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<h1 class="topictitle1">Plan for performance</h1>
<div><p>Setting performance objectives for your <span class="keyword">iSeries™</span> server
will allow you to have measurable performance benchmarks to compare your performance
data. This topic will explain how to set those benchmarks and how to use them
later.</p>
<p>Planning your system's performance requires you to set performance objectives,
create benchmarks based on those objectives, and plan for your system's growth.
This section guides you through the necessary steps in planning your system's
performance.</p>
<p>When planning your system's performance, you will need to fully understand
the business requirements your system is addressing and be able to translate
those business needs into performance objectives. Keep in mind that as the
business needs evolve, the performance objectives must also evolve.</p>
<p>Perhaps the best way to start is to estimate the maximum hourly and daily
interactive transaction throughput required of your computer system during
your peak business periods. After that, you can decide what average response
time is acceptable to your local and remote workstations. You should think
about how long your regular batch processes take, and how to schedule them
so that they complete in time to achieve your business requirements.</p>
<p>You can then establish a base set of statistics, which should then be documented
in a performance objective plan containing:</p>
<ul><li>The peak transactions per hour</li>
<li>The peak transactions per day</li>
<li>Acceptable average response time for local workstations</li>
<li>Peak interactive transactions</li>
<li>A list of the major scheduled batch jobs with times when they will be
run and their expected duration</li>
<li>A list of other unscheduled batch jobs that may be required</li>
</ul>
<p>To plan for performance, complete the following tasks:</p>
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<ul class="ullinks">
<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="rzahxplanbench.htm">Set system benchmarks</a></strong><br />
Setting good system benchmarks will give you performance data for a properly tuned system. These performance benchmarks from both before and after system changes provide important information for both troubleshooting and planning.</li>
<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="rzahxplancapacity.htm">Determine when and how to expand your system</a></strong><br />
As your business needs change, your system must also change. To prepare for any changes, you will want to model the current system and then see what would happen if the system, the configuration, or the workload were changed.</li>
<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="rzahxplanperfstrategy.htm">Select a performance management strategy</a></strong><br />
Different business needs require different performance management strategies. Here are three basic business models and their suggested performance management strategies.</li>
</ul>
<div class="familylinks">
<div class="parentlink"><strong>Parent topic:</strong> <a href="rzahx1.htm" title="How much do you invest in managing the performance of your system? The needs of your business change, sometimes sooner than you expect.">Performance</a></div>
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