VVs, fragmentation of the volumes may make it difficult to find space for a new segment. Setting 
Average Number of Storage Segments to a larger value will increase the number of segments occupi ed 
by files, and decrease the segment size. Fragmentation of the volumes will be reduced, but the amount of 
metadata required to describe the files will be increased.
Conversely, if files are small relative to the size of the disk VVs, smaller values of  Average Number of 
Storage Segments increase the size of the storage segments, and decrease the number of segments 
occupied by each file. This reduces the metadata storage requirements of the fil e.
The number of segments in small HPSS files can have a significant  impact on transfer performance.  To  
maximize the transfer performance, set this value to 1.  Keep in mind that this will result  in less effective 
disk space utilization.  On average, you will use only 50% of your disk space with this selection.
Storage Segment  SizeMedia Type. The media type of all volumes in the storage class.
Media Block Size (MBS). The Media Block Size is the size in bytes of a physical  data block on the 
media. For disk, the value must be a multiple of the physical block size used by the disk hardware. For 
example, if the disk hardware stores data in 512-byte sectors, 2048 would be a valid entry in this fi eld, 
but 2000 would not.
Advice - The Media Block Size should be set to a value appropriate for the vol ume type.  See the HPSS 
Installation Guide, Section 3.10.1.1: Media Block Size Selection for some  recommendations.
VV Block Size (VVBS). The virtual volume block size is the number of bytes written to an element of a 
striped VV before the data stream moves to the next stripe element. It can be thought of as t he stride 
length of striped data transfer operations. The length of the VV block has  an effect on the striping 
efficiency. Short VV blocks cause more protocol overhead when writing striped devices. In non-striped 
applications, VV Block Size has little meaning so any convenient multiple of the Media Block Size  will 
do.
Advice - When choosing a VV Block Size, the administrator should consider the characteri stics of any 
data source or sink that will be copied to or from. Best performance of striped  copies usually occurs 
when the VV Block Sizes of the source and sink are equal. This minimizes the dat a movement protocol 
overhead and helps to keep the data streams flowing smoothly.
VV Block Size must be an integer multiple of the Media Block Size.
See the HPSS Installation Guide, Section 3.10.1.2: Virtual Volume Block Size Sele ction (disk) and 
Section 3.10.1.3: Virtual Volume Block Size Selection (tape) for information.
Stripe Width (SW). The number of Physical Volumes in a Virtual Volume in this Storage Class .
PV Size (PVSIZE). The size of the disk volume in bytes.
VV Size (VVSIZE). The virtual volume size. The product of the PV Size (PVSIZE) and the Stripe 
Width (SW).
Stripe Length (SL). The Stripe Length is the product of the VV Block Size (VVBS) and  the Stripe 
Width (SW).
Min Multiplier (MINMULT). The Min Storage Segment Size (MINSEG) field is set  to the product of 
this value and Stripe Length (SL).
HPSS Management Guide November 2009
Release 7.3 (Revision 1.0) 161