System Software Library NonStop NET/MASTER MS Command Reference Manual Abstract This manual describes NonStop NET/MASTER Management Services (MS) commands. This manual is intended for all NonStop NET/MASTER users. Part Number 115412 Edition Second Published Product Version Release ID Supported Releases July 1995 NonStop NET/MASTER D30 D30.02 This manual supports D30.00 and all subsequent releases until otherwise indicated in a new edition.
Document History Edition Part Number Product Version Earliest Supported Release Published First 106157 D30.00 December 1994 Second 115412 NonStop NET/MASTER D30 NonStop NET/MASTER D30 D30.02 July 1995 New editions incorporate any updates issued since the previous edition. A plus sign (+) after a release ID indicates that this manual describes function added to the base release, either by an interim product modification (IPM) or by a new product version on a .99 site update tape (SUT).
New and Changed Information The Sterling Software services to which NonStop NET/MASTER MS connects, formerly called NET/MASTER, is now referred to as the SOLVE management services. All sections in this manual have minor changes, which include updated screen displays, examples, and figures. The following sections have major changes: Notation Conventions The subsection “Boldface” now precedes the subsection “Underline _.
New and Changed Information PARAM—The DYNAMICPROCESS operand has additional information about running as a process pair. The NCLQUEUESVOL operand is new. The PROCESSCLASS operand no longer has a default value (of NC). The PROCESSCPU operand can now be used to specify where the backup process of a static BK, EM, or NC persistent process is created. The STATICPROCESS operand has additional information. PROCESS ALTER—The BACKUPCPU operand can now be used with BK, EM, and NC application processes.
New and Changed Information UDBCTL OPEN—The syntax has been corrected; the extraneous pair of braces surrounding the SWGUID operand in the syntax box has been removed. Appendix A Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands The FUP VOLS command has been added to Table A-32. The PUP ADDRTOCYL, ADDRTOFILE, COPY, FIXMICROCODE, LISTDEFECTS, LISTHEADERS, LISTSPARES, LISTVDL, LOADCHANNEL, UPDATEREV commands have been removed from Table A-52. Glossary Index The glossary has been expanded.
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Contents New and Changed Information About This Manual xxiii Notation Conventions Section 1 iii xxvii Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command and Operand Default Authority Levels Command Restrictions 1-9 1-15 Commands and Operands Organized by Function Section 2 1-1 1-22 NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ! 2-3 ? 2-5 AT 2-7 AUTOHOLD CANCEL CLEAR 2-17 2-20 CLOSTERM CNM 2-14 2-22 2-24 CS- 2-26 CS+ 2-27 DEBUG BREAKPOINT DEBUG CL
Contents DEBUG STEP 2-65 DEBUG STOP 2-71 DEBUG TRACE EDIT 2-76 EMSCOLL 2-78 EMSDIST ENTER 2-80 2-81 EQUATE EVERY EXEC 2-84 2-87 2-93 FC 2-95 FK 2-96 FLUSH 2-106 FSTOP 2-108 GO 2-110 HISTORY 2-112 HLPMAINT INTQ ISR K 2-113 2-120 2-123 2-130 LBANNER 2-131 LINK DEFINE 2-134 LINK DELETE 2-141 LINK RESET 2-142 LINK START 2-143 LINK STOP LIST 2-145 LOG 2-148 LOGSWAP LTITLE MSG 2-144 2-151 2-153 MAXUSERS 2-155 2-156 NCLCHECK viii 2-73 2-158 115412 Tandem Comp
Contents NCLCOMP 2-159 NCLQUEUE RESET NCLQUEUE SET NRDRET OCSID 2-163 2-165 2-167 2-168 OPENTERM 2-171 OPSYS 2-173 Format 1 2-173 Format 2 2-175 ORDER PAGE 2-181 2-183 PARAM 2-185 CEXCCF 2-194 CEXDCF 2-195 CIP 2-196 CIPPROCESS 2-197 CMDPROCESS 2-199 CMDSVR 2-201 CPUWEIGHT 2-203 DID 2-206 DSNMPROCESS 2-207 DSNMSECTION 2-209 DSNMSUBVOL 2-210 DYNAMICPROCESS 2-211 FEATUREDISABLE 2-213 GMMPROCESS 2-214 INIT 2-216 LOGFILE1 2-217 MDSMAPFILE 2-218 NCLCUSTOBJ 2-219 NCLCUSTSRC 2-220 NCLDISTCODE 2-221 NCLD
Contents PNLDISTSRC 2-228 PROCESSCHAR 2-229 PROCESSCLASS 2-230 PROCESSCPU 2-233 PROCESSDEBUGTERM 2-235 PROCESSNAME 2-237 PROCESSOBJECT 2-238 PROCESSPARAM 2-239 PROCESSPRIORITY 2-241 PROCESSSWAPVOL 2-242 PROCESSWEIGHT 2-243 READY 2-244 SECEXIT 2-245 SECEXITPROCESS 2-246 STATICPROCESS 2-248 SWGUID 2-250 UACAUTH 2-251 UACUTIL 2-252 UADAUTH 2-253 UADUTIL 2-254 UMSFILE 2-255 PF 2-256 PROCESS ALTER 2-261 PROCESS SWITCH PROFILE 2-264 2-265 PROGRUN 2-283 Format 1 2-283 Format 2 2-284 PSNDCTL process-spec PS
Contents SESSION DELETE 2-310 SHOW COMMANDS 2-311 SHOW CPUWEIGHT 2-314 SHOW DOMAINS SHOW ENGINE 2-317 2-319 SHOW EQUATES 2-320 SHOW FILEINFO 2-322 SHOW FILES 2-325 SHOW FILTERS SHOW ISR 2-328 2-329 SHOW LINKS 2-333 SHOW LOCKS 2-337 SHOW LOGS 2-342 SHOW MAPS 2-343 SHOW NCL 2-345 SHOW NCLGLBL 2-350 SHOW NCLOBJECT 2-353 SHOW NCLQUEUE 2-356 SHOW NCLSTAT 2-358 SHOW NRD 2-359 SHOW OCS 2-361 SHOW PANELS 2-362 SHOW PARAM 2-364 SHOW PAUSE 2-366 SHOW PNLOBJECT SHOW PRELOA
Contents SHOW TIMER 2-394 SHOW TRACE 2-396 SHOW UDB 2-401 SHOW UDBUSER SHOW USERS 2-404 2-405 SHOW VARTABLES SHUTDOWN 2-407 2-411 SHUTDOWN $ABEND$ SIGNOFF link-name SIGNON 2-417 2-423 START 2-427 STATUS 2-429 SUBMIT 2-430 SWAP 2-415 2-416 SIGNON link-name SPLIT 2-413 2-433 SYSPARMS 2-436 AUTOEXEC 2-446 CDELAY 2-448 CMDAUTH 2-449 CMDREPL 2-451 CMDSTACK 2-452 CNMAPPLNME 2-453 CONMSG 2-454 EMSBKGCOLOR 2-455 EMSCOLLPNM 2-456 EMSCOLOR 2-457 EMSDISTBCP 2-458 EMSDISTCOLL 2-459 EMSDISTFL
Contents EMSLINELEN 2-468 EMSLINENUM 2-469 EMSMAXRATE 2-470 EMSNRD 2-471 EMSPROC 2-472 EVCMDMIN 2-473 HELDMSG 2-474 ID 2-475 LANG 2-476 LASTLOGON 2-477 LMSGWARN 2-478 LNKTRACE 2-479 LOCKMAX 2-480 LOGFILEn 2-481 LOGHIWATER 2-482 LOGLOWATER 2-483 LOGPRCNUM 2-484 LOGPROC 2-485 LOGWRAP 2-486 MAPDEL 2-487 MAPLOAD 2-488 MAXPANEL 2-489 MODLUSER 2-490 NCLGBTRC 2-491 NCLMAXK 2-492 NCLOBJPATH 2-493 NCLOGTRM 2-494 NCLPEND 2-495 NCLPRSHR 2-496 NCLTRLFF 2-498 NCLTRMAX 2-499 NCLUMAX 2-500 NCLXUSER 2-501 NETNAME 2-502 NM
Contents PWEXPIRE 2-509 PWHISTORY 2-510 PWMIN 2-511 PWRETRY 2-512 SESSMSG 2-513 SPERRORC 2-514 SPERRORH 2-515 SPFKEYC 2-516 SPINPHIC 2-517 SPINPLOC 2-518 SPINPUTH 2-519 SPINPUTP 2-520 SPLABELC 2-521 SPOUTHIC 2-522 SPOUTLOC 2-523 SPSUBTLC 2-524 SPTITLEC 2-525 SPTITLEP 2-526 SWGUIDDSNM 2-527 SYSUDB 2-528 TCMDMAX 2-529 TEDITOBJ 2-530 TOACT1 2-531 TOACT2 2-533 TOALARM 2-534 TOSTART 2-535 TOTIME1 2-536 TOTIME2 2-537 TRACEFILE 2-538 TRACEFLAGS 2-539 UNLOAD 2-540 TERMINAL ADD 2-542 TERMINAL DELETE TERMINAL LOCK
Contents TRACE RESET 2-563 TRACE START 2-564 TRACE STOP 2-567 UDBCTL file-spec UDBCTL CLOSE 2-570 UDBCTL OPEN 2-571 UDBCTL RESET 2-576 UDBCTL STOP 2-577 UNIT DEFINE 2-578 UNIT DELETE 2-583 X Appendix A 2-568 2-584 Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands Default OPSYS Utility Authority Levels ACTIVATE Utility A-1 ADDUSER Utility A-1 ALARMOFF Utility A-1 ALTPRI Utility A-2 APCCOM Utility A-2 ATTACHSEG Utility A-2 BACKUP Utility A-2 BATCHCOM Utility A-3 BUSCMD Utility A-3
Contents EMSCCTRL Utility A-10 EMSCINFO Utility A-10 ENV Utility A-10 ERROR Utility A-10 EXIT Utility A-10 FILEINFO Utility A-11 FILENAMES Utility A-11 FILES Utility A-11 FUP Utility A-12 HELP Utility A-12 HLSCOM Utility A-13 HOME Utility A-13 LIGHTS Utility A-13 LOAD Utility A-13 MEASCOM Utility A-14 NSS Utility A-14 PASSWORD Utility A-15 PATHCOM Utility A-15 PDEBUG Utility A-15 PEEK Utility A-16 PERUSE Utility A-16 PMSEARCH Utility A-16 PMSG Utility A-17 PPD Utility A-17 PSMAIL Utility A-18 PSTATUS Utili
Contents SETTIME Utility A-26 SPOOLCOM Utility A-26 SQLCI Utility A-26 SURVCOM Utility A-27 SUSPEND Utility A-27 SYSTEM Utility A-28 SYSTIMES Utility A-28 TACL Utility A-29 TAPECOM Utility A-30 TMFCOM Utility A-30 USE Utility A-31 USERS Utility A-31 VOLUME Utility A-31 VPROC Utility A-31 WHO Utility A-31 XBUSDOWN Utility A-32 XBUSUP Utility A-32 YBUSDOWN Utility A-32 YBUSUP Utility A-32 Default PROGRUN Utility Authority Levels A-33 Glossary Glossary–1 Index Figures Index–1 Figure 1.
