When unplanned outages occur, data stored within independent disk pools is unavailable until they can be restarted. To ensure that the restart occurs quickly and efficiently, you should use recommended strategies for varying on your independent disk pools.
These strategies provide a means of reducing the vary on time for independent disk pools.
In a clustered environment, a user profile is considered to be the same across servers if the profile names are the same. The name is the unique identifier in the cluster. However, a user profile also contains a user identification number (UID) and group identification number (GID). To reduce the amount of internal processing that occurs during a switchover, where the independent disk pool is made unavailable on one server and then made available on a different server, the UID and GID values should be synchronized across the recovery domain for the device CRG.
The recommended structure for using independent disk pools is to place the majority of your application data objects into independent disk pools and a minimal number of nonprogram objects in SYSBAS, which is the system disk pool and all configured basic disk pools. The system disk pool and basic user disk pools (SYSBAS) would contain primarily operating system objects, licensed program libraries, and few user libraries. This structure yields the best possible protection and performance. Application data is isolated from unrelated faults and can also be processed independently of other system activity. Vary on and switchover times are optimized with this structure.
This recommended structure does not exclude other configurations. For example, you might start by migrating only a small portion of your data to a disk pool group and keeping the bulk of your data in SYSBAS. This is certainly supported. However, you should expect longer vary-on and switchover times with this configuration since additional processing is required to merge database cross-reference information into the disk pool group.