A file partition has two principal states that determine access to objects in the partition
Active, in which objects can be created, updated, and deleted
Frozen (or read-only), in which objects cannot be created, updated, and deleted
You can specify a different file-system location for each partition.
A frozen partition can be operationally marked as offline, which means that the file partition cannot be accessed through the file system. The distinction between an online and offline partition is significant when dealing with exception conditions. For example, a reference to an object in an offline partition is a normal condition whereas a reference to a supposedly online partition that is missing is an unexpected or abnormal exception.
System event trapping is one way to allow external management tools to take action to resolve the absent partition condition; the action may be as simple as asking an operator to mount a specified disk from an archive.
The state of a non-active partition overrides the state of objects contained in the partition. The frozen partition state overrides object volatility, which means that all objects contained in a frozen partition are themselves frozen. Similarly, all objects contained in an offline partition are considered to be offline (or not present).
If you attempt to update a frozen object, a