IBM DS6000 Manual Do Utilizador

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Chapter 24. Global Mirror interfaces 
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24.3.1  Establish a Global Mirror environment
The following sections discuss the setup of a Global Mirror environment using TSO 
commands in a step-by-step approach. The sequence of steps in our example is the 
recommended one, although it is not a mandatory one. Still, it guarantees a clean and 
straightforward creation of the Global Mirror environment.
24.3.2  Define paths
When you establish Global Copy relationships between volume pairs, you have to first 
establish the Global Copy paths. A Global Copy path, similar to a Metro Mirror path, is the 
logical definition of the connectivity between two LSSs, the primary LSS and the secondary 
LSS. This definition is accomplished upon an available physical Fibre Channel link that 
connects the primary and secondary storage disk subsystems where the corresponding LSSs 
are. More than one path can be defined over a single Fiber Channel link. You can also define 
paths in either direction on the very same physical link. 
The FCP links that provide the physical support for the logical path definitions are either 
direct-connected or can use the SAN infrastructure. In the latter case, the FCP ports can be 
shared with either other remote copy connections or with host connections. Still, you may 
consider dedicated ports, thus separating host I/O from remote copy I/O, which is 
recommended for Metro Mirror. For Global Copy and Global Mirror it is feasible to consider an 
FCP port sharing approach.
Figure 24-2 shows two LSSs, one on each storage disk subsystem, with both storage disk 
subsystems connected either directly or over the SAN. The figure shows four physical links, 
each link connecting to an FCP port. Because the storage disk subsystems are separated 
over a large distance, these links are either going through an SAN network, or over an 
IP-based network. There is no distance limit for a Global Mirror configuration. 
Figure 24-2   Paths definition between two LSS
Example 24-9 shows the TSO command that is used to define the four logical paths, at once, 
between the primary LSS and the secondary LSS. If using TSO commands, there is no 
change in how to define a path on the DS6000 or the DS8000, as compared to the ESS 800.
Example 24-9   Define logical paths 
//* ---------------------------- TSO ------------ CREATE (1) ----- ***
//* ESTABLISH PATH(S)                                              ***
//* -------------------------------------------------------------- ***
FCP port
Fiber Channel links
physical connections
DWDM or Channel Extender 
network
infrastructure
LCU: 2C00
Primary
 A 
2C00
LCU: 3C00
Secondary
 B 
3C00
paths
between LSSs
logical connections