradeoff between the cost of an outage or data loss with the investment required for achieving the recovery point objective (RPO) and recovery time objective (RTO). Continuous system availability requires scalability, as well as failover capability for maintenance, outages, and disasters. It also requires a shift from standby to active-active systems. Active-active sites are geographically distant transaction processing centers, each with the infrastructure to run business operations and with data synchronized by using database replication, such as the Q Replication technology that is part of IBM® InfoSphere® Data Replication software. This IBM Redbooks® publication describes preferred practices and introduces an architecture for continuous availability and disaster recovery that is used by a very large business institution that runs its core business on IBM DB2® for z/OS® databases. This paper explains the technologies and procedures that are required for the implementation of an active-active sites architecture. It also explains an innovative procedure for major IT upgrades that uses Q Replication for DB2 on z/OS, Multi-site Workload Lifeline, and Peer-to-Peer Remote Copy/Extended Distance (PPRC-XD). This paper is of value to decision makers, such as executive and IT architects, and to database administrators who are responsible for design and implementation of the solution.

Understanding and Using Q Replication for High Availability Solutions on the IBM z OS Platform

Understanding and Using Q Replication for High Availability Solutions on the IBM z OS Platform
Author: Cecile Madsen,Chuck Ballard,Jason Arnold,Rich Briddell,Heverson Campelo,Jayanti Mahapatra,Eduardo Pingarilho,IBM Redbooks
Publsiher: IBM Redbooks
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2014-02-11
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780738439204

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With ever-increasing workloads on production systems from transaction, batch, online query and reporting applications, the challenges of high availability and workload balancing are more important than ever. This IBM® Redbooks® publication provides descriptions and scenarios for high availability solutions using the Q Replication technology of the IBM InfoSphere® Data Replication product on the IBM z/OS® platform. Also included are key considerations for designing, implementing, and managing solutions for the typical business scenarios that rely on Q Replication for their high availability solution. This publication also includes sections on latency analysis, managing Q Replication in the IBM DB2® for z/OS environment, and recovery procedures. These are topics of particular interest to clients who implement the Q Replication solution on the z/OS platform. Q Replication is a high-volume, low-latency replication solution that uses IBM WebSphere® MQ message queues to replicate transactions between source and target databases or subsystems. A major business benefit of the low latency and high throughput solution is timely availability of the data where the data is needed. High availability solutions are implemented to minimize the impact of planned and unplanned disruptions of service to the applications. Disruption of service can be caused by software maintenance and upgrades or by software and hardware outages. As applications' high availability requirements evolve towards continuous availability, that is availability of the data 24 hours a day and 7 days a week, so does the Q Replication solution, to meet these challenges. If you are interested in the Q Replication solution and how it can be used to implement some of the high availability requirements of your business scenarios, this book is for you.

Smarter Business Dynamic Information with IBM InfoSphere Data Replication CDC

Smarter Business  Dynamic Information with IBM InfoSphere Data Replication CDC
Author: Chuck Ballard,Alec Beaton,Mark Ketchie,Frank Ketelaars,Anzar Noor,Judy Parkes,Deepak Rangarao,Bill Shubin,Wim Van Tichelen,IBM Redbooks
Publsiher: IBM Redbooks
Total Pages: 484
Release: 2012-03-12
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780738436371

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To make better informed business decisions, better serve clients, and increase operational efficiencies, you must be aware of changes to key data as they occur. In addition, you must enable the immediate delivery of this information to the people and processes that need to act upon it. This ability to sense and respond to data changes is fundamental to dynamic warehousing, master data management, and many other key initiatives. A major challenge in providing this type of environment is determining how to tie all the independent systems together and process the immense data flow requirements. IBM® InfoSphere® Change Data Capture (InfoSphere CDC) can respond to that challenge, providing programming-free data integration, and eliminating redundant data transfer, to minimize the impact on production systems. In this IBM Redbooks® publication, we show you examples of how InfoSphere CDC can be used to implement integrated systems, to keep those systems updated immediately as changes occur, and to use your existing infrastructure and scale up as your workload grows. InfoSphere CDC can also enhance your investment in other software, such as IBM DataStage® and IBM QualityStage®, IBM InfoSphere Warehouse, and IBM InfoSphere Master Data Management Server, enabling real-time and event-driven processes. Enable the integration of your critical data and make it immediately available as your business needs it.

Implementing IBM InfoSphere Change Data Capture for DB2 z OS V6 5

Implementing IBM InfoSphere Change Data Capture for DB2 z OS V6 5
Author: Jason Arnold,IBM Redbooks
Publsiher: IBM Redbooks
Total Pages: 64
Release: 2011-07-27
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780738450452

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IBM® InfoSphereTM Change Data Capture for z/OS® uses log-based change data capture technology to provide low impact capture and rapid delivery of changes to and from DB2® z/OS in heterogeneous environments without impacting source systems. Customers get the up-to-date information they need to make actionable, trusted business decisions while optimizing MIPS costs. Change Data Capture can also be used to synchronize data in real time between multiple data environments to support active data warehousing, live reporting, operational business intelligence, application consolidations and migrations, master data management, and to deliver data to SOA environments. This IBM RedpaperTM document describes InfoSphere Change Data Capture, how to install and configure it, and how to migrate to the latest release.

WebSphere Replication Server for Z OS Using Q Replication

WebSphere Replication Server for Z OS Using Q Replication
Author: Nagraj Alur,Steffen Herold,Huey Kim,Makiko Tsuchida,Mark Wiman,Jaime Anaya
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2006
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:1151007871

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This IBM Redbooks publication provides detailed instructions and scripts for managing failover and switchback in a WebSphere Replication Server for z/OS bidirectional Q replication environment for the z/OS platform. A typical business scenario is used to showcase the bidirectional failover/switchback implementation. This book also includes a WebSphere MQ shared disk and WebSphere MQ shared queue high availability scenario for the source system in a Q replication environment involving unidirectional replication. Key considerations in designing and implementing such environments are discussed. This book is aimed at an audience of IT architects and database administrators (DBAs) responsible for developing high-availability solutions on the z/OS platform. Please note that the additional material referenced in the text is not available from IBM.