It’s A Good Day For Mainframe Trivia!

May 9, 2023

Sonja Soderlund is an Oregon-based B2B freelance writer. Whether writing about mainframe computers, educational technology, or sustainable retail, she strives to bring clarity to complex issues. Connect with her or LinkedIn.

Planet Mainframe is here to support your ongoing mainframe training (try saying that five times fast), and our trivia quiz this week is based on two articles that explore the topics of indexing and the basics of Virtual Storage Access Method.

To jump right in, Top 10 Steps to Building the Right Indexes (♧ HINT) takes you into the deep waters of designing and creating appropriate indexes, one of the major struggles with Db2 development. Craig Mullins (President & Principal Consultant of Mullins Consulting, Inc.), whom IBM has named a Gold Consultant and Information Champion, ably takes the reader through a concise, step-by-step guide to building the right tables. 

Both an art and a science, this essential skill requires you to juggle different priorities and, as you may have experienced, things can get complicated fast. Mullins takes the guesswork out of index creation and offers a helpful list of steps to take – as well as some general advice. This is essential reading for anyone struggling with “the delicate balancing act of creating the right indexes to optimize the right queries.”

In his article, Basics of VSAM (♧ HINT), Colin Pearce dedicates his attention to the basic structures of  Virtual Storage Access Method (VSAM) and their different processing capabilities and access.

With over 30 years of experience as a z/OS Systems Programmer and CICS/TS Systems Programmer, Colin Pearce knows a thing or two about the basics (and beyond) of VSAM, and he brings this experience to bear in this training.

VSAM isn’t exactly new – it’s been around since the 1970s – but it’s still in use because it provides a helpful (once you know how it works) way of storing large amounts of data for various types of access. 

Pearce’s article defies a simple summary because it goes into some detail about VSAM’s different structures, with emphasis on the Key Sequenced Dataset. If you have lingering questions about how these structures relate to each other and how they differ, this is the article for you.

Take a few minutes to dive into these articles, then test yourself with our Trivia Quiz.

1. Indexes should be built to optimize the access of your SQL queries. To properly create an optimal set of indexes requires which of these:

 
 
 
 

2. What Does VSAM stand for?

 
 
 
 

3. VSAM provides a way of storing large amounts of data for three types of access. Which of these is NOT one of these types of access?

 
 
 
 

4. Is this statement TRUE or FALSE?

“Each record in the KSDS (Key Sequenced Dataset) has a Key. If REPRO finds 3 keys not in sequence, it abandons the load and reports which keys are out of sequence.”

 
 

Wherever you are in your career, there is always more to learn about organizing and accessing the information stored in a mainframe. Take a moment to consider the future raging tension headaches you can avoid by taking the guesswork out of indexing and having a proper understanding of a high-performance access method like VSAM. These articles, with wisdom gleaned from years of working with databases, are worth their weight in gold.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sign up to receive the latest mainframe information

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Read More

Mainframes in Pop Culture

Mainframes in Pop Culture

We’re in the long, hot days of summer here in the Northern Hemisphere, and while many of us may not be on summer holidays, our Planet Mainframe Trivia Quiz is going to venture into new territory - mainframes in pop culture! Mainframes may be known for their...

CICS Month Trivia

CICS Month Trivia

It’s CICS month at Planet Mainframe! That means we’ll spend some time this month exploring the system that’s been the bedrock of enterprise transaction processing since the 1960s. CICS grew out of the idea of Ben Riggens, an IBM systems engineer working at Virginia...

Db2 Month Trivia

Db2 Month Trivia

This month at Planet Mainframe, we’re celebrating all things Db2, which has earned its place as one of the most trusted relational database management systems in mainframe environments. Organizations have trusted it for decades because when push comes to shove, it...