Tuning AIX systems for IBM Spectrum Protect server performance
There are a number of actions that can improve performance for an IBM Spectrum Protect server that is running in an AIX® environment.
About this task
Procedure
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Use the rbrw mount option to release memory from the file system cache. For
more information about the release-behind sequential read and write (rbrw)
option, see the AIX product information .
AIX systems can cache much file system data, which can take away memory that is needed for IBM Spectrum Protect server and Db2® processes. To avoid paging with the AIX server, use the rbrw mount option for the JFS2 file system. Less memory is used for the file system cache and more is available for IBM Spectrum Protect.
Concurrent I/O (CIO) options are not necessary to access or mount database or log file systems. IBM Spectrum Protect completes mounts automatically. Also, CIO disables the read-ahead feature of JFS2 file systems, decreasing the read performance of the database during backup. Do not use the file system mount options, CIO and Direct I/O (DIO), for file systems that contain the IBM Spectrum Protect database, logs, or storage pool volumes. These options can cause performance degradation of many server operations.
IBM Spectrum Protect and Db2 can still use DIO where it is beneficial to do so, but IBM Spectrum Protect does not require the mount options to selectively take advantage of these techniques.
- Use the Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) time zone specification for best system performance.
- IBM Spectrum Protect supports sharing Fibre Channel ports through NPIV in a pSeries LPAR. While you can share these ports, be sure that the port has adequate bandwidth for all LPARs that use that port. Sharing resources with other logical partitions can affect the performance of the IBM Spectrum Protect server. When there are other logical partitions on the system, you can dedicate resources to the IBM Spectrum Protect server partition.
- IBM Spectrum Protect can use 10-gigabit Ethernet ports that are shared through the VIO server. However, when you use a shared VIO port, it does not always provide full 10-gigabit throughput. If full 10-gigabit Ethernet bandwidth is needed, you can use the logical Host Ethernet Adapter (LHEA) method of sharing.