Contents xviii Table 1-8. Inter-System Routing (ISR) Commands Table 1-9. Commands Used to Execute NCL Procedures Table 1-10. Commands Used to Control NCL Processes Table 1-11. Commands Used to Display NCL Information Table 1-12. Commands Used With Function Keys Table 1-13. Commands Used With Time Table 1-14. Commands Used With Other Commands Table 1-15. Commands Used With Terminals Table 1-16. Commands Used With Configuration Table 1-17.
Contents Table 2-16. SYSPARMS Operands Displayed by SHOW SYSPARMS Command 2-389 Table 2-17. SYSPARMS Operands Not Displayed by SHOW SYSPARMS Command 2-390 Table 2-18. Virtual Users Table 2-19. SYSPARMS Operands Entered Only From INIT Table 2-20. SYSPARMS Operands Entered From Any NCL Procedure 2-444 Table 2-21. SYSPARMS Operands Table 2-22. SYSPARMS Operands Restrictions Table A-1. Default Authority Levels for ACTIVATE Utility A-1 Table A-2.
Contents xx Table A-25. Default Authority Levels for EMSCINFO Utility Table A-26. Default Authority Levels for ENV Utility Table A-27. Default Authority Levels for ERROR Utility Table A-28. Default Authority Levels for EXIT Utility Table A-29. Default Authority Levels for FILEINFO Utility Table A-30. Default Authority Levels for FILENAMES Utility Table A-31. Default Authority Levels for FILES Utility Table A-32. Default Authority Levels for FUP Utility Table A-33.
Contents Table A-58. Default Authority Levels for RESTORE Utility Table A-59. Default Authority Levels for RJECIR Utility A-23 Table A-60. Default Authority Levels for RJECIS Utility A-24 Table A-61. Default Authority Levels for SAFECOM Utility Table A-62. Default Authority Levels for SCF Utility Table A-63. Default Authority Levels for SEGINFO Utility A-25 Table A-64. Default Authority Levels for SETTIME Utility A-26 Table A-65. Default Authority Levels for SPOOLCOM Utility Table A-66.
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About This Manual This manual describes NonStop NET/MASTER Management Services (MS) commands. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS command is a word or abbreviation that describes an action and tells NonStop NET/MASTER MS to perform that action. You use NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands to control NonStop NET/MASTER MS, the Tandem system on which NonStop NET/MASTER MS is running, and remote systems to which NonStop NET/MASTER MS is linked.
About This Manual How to Use This Manual How to Use This Manual The first time you use this manual, you should read Section 1 before Section 2. This will give you a quick overview of all NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands. Thereafter, to find the command you want you can either use the table of contents to find its page number, or just skip to the command itself—remember, commands are in alphabetic order.
About This Manual Where to Go for More Information Figure 1.
About This Manual Your Comments Invited Your Comments Invited xxvi After you have had a chance to use this manual, please take a moment to fill out the Reader Comment Card and send it to us. The Reader Comment Card is located at the back of the printed manual and as a separate file in the CD Read Document List. You can fax the card to us at (408) 285-6660 or mail the card by using the business reply address on the back of the card in the printed manual.
Notation Conventions z General Syntax Notation UPPERCASE LETTERS The following summarizes the notation conventions for syntax presentation in this manual. Uppercase letters indicate keywords and reserved words; enter these items exactly as shown. Items not enclosed in brackets are required. For example: MAXATTACH lowercase italic letters Lowercase italic letters indicate variable items that you supply. Items not enclosed in brackets are required.
Notation Conventions General Syntax Notation Underline _ An underlined syntax item in a horizontal or vertical list is the default value. If you do not choose any item in a list, the default value is used. For example: NONE RED Ellipsis ... BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW An ellipsis immediately following a pair of brackets or braces indicates that you can repeat the enclosed sequence of syntax items any number of times. For example: M address-1 [ , new-value ]... [ - ] {0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9}..
1 Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands This section summarizes NonStop NET/MASTER Management Services (MS) commands in a series of tables: Table 1-1 summarizes NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands with a brief description. Table 1-2 describes the guidelines used for assigning default command and operand authority levels. Table 1-3 tabulates NonStop NET/MASTER MS command and operand default authority levels. (Operands not listed have a default authority level of 0.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Manage NonStop NET/MASTER MS security Manage NonStop NET/MASTER MS activity logs For details about these and other NonStop NET/MASTER MS management responsibilities, refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS System Management Guide. This manual also contains planning, installing, and configuration information for NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Table 1-1. Summary of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands (Page 1 of 6) Command Meaning ! Immediately executes a previously executed command, without modifications. Displays a previously executed command in the roll-delete message display area of an OCS window. Issues a command, a message, or a series of commands at a specified time of day. Sets an OCS screen to either roll or hold roll-delete messages.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Table 1-1. Summary of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands (Page 2 of 6) Command Meaning DEBUG STEP Resumes execution of the specified NCL process by single or multiple statements. Stops a debug session. Obtains stack trace information from the targeted NCL process. Invokes Edit Services. Starts or stops the recording of events from NonStop NET/MASTER MS to the Event Management Service (EMS) event collector.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Table 1-1. Summary of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands (Page 3 of 6) Command Meaning LINK STOP LIST LOG LOGSWAP Stops an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) link. Lists the contents of a file: usually, an NCL procedure. Logs a message to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS activity log. Stops logging to the current activity log file and opens another activity log file in the group of activity log files.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Table 1-1. Summary of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands (Page 4 of 6) Command Meaning PSNDCTL OPEN Makes a Pathway server class available for use by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Disassociates a Pathway server class identifier from a Pathway server class. Purges one or more timer command(s), an NCL lock request, or one or more full non-roll-delete (NRD) message(s).
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Table 1-1. Summary of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands (Page 5 of 6) Command Meaning SHOW NCLQUEUE SHOW NCLSTAT SHOW NRD Displays the current execution limit for each NCL queue. Displays information about preloaded NCL procedures. Displays the current full non-roll-delete (NRD) messages in the NRD message central queue. Displays information about users who are currently using Operator Control Services (OCS).
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Overview of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Table 1-1. Summary of NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands (Page 6 of 6) Command Meaning SIGNOFF link-name Logs off a user from a remote NonStop NET/MASTER MS or SOLVE management services system. Refreshes the NonStop NET/MASTER MS security profile of a user. Logs on a user to a remote NonStop NET/MASTER MS or SOLVE management services system. Opens a new window or adjusts the size of the current window.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command and Operand Default Authority Levels Command and An authority level is a number from 0 through 255 assigned to NonStop Operand Default NET/MASTER MS users and NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands and operands. Authority Levels This number determines whether a user has the authority to execute a NonStop NET/MASTER MS command or operand. The lowest authority level is 0; the highest is 255.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command and Operand Default Authority Levels Table 1-3.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command and Operand Default Authority Levels Table 1-3.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command and Operand Default Authority Levels Table 1-3. Command Default Authority Levels (Page 3 of 5) Command Authority Level OPSYS (continued) ORDER PAGE PARAM PF PROCESS ALTER PROCESS SWITCH PROFILE PROGRUN PSNDCTL process-spec PSNDCTL CLOSE PSNDCTL OPEN PSNDCTL STOP PURGE REQMS RETURN ROUTE SESSION DEFINE SESSION DELETE SHOW COMMANDS SHOW CPUWEIGHT SHOW DOMAINS SHOW ENGINE 1–12 115412 Tandem Computers Incorporated 0 0 N.A.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command and Operand Default Authority Levels Table 1-3.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command and Operand Default Authority Levels Table 1-3.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command Restrictions Command Restrictions Some restrictions apply to executing NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands in the following circumstances: Executing from an NCL procedure Routing to a remote system Executing in a background processing environment. When you execute a NonStop NET/MASTER MS command from an NCL procedure, you must precede it by either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command Restrictions If the value in the CMD column is N, you cannot enter the command from an NCL procedure by using the CMD core statement. If the value in the CMD column is Y, you can enter the command from an NCL procedure by using the CMD core statement; for example, the following command is allowed: CMD “-FK F6 IMM,AUTOHOLD” If the INTCMD column is N, you cannot enter the command from an NCL procedure by using the INTCMD verb.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command Restrictions Table 1-4.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command Restrictions Table 1-4.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command Restrictions Table 1-4.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command Restrictions Table 1-4.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Command Restrictions Table 1-4.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Commands and Operands Organized by Function Commands and Operands Organized by Function The tables in this subsection summarize NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands and operands by function. The tables show the main commands and operands in each functional group. A command or operand may be in more than one group. Table 1-5 lists the operands of the PROFILE command.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Commands and Operands Organized by Function Table 1-8 lists Inter-System Routing (ISR) commands. The ISR command is used to define how messages flow between NonStop NET/MASTER MS and SOLVE management services systems. The SHOW ISR command is used to display ISR definitions. Table 1-8. Inter-System Routing (ISR) Commands ISR SHOW ISR Table 1-9 lists commands used to execute NCL procedures. Table 1-9.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Commands and Operands Organized by Function Table 1-13 lists time and timer commands. Table 1-13. Commands Used With Time AT EVERY PURGE TIMER SHOW TIMER TIME Table 1-14 lists commands used to retrieve, display, and modify commands from the history buffer associated with each OCS window. Table 1-14.
