1 /ACCESSED
/ACCESSED=number-of-directories
Affects Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 1 (ODS-1) disks only.
Specifies that, for disk volumes, the number of directories
allowed in system space must be a value from 0 to 255. The
default value is 3.
2 /BADBLOCKS
/BADBLOCKS=(area[,...])
Specifies, for disk volumes, faulty areas on the volume. The
INITIALIZE command marks the areas as allocated so that no data
is written in them.
Possible formats for area are as follows:
lbn[:count] Logical block number (LBN) of the first block
and optionally a block count beginning with the
first block, to be marked as allocated
sec.trk.cyl[:cnt] Sector, track, and cylinder of the first block,
and optionally a block count beginning with the
first block, to be marked as allocated
All media supplied by VSI and supported on the OpenVMS operating
system, except diskettes and TU58 cartridges, are factory
formatted and contain bad block data. The Bad Block Locator
utility (BAD) or the diagnostic formatter EVRAC can be used
to refresh the bad block data or to construct it for the media
exceptions above. The /BADBLOCKS qualifier is necessary only
to enter bad blocks that are not identified in the volume's bad
block data.
DIGITAL Storage Architecture (DSA) disks (for example, disks
attached to UDA-50 and HSC50 controllers) have bad blocks handled
by the controller, and appear logically perfect to the file
system.
For information on how to run BAD, see the OpenVMS Bad Block
Locator Utility Manual (available on the Documentation CD-ROM).
3 /CLUSTER_SIZE
/CLUSTER_SIZE=number-of-blocks
Defines, for disk volumes, the minimum allocation unit in blocks.
The maximum size you can specify for a volume is 16380 blocks, or
1/50th the volume size, whichever is smaller.
For Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 5 (ODS-5) disks, the default
cluster size is 16. In this case the minimum value allowed by the
following equation is applied:
(disk size in number of blocks)/(65535 * 4096)
Any fractional values must be rounded up to the nearest integer
and, by default, are rounded up to the next multiple of 16.
For Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 2 (ODS-2) disks, the default
cluster size depends on the disk capacity; disks with less than
50,000 have a default of 1. Disks that are larger than 50,000
have a default of either 16 or the result of the following
formula, whichever is greater:
(disk size in number of blocks)/(255 * 4096)
Any fractional values must be rounded up to the nearest integer
and, by default, are rounded up to the next multiple of 16.
NOTE
For Version 7.2 and later, you can specify a cluster size
for ODS-2 volumes smaller than allowed by the ODS-2 formula;
however, if you try to mount this volume on a system running
a version prior to 7.2, the mount fails with the following
error:
%MOUNT-F-FILESTRUCT, unsupported file structure level
If you choose the default during the initialization of an
ODS-2 disk, your disk can be mounted on prior versions of
OpenVMS.
For ODS-1 disks, the cluster size must always be 1.
NOTE
If you specify /LIMIT and do not specify a value for
/CLUSTER_SIZE, a value of /CLUSTER_SIZE=16 is used.
4 /DATA_CHECK
/DATA_CHECK[=(option[,...])]
Checks all read and write operations on the disk. By default,
no data checks are made. Specify one or both of the following
options:
READ Checks all read operations.
WRITE Checks all write operations; default if only the /DATA_
CHECK qualifier is specified.
To override the checking you specify at initialization for disks,
enter a MOUNT command to mount the volume.
5 /DENSITY
/DENSITY=density-value
Allows you to specify the format density value for certain tapes
and disks.
For magnetic tape volumes, specifies the density in bits per inch
(bpi) at which the magnetic tape is to be written. The density
value specified can be 800 bpi, 1600 bpi, or 6250 bpi, as long as
the density is supported by the magnetic tape drive.
If you do not specify a density value for a blank magnetic tape,
the system uses a default density of the highest value allowed
by the tape drive. If the drive allows 6250-, 1600-, and 800-bpi
operation, the default density is 6250 bpi.
