Db2 table spaces
A Db2 table space is a set of volumes on disks that hold the data sets in which tables are actually stored. Every table is stored in table space.
A table space consists of a number of VSAM linear data sets. Table spaces are divided into equal-sized units, called pages. Each page is read from disk to the assigned buffer pool, or written from the buffer pool to disk, in a single operation. The page size is controlled by the buffer pool that you assign to the table space (4 KB, 8 KB, 16 KB, or 32 KB in size) for the data. The default page size is 4 KB.
Data in most table spaces can be compressed, which can allow you to store more data on each data page.
You can let Db2 create and manage the table space for you by issuing a CREATE TABLE statement that does not specify an existing table space. Db2 creates a partition-by-growth or partition-by-range table space. For more information, see Creation of table spaces.
You can also explicitly define table spaces by issuing CREATE TABLESPACE statements. You specify the database that the table space belongs to, and the storage group that it uses. When you create a table space, certain options that you specify control the type of table space that is created.
For descriptions of the various table space types, see Table space types and characteristics in Db2 for z/OS.
Segmented non-UTS table spaces, which are deprecated, can contain more than one table. However, with the recommended partition-by-growth and partition-by-range table spaces, each table space contains only a single table.