Introduction to NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Commands and Operands Organized by Function Table 1-18 lists commands used to control message presentation on an OCS window. Table 1-18. Commands Used With Messages AUTOHOLD CLEAR K NRDRET ORDER PAGE PROFILE EMS PROFILE HOLD PROFILE MONMSG PROFILE MSG PROFILE MSGCODE PROFILE MSGPROC PROFILE PREFSYS PROFILE PRFTM PROFILE ROLL PROFILE TRUNC PROFILE UNSOL PURGE NRD Table 1-19 lists commands used with files and user databases (UDBs). Table 1-19.
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2 NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands This section describes NonStop NET/MASTER Management Services (MS) commands. Figure 2-1 shows how each command is described. Figure 2-1. How NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Are Described (Page 1 of 2) COMMAND The COMMAND is briefly described in this introductory paragraph. If applicable, there may be some tips on how to use the command. If relevant, the command may be contrasted with other commands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Figure 2-1. How NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands Are Described (Page 2 of 2) If the main purpose of a command is to display information, such as a SHOW command, the third consideration lists the message numbers that indicate the results. For more information on these messages, refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER Messages Manual or NonStop NET/MASTER MS online help. Any other considerations relating to the command and its operands are listed as consecutive bullets.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ! ! The ! command immediately executes a previously executed command, without modifications. Entering the ! command with no operands executes the most recently executed command. The space between the exclamation point and the operand is optional. The PROFILE CMDSTACK command provides details about the history buffer, which contains previously executed commands. ! [ number | text ] number specifies an absolute command line number.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ! Examples 1. The two commands in the following example are synonymous; they execute the command in command line 1 of the history buffer: !1 ! 1 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ? ? The ? command displays a previously executed command in the roll-delete message display area of an OCS window. Entering the ? command with no operands displays the most recently executed command. The space between the question mark and the operand is optional. This command does not increment the command line number. The PROFILE CMDSTACK command provides details about the history buffer, which contains previously executed commands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ? Examples 1. The two commands in the following example are synonymous; they display the command in command line 5 of the history buffer: ?5 ? 5 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AT AT The AT command issues a command, a message, or a series of commands at a specified time of day. Contrast this command with the EVERY command, which issues a command, a message, or a series of commands at a specified time frequency.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AT hh specifies the number of hours from the current time at which to issue the command, message, or series of commands. This must be a number from 0 through 24. mm specifies the number of minutes from the current time at which to issue the command, message, or series of commands. This must be a number from 0 through 59. ss specifies the number of seconds from the current time at which to issue the command, message, or series of commands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AT If you also specify the ROUTE operand and the user specified in the ROUTE operand is not logged on when execution is attempted, the command executes under the control of the environment you specify with the KEEP operand. If you do not specify this operand and the environment from which the timer command is issued does not exist when NonStop NET/MASTER MS attempts to execute the command, then the command is not executed and is deleted from the timer queue.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AT If you specify ENV=PRI or ENV=CUR, when the timer command is purged the message is sent to either your OCS window or your current execution environment, respectively. If you specify KEEP=MON or KEEP=LOG and you are not logged on when the timer command is purged, the message is sent to the Background Monitor or the Background Logger, respectively.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AT LOG specifies that the command executes under the control of the Background Logger. The results of the command are directed to the activity log but are not sent to any terminals. TID=timer-id specifies a user-assigned identifier for the command. You can specify a timer ID in addition to the system-assigned timer number.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AT Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. The LIMIT operand has a default authority level of 1. The KEEP and ROUTE operands each have a default authority level of 2. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. When a timer command is executed, it is queued in the NonStop NET/MASTER MS timer queue.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AT Examples 1. Table 2-1 illustrates the time format for the AT command. Table 2-1. AT Command Example Time Formats Time Meaning 21:30:00 21:30 6:3 6:03 6:30 ::50 :30 :9 1:00 *+1:30 *+::30 Executes the command at 9:30 p.m. Executes the command at 9:30 p.m. Executes the command at 6:03 a.m. Executes the command at 6:03 a.m. Executes the command at 6:30 a.m. Executes the command at 12:00.50 a.m. Executes the command at 12:30 a.m. Executes the command at 12:09 a.m.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AUTOHOLD AUTOHOLD The AUTOHOLD command sets an OCS screen to either roll or hold roll-delete messages. By using this command you can stop messages from rolling past on your OCS screen before you can examine them, and you can control what happens when a full screen of messages fills the roll-delete message display area, if there are more messages in a group to display on the screen. (Messages are grouped to avoid individual I/O operations to the terminal.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AUTOHOLD If a group of messages fills more than one screen (with the result that later messages in the group overwrite earlier messages in the group), OCS stops roll-delete messages from scrolling past in the roll-delete message area if the roll-delete message delimiter bar is about to roll to the top of the OCS window. NOAUTO disables AUTOHOLD AUTO. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands AUTOHOLD Examples 1. The following example toggles between AUTOHOLD ON and AUTOHOLD OFF: AUTOHOLD 2. The following example turns autohold on: AUTO ON 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CANCEL CANCEL The CANCEL command logs off a user from NonStop NET/MASTER MS, disengages a terminal from a session with NonStop NET/MASTER MS, or closes your other NonStop NET/MASTER MS window. Entering the CANCEL command with no operands logs off the user entering the command from NonStop NET/MASTER MS. CANCEL [ U=user-id | TERM={ device-name | logical-name | * } | WINDOW ] U=user-id specifies the user ID of the user to log off from NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CANCEL logical-name specifies the logical name of the terminal. This is the name by which NonStop NET/MASTER MS recognizes the terminal. It corresponds to a physical name. A logical name must be from one through eight characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. A logical name cannot begin with a backslash (\) or a dollar sign ($). You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a logical name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CANCEL If a terminal was implicitly defined and opened, the CANCEL TERM command closes the terminal and deletes the terminal definition record. The TACL prompt is redisplayed. The SHOW TERM and SHOW TERMDEF commands do not display information about the terminal. For related information, see the CLOSTERM, OPENTERM, and TERMINAL commands. Examples 1. The following example logs off USER1 from NonStop NET/MASTER MS: CANCEL U=USER1 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CLEAR CLEAR The CLEAR command clears roll-delete messages in the current OCS window. This command is synonymous with the K command. Entering the CLEAR command with no operands clears all roll-delete messages currently displayed in the OCS window, but does not affect messages queued for display at the window from which the command is entered. In OCS, this command is assigned by default to the F8 function key.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CLEAR This command does not clear messages in the NRD message display area. (The size of the NRD message display area, therefore, can increase as a result of executing this command, as NRD messages are moved from the roll-delete message display area to the NRD message display area.) You can view messages that have scrolled past on your OCS window by using the recall buffer. For related information, see the PAGE command. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CLOSTERM CLOSTERM The CLOSTERM command closes the specified terminal(s) from use with NonStop NET/MASTER MS. A terminal must be defined to NonStop NET/MASTER MS and opened for use with NonStop NET/MASTER MS before you can use the CLOSTERM command. Terminals can be defined and opened either explicitly (by using the TERMINAL ADD and OPENTERM commands, respectively) or implicitly (by running the NNM utility program from TACL).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CLOSTERM logical-name specifies the logical name of the terminal. This is the name by which NonStop NET/MASTER MS recognizes the terminal. It corresponds to a physical name. A logical name must be from one through eight characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. A logical name cannot begin with a backslash (\) or a dollar sign ($). You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a logical name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CNM CNM The CNM command establishes and discontinues communication from NonStop NET/MASTER MS (as a Communication Network Management (CNM) application) with the SNAX System Services Control Point (SSCP). You must define the application using a Guardian utility such as the Communications Management Interface (CMI) or the Subsystem Control Facility (SCF) before it can be used by NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CNM Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. Only solicited messages can be received by NonStop NET/MASTER MS across the CNM interface: unsolicited messages are received using EMS. Refer to the Tandem SNAX/CNM Manual for more information on CNM. For related information, see the REQMS command. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CS- CS- The CS- command retrieves the oldest command in the history buffer and displays it in the OCS command input line. The PROFILE CMDSTACK command provides details about the history buffer, which contains previously executed commands. Repeating the CS- command results in continued rolling of commands in the history buffer. In OCS, this command is assigned by default to the F11 function key.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands CS+ CS+ The CS+ command retrieves the newest command in the history buffer and displays it in the OCS command input line. The PROFILE CMDSTACK command provides details about the history buffer, which contains previously executed commands. Repeating the CS+ command results in continued rolling of commands in the history buffer. In OCS, this command is assigned by default to the F10 function key.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG BREAKPOINT DEBUG BREAKPOINT The DEBUG BREAKPOINT command sets a breakpoint in an NCL process at the specified code position. When NCL encounters a breakpoint, it suspends execution of the NCL process and displays a message in the roll-delete message display area of your OCS window. The default message reports the number of the statement at which execution is suspended, as part of the data.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG BREAKPOINT If you do not specify the name of a particular error handler, NCL suspends execution just before the NCL process executes the first statement of the first error handler raised. error-handler specifies the name of a particular error handler, such as ERROR, ARITH_ERROR, or RANGE_ERROR. If an error is raised, NCL suspends execution just before the NCL process executes the first statement of the particular error handler (the ON core statement).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG BREAKPOINT EXTERNAL sets a breakpoint at the entry to any procedure or function resolved by an external call. NCL suspends execution just before the NCL process executes the first statement of the procedure or function. This is after all variables are initialized. The first statement of a procedure is PROCEDURE. The first statement of a function is FUNCTION.