If you do not specify a density value for a magnetic tape that
has been previously written, the system uses the density of the
first record on the volume. If the record is unusually short, the
density value will not default.
The /DENSITY qualifier does not apply to any TF tape device.
Valid tape density values are:
Keyword Meaning
DEFAULT Default density
800 NRZI 800 bits per inch (BPI)
1600 PE 1600 BPI
6250 GRC 6250 BPI
3480 IBM 3480 HPC 39872 BPI
3490E IBM 3480 compressed
833 DLT TK50: 833 BPI
TK50 DLT TK50: 833 BPI
TK70 DLT TK70: 1250 BPI
6250 RV80 6250 BPI EQUIVALENT
NOTE: Only the keywords above are understood by TMSCP/TUDRIVER
code prior to OpenVMS Version 7.2. The remaining keywords in this
table are supported only on Alpha systems.
TK85 DLT Tx85: 10625 BPI - Cmpt III - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
TK86 DLT Tx86: 10626 BPI - Cmpt III - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
TK87 DLT Tx87: 62500 BPI - Cmpt III - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
TK88 DLT Tx88: (Quantum 4000) - Cmpt IV - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
TK89 DLT Tx89: (Quantum 7000) - Cmpt IV - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
QIC All QIC drives are drive-settable only -
Alpha/Integrity servers only
8200 Exa-Byte 8200 - Alpha/Integrity servers only
8500 Exa-Byte 8500 - Alpha/Integrity servers only
DDS1 Digital Data Storage 1 - 2G - Alpha/Integrity servers
only
DDS2 Digital Data Storage 2 - 4G - Alpha/Integrity servers
only
DDS3 Digital Data Storage 3 - 8-10G - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
DDS4 Digital Data Storage 4 - Alpha/Integrity servers only
AIT1 Sony Advanced Intelligent Tape 1 - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
AIT2 Sony Advanced Intelligent Tape 2 - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
AIT3 Sony Advanced Intelligent Tape 3 - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
AIT4 Sony Advanced Intelligent Tape 4 - Alpha/Integrity
servers only
DLT8000 DLT 8000 - Alpha/Integrity servers only
8900 Exabyte 8900 - Alpha/Integrity servers only
SDLT SuperDLT1 - Alpha/Integrity servers only
SDLT320 SuperDLT320 - Alpha/Integrity servers only
Note that tape density keywords cannot be abbreviated.
To format a diskette on RXnn diskette drives, use the
INITIALIZE/DENSITY command. Specify the density at which the
diskette is to be formatted as follows:
Keyword Meaning
single RX01 - 8 inch
double RX02 - 8 inch
dd double density: 720K - 3 1/2 inch
hd high density: 1.44MB - 3 1/2 inch
ed extended density: 2.88MB - 3 1/2 inch
If you do not specify a density value for a diskette being
initialized on a drive, the system leaves the volume at the
density to which the volume was last formatted.
NOTE
RX33 diskettes cannot be read from or written to by RX50
disk drives. RX50 diskettes can be read from and written to
by RX33 disk drives; they cannot be formatted by RX33 disk
drives.
6 /DIRECTORIES
/DIRECTORIES=number-of-entries
The effect of this qualifier depends on the disk structure:
o For ODS-1, /DIRECTORIES allows space for the specified number
of directory entries to be reserved in 000000.DIR (the MFD).
o For ODS-2 and ODS-5, /DIRECTORIES allows the initial size of
the MFD to be set. The specified number is divided by 16, to
produce the number of blocks to preallocate. This number is
then rounded up to a whole number of clusters.
The number-of-entries value must be an integer between 16 and
16000. The default value is 16.
7 /ERASE
/ERASE[=keyword]
/NOERASE (default)
Specifies whether to perform a data security erase (DSE) and, on
disk volumes only, whether to set the volume characteristic to
ERASE_ON_DELETE.
The /ERASE qualifier applies to Files-11 On-Disk Structure
Level 2 (ODS-2) and Level 5 (ODS-5) disks and ANSI magnetic tape
volumes, and is valid for magnetic tape devices that support the
hardware erase function, such as TU78 and MSCP magnetic tapes.
For tape volumes, /ERASE physically destroys deleted data by
writing over it.
For disk volumes, when /ERASE is specified with no keywords, this
command does the following:
o Performs a data security erase (DSE) by writing the system-
specified erase pattern into every block on the volume before
initializing it. The amount of time taken by the DSE operation
depends on the volume size.
o Sets the volume characteristic to ERASE_ON_DELETE so that each
file on the volume will be erased by a DSE when it is deleted.
For disk volumes, two optional keywords allow you to
independently specify just one of the actions noted above.
o /ERASE=INIT
Performs a data security erase (DSE) operation on the
volume before initializing it, but does not set the volume
characteristic to ERASE_ON_DELETE. This operation takes longer
than specifying /ERASE=DELETE and is equivalent to performing
SET VOLUME/NOERASE_ON_DELETE.
o /ERASE=DELETE
Sets the ERASE_ON_DELETE volume characteristic, but does not
perform a DSE operation on the disk.
If neither (or both) keywords are specified, both actions are
performed. That is, /ERASE is equivalent to /ERASE=(INIT,DELETE).
8 /EXTENSION
/EXTENSION=number-of-blocks
Specifies, for disk volumes, the number of blocks to use as a
default extension size for all files on the volume. The extension
default is used when a file increases to a size greater than its
initial default allocation during an update. For Files-11 On-Disk
Structure Level 2 and Level 5 disks, the value for the number-
of-blocks parameter can range from 0 to 65,535. The default value
is 5. For Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 1 disks, the value can
range from 0 to 255.
The OpenVMS operating system uses the default volume extension
only if no different extension has been set for the file and no
default extension has been set for the process by using the SET
RMS_DEFAULT command.
9 /FILE_PROTECTION
/FILE_PROTECTION=code
Affects Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 1 (ODS-1) disks only.
Defines for disk volumes the default protection to be applied to
all files on the volume.
Specify the code according to the standard syntax rules described
in the VSI OpenVMS Guide to System Security. Any attributes not
specified are taken from the current default protection.
Note that this attribute is not used when the volume is
being used on an OpenVMS system, but is provided to control
the process's use of the volume on RSX-11M systems. OpenVMS
systems always use the default file protection. Use the
SET PROTECTION/DEFAULT command to change the default file
protection.
10 /GPT
/GPT (default for Integrity servers)
/NOGPT (default for Alpha)
Applies to Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 2 (ODS-2) and Level 5
(ODS-5) disks only.
NOTE
If you specify /GPT, the disk might not mount on some
systems running older versions of OpenVMS.
When /GPT is specified, the system file [000000]GPT.SYS is
created. GPT.SYS contains partition/boot information needed
by the IA64 console software. (GPT is an abbreviation for GUID
Partition Table, where GUID stands for Global Unique Identifier.)
The BACKUP utility recognizes GPT.SYS and maintains its contents
in a save/restore operation.
If /NOGPT is specified, the pre-Version 8.2 VBN layout of
[000000]INDEXF.SYS is used. The VBN layout is described in
the Guide to OpenVMS File Applications and in VMS File System
Internals by Kirby McCoy (ISBN 1-55558-056-4, 1990).
11 /GROUP
Used in conjunction with the /NOSHARE qualifier to create
a group volume. The group volume allows access by system
(S), owner (O), and group (G) accessors. The protection is
(S:RWCD,O:RWCD,G:RWCD,W).
The owner user identification code (UIC) of the volume defaults
to your group number and a member number of 0.
