I'll bet that you never used the VTOC program (CBT File 112) to scan
your DASD for underutilization, bad blocking, uncataloged datasets,
phantom catalog entries etc.
On 2020-04-22 15:20, Gerhard adam wrote:
... and so goes the mythology. The truth is that programmers routinely used lousy block sizes and wastes tremendous amounts of space. JCL sizes were rarely scrutinized nor was data set usage. It was entirely possible for test data to exist for weeks or months beyond its usefulness
This isn’t to say that money was obviousness spent and even wasted, but few
installations took managing their DASD seriously. They would worry about
saving a byte by packing a date while wasting 100 tracks due to poor blocking.
This is why nothing really happened until System Determined Blocksize, and the
Storage Administrator tools became available.
People certainly wrung their hands but rarely did anything about it
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On Wed, Apr 22, 2020 at 12:08 PM -0700, "Pommier, Rex"
<rpomm...@sfgmembers.com> wrote:
Agreed. Another thing to remember was that we were dealing with disk volumes
measured in kilobytes or megabytes instead of terabytes. In addition, the site
I cut my teeth on had all removable disk packs that got rotated onto the drives
for processing of each application. Every byte saved per record gave us the
better chance of fitting the entire set of datasets on a single disk set so we
could process it.
Rex
-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List On Behalf Of Charles Mills
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2020 12:32 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: [External] Re: Here we go again;
Faulty logic there. A byte here and byte there and pretty soon you have to buy
ANOTHER unit of DASD. It costs the same empty or full, but if it gets nearly
full you have to pay for another.
Charles
-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] On Behalf
Of Gerhard adam
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2020 10:06 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: Here we go again;
The notion of “savings” was marketing nonsense. The DASD was paid for regardless of whether it held a production database or someone’s golf handicap.
It cost the same whether it was empty or full. The notion of “saving” was
nonsense and even under the best of circumstances could only be deferred
expenses
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