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Perhaps the most important component of
a PAI/O Driver for z/OS
enterprise user license is the subsystem performance profiles. These
licensed documents are provided to our licensed enterprise users to
assist them in understanding and acquiring new storage subsystems.
These licensed documents are not provided to the vendors as part of
their site licenses, and are not written to provide any vendor an
independent endorsement of some product.
PAI/O Driver for z/OS
subsystem profiles are based on a standard set of engineering tests
which are employed by Performance Associates to evaluate each new
or updated storage subsystem. The content of these profiles should
not be confused with similar sounding product offerings that are based
on expert analysis of vendor brochures, anecdotal observations, or
vendor supplied data. Rather, PAI/O
Driver for z/OS subsystem profiles
are based on hard experimental data that is independently collected
by Performance Associates employees using the industry standard PAI/O
Driver for z/OS tool set which
is respected by both users and vendors.
Each subsystem profile is comprised
of four major sections. They are:
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Architectural
Overview |
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Experimental
Results |
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Observations,
Comments, and Hypotheses |
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Acquisition Strategies |
Subsystem profiles range from forty to seventy
pages in length depending on the complexity of the subsystem and the
number of configurations evaluated.
Architectural Overview
The architectural overview provides a tutorial on the hardware and
firmware architecture employed by the system. Key topics include logical
and physical structure, fault tolerance, RAID schemas supported, and
the logical and physical connectivity provided by the storage subsystem.
Experimental Results
The experimental results section provides the meat of the profile.
This section details the configurations that were evaluated as well
as the results of Performance Associates standard series of
tests. These tests evaluate uniform, skewed, online update, record
level, front-end, and sequential I/O arrival patterns. The results
of the standard engineering tests are presented in access density
as well as I/O rate formats so that vendor product offerings of difference
capacities can be compared by the user.Observations, Comments, and
HypothesesThe observations, comments, and hypotheses section provides
a comprehensive analysis of the results presented in the experimental
results section. Observations include topics such as ongoing tuning
requirements, aggregate data transfer rate, channel data rate, and
an analysis of the storage subsystems scalability. The comments are
expressed in a tabular format that highlights the experimental results
presented in the profile. The final topic in this section is Performance
Associates hypotheses about the subsystem. While these hypotheses
represent our expert opinions about the subsystem, we are careful
to annotate them as our opinions rather than as facts for which we
have hard experimental data to support.
Acquisition Strategies
The final section is acquisition strategies. In this section Performance
Associates suggests specific terms that should be included in the
acquisition contract to protect the user against any deficiencies
identified in the subsystem profile.
Summary
To summarize, the subsystem profiles are intended to provide Performance
Associates licensed enterprise users with independent assessments
of vendor storage subsystem offerings. While the standard engineering
tests on which the profiles are based do not exactly represent any
specific user workload, they do provide the foundation to the PAI/O
Driver for z/OS storage subsystem
acquisition process. The PAI/O
Driver for z/OS profiling and testing
software builds on this foundation of knowledge to allow a user to
specifically state their requirements to the vendors, and to verify
that a vendor product offering has met these requirements in the acquisition
process!
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