StorageTek 312564001 Manual Do Utilizador

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DB2 Manager User Guide 
 StorageTek 
Proprietary 
Product Description 
 
Introduction 
Storage Technology's DB2 Manager software product is designed to 
implement Archive Manager support for storage of table rows using IBM's 
DB2 relational database management product.  Archive Manager is a 
Storage Technology archival database management product, which primarily 
uses tape cartridge media for storage of archived objects.  Archive Manager 
also optionally enables disk copies of objects in an Archive Manager 
database to be retained. The product supplies a range of facilities to optimize 
the storage and retrieval of objects in an archive database.   
Installation of Archive Manager on the host system is a pre-requisite for DB2 
Manager implementation.  Migrated rows are stored as objects in a standard 
Archive Manager database, each Archive Manager database consisting of a 
discrete set of tape cartridge volumes (plus optional disk copy datasets).  
DB2 Manager uses a separate Archive Manager database for each DB2 table 
which has been enabled for archival with DB2 Manager. 
DB2 Manager enables applications developed to use DB2 as a data manager 
to extend the range of storage options supported by DB2 to include an 
Archive Manager database.  Version 1.1 of DB2 Manager includes support 
for all versions of DB2 from version 4 upwards. 
Implementation of the product requires no modifications to applications which 
use standard SQL processing to access DB2 tables.  This means that 
customer-developed or vendor-supplied DB2 SQL applications will be able to 
store and retrieve table rows in Archive Manager without modification. 
As is the case for all Archive Manager applications, usage of DB2 Manager to 
access tape-resident objects in an online processing environment requires 
the implementation of an automated tape processing facility, using the 
StorageTek 4400 ACS range of products. 
There are no functional limitations in DB2 Manager which would prevent its 
implementation in a manual tape-processing environment, using free-
standing tape cartridge drives. However, the need for manual operator 
intervention in this environment would mean that SQL commands issued from 
an online processing system, which required access to a tape-resident 
object, would wait indefinitely for a response (depending on the time taken to 
manually satisfy the tape-handling request).  A guaranteed level of service for 
processing these requests can only be supplied through the implementation 
of an automated tape handling strategy. 
Note that a single SQL command issued from an application problem may 
generate access to multiple rows from one or more tables.   In these 
instances, DB2 will create a temporary table containing the result of the SQL