12 /HEADERS
/HEADERS=number-of-headers
Specifies, for disk volumes, the number of file headers to be
allocated for the index file. The minimum and default value
is 16. The maximum is the value set with the /MAXIMUM_FILES
qualifier. However, if /LIMIT is specified and no value is
specified for /HEADERS or /MAXIMUM_FILES, the following defaults
apply:
o /MAXIMUM_FILES: 16711679 files
o /HEADERS: 0.5 percent of the size of the current device
MAXBLOCK (an F$GETDVI item code)
For example, for a 33GB disk, the default number of
preallocated header blocks would be approximately 355000.
/HEADERS is useful when you want to create a number of files
and want to streamline the process of allocating space for that
number of file headers. If you do not specify this qualifier, the
file system dynamically allocates space as it is needed for new
headers on the volume.
NOTE
The default value for the /HEADERS qualifier is generally
insufficient for ODS-2 and ODS-5 disks. To improve
performance and avoid SYSTEM-F-HEADERFULL errors, VSI
recommends that you set this value to be approximately the
number of files that you anticipate having on your disk;
however, grossly overestimating this value will result in
wasted disk space.
The /HEADERS qualifier controls how much space is initially
allocated to INDEXF.SYS for headers. Each file on a disk requires
at least one file header and each header occupies one block
within INDEXF.SYS. Files that have many Access Control Entries
(ACE) or are very fragmented may use more than one header.
The default value of 16 leaves room for less than 10 files to be
created before INDEXF.SYS must extend; therefore, try to estimate
the total number of files that will be created on the disk and
specify it here. This will improve disk access performance.
Overestimating the value may lead to wasted disk space. This
value cannot be changed without reinitializing the volume.
INDEXF.SYS is limited as to how many times it may extend. When
the map area in its header (where the retrieval pointers are
stored) becomes full, file creation fails with the message
"SYSTEM-W-HEADERFULL."
13 /HIGHWATER
/HIGHWATER (default)
/NOHIGHWATER
Applies to Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 2 (ODS-2) and Level 5
(ODS-5) disks only.
Sets the file high-water mark (FHM) volume attribute, which
guarantees that users cannot read data that they have not
written. You cannot specify the /NOHIGHWATER qualifier for
magnetic tape.
The /NOHIGHWATER qualifier disables FHM for a disk volume.
14 /HOMEBLOCKS
/HOMEBLOCKS=option
Applies to Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 2 (ODS-2) and Level 5
(ODS-5) disks only.
Specifies where the volume's homeblock and spare copy of the
homeblock are placed on disk. The value of option can be one of
the following:
o GEOMETRY
Causes the homeblocks to be placed at separate locations on
disk, to protect against failure of a disk block. Placement
depends on the reported geometry of the disk.
o FIXED (default)
Causes the homeblocks to be placed at separate fixed locations
on the disk. Placement is independent of the reported geometry
of the disk. This caters to disks that report different
geometries according to which type of controller they are
attached to.
o CONTIGUOUS
Causes the homeblocks to be placed contiguously at the start
of the disk. When used with the /INDEX=BEGINNING qualifier,
this setting allows container file systems to maximize the
amount of contiguous space on the disk, for example, to hold
one large file, such as a database.
15 /INDEX
/INDEX=position
Specifies the location of the index file for the volume's
directory structure. Possible positions are as follows:
BEGINNING Beginning of the volume
MIDDLE Middle of the volume (default)
END End of the volume
BLOCK:n Beginning of the logical block specified by n
16 /INTERCHANGE
Specifies that the magnetic tape will be used for interchange in
a heterogeneous vendor environment. The /INTERCHANGE qualifier
omits the ANSI VOL2 labels. Under OpenVMS, the ANSI VOL2 labels
contain OpenVMS specific security attributes.
For more information on the /INTERCHANGE qualifier and on
magnetic tape labeling and tape interchange, see the VSI OpenVMS
System Manager's Manual, Volume 1: Essentials.
