chfcmap

Use the chfcmap command to modify attributes of an existing mapping.

Syntax

 chfcmap    [  -name  new_name_arg  ]   {  fc_map_id  |  fc_map_name  }
 chfcmap    { [  -consistgrp  {  consist_group_id  |  consist_group_name  } ] | [  -force  ] }   [  -copyrate   rate  ]   [  -autodelete   { on | off } ] [  -cleanrate  {  rate  } ] {  fc_map_id  |  fc_map_name  }  

Parameters

-namenew_name_arg
(Optional) Specifies the new name to assign to the mapping. The -name parameter cannot be used with any other optional parameters.
-force
(Optional) Specifies that the mapping be modified to a stand-alone mapping (equivalent to creating the mapping without a consistency group ID). You cannot specify the -force parameter with the -consistgrp parameter.
Important: Using the force parameter might result in a loss of access. Use it only under the direction of your product support information.
-consistgrpconsist_group_id | consist_group_name
(Optional) Specifies the consistency group for which you want to modify the mapping. You cannot specify the -consistgrp parameter with the -force parameter.
Note: The consistency group cannot be modified if the specified consistency group is in the preparing, prepared, copying, suspended, or stopping state.
-copyraterate
(Optional) Specifies the copy rate. The rate value can be 0 - 150. The default value is 50. A value of 0 indicates no background copy process. For the supported -copyrate values and their corresponding rates, see Relationship between the rate, data rate, and grains per second values.
-autodeleteon | off
(Optional) Specifies that the autodelete function be turned on or off for the specified mapping. When you specify the -autodelete on parameter, you are deleting a mapping after the background copy completes. If the background copy is already complete, the mapping is deleted immediately.
-cleanraterate
(Optional) Sets the cleaning rate for the mapping. The rate value can be 0 - 150. The default value is 50.
fc_map_id | fc_map_name
(Required) Specifies the ID or name of the mapping to modify. Enter the ID or name last on the command line.

Description

The chfcmap command modifies attributes of an existing mapping.

Attention: You must enter the fc_map_id | fc_map_name last on the command line.

If you have created several FlashCopy mappings for a group of volumes that contain elements of data for the same application, you can assign these mappings to a single FlashCopy consistency group. You can then issue a single prepare command and a single start command for the whole group, for example, so that all of the files for a particular database are copied at the same time.

The -copyrate parameter specifies the copy rate. If 0 is specified, background copy is disabled. The -cleanrate parameter specifies the rate for cleaning the target volume. The cleaning process is only active if the mapping is in the copying state and the background copy has completed, the mapping is in the copying state and the background copy is disabled, or the mapping is in the stopping state. You can disable cleaning when the mapping is in the copying state by setting the -cleanrate parameter to 0. If the -cleanrate is set to 0, the cleaning process runs at the default rate of 50 when the mapping is in the stopping state to ensure that the stop operation completes.

This table provides the relationship of the copy rate and cleaning rate values to the attempted number of grains to be split per second. A grain is the unit of data represented by a single bit.

Table 1. Relationship between the rate, data rate, and grains per second values
User-specified rate attribute value Data copied/sec 256 KB grains/sec 64 KB grains/sec
1 - 10 128 KB 0.5 2
11 - 20 256 KB 1 4
21 - 30 512 KB 2 8
31 - 40 1 MB 4 16
41 - 50 2 MB 8 32
51 - 60 4 MB 16 64
61 - 70 8 MB 32 128
71 - 80 16 MB 64 256
81 - 90 32 MB 128 512
91 - 100 64 MB 256 1024
101 - 110 128 MB 512 2048
111 - 120 256 MB 1024 4096
121 - 130 512 MB 2048 8192
131 - 140 1 GB 4096 16384
141 - 150 2 GB 8192 32768
Note: Maps that are rc_controlled are not shown in the view when this command is specified.

An invocation example

chfcmap -name testmap 1

The resulting output:

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