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Installation and User's Guide

Installation and User's Guide

Installation and User's Guide

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client A software program or computer thatrequests services from a server.client acceptorAn HTTP service that serves the Javaapplet for the Web client to Webbrowsers. On Windows systems, the clientacceptor is installed <strong>and</strong> run as a service.On AIX, UNIX, <strong>and</strong> Linux systems, theclient acceptor is run as a daemon, <strong>and</strong> isalso called the client acceptor daemon(CAD).client acceptor daemon (CAD)See client acceptor.client domainThe set of drives, file systems, or volumesthat the user selects to back up or archivedata, using the backup-archive client.client nodeA file server or workstation on which thebackup-archive client program has beeninstalled, <strong>and</strong> which has been registeredto the server.client node sessionA session in which a client nodecommunicates with a server to performbackup, restore, archive, retrieve, migrate,or recall requests. Contrast withadministrative session.client options fileAn editable file that identifies the server<strong>and</strong> communication method, <strong>and</strong>provides the configuration for backup,archive, hierarchical storage management,<strong>and</strong> scheduling.client option setA group of options that are defined onthe server <strong>and</strong> used on client nodes inconjunction with client options files.client-polling scheduling modeA method of operation in which the clientqueries the server for work. Contrast withserver-prompted scheduling mode.client scheduleA database record that describes theplanned processing of a client operationduring a specific time period. The clientoperation can be a backup, archive,restore, or retrieve operation, a clientoperating system comm<strong>and</strong>, or a macro.See also administrative comm<strong>and</strong> schedule.client/serverPertaining to the model of interaction indistributed data processing in which aprogram on one computer sends a requestto a program on another computer <strong>and</strong>awaits a response. The requestingprogram is called a client; the answeringprogram is called a server.client system-options fileA file, used on AIX, UNIX, or Linuxsystem clients, containing a set ofprocessing options that identify theservers to be contacted for services. Thisfile also specifies communication methods<strong>and</strong> options for backup, archive,hierarchical storage management, <strong>and</strong>scheduling. This file is also called thedsm.sys file. See also client user-options file.client user-options fileA file that contains the set of processingoptions that the clients on the system use.The set can include options thatdetermine the server that the clientcontacts, <strong>and</strong> options that affect backupoperations, archive operations,hierarchical storage managementoperations, <strong>and</strong> scheduled operations.This file is also called the dsm.opt file.For AIX, UNIX, or Linux systems, see alsoclient system-options file.closed registrationA registration process in which only anadministrator can register workstations asclient nodes with the server. Contrastwith open registration.collocationThe process of keeping all data belongingto a single-client file space, a single clientnode, or a group of client nodes on aminimal number of sequential-accessvolumes within a storage pool.Collocation can reduce the number ofvolumes that must be accessed when alarge amount of data must be restored.collocation groupA user-defined group of client nodeswhose data is stored on a minimalnumber of volumes through the processof collocation.commit pointA point in time when data is consideredconsistent.676 IBM Tivoli Storage Manager for Windows Backup-Archive Clients: <strong>Installation</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>User's</strong> <strong>Guide</strong>

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