means that the corresponding flag is set.
•Read Enabled. An indication of whether the device is available for reading.
•Write Enabled. An indication of whether the device is available for writing.
•Locate Support (tape only). An indication of whether the device supports a high speed (absolute ) 
positioning operation.
Advice - This option is supported for IBM 3590, 3590E, 3580, 3592, StorageTek 9840, 9940, DST-
312, DST-314, T10000 and GY-8240 devices.
•NO-DELAY Support (tape only). An indication of whether the device supports opening the device 
with no delay flag set, while allowing tape I/O operation after the open.
Advice - On some tape devices, this will allow for a quicker polling oper ation when no tape is 
presently loaded in the device. This field is meaningful for tape devi ces only.
•Write TM(0) to Sync (tape only). An indication of whether the device supports issuing  a write 
tape mark request with a zero count to flush data written previously to the tape media.
Advice - On some devices, this may provide a higher performance method to ensure that  data has 
been safely written to the media. This option is not used for the IBM 3590,  and 3590E devices, 
provided the HPSS supported device driver is used in accessing the device.  Note that for Ampex 
DST-312 this field should be set to “ON”.
•Removable Media Support (tape only). An indication of whether the device supports re movable 
media.
•SCSI-2 LBA Positioning (tape only). If ON, the tape device supports SCSI-2 Logical Block 
Addresses.
Advice - If SCSI-2 LBAs and the SCSI LOCATE command (Locate Support) are supported by the  
device, HPSS will calculate tape read addresses based on known LBAs and relative  addresses. 
LBA positioning provides for faster access of data residing on tape. The benef it will be realized 
for read requests with many source descriptors specifying locations spread  sparsely down the 
tape. This is only supported by the IBM SCSI tape device driver.
•SAN3P-transfer Enabled (disk only).  If ON, SAN3P data transfers to this device will be 
supported.
Warning – There is a security vulnerability associated with the use  of SAN3P.  If a user is root on 
a machine which has access to the SAN (e.g. a client machine) then that user has the potenti al to 
access or destroy fiber-channel connected disk storage. Two areas of concern: 1) verification  
that only authorized users (usually limited to only ‘root’ or ‘hpss’) are granted read and 
write access to these resource; 2) HPSS administrators should be aware that machines, 
possibly owned or managed by other groups, which are added to the SAN to facilitate the 
use of SAN3P transfers will have access to all data on disk and tape resources.  If those 
systems are compromised, or there are individuals authorized for systems privileges on 
those particular machines, but not necessarily authorized for HPSS administrative access, 
there is the potential for access and/or damage to HPSS data.  These are inherent 
limitations of SAN implementations that have not yet been addressed by the industry and 
cannot be remedied by HPSS.
HPSS Management Guide November 2009
Release 7.3 (Revision 1.0) 212