Safeguard User's Guide (G06.24+, H06.03+)

Working with Patterns
Safeguard User’s Guide422089-009
9-10
DELETE DISKFILE-PATTERN
DELETE DISKFILE-PATTERN
DELETE DISKFILE-PATTERN Examples
To delete the diskfile pattern $ABC.*.*:
DELETE DISKFILE-PATTERN $ABC.*.*
To delete all diskfile patterns that match the search pattern $ABC.*.*:
DELETE DISKFILE-PATTERN $ABC.*.*, ALL
To delete all diskfile patterns that match the search pattern $AB*.D*.*F
DELETE DISKFILE-PATTERN $AB*.D*.*F, ALL
FREEZE DISKFILE-PATTERN
FREEZE DISKFILE-PATTERN Example
To freeze all diskfiles that match all patterns that specify a subvolume name
beginning with the characters TEST:
FREEZE DISKFILE-PATTERN $*.TEST*.*, ALL
It is valid in a search pattern to have a wildcard in the volume portion of a diskfile
name.
INFO DISKFILE-PATTERN
Finding Added Patterns
For example, if you had the following patterns:
1. $DATA1.A*.*
2. $DATA1.A*.B*
3. $DATA2.A*.*
4. $DATA3.A*.B*
INFO DISKFILE-PATTERN $DATA1.A*.* would return pattern 1.
INFO DISKFILE-PATTERN $DATA1.A*.*, ALL would return patterns 1 and 2.
INFO DISKFILE-PATTERN $DATA*.A*.* would return patterns 1 and 3 (one
dimensional search).
INFO DISKFILE-PATTERN $DATA*.A*.*, ALL would return patterns 1, 2, 3, & 4 (a
multi-dimensional search).