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG BREAKPOINT stmt-position provides either the complete statement specification or a specific statement number at which to set the breakpoint. file-name specifies the name of a source file on which to place the breakpoint. { proc-name | func-name } specifies the name of a procedure or function on which to place the breakpoint.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG BREAKPOINT { VAR | VBL }=variable-name specifies a variable name. NCL sets a breakpoint on access to a variable. Note You must omit the leading ampersand (&) from the variable name. You cannot place a breakpoint on a global variable, a system variable, or a mapped data object (MDO) variable. When a variable breakpoint is triggered, a message is sent and suspension occurs at the next loss of control.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG BREAKPOINT Each breakpoint set in an NCL process is allocated a unique number, starting from 1 and incrementing by 1 through to the maximum number of breakpoints you can set in a single debug session: 65535. A breakpoint number is not reallocated if a breakpoint is later cleared. If you place a breakpoint on all or any procedures or functions, or all or any error handler calls, NCL does not require the target NCL process to be a privately loaded copy.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG BREAKPOINT 2. The following example is the abbreviated form of the preceding example: DEB B PROC=ENTRY PROC=EXIT PROC=EXT 3. The following example sets a breakpoint at the general error handler, ERROR, and three specific error handlers: DEB B ID=1234 E E=TYPE_ERROR E=ARITH_ERROR E=LABEL_ERROR 4. The following example sets a breakpoint at statement 45 in the current procedure or function: DEB B S=45 5.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG CLEAR DEBUG CLEAR The DEBUG CLEAR command clears one or more breakpoint(s) associated with an NCL process. DEBUG CLEAR [ ID=ncl-id ] clear-spec clear-spec: BREAKPOINT=ALL BREAKPOINT=bp-number [ [ BREAKPOINT=bp-number ] … ] ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG CLEAR Examples 1. The following example clears all breakpoints in the current NCL process. The following screen displays the results. DEBUG CLEAR BREAKPOINT=ALL (09:01) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG NNM1060 PROCEDURE WORDS NCLID 1536 PAUSED DEBUG START ID=1536 NNM1901 NCL 001536 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001536 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG DISPLAY DEBUG DISPLAY The DEBUG DISPLAY command displays information about one or more variables in the currently active set of variables. Entering the DEBUG DISPLAY command with no operands lists the current share list. This lists the share settings in the current CONTROL environment, the share settings supplied by the caller, and the share settings in the definition of the current procedure or function.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG DISPLAY { VAR | VBL }=[ variable-name ][ * ] specifies a variable name. NCL displays the value of this variable. You can specify a generic variable. Note You must omit the leading ampersand (&) from the variable name. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG DISPLAY Examples 1. The following example displays all variables in normal format in the current NCL process. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG DISPLAY 2. The following example displays all variables in binary (hexadecimal) format in the current NCL process. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG HOLD DEBUG HOLD The DEBUG HOLD command suspends execution of the specified NCL process(es). DEBUG HOLD [ ID=ncl-id [ [ ID=ncl-id ] … ] | ALL ] ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process. If you do not specify an NCL ID, the default NCL ID is assumed (see the DEBUG START command for further information about the default NCL ID). ALL specifies all NCL processes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS The DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS command lists the breakpoints in an NCL process. Entering the DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS command with no operands lists the breakpoints in the current NCL process. DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS [ ID=ncl-id ] ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS Examples 1. The following example lists the breakpoints in the current NCL process. The following screen displays the results. DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS (08:59) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG NNM1060 PROCEDURE WORDS NCLID 1536 PAUSED DEBUG START ID=1536 NNM1901 NCL 001536 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001536 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG LOAD DEBUG LOAD The DEBUG LOAD command loads the specified file—an external NCL procedure or function—before execution by an NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG LOAD Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. If the file contains fatal compilation errors, it is not loaded. NCL displays the errors in the roll-delete message display area. For related information, see the other DEBUG commands and the EXEC, FLUSH, SHOW NCL, and START commands. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG LOG DEBUG LOG The DEBUG LOG command starts the writing of debug messages to the activity log for the specified NCL process(es). When you start a debug session, by default debug messages are sent only to your OCS window. You can use the DEBUG LOG command to start writing debug messages to the activity log and the DEBUG NOLOG command to stop writing.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG MODIFY DEBUG MODIFY The DEBUG MODIFY command modifies the value of a variable in an NCL process. The variable must exist before you attempt to modify it. You cannot use this command to create variables. You can use this command to modify simple, stem, compound, nested, MDO, global, and some system variables (those to which you can assign values—these are &SYS.LOOPCTL, &SYS.RETCODE, &SYS.PANEL.FLD, and &SYS.PANEL.SKIP).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG MODIFY { VAR | VBL }=variable-name specifies a variable name. NCL modifies the specified variable. Note You must omit the leading ampersand (&) from the variable name. VAL[ =value ] specifies the value of the specified variable. Omitting a value (by specifying VAL without [ =value ]) assigns a null value to the variable. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG NOLOG DEBUG NOLOG The DEBUG NOLOG command stops the writing of debug messages to the activity log for the specified NCL process(es). When you start a debug session, by default debug messages are sent only to your OCS window. You can use the DEBUG LOG command to start writing debug messages to the activity log and the DEBUG NOLOG command to stop writing.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG RESUME DEBUG RESUME The DEBUG RESUME command resumes execution of the currently suspended NCL process(es). An NCL process is suspended when NCL encounters a breakpoint. Execution continues until either the next breakpoint is encountered or the NCL process terminates. DEBUG RESUME [ ID=ncl-id [ [ ID=ncl-id ] … ] | ALL ] ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG RESUME Examples 1. The following example resumes execution of the current NCL process. The following screen displays the results. DEBUG RESUME (09:54) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG |NM1060 PROCEDURE WORDS NCLID 1606 PAUSED DEBUG START ID=1606 NNM1901 NCL 001606 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001606 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SET DEBUG SET The DEBUG SET command sets the current NCL process. DEBUG SET ID=ncl-id ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process. If you enter an invalid NCL ID, the DEBUG SET command is ignored. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SET Examples 1. The following example sets the NCL process with the NCL ID of 1620 as the current NCL process. The following screen displays the results. DEBUG SET ID=1620 (10:00) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------DEBUG START NNM1949 NEW NCL WILL BE SUSPENDED IN CURRENT ENVIRONMENT START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG NNM1901 NCL 001620 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001620 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SOURCE DEBUG SOURCE The DEBUG SOURCE command displays the decompiled source statements of a suspended NCL process. Comments are not displayed (they are not compiled and, therefore, not decompiled). Statements that span multiple lines in the source code are shown as a single statement.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SOURCE DETAIL specifies the detail in which to display each decompiled line of text. YES displays opcodes (one per line) for each line of decompiled text. (Opcodes are NCL source codes in an executable form.) Note Use DETAIL=YES only when directed by Tandem support personnel. NO displays each line of decompiled text without opcodes. NESTED specifies whether to display decompiled text from nested procedures or functions, if present.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SOURCE If you specify a leading file name only, with no intermediate procedures or functions, decompilation occurs for the entire file. This does not include nested procedures or functions. stmt-position provides either the complete statement specification or a specific statement number at which to display the decompiled text. file-name specifies the name of a source file for which to display the decompiled text.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SOURCE SCOPE specifies a nesting level. NCL displays decompiled text at the specified nesting level. You should use this operand with a single statement number only, not a complete statement position specification. If you use this operand with a complete statement position specification, the specification is ignored. 0 specifies the current nesting level. nesting-level specifies the nesting level of a caller procedure or function.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SOURCE Examples 1. The following example displays the statement at which execution is currently suspended. The following screen displays the results. DEBUG SOURCE (14:45) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG NNM1060 PROCEDURE WORDS NCLID 1066 PAUSED DEBUG START ID=1066 NNM1901 NCL 001066 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001066 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SOURCE 2. The following example displays a specific statement in a nested function. The following screen displays the results. DEBUG SOURCE LOC=WORDS.TOP_TITLE.1 (14:57) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG NNM1060 PROCEDURE WORDS NCLID 1076 PAUSED DEBUG START ID=1076 NNM1901 NCL 001076 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001076 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG SOURCE 4. The following screen displays multiple statements in a forward direction from the current statement: DEBUG SOURCE FW=10 (15:20) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG NNM1060 PROCEDURE WORDS NCLID 1094 PAUSED DEBUG START ID=1094 NNM1901 NCL 001094 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001094 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG START DEBUG START The DEBUG START command starts a single debug session. This must be the first DEBUG command you enter; it initiates the session. No other DEBUG commands can be successfully executed unless you start a debug session first. Contrast this command with the DEBUG STOP command, which stops a debug session. Before you can begin debugging, you need to set the current NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG START ALL specifies both the current execution environment and its dependent processing environment(s). CURRENT specifies the current execution environment. DEPENDENT specifies the dependent processing environment(s) of the current execution environment. PROCS specifies the type of NCL procedure to debug. ALLPROCS specifies new NCL procedures and current NCL processes. All newly invoked NCL procedures will be debugged. All currently executing NCL processes are debugged.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG START logical-name specifies the logical name of the terminal. This is the name by which NonStop NET/MASTER MS recognizes the terminal. It corresponds to a physical name. A logical name must be from one through eight characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. A logical name cannot begin with a backslash (\) or a dollar sign ($). USER=user-id specifies a user ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG START Examples 1. The following example starts a debug session for a single NCL process: DEBUG START ID=1234 2. The following example starts a debug session for currently executing NCL processes: DEBUG START PROCS=CURRPROCS 3. The following example starts a debug session for newly executed NCL processes: DEBUG START 4. The following example starts a debug session for both currently executing and newly executed NCL processes: DEBUG START PROCS=ALLPROCS 5.