You can place a table with high I/O activity on a dedicated
disk device. Doing this reduces contention for the data that is stored
in that table.
When disk drives have different performance levels, you can put
the tables with the highest use on the fastest drives. Placing two
high-use tables on separate disk devices reduces competition for disk
access when the two tables experience frequent, simultaneous I/O from
multiple applications or when joins are formed between them.
To isolate a high-use table on its own disk device, assign the
device to a chunk, assign that chunk to a dbspace, and then place
the table in the dbspace that you created. Isolating
high-use tables shows three high-use
tables, each in a separate dbspace, placed on three disks. Figure 1: Isolating
high-use tables