ibm-information-center/dist/eclipse/plugins/i5OS.ic.rzalw_5.4.0.1/rzalwrecent_changes.htm

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<meta name="DC.Title" content="Recover recent changes after an unplanned outage" />
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<h1 class="topictitle1">Recover recent changes after an unplanned outage</h1>
<div><p>After an unplanned outage, your goal is to get your system up and
running again as quickly as possible. You want to get back to where you were
before the outage occurred without having to manually re-enter transactions.</p>
<p>This may involve rebuilding some of your data. There are a few availability
tools that you can use that will help you more quickly get back to where you
were before the outage occurred.</p>
<div class="section"><h4 class="sectiontitle">Journaling</h4><p>Journal management prevents
transactions from being lost if your system ends abnormally. When you journal
an object, the system keeps a record of the changes you make to that object.
For detailed information on how to plan for and use journaling, see <a href="../rzaki/rzakikickoff.htm">Journal management</a>.</p>
</div>
<div class="section"><h4 class="sectiontitle">Commitment control</h4><p>Commitment control helps to provide
data integrity on your server. It allows you to define and process a group
of changes to resources, such as database files or tables, as a single transaction.
Then, it ensures that either the entire group of individual changes occur
or that none of the changes occur. For example, you lose power just as a series
of updates are being made to your database. Without commitment control, you
run the risk of having incomplete or corrupt data. With commitment control,
the incomplete updates would be backed out of your database when you restart
your server.</p>
<p>You can use commitment control to design an application
so the system can restart the application if a job, an activation group within
a job, or the system ends abnormally. With commitment control, you can have
assurance that when the application starts again, no partial updates are in
the database due to incomplete transactions from a prior failure.</p>
<p>For
detailed information on how to plan for and use commitment control, see <a href="../rzakj/rzakjcommitkickoff.htm">Commitment control</a>.</p>
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<div class="parentlink"><strong>Parent topic:</strong> <a href="rzalwshorten_unplanned.htm" title="Unplanned outages do occur, and a key to availability is to ensure that when they do occur you can recover from them as quickly as possible.">Shorten unplanned outages</a></div>
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