The obvious question is: What is different between the various media classes? Then again, I just discovered two identical media classes. All the values were the same except for the name of the Media class. One was ULTRIUM# and one was ARCHIVE#.
Only explanation I can come up with was to reduce the possibility of that special save being reused accidentally. ARCHIVE# has one tape in it. With a *PERM Expiration Date. With a Creation Date just over 10 years ago.
Original Message:
Sent: Thu May 29, 2025 03:05 PM
From: Steven Riedmueller
Subject: BRMS media class uses
Thanks Rob for your valued input!
I'm glad you mentioned the "initialize on expire" option. It actually seems to be an important option to turn on with a VTL solution. There's no "cost" in having the system "load" a virtual tape and initialize it, like there would be with a physical tape. I've worked with two different VTL solution providers and both told me to make sure that setting is turned on within the media classes that we're using.
I'm curious to see if anyone has any specific use cases for multiple media classes, aside from actual different media types. I've come across an environment where 10 LPARs are all using a single media class for all backups, but in one oddball LPAR they're using 8 different media classes but nobody seems to know why. "It's always been that way." :D
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Steven Riedmueller
Certified IBM i Admin
Speaker, Mentor, and Advocate
Original Message:
Sent: Thu May 29, 2025 02:36 PM
From: Robert Berendt
Subject: BRMS media class uses
IDK about multiple media classes, but there are some options within a media class which do intrigue me. For example, we never use *PERM on tapes. We always set a retention period in the control group. When the tape expires it just gets reused automatically and rewrites over the data on the tape. There's an option in the media class to initialize the tape when it expires. Normally a "who cares" kind of thing but if you really want to make sure data is gone on an *EXP tape there's your option there. This actually was a thing here.
But in general, I agree with you and we tend to only differentiate media classes for different media types. You know, ULTRIUM5 vs ULTRIUM7 kind of things.
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Robert Berendt IBMChampion
Business Systems Analyst, Lead
Dekko
Fort Wayne
Original Message:
Sent: Thu May 29, 2025 12:48 PM
From: Steven Riedmueller
Subject: BRMS media class uses
Hey all,
There's a great conversation going on about the BR1>BR2 migration, and about BRMS as a whole. This lead me to ask a question about the concept of "media class" in BRMS.
If all of your tapes are the same density (i.e. ULTRIUM5), what is the benefit of using multiple media classes? From my perspective (using a VTL) there isn't much to be gained by using different media classes. It actually creates a situation where a backup might complain about not having available media of X class, when in reality there is plenty of available tape media in the library.
The control group sets the retention along with many other attributes of the backup. So when does using different media classes become useful?
Thanks,
Steve Riedmueller
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Steven Riedmueller
Certified IBM i Admin
Speaker, Mentor, and Advocate
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