Book Image

IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Administration Cookbook

Book Image

IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Administration Cookbook

Overview of this book

IBM DB2 LUW is a leading relational database system developed by IBM. DB2 LUW database software offers industry leading performance, scale, and reliability on your choice of platform on various Linux distributions, leading Unix Systems like AIX, HP-UX and Solaris and MS Windows platforms. With lots of new features, DB2 9.7 delivers one the best relational database systems in the market. IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Administration Cookbook covers all the latest features with instance creation, setup, and administration of multi-partitioned database. This practical cookbook provides step-by-step instructions to build and configure powerful databases, with scalability, safety and reliability features, using industry standard best practices. This book will walk you through all the important aspects of administration. You will learn to set up production capable environments with multi-partitioned databases and make the best use of hardware resources for maximum performance. With this guide you can master the different ways to implement strong databases with a High Availability architecture.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Administration Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating and configuring DB2 non-partitioned databases


We will discuss here how to create a single-partitioned database, which is sufficient for most database applications and is the most common configuration for small- to medium-sized databases.

If you plan on having a Business Intelligence (BI) database, you should be planning for a partitioned database. You can estimate one processor core for every 300 GB of data. We will cover this topic in Chapter 3, DB2 Multi-partitioned Databases—Administration and Configuration.

Getting ready

Gather as much technical information as you can about the hardware or virtual machine(s) you have at your disposal, for this database. Identify in which instance you will create your database, and ensure you will have enough memory and disk space for what you need.

Identify the location where you will create the table spaces (filesystems for Unix platforms, disk drives on Windows servers) and how much available space you will have. Make sure the instance owner has...