Do you have any idea how many calls I get, Larry gets, Pete gets when *NOMAX crashes the system because it filled up? SQL is never wrongly implemented is it?

It's almost an annuity stream. I actually love that response.

More seriously understanding the tables, how big they might get, and how fast they grow is a fundamental part of system management. Set the sizes as needed and now you know if something is getting out of sorts on the system.

Jim Oberholtzer
Agile Technology Architects



On Nov 6, 2018, at 2:05 PM, Booth Martin <booth@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

I am curious; why aren't you recommending *NOMAX?


On 11/6/2018 2:36 PM, Musselman, Paul wrote:
Jack--

No, it's not a 'troubled' file-- the data is fine. It is a sign that whomever originally created the file didn't know how much data would be stored, and under-estimated the file size.

The problem is that every time the file fills up an 'increment' of records (ie every 100 records you add), the operating system will ask what to do about it. Usually, the option to increment the file and continue is taken. This has happened over 42,000 times!

The cure is to CHGPF and increase the base size of the file, and the size of the increments. Since the file currently has more than 4 million records, the changed size should be at least 5 million. The increment should be more than 100. I recommend the maximum-- 32767. The maximum increments is already 32767, which the file has exceeded by at least 10,000 increments!

CHGPF FILE(LIB/FILE) SIZE(5000000 32767 32767)

You can't change the file while it's busy-- pick a 'quiet time.'

Before you change the file, however-- How many deleted records does the file contain? Would reorganizing the file be a good starting point?


Paul E Musselman
PaulMmn@xxxxxxxxxxxxx


--
Booth Martin
www.martinvt.com
(870)576-9371
(802)461-5349

Brain fried -- core dumped
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