17 /LABEL
/LABEL=option
Defines characteristics for the magnetic tape volume label, as
directed by the included option. The available options are as
follows:
o OWNER_IDENTIFIER:"(14 ANSI characters)"
Allows you to specify the Owner Identifier field in the
volume label. The field specified can accept up to 14 ANSI
characters.
o VOLUME_ACCESSIBILITY:"character"
Specifies the character to be written in the volume
accessibility field of the OpenVMS ANSI volume label VOL1
on an ANSI magnetic tape. The character may be any valid
ANSI "a" character. This set of characters includes numeric
characters, uppercase letters, and any one of the following
nonalphanumeric characters:
! " % ' ( ) * + , - . / : ; < = > ?
By default, the OpenVMS operating system provides a routine
that checks this field in the following manner:
o If the magnetic tape was created on a version of the
OpenVMS operating system that conforms to Version 3
of ANSI, then this option must be used to override any
character other than an ASCII space.
o If a protection is specified and the magnetic tape conforms
to an ANSI standard that is later than Version 3, then this
option must be used to override any character other than an
ASCII 1.
If you specify any character other than the default, you
must specify the /OVERRIDE=ACCESSIBILITY qualifier on the
INITIALIZE and MOUNT commands in order to access the magnetic
tape.
18 /LIMIT
/LIMIT[=n]
Applies to Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 2 (ODS-2) and Level 5
(ODS-5) disks only.
Specifies that the volume should be initialized with volume
expansion. n defines the maximum growth potential of the volume
in blocks. If no value is specified, the maximum expansion
potential is set up.
The maximum value depends on the value specified for /CLUSTER_
SIZE:
/CLUSTER_SIZE 8 1TB of expansion is set up.
/CLUSTER_SIZE < 8 Expansion limit is set to
65535*4096*Cluster_value because the maximum
size of the bitmap is 65535 blocks.
For more information about volume expansion, see the VSI Volume
Shadowing for OpenVMS manual.
The minimum allowed value is the largest of the following values:
o The value supplied with /LIMIT
o The physical disk size
o The size resulting from a 256-block BITMAP.SYS file (that is,
256 * 4096 bits/block * Disk Cluster Value)
If a value less than the minimum is supplied, the value is
increased to the minimum. This value is displayed (in blocks) as
the "Expansion Size Limit" in the output from a SHOW DEVICE/FULL
command.
NOTE
If you specify /LIMIT and do not explicitly set a value for
the following parameters, the defaults for these parameters
are set as follows:
o /CLUSTER_SIZE: 16
o /MAXIMUM_FILES: 16711679 files
o /HEADERS: 0.5 percent of the size of the current device
MAXBLOCK (an F$GETDVI item code)
For example, for a 33GB disk, the default number of
preallocated header blocks would be approximately 355000.
19 /MAXIMUM_FILES
/MAXIMUM_FILES=n
Restricts the maximum number of files that the volume can
contain. The /MAXIMUM_FILES qualifier overrides the default
value, which is calculated as follows:
(volume size in blocks)/((cluster factor + 1) * 2)
NOTE
If /LIMIT is specified and no value is set for /MAXIMUM_
FILES, the default is 16711679 files.
The maximum size you can specify for any volume is as follows:
(volume size in blocks)/(cluster factor + 1)
The minimum value is 0. Note that the maximum can be increased
only by reinitializing the volume.
NOTE
The /MAXIMUM_FILES qualifier does not reserve or create
space for new file headers on a volume. The file system
dynamically allocates space as it is needed for new headers.
20 /MEDIA_FORMAT
/MEDIA_FORMAT=[NO]COMPACTION
Controls whether data records are automatically compacted and
blocked together on any device that supports data compaction.
Data compaction and record blocking increase the amount of data
that can be stored on a single tape cartridge.
Note that once data compaction or noncompaction has been selected
for a given cartridge, that same status applies to the entire
cartridge.
21 /OVERRIDE
/OVERRIDE=(option[,...])