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STEP DEBUG STEP The DEBUG STEP command resumes execution of the specified NCL process by single or multiple statements. A single step is performed if you do not supply a step specification. A single step means executing the next statement in the NCL process. DEBUG STEP [ ID=ncl-id ] [ NEXT={ IN | OUT | number } ] ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STEP Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. For related information, see the other DEBUG commands and the EXEC, FLUSH, SHOW NCL, and START commands. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STEP 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STEP 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STEP 4.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STEP 5. The following screen shows how the output from the DEBUG STEP command is affected by DEBUG SOURCE ON. For further information, see DEBUG SOURCE command. (10:48) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------DEBUG START NNM1949 NEW NCL WILL BE SUSPENDED IN THE TARGET ENVIRONMENT START ZEX0903N NNM1901 NCL 001018 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001018 SUSPENDED AT ZEX0903N.1 LINE 1 DEBUG STEP NNM1902 NCL 001018 SUSPENDED AT ZEX0903N.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STOP DEBUG STOP The DEBUG STOP command stops a debug session. Contrast this command with the DEBUG START command, which starts a debug session. DEBUG STOP [ ID=ncl-id [ [ ID=ncl-id ] … ] | ALL ] [ TYPE={ CONTINUE | SUSPEND | TERMINATE } ] ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG STOP Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. For related information, see the other DEBUG commands and the EXEC, FLUSH, SHOW NCL, and START commands. Examples 1. The following example stops a debug session for the current NCL process: DEBUG STOP 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG TRACE DEBUG TRACE The DEBUG TRACE command obtains stack trace information from the targeted NCL process. Each message line displayed by this command represents a nesting level resulting from calling a procedure or function, a subroutine, or an error handler, and displays information about that nesting level. DEBUG TRACE [ ID=ncl-id ] [ ARGS={ YES | NO } ] ID=ncl-id specifies the NCL process identifier (NCL ID) of an NCL process and sets the current NCL process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG TRACE For related information, see the other DEBUG commands and the EXEC, FLUSH, SHOW NCL, and START commands. Examples 1. The following example displays the results from the DEBUG TRACE ARGS=NO command. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands DEBUG TRACE 2. The following example displays the results from the DEBUG TRACE ARGS=YES command. The following screen displays the results. DEBUG TRACE ARGS=YES (10:25) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START WORDS THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG NNM1060 PROCEDURE WORDS NCLID 1623 PAUSED DEBUG START ID=1623 NNM1901 NCL 001623 DEBUG SESSION INITIATED NNM1902 NCL 001623 SUSPENDED AT WORDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EDIT EDIT The EDIT command invokes Edit Services. You can use Edit Services to create and modify NCL procedures and panel description files. Entering the EDIT command with no operands is an alternative method of invoking Edit Services; that is, it allows you to invoke Edit Services from OCS rather than the NonStop NET/MASTER MS primary menu. After invoking Edit Services, the Edit Services selection list screen is displayed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EDIT Files created in Edit Services are stored by default in your user procedure library. If your user procedure library is not defined, Edit Services stores files by default in the customized procedure library specified by the PARAM NCLCUSTSRC command. If the customized procedure is not defined, Edit Services stores files by default in the distribution procedure library specified by the PARAM NCLDISTSRC command. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EMSCOLL EMSCOLL The EMSCOLL command starts or stops the recording of events from NonStop NET/MASTER MS to the Event Management Service (EMS) event collector. EMSCOLL { START | STOP } START starts the recording of events from NonStop NET/MASTER MS to the EMS event collector. NonStop NET/MASTER MS establishes communication with the configured collector. Events from NonStop NET/MASTER MS are logged to the configured collector until the EMSCOLL STOP command is issued.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EMSCOLL Examples 1. The following example establishes communication between NonStop NET/MASTER MS and the configured EMS event collector: EMSCOLL START 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EMSDIST EMSDIST The EMSDIST command starts or stops the receiving of events from an Event Management Service (EMS) event distributor to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. EMSDIST { START | STOP } START starts the receiving of events from an EMS event distributor. As they arrive, events are passed to the EMSPROC system-level NCL procedure (if EMSPROC is available and active). A message is sent to all monitor-class users, indicating that the event distributor interface is active.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ENTER ENTER The ENTER command defines the ENTER key. You can use this command to replace the normal ENTER key with an ENTER key of your choice. You can define the normal ENTER key only if you have first defined another key to function as an ENTER key, by using either the FK or PF command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ENTER IMM defines the key as an immediate function key with no associated text. Defining the key in this way does not change its default definition. When you press the key, any command in the OCS command input line is executed. IMM,text defines the key, explicitly, as an immediate function key with the associated text. The text should correspond to the name of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ENTER Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. If you position the cursor on a NRD message and press the ENTER key, the NRD message is hidden. Any function associated with the ENTER key is not performed. You can assign concatenated commands to the ENTER key.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EQUATE EQUATE The EQUATE command assigns a text value to a symbol. You can assign a lengthy command string to a single character or a sequence of characters by using this command. This can prove useful when you are typing lengthy commands, such as ROUTE commands. An installation can define global equates that become the defaults for all users. An individual user can define local equates while in OCS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EQUATE A local equate is a symbol created by an individual user using this command after NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup. A local equate is effective only for a specific user and only in the OCS window from which this command is executed. When you exit from OCS, local equates are lost. When you display all available equates using the SHOW EQUATES command, this type of equate is displayed with type LOCL.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EQUATE Examples 1. The commands in the following example, when executed from the INIT NCL procedure, create global equates with type GLBL. If these commands are executed from OCS, they create local equates with type LOCL. a. The following example creates an equate to start FUP: EQUATE FUP PROGRUN FILE=$SYSTEM.SYS00.FUP b. The following example creates an equate to start PSMAIL: PROGRUN FILE=PATHCOM PARAMS="$TRPM;RUN M6530" 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EVERY EVERY The EVERY command issues a command, a message, or a series of commands at a specified time frequency. Contrast this command with the AT command, which issues a command, a message, or a series of commands at a specified time of day.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EVERY CUR executes the command in the current execution environment. Specifying ENV=CUR allows an NCL process to issue a timer command using the INTCMD verb. After the timer command executes, the NCL process can obtain the results using the INTREAD verb. If you do not specify the KEEP operand, then the environment from which the timer command is issued must exist for the timer command to execute. (The INTCLEAR verb can dismantle a dependent processing environment.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EVERY LIMIT limits the number of times the command, message, or series of commands is to execute. This allows a timer command to execute periodically (at the specified interval) for a specified number of times. execution-limit specifies an execution limit. The timer command executes the number of times you specify. You can specify a value from 0 through 999. You must specify an execution limit of 1 to execute the command, message, or series of commands once only.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EVERY ROUTE sends the command for execution under the control of a (target) real user or virtual user. This operand suppresses the automatic deletion of the command that occurs when a certain user is not logged on. If a user is not logged on when execution is attempted, the command is not executed but is retained for execution at the same time on the following day.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EVERY [ CMD= ]command-text specifies the NonStop NET/MASTER MS command(s) to execute. This operand is a positional qualifier and must be the last operand in the command line. It must be followed immediately by the NonStop NET/MASTER MS command(s) you want to execute. MSG=message-text specifies the message text to send to the processing environment in which the timer command is running. This operand is a positional qualifier and must be the last operand in the command line.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EVERY Examples 1. Table 2-2 illustrates the time format for this command. Table 2-2. EVERY Command Example Time Formats Time Meaning 21:30:00 21:30 6:3 6:03 6:30 ::50 :30 :9 1:00 Executes the command every 21 hours and 30 minutes. Executes the command every 21 hours and 30 minutes. Executes the command every 6 hours and 3 minutes. Executes the command every 6 hours and 3 minutes. Executes the command every 6 hours and 30 minutes. Executes the command every 50 seconds.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EXEC EXEC The EXEC command invokes and schedules an NCL procedure for serial execution. When an NCL procedure is scheduled for execution, it executes serially with respect to any other NCL procedures invoked by the EXEC command in the same environment. If another serial NCL process is already running, the newly scheduled NCL process is queued. Contrast this command with the START command, which invokes an NCL procedure for immediate, asynchronous execution.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands EXEC Upon execution, the system variable &SYS.PARMCNT holds the number of parameters created, and the system variable &SYS.ALLPARMS holds the parameters in a single string. The system variable &SYS.NCLID holds the NCL process identifier of the NCL process. For related information, see the FLUSH, GO, SHOW NCL, and START commands. Examples 1. The following example invokes three NCL procedures: PROC1, PROC2, and PROC3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FC FC The FC command displays a previously executed command in the OCS command input line for modification and reexecution. Entering the FC command with no operands displays the most recently executed command. The PROFILE CMDSTACK command provides details about the history buffer, which contains previously executed commands. FC [ number | text ] number specifies an absolute command line number.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK FK The FK command defines function keys for both Tandem 6530 or compatible terminals and IBM 3270 or compatible terminals, and displays function key definitions. You can assign a lengthy command string to a function key using this command. This can prove useful when you are typing lengthy commands, such as ROUTE commands. An installation can define global function keys that become the defaults for all users.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK key-name specifies the name of the function key to define. You can define the following function keys on a Tandem 6530 or compatible terminal: F1 … F16 ENTER ROLLUP ROLLDOWN PAGEUP PAGEDOWN INSLINE SF1 … SF16 SENTER SROLLUP SROLLDOWN SPAGEUP SPAGEDOWN DELLINE You can define the following function keys on an IBM 3270 or compatible terminal: PF01 … PF24 key-type specifies the type of definition to apply to the function key.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays the key string in the OCS command input line. You can then modify the key string or add text to it. You can then execute the command or NCL procedure by pressing the ENTER key. When you press the conversational function key and the associated key string is SPLIT, SWAP, or a recall buffer keyword, NonStop NET/MASTER MS performs the function associated with the keyword. IMM defines the function key as an immediate function key.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK When you press a suffix function key and the associated key string is SPLIT, SWAP, or a recall buffer keyword, NonStop NET/MASTER MS performs the function associated with the keyword. key-string specifies a string to associate with a function key. command specifies the name of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS command. The key type determines how the command is processed and executed. ncl-procedure specifies the name of an NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK HALFDOWN assigns to the function key the function of moving half a screen forward in the recall buffer, showing newer messages. (The size of the screen may vary: therefore, the number of lines cannot be expressed as a constant number.) HALFUP assigns to the function key the function of moving half a screen backward in the recall buffer, showing older messages. (The size of the screen may vary: therefore, the number of lines cannot be expressed as a constant number.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK RECALLEND assigns to the function key the function of exiting from the recall buffer and returning to normal scrolling mode. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. The names of the function keys indicate the type of terminal.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK You can assign concatenated commands to a function key. To do so, you must use two semicolons (;;), rather than one semicolon, between commands. When you are defining a prefix function key, you should end the text with a plus sign (+) if you want a blank when the text is prefixed to the text in the OCS command input line.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK 3. The following example defines function keys for 3270 and compatible terminals: CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD 4.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK 5.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FK 7. The following example defines a suffix function key, preceding the text with a plus sign (+): FK SF5 SUFF,+FROM NMTJN Assume that you type the following text in the OCS command input line: MSG ALL SHUTDOWN in 10 minutes. Please log off now. When you press the SF5 function key, NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays the message in the roll-delete message area as the following message lines show: MSG ALL SHUTDOWN in 10 minutes. Please log off now.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FLUSH FLUSH The FLUSH command terminates an NCL process and any NCL processes executing in its dependent processing environment. This command terminates execution immediately and unconditionally. You can use this command to terminate an executing, paused, queued, or delayed NCL process. The command is useful when you are developing NCL procedures and debugging NCL processes; you can use it to terminate an old version of an NCL process before you execute the new version.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FLUSH For related information, see the EXEC, GO, SHOW NCL, SHOW PAUSE, and START commands. Examples 1. The following example terminates an NCL process. There must be only one NCL process executing in your current execution environment to execute this command. FLUSH 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FSTOP FSTOP The FSTOP command forces an immediate and complete orderly shutdown of NonStop NET/MASTER MS, regardless of its operating state or the functions currently being performed. The processes stopped are the NonStop NET/MASTER MS control process (NCP) and all other processes in the NonStop NET/MASTER MS system.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands FSTOP Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands GO GO The GO command resumes execution of a paused NCL process, suspended using either the NCL PAUSE or DELAY verb. You cannot use this command to satisfy an outstanding INTREAD verb issued by an NCL process. To do this, use the INTQ command instead. GO [ ID=ncl-id ] [ parameter … ] ID=ncl-id identifies the paused NCL process. You must specify this operand if more than one NCL process (excluding MSGPROC) is executing in your primary processing environment.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands GO For related information, see the EXEC, FLUSH, INTQ, SHOW NCL, SHOW PAUSE, and START commands. Examples 1. The following example resumes execution of an NCL process. There must be only one NCL process executing in your region to execute this command. GO 2. The following example resumes execution of the NCL process with the NCL ID of 68: GO ID=68 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HISTORY HISTORY The HISTORY command displays the most recently executed command lines. You can use this command to display commands from the history buffer associated with an OCS window. Entering the HISTORY command with no operands displays up to the last 10 command lines. The PROFILE CMDSTACK command provides details about the history buffer, which contains previously executed commands. HISTORY [ number ] number specifies the number of command lines to display.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HLPMAINT HLPMAINT The HLPMAINT command transfers command help information between the NonStop NET/MASTER MS command help database and an edit file. The NonStop NET/MASTER MS command help database contains help information for NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands. Command help information is displayed when you request help for a command while using NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HLPMAINT HLPMAINT { EXPORT [ REPLACE={ YES | NO } ] | IMPORT } FILE=file-name KEY=help-string [ CULTURE=cultural-indicator ] EXPORT specifies that information is to be transferred from the NonStop NET/MASTER MS command help database to an edit file: help information is exported from the database. Note The export operation fails if you have not opened the NonStop NET/MASTER MS command help database as a UDB pair, or the UDB pair does not have a UDB identifier of ZHLPDB.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HLPMAINT YES specifies that the export operation is to replace an existing edit file. If the edit file exists, the file is purged, a new edit file is created, and the export operation transfers information to the new edit file. NO specifies that the export operation is not to replace an existing edit file. If the edit file exists, the export operation fails.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HLPMAINT FILE=file-name specifies the name of the command help edit file to which to export information and from which to import information. You can specify a file name in the form: [ [ [ \sys. ]$volume. ]subvolume. ]file-name After an export operation, the edit file contains the help information for the command specified by the KEY operand. For an import operation, the edit file must contain the help information of only one command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HLPMAINT In an export operation, the cultural indicator (combined with a help string) identifies the help information to export. You would use a cultural indicator if the NonStop NET/MASTER MS command help database contains help information for the same command in more than one language. For example, the database may have help information for the same command in both U.S. English and German.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HLPMAINT Example 1. The following example exports help information describing the TIME command to the MYFILE edit file: HLPMAINT EXPORT KEY=TIME FILE=MYFILE If MYFILE already exists, the export operation fails. 2. The following example exports help information describing the SHOW USERS command to the MYFILE edit file: HLPMAINT EXPORT REPLACE=YES KEY=“SH USERS” FILE=MYFILE If MYFILE already exists, it is replaced. 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands HLPMAINT 8. The following example imports help information, which describes the ! command, from the MYFILE edit file to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS command help database: HLPMAINT IMPORT KEY=“!” FILE=MYFILE 9.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands INTQ INTQ The INTQ command passes data to the request queue or response queue of an NCL process. This command allows an OCS user or an NCL process to communicate with other NCL processes by passing data to the target NCL process. The target NCL process must be executing when you issue this command and must use the INTREAD verb to read the data.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands INTQ DATA precedes the parameter(s) to pass to the NCL process. parameter specifies a parameter to pass to the NCL process. You must pass the parameters in the order the NCL process expects to receive them. Parameters are assigned, in order, to the parameter variables &1 through &n. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. The ID operand has a default authority level of 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands INTQ Examples 1. The following example sends two parameters to the dependent request queue of an NCL process with the NCL ID of 208: INTQ ID=208 DATA=MONDAY JOB1 The target NCL process can issue either of the following two statements to read the data from the queue: INTREAD TYPE=REQ INTREAD TYPE=ANY 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ISR ISR The ISR command changes an Inter-System Routing (ISR) configuration. ISR is the NonStop NET/MASTER MS service that enables, disables, and controls message flow between multiple NonStop NET/MASTER MS and SOLVE management services systems.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ISR flow-class specifies a specific flow class. { CNM | NEWS } specifies CNM event messages only. NEWS is a synonym for CNM. { EMS | PPO } specifies EMS event messages only. PPO is a synonym for EMS. DISABLE disables ISR conversation(s) specified by flow class and link class. If you omit the flow class specification, all flow classes are disabled. If you omit the link class specification, all the flow classes are disabled for all links. ALL specifies all flow classes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ISR { EMS | PPO } specifies EMS event messages only. PPO is a synonym for EMS. RESET resets the attributes of all flow classes of the links specified by the link class to their default values. You cannot specify a particular flow class using this operand. It resets all flow classes. If you omit the link class specification, all the flow classes of all links are reset. The SOLICIT and UNSOLICIT operands are invalid with this operand.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ISR NO disallows solicited event message flow. This prevents your system from sending solicited ISR event messages to a remote system and prevents your system from receiving ISR event messages from a remote system. UNSOLICIT specifies whether and how to allow or disallow unsolicited event message flow. YES allows unsolicited event message flow in both directions, to and from your local system.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ISR The default ISR definition enables all flow classes for all links, allows solicited message flow, and disallows unsolicited message flow. The default ISR definition is: ISR ENABLE=ALL ALL SOLICIT=YES UNSOLICIT=NO You can change the default ISR definition by including an alternative command in the INIT NCL procedure executed during NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup using the ISR ALTER DEFAULT command. Once this is done, new links are assigned the new default value.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ISR 6. The following example shows two commands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ISR 16. The following example alters the EMS and CNM message flows for the specified link, LINK1, allowing solicited messages and unsolicited messages: ISR ALTER=(EMS,CNM) LINK=LINK1 SOLICIT=YES UNSOLICIT=YES 17. The following example restores the default ISR definition and all flow classes for all links to the original ISR definition: ISR RESET 18.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands K K The K command clears roll-delete messages in the current OCS window. This command is synonymous with the CLEAR command. See the CLEAR command for more information.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER LBANNER The LBANNER command sets or erases a NonStop NET/MASTER MS logon screen LBANNER banner line. The logon screen has sixteen lines available to display banner lines: collectively, the individual banner lines are called the logon screen banner. After you enter the command, you must log off NonStop NET/MASTER MS and redisplay the logon screen to check that a banner line is correctly set or erased.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER banner-text LBANNER specifies the text to display at the specified line on the logon screen. You can specify a logon screen banner line from 1 through 79 characters long and can include any displayable characters. The command is rejected if the maximum length is exceeded. Alphabetic characters are case-sensitive. You must use single quotes (‘ ’) or double quotes (“ ”) to surround the text. You must position the text where you want to display it.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER This is Line 1................................................................. .................................................................This is Line 2 .................................This is Line 3................................
