Terse
TERSE is an IBM archive file format that supports lossless compression. A TERSE file may contain a sequential data set, a partitioned data set (PDS), partitioned data set extended (PDSE), or a large format dataset (DSNTYPE=LARGE). Any record format (RECFM) is allowed as long as the record length is less than 32 K (64 K for RECFM=VBS). Records may contain printer control characters.[1] Terse files are compressed using a modification of Ziv, Lempel compression algorithm developed by Victor S. Miller and Mark Wegman at the Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York.[2][3] The Terse algorithm was proprietary to IBM; however, IBM has released an open source Java decompressor under the Apache 2 license.[4] The compression/decompression program (called terse and unterse)—AMATERSE or TRSMAIN—is available from IBM for z/OS; the z/VM equivalents are the AMATERSEThe following JCL can be used to invoke AMATERSE on z/OS (TRSMAIN uses INFILE and OUTFILE instead of SYSUT1 and SYSUT2):[6][7] //jobname JOB ...
//stepname EXEC PGM=AMATERSE,PARM=ppppp
//SYSPRINT DD SYSOUT=*
//SYSUT1 DD DISP=SHR,DSN=input.dataset
//SYSUT2 DD DISP=(NEW,CATLG),DCB=ddd,DSN=output.dataset,
// SPACE=space_parameters
//SYSUT3 DD DISP=(NEW,DELETE),SPACE=space_parameters Optional temporary dataset
UsesTerse can be used as a general-purpose compression/decompression tool. IBM also distributes downloadable Program temporary fixs (PTFs) as tersed datasets. Terse is also used by IBM customers to package diagnostic information such as z/OS dumps and traces, for transmission to IBM. References
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