volume.
•In DOWN condition, the volume cannot be read, written or mounted. This condition can be used 
to make a disk unavailable to the system.
Change the VV Condition of a disk virtual volume by selecting the desired condition from the drop 
down menu and then pressing the Update button.
Changes Pending.  If there are any VV Condition changes for this volume pending in the Core server, 
Changes Pending will be "Yes" with a red bullet. Otherwise, Changes Pending will  be None.
Retired. When checked, the volume is retired. New storage segments will not be created on the volume.
More Commonly Used  Data TabNumber of Extents. The number of disk storage segment extents allocated in this virtual  volume.
Storage Class. The storage class to which the disk virtual volume is assigned.
Storage Map Flags. Normally this field is blank, but if "Offline" is displa yed in this field, the disk 
volume is not available for use because the PVL mount job failed. The Core Server received  an error 
when it tried to mount one or more of the disks in the volume the last time it started. Accesses  to the disk 
will receive an error. New storage segments will not be created on the disk. The volume can be brought 
back on-line only by correcting the mount problem and restarting the Core Server. If more than one of the 
underlying physical volumes is off-line, the virtual volume will remain off-line until all physical volumes 
are on-line
Usable Length. The amount of disk space that can be used for storing storage segments. This is the  
Actual Length of the disk volume minus certain amounts set aside for system use.
Free Space. The number of bytes on the disk virtual volume that are not assigned to storage segments. 
Free Space is initially set to the value of Usable Length, then decremented and incremented  by the size of 
disk storage segments as they are created and deleted. Since disk storage segments are allocated in  whole 
Clusters, they are usually larger than the amount of storage needed to store the segment of the  file. This 
creates “slack space” which is space allocated to files, but not fille d with file data. The amount of disk 
space in use for any volume, which is the Usable Length minus the Free Space, will always be somewhat 
greater than the sum of the lengths of the file segments stored on the volume. Since unallocated  disk 
space may become fragmented, it may not be possible to create new disk storage segments on a volume 
even if the amount of Free Space appears to be large. The size of the largest free extent  on the volume is 
logged by the Core Server when this happens.
Stripe Width. The number of physical volumes in the stripe group that makes up the virtual volume. All 
volumes in HPSS are considered to be striped, even if this value is one.
Time Last Read. The date and time the volume was last read. This value is not stored  in metadata, but is 
initialized to zero when the Core Server starts and then updated each time the disk is  read. This field is 
not affected by transaction aborts.
Time Last Written. The date and time the volume was last written. This value is not  stored in metadata, 
but is initialized to zero when the Core Server starts and then updated each time the  disk is written. This 
field is not affected by transaction aborts.
PVL Job ID. The PVL job ID in which this volume is mounted. This field will be zero if the volume is 
not mounted.
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