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DEFINE LBANNER LINK DEFINE The LINK DEFINE command defines an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) link definition record and stores it in global memory. INMC is the NonStop NET/MASTER MS service that allows multiple NonStop NET/MASTER MS and SOLVE management services systems to be connected.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DEFINE { COLOR | COLOUR }=color-option specifies the color used to display all messages originating from a link. LBANNER If you are authorized to use Remote Operator Control (ROC), you can use the COLOR operand of the SIGNON link-name command when you log on to a remote system to specify a different color in which to display messages originating from the remote system.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DEFINE You do not have to define the records that make up a complete link definition record in any particular order. In addition, you can define records for future use. The records are not checked for consistency until you start the link. LBANNER This command does not affect the current operational status of the link to which it applies. All active links remain active, all stopped links remain stopped, and all links that are pending active remain pending active.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DEFINE 5. LBANNER Note The following example defines an X.25 link between a local Tandem system running NonStop NET/MASTER MS (\LOC1) and a remote Tandem system running NonStop NET/MASTER MS (\RMT1). It defines two units under each session definition record. For convenience, the components that create the hierarchical relationship among the link definition record, the session definition record, and the unit definition records are underlined.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DEFINE 6. LBANNER Note 2–138 The following example defines a process-to-process (PTP) link between two instances of NonStop NET/MASTER MS on one Tandem system: ANNM and BNNM. It defines two units under each session definition record. For convenience, the components that create the hierarchical relationship among the link definition record, the session definition record, and the unit definition records are underlined. \LOC1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DEFINE 7. Note The following example defines an SNA link between two Tandem systems: \TAN1 and \TAN2. It defines two units under each session definition record. For convenience, the components that create the hierarchical relationship among the link definition record, the session definition record, and the unit definition records are underlined.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DEFINE 8. LBANNER Note 2–140 The following example defines an SNA link for a local Tandem system running NonStop NET/MASTER MS, linked to a remote IBM system running the SOLVE management services. For convenience, the components that create the hierarchical relationship among the link definition record, the session definition record, and the unit definition records are underlined.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK DELETE LINK DELETE The LINK DELETE command deletes an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) link definition record from global memory. LINK DELETE=link-name LBANNER link-name specifies the name of the link to the remote system. The link name is defined in the LINK DEFINE command. The link name can be from 1 through 12 characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK RESET LINK RESET The LINK RESET command stops and resets an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) link. You can restart the link using the LINK START command. LBANNER When you next restart the link NonStop NET/MASTER MS reobtains the records that make up the complete link definition from global memory: NonStop NET/MASTER MS does not use the complete link definition that was current when you stopped the link.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK START LINK START The LINK START command starts an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) link. You must completely describe a link, using the LINK DEFINE, SESSION DEFINE, and UNIT DEFINE commands, before starting the link. You can change the description of any definition record created using these commands at any time before starting the link. LBANNER The LINK START command does not alter the records that make up the complete link definition in global memory.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LINK STOP LINK STOP The LINK STOP command stops an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) link. You can restart the link using the LINK START command. LBANNER When you next restart the link, NonStop NET/MASTER MS does not reobtain the records that make up the complete link definition from global memory: NonStop NET/MASTER MS uses the complete link definition that was current when you stopped the link.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LIST LIST The LIST command lists the contents of a file: usually, an NCL procedure. Entered LBANNER from OCS, the listing is displayed in the roll-delete message area of your OCS window. Although the main use of this command is to enable you to list the contents of an NCL procedure, you can use it to list the contents of any edit file (with a file code of 101).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LIST Examples 1. The following example lists the contents of the NCL procedure, INITCMD. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER LIST INITCMD 2–146 (10:00) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------LIST INITCMD NNM1018 initcmd: PROCEDURE NNM1018 CONTROL NOCMD NNM1018 IF &SYS.OCS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LIST 2. The following example lists the contents of the INIT NCL procedure. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER LIST INIT ID=\SYS1.$DATA9.ZNNMNDS (08:21) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------LIST INIT ID=\SYS1.$DATA9.ZNNMNDS NNM1018 /*/ NNM1018 /* NonStop NET/MASTER - T6581D30 - 31OCT94 NNM1018 /* (C)1993, COPYRIGHT 1990-1993 SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENTS INTERNATIONAL PTY. LTD.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LOG LOG The LOG command logs a message to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS activity log. LBANNER The activity log is a chronological record of all important activity. The LOGPROC NCL procedure (if active) intercepts and processes messages sent to the log. You can browse through the activity log online using Log Browse. Entering the LOG command with no operands logs the time, terminal, and user ID of the person entering the command without logging a message.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LOG Examples 1. The following example logs the time, your terminal name, and your user ID to the activity log. The following screen displays the results in normal format. LBANNER LOG 08:24:01 --- Log LOGFILE1 (\SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ILGFILE1) for 22-JUN-1994 ---COMMAND ==> DISPLAY >> 08:23:36 RANGE >> 08:23:46 TIME TEXT 08:23:36 NNM0375 (ROLL=0......) SCREEN ROLL DELAY TIME IS 0. 08:23:36 NNM0366 (MONMSG=YES..) MONITOR CLASS MESSAGES WILL BE DISPLAYED.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LOG 2. The following example logs a message to the activity log. The following screen displays the results in full format. LBANNER LOG REPORT TERMINAL FAILURE $ATP2.#TERM2 2–150 08:56:01 -- -Log LOGFILE1 (\SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ILGFILE1) for 07-JUN-1994 ---COMMAND ==> DISPLAY >> 08:54:04 RANGE >> 08:54:04 TIME TERM USER TEXT 08:54:04 #1520653 NMTJN NNM1500 ===> LOG ENTRY: REPORT TERMINAL FAILURE $ ATP2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LOGSWAP LBANNER LOGSWAP The LOGSWAP command stops logging to the current activity log file and opens another activity log file in the group of activity log files. (The next available log file may be the same as the current activity log file if only one file is available in the group.) The activity log is a chronological record of all important activity. The LOGPROC NCL procedure (if active) intercepts and processes messages sent to the log.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LOGSWAP When NonStop NET/MASTER MS attempts to automatically swap to the next log file in the group and the next log file is: LBANNER A new file, that is, a file that has not been used since NonStop NET/MASTER MS has started, NonStop NET/MASTER MS disregards the setting of SYSPARMS LOGWRAP and automatically swaps to the new file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LTITLE LTITLE The LTITLE command sets or erases the NonStop NET/MASTER MS logon screen title. The second line of the logon screen is available to display the logon screen title. After you enter the command, you must log off NonStop NET/MASTER MS and redisplay the logon screen to check that the logon screen title is correctly set or erased.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LTITLE Examples 1. The following example sets the title at the top of the NonStop NET/MASTER MS logon screen. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands MAXUSERS MAXUSERS The MAXUSERS command limits the number of interactive users that can log on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS concurrently. During a period of critical system load, this command can be helpful by temporarily limiting the maximum number of concurrent users. Entering the MAXUSERS command with no operands displays the number of current users and the maximum limit.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands MSG MSG The MSG command sends a message to one or more OCS operators or terminals. You can control whether you receive messages from this command by using the PROFILE command. If you do not want to receive messages, specify PROFILE MSG=NO or PROFILE UNSOL=NO. LBANNER MSG { user-id | device-name | logical-name | ALL } message-text user-id specifies the user ID of the user to whom to send the message. You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a user ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands MSG You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a logical name. In this context, the asterisk is a wild card. ALL sends the message to all OCS operators and all dependent processing environments profiled to receive the message. LBANNER message-text specifies the message to send. If the command is entered from a command input line, the maximum length of message-text is determined by the length of the command input line.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLCHECK NCLCHECK The NCLCHECK command checks the syntax of an NCL procedure without executing LBANNER it. The number of errors and warnings are displayed after the syntax check is finished. (An error is a mistake that causes an NCL procedure to stop executing. A warning is a mistake that does not stop an NCL procedure from executing, but may cause it to execute unpredictably.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLCOMP NCLCOMP The NCLCOMP command either compiles an NCL procedure or panel description file and writes the object to an object file, or deletes an object from an object file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLCOMP PANEL specifies the name of a panel description file or the fully qualified name of a panel description file. LBANNER panel-desc-file specifies the name of a panel description file. If you are writing to the object file, the panel library search path is searched to locate the panel description file. If you are deleting from the object file, the object file is searched to locate the object of the panel description file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLCOMP NOCHECK specifies that the NCL procedure or panel description file is to be compiled and that, if that object is already compiled into the object file, the new object is to overwrite the existing object in the object file. LBANNER If you do not specify NOCHECK, an NCL procedure or panel description file is compiled and the object written to the object file only if the timestamp of the source file is later than the timestamp of the object.