Sometimes it makes sense to stop mirroring before making a potentially-risky application-level change, so that you could cut over to a DR async or backup failover member to revert the change if necessary.
This seems like a positive change - we use Pause Dejournaling pretty heavily to prevent an async from resuming dejournaling when restarted, but Stop Mirror (with this change) would likely be a better fit for many of those situations.
My only question is about how to determine that an async isn't dejournaling because it has been Stopped - this could be unintuitive after Caché is restarted on the async. What would you see in the Status Monitor or cconsole.log after restarting a stopped async?
Sometimes it makes sense to stop mirroring before making a potentially-risky application-level change, so that you could cut over to a DR async or backup failover member to revert the change if necessary.
This seems like a positive change - we use Pause Dejournaling pretty heavily to prevent an async from resuming dejournaling when restarted, but Stop Mirror (with this change) would likely be a better fit for many of those situations.
My only question is about how to determine that an async isn't dejournaling because it has been Stopped - this could be unintuitive after Caché is restarted on the async. What would you see in the Status Monitor or cconsole.log after restarting a stopped async?