TSS tables
The argument is typically a node name, a user ID, or a terminal type. The result provides customization information that you specify. When
ETA
queries the TSS tables, it searches for the argument; if
ETA
finds the argument, it returns the corresponding result. Thirteen TSS table types give you the flexibility to control and selectively implement all available IMS and
ETA
options.
You can set the length of the argument and result columns between 1 and 256 bytes. Although the number of columns is fixed, you can create as many as 999,999 rows.
You can define and maintain TSS tables through the ETA online interface or through TSS batch commands that you can issue at the TSO READY prompt or in batch routines. For more information about creating and maintaining TSS tables in batch, see TSS-batch-processing-execution.
This section contains the following topics: