The Work with Journal (WRKJRN) command can be used to recover a damaged journal.
The WRKJRN command associates the receivers with the recovered journals without you having to delete and restore the receivers.
Option 6 on the Work with Journals display verifies that the journal is damaged before proceeding with recovery. If the journal is not damaged, an informational message appears.
For a description of the Work with Journals display, see the WRKJRN command in the online command help. To view the help, type WRKJRN on a command line, and press F1.
Recovery for a damaged journal guides you through the following steps:
As the recovery of a damaged journal proceeds, the Display Journal Recovery Status display appears. The information about this display is updated as the operation progresses to indicate which steps have been completed, which steps have been bypassed, and which step will be run next. Whenever a user action is required, the status display is replaced by the appropriate prompt display.
The status field indicates the following operation status:
The first display you usually see after the first status display is the Recover Damaged Journal display. Use this display to choose whether the journal is to be created or restored.
When the last step of the recovery process is complete, a message appears indicating that all objects for which journaling was started must be saved to establish a new recovery point.
If the damaged journal had any remote journals associated with it and a previously saved version of the journal was not restored, use the Add Remote Journal (QjoAddRemoteJournal) API or Add Remote Journal (ADDRMTJRN) command to reassociate those remote journals. See Add remote journals for information about adding remote journals.