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLCOMP 6. The following example locates the MYPROC NCL procedure in the default search path, compiles the NCL procedure, and writes the object to the MYNCLOBJ object file (replacing the object if it currently exists in the object file): NCLCOMP PROC=MYPROC OBJECT=MYNCLOBJ NOCHECK LBANNER 7. 2–162 The following example compiles all the NCL procedures beginning with MY in $DATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLQUEUE RESET NCLQUEUE RESET The NCLQUEUE RESET command deletes an NCL queue. You can specify whether to execute or delete NCL processes currently in the queue. NCL processes sent to the queue and currently executing continue to execute. LBANNER NCLQUEUE RESET=queue-name [ PURGE={ YES | NO } ] Note Any user who can write NCL procedures can use the START verb to send an NCL procedure to any NCL queue. Therefore, deleting an NCL queue can affect many users.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLQUEUE RESET Examples 1. The following example deletes a queue called ABC, specifying that all NCL processes in the queue are to be purged when the queue is deleted: NCLQUEUE RESET=ABC PURGE=YES LBANNER 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLQUEUE SET NCLQUEUE SET The NCLQUEUE SET command defines an NCL queue and sets the execution limit, or LBANNER modifies the execution limit of an existing NCL queue. The execution limit determines the maximum number of NCL processes that can concurrently execute in the specified queue for each NCL processing environment. A START verb that uses the QUEUE operand (with or without the DELAY operand) sends an NCL procedure to a queue.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLQUEUE SET LIMIT=number LBANNER sets the execution limit for the specified queue for each NCL processing environment. You can specify a number from 0 through 32767. Specifying 0 stops all queued NCL processes from executing, although NCL processes that are currently executing continue to execute. NCL processes in the queue begin to execute in turn when you next specify a number greater than 0.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NCLQUEUE SET 3. The following example illustrates how the global execution limit is applied locally to each NCL processing environment that sends NCL processes to an NCL queue: Suppose that you create an NCL queue called ABC with an execution limit of 1 by using the following command: LBANNER NCLQUEUE SET=ABC LIMIT=1 Suppose that USER1 opens one OCS window (which has a primary processing environment associated with it).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands NRDRET LBANNER NRDRET The NRDRET command restores all full non-roll-delete (NRD) messages associated with an OCS window. If you have temporarily removed full NRD messages from the NRD message display area of an OCS window, using NRD cursor deletion, you can use this command to redisplay them. When you enter OCS, you must explicitly execute the NRDRET command to display all NRD messages currently in the NRD message queue that you are entitled to receive.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OCSID OCSID The OCSID command sets or erases an Operator Control Services (OCS) window LBANNER identifier. This command is useful either when you are using more than one OCS window and frequently swap between them, or when the windows are profiled to perform different functions. You would assign a different window identifier to each window to identify each window correctly.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OCSID Examples 1. The following example sets an OCS window ID for an OCS window. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER OCSID NCL_TEST 2–170 (13:14) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------OCSID NCL_TEST NNM0363 OCS WINDOW ID SET.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OCSID LBANNER 2. The following NCL procedure sets the OCS window ID of the first OCS window you enter to ONE and sets the OCS window ID of the other OCS window to TWO when you enter it: OCSID: PROCEDURE IF &SYS.OCS.IDO \= “ONE” THEN CMD “-OCSID ONE” ELSE CMD “-OCSID TWO” END OCSID If you execute this procedure as soon as you enter each OCS window, the order in which you enter and exit either OCS window can be completely random.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPENTERM LBANNER OPENTERM The OPENTERM command opens the specified terminal(s) for use with NonStop NET/MASTER MS. You must explicitly define a terminal to NonStop NET/MASTER MS (using the TERMINAL ADD command) before you can use the OPENTERM command. After you open a terminal, NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays the logon screen. You cannot open a terminal that is already open. The OPENTERM command does not affect the terminal definition record.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPENTERM Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3. LBANNER You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. When you open a terminal by using this command the SHOW TERM command shows the status of the terminal is WAIT LOGON and the SHOW TERMDEF command shows that the status of the terminal is CONNECTED.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS LBANNER OPSYS The OPSYS command submits a Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) command for execution. There are two types of DSNM commands you can execute from NonStop NET/MASTER MS: DSNM commands used to start, interactively communicate with, and terminate interactive sessions with Guardian utilities and to run TACL macros; and DSNM commands used to control subsystems in a network.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS NonStop NET/MASTER MS command. The SEND keyword in Format 1 is the same as the SEND keyword in Format 2. LBANNER session specifies a valid session name. If the session does not already exist, it is created. When the session does not exist, it is created only if =utility is provided or the session name is one of the defined utility names. A valid session name begins with an alphabetic character, followed by up to 19 letters, numbers, or underscores (_).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS LBANNER Format 2 Format 2 of the OPSYS command allows you to control subsystems in a network and to start, interactively communicate with, and terminate Guardian utilities. If Format 1 is unavailable, you can use only Format 2 (if you have sufficient authority). Refer to the User’s Guide to DSNM Commands for a complete description of DSNM utility and subsystem commands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS If your installation permits the use of both Format 1 and Format 2, the default authority level of Format 2 is 3. If your installation permits the use of Format 2 only, the default authority level of Format 2 is 3. LBANNER Table 2-3 lists the default authority levels of DSNM utility commands. Default authority levels for Guardian utility commands are listed in Appendix A, “Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands.” Table 2-3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS You can use the ROUTE link-name OPSYS command to send a DSNM command to a remote Tandem system running NonStop NET/MASTER MS or a VTAM command to a remote IBM system running the SOLVE management services. LBANNER Refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS System Management Guide for more information on using the INIT NCL procedure to install, configure, and remove Format 1 of the OPSYS command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS 2. Using Format 1 of the OPSYS command, the following example establishes a new session with the FUP utility, identified by a session name, FUP1, and sends a command to FUP. It executes the FUP SUBVOLS utility command. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS 3. Using Format 1 of the OPSYS command, the following example starts a TACL process and obtains information about your TACL user ID: LBANNER OPSYS TACL WHO (11:38) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------START OPSYS TACL WHO NNM1468 TACL (T9205D20 - 01JUN93), Operating System D20 NNM1468 COPYRIGHT TANDEM COMPUTERS INCORPORATED 1985,1987-1993 NNM1468 CPU 3, process has no backup NNM1468 June 23, 1994 11:36:16 NNM1468 (Invoking $SYSTEM.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands OPSYS 9. Using Format 2 of the OPSYS command, the following example returns a single line of status information for the line $LHORL and lists the acceptable states for the line: OPSYS INQUIRE $LHORL, DETAIL 10. Using Format 2 of the OPSYS command, the following example starts all members of the group ALL-EXPAND that are either pending or in the DOWN state: LBANNER OPSYS START ALL-EXPAND, NOT-UP 11.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ORDER The ORDER command displays messages in chronological order on an OCS window. In OCS, a group of messages may start in the middle of the roll-delete message area of an OCS window and wrap around to the top of the message area, followed by the roll-delete message area delimiter line.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ORDER The following example reorganizes messages on an OCS window: ORDER LBANNER The following screen shows messages on an OCS window after using the ORDER command: (09:13) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------NNM0602 TEDITOBJ $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.TEDIT NNM0602 TOACT1 DISC NNM0602 TOACT2 DISC NNM0602 TOALARM 3 NNM0602 TOSTART NONE NNM0602 TOTIME1 0.00 NNM0602 TOTIME2 0.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PAGE PAGE The PAGE command clears roll-delete messages in the current OCS window. PAGE LBANNER Considerations 2–184 The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using the CMD core statement (but not the INTCMD verb). If you want to perform a clear function from an NCL procedure, it is recommended that you use this command, not the CLEAR command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PAGE You can view messages that have scrolled past on your OCS window by using the recall buffer. For related information, see the CLEAR command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PARAM The PARAM command defines NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup parameters or changes certain startup parameters. Startup parameters contain settings used during NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup, before execution of the INIT NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM Refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS System Management Guide for more information on all operands of the PARAM command. LBANNER Note For convenience, considerations and examples of PARAM commands appear with the description of individual operands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER PARAM PROCESSWEIGHT=process-weight READY=ncl-procedure SECEXIT=process-name[ [, process-name ] … ] SECEXITPROCESS=logical-name STATICPROCESS=logical-name SWGUID={ YES | NO } UACAUTH=file-name UACUTIL=file-name UADAUTH=file-name UADUTIL=file-name UMSFILE=file-name Table 2-5 lists operands of the PARAM command that configure a single value and should occur once only in the configuration file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM LBANNER Table 2-8 lists operands of the PARAM command that must occur in a group of PARAM commands and define the attributes of a specific type of process (for example, the attributes of a dynamic process include its object file name, its priority, and the central processing unit resources it can use).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM For each type of process, Table 2-9 summarizes the use of the PARAM commands that define logical names and process types. Table 2-9. Using PARAM Operands That Define Logical Names and Process Types NNM Processes Processes External to NNM