Requests the INITIALIZE command to ignore data on a magnetic tape
volume that protects it from being overwritten. You can specify
one or more of the following options:
ACCESSIBILITY (For magnetic tapes only.) If the installation
allows, this option overrides any character
in the Accessibility field of the volume. The
necessity of this option is defined by the
installation. That is, each installation has the
option of specifying a routine that the magnetic
tape file system will use to process this field.
By default, OpenVMS provides a routine that
checks this field in the following manner. If the
magnetic tape was created on a version of OpenVMS
that conforms to Version 3 of ANSI, this option
must be used to override any character other than
an ASCII space. If a protection is specified and
the magnetic tape conforms to an ANSI standard
that is higher than Version 3, this option must
be used to override any character other than an
ASCII 1. To use the ACCESSIBILITY option, you
must have the user privilege VOLPRO or be the
owner of the volume.
EXPIRATION (For magnetic tapes only.) Allows you to write
to a tape that has not yet reached its expiration
date. You must have the user privilege VOLPRO
to override volume protection, or your UIC must
match the UIC written on the volume.
OWNER_ Allows you to override the processing of the
IDENTIFIER Owner Identifier field of the volume label.
If you specify only one option, you can omit the parentheses.
To initialize a volume that was initialized previously with the
/PROTECTION qualifier, your UIC must match the UIC written on the
volume or you must have VOLPRO privilege.
You can initialize a volume previously initialized with
/PROTECTION if you have control access.
22 /OWNER_UIC
/OWNER_UIC=uic
Specifies an owner user identification code (UIC) for the volume.
The default is your default UIC. Specify the UIC using standard
UIC format as described in the VSI OpenVMS Guide to System
Security.
For magnetic tapes, no UIC is written unless protection on the
magnetic tape is specified. If protection is specified, but no
owner UIC is specified, your current UIC is assigned ownership of
the volume.
23 /PROTECTION
/PROTECTION=(ownership[:access][,...])
Applies the specified protection to the volume:
o Specify the ownership parameter as system (S), owner (O),
group (G), or world (W).
o Specify the access parameter as read (R), write (W), create
(C), or delete (D).
The default is your default protection. Note that the /GROUP,
/SHARE, and /SYSTEM qualifiers can also be used to define
protection for disk volumes.
For magnetic tape, the protection code is written to an OpenVMS
specific volume label. The system applies only read (R) and
write (W) access restrictions; create and delete (D) access are
meaningless. Moreover, the system and the owner are always given
both read (R) and write (W) access to magnetic tapes, regardless
of the protection code you specify.
For more information on specifying protection code, see the VSI
OpenVMS Guide to System Security. Any attributes not specified
are taken from the current default protection.
When you specify a protection code for an entire disk volume, the
access type E (execute) indicates create access.
24 /SHADOW
/SHADOW=(device_name_1, device_name_2, device_name_3) label
(Alpha/Integrity servers only)
Initializes multiple members of a future shadow set. Initializing
multiple members in this way eliminates the requirement of a full
copy when you later create a shadow set.
When both the /SHADOW and /ERASE qualifiers are specified, the
INITIALIZE command performs the following operations:
o Formats up to six devices with one command, so that any three
can be subsequently mounted together as members of a new host-
based shadow set
o Writes a label on each volume
o Deletes all information from the devices except for the system
files and leaves each device with identical file structure
information. All former contents of the disks are lost.
VSI strongly recommends that you use the /ERASE qualifier. When
/ERASE is specified, a merge operation is substantially reduced.
However, using /ERASE has two side effects that are important
considerations for volume shadowing: the setting of the ERASE
volume attribute and the time it takes to initialize a volume
using /ERASE.
If /ERASE is specified with /SHADOW, the disks are erased
sequentially, which effectively doubles or triples the time
it takes for the command to complete. If the disks are large,
consider performing multiple, simultaneous INITIALIZE/ERASE
commands (without /SHADOW) to erase the disks. Once all of
those commands have completed, then execute an INITIALIZE/SHADOW
command (without /ERASE).
Once you have initialized your devices using /ERASE and /SHADOW,
you can then mount up to three of these devices as members of a
new host-based shadow set.
Note that the INITIALIZE/SHADOW command should not be used to
initialize a disk to be added to an existing shadow set, as no
benefit is gained.
For more information about volume shadowing, see the VSI Volume
Shadowing for OpenVMS manual.
25 /SHARE
/SHARE (default)
/NOSHARE
Permits all categories of access by all categories of ownership.
The /NOSHARE qualifier denies access to group (unless the /GROUP
qualifier is also specified) and world processes.
26 /SIZE
/SIZE=n
When /SIZE=n is specified for a magnetic disk, n specifies the
size (in blocks) of the logical volume (the space available for
the file system). This allows you to INITIALIZE a disk with a
file system size that is less than the physical volume size,
which can be useful if you plan to create a shadow set using this
disk and a smaller physical disk. The value of n is displayed
(in blocks) as "Logical Volume Size" in the output from a SHOW
DEVICE/FULL command.
For DECram disks, /SIZE specifies the size (in blocks) of the
disk (device type DT$_RAM_DISK) to be allocated from available
memory. The size of the device is created at disk initialization
time.
To deallocate space, specify /SIZE=0. All resources specifically
allocated to the DECram disk are returned to the system.
Note that n cannot exceed 524,280 blocks on versions of DECram
prior to Version 2.3. DECram Version 2.3 running on an Alpha
system supports up to 67,108,864 blocks, equivalent to 32GB.
27 /STRUCTURE
/STRUCTURE=level
Specifies whether the volume should be formatted in Files-11
On-Disk Structure Level 1, 2 (the default), or 5.
Structure Level 1 is incompatible with the /DATA_CHECK and
/CLUSTER_SIZE qualifiers. The default protection for a Structure
Level 1 disk is full access to system, owner, and group, and read
(R) access to all other users.
Note that Alpha does not support ODS-1 disks, and specifying 1 on
Alpha results in an error.
See the VSI OpenVMS System Manager's Manual, Volume 1: Essentials
for more information about ODS-5 disks.
28 /SYSTEM
Requires a system UIC or SYSPRV (system privilege) privilege.
Defines a system volume. The owner UIC defaults to [1,1].
Protection defaults to complete access by all ownership
categories, except that only system processes can create top-
level directories.
29 /USER_NAME
/USER_NAME=name
Specifies a user name to be associated with the volume. The name
must be 1 to 12 alphanumeric characters. The default is your user
name.
30 /VERIFIED
/VERIFIED
/NOVERIFIED
Indicates whether the disk has bad block data on it. Use the
/NOVERIFIED qualifier to ignore bad block data on the disk. The
default is the /VERIFIED qualifier for disks with 4096 blocks or
more and the /NOVERIFIED qualifier for disks with less than 4096
blocks.
31 /VOLUME_CHARACTERISTICS
/VOLUME_CHARACTERISTICS=([[NO]HARDLINKS,] [[NO]ACCESS_
DATES[=delta-time]],[NO]SPECIAL_FILES)
Applies to Files-11 On-Disk Structure Level 5 (ODS-5) disks only.
Enables or disables hardlinks and automatic updates of access
dates on ODS-5 volumes.
The default value for delta-time is 1 second, chosen to comply
with the "seconds since EPOCH" time interface required by
POSIX st_atime. A site can choose a larger delta time to reduce
overhead if 1-second granularity is not required.
Note that the NOACCESS_DATES option affects only the node on
which the command is issued. Other nodes are not affected by the
change until the next time the volume is mounted.
See the Guide to OpenVMS File Applications for additional
information.
The volume characteristic [SPECIAL_FILES] allows you to disable
symlinks. This eliminates file access failure audits that may
occur due to symlinks being enabled for all processes in the
current implementation.
32 /WINDOWS
/WINDOWS=n
Specifies the number of mapping pointers (used to access data in
the file) to be allocated for file windows. The value can be an
integer in the range of 7 to 80. The default is 7.