Inspect Manual

High-Level Inspect Commands
Inspect Manual429164-006
6-77
Using the TYPE Clause
The first form represents a permanent file and the second form represents a
temporary file.
FILENAME32
interprets the item as a 32-byte internal file name and displays it in one of
these forms:
\system.$volume.subvolume.filename
\system.$volume.#number
The first form represents a permanent file and the second form represents a
temporary file.
LOCATION
interprets the item as a 1word code address and displays it using all location
formats: STATEMENTS OFFSET, LINES FILE ALL OFFSET, and
INSTRUCTIONS.
You can specify that the address is from a different code segment by entering a
segment identifier after the LOCATION display type. The segment identifier
has this form:
{ UC | UL } [ .segment-number ]
UC indicates that the address is in the user code space; UL indicates that it is
in the user library space. segment-number specifies the particular code
segment within the code space; it must be a number in the range zero through
31. If you omit the segment number, Inspect uses the value zero.
PROCESS HANDLE
interprets the item as an 10-word process identifier and displays it in this form:
\system.[$process-name:]cpu:pin:verification-sequence-
number
For more information on process handles, see the Guardian Programmer’s
Guide. Note that process handle may not work if the current program is a
savefile because it is not active.
SSID
interprets the item as a 12-byte subsystem identifier and displays it in one of
these forms:
owner.subsys-name.version
owner.subsys-number.version
SYSTEM
interprets the item as a 2-byte field and displays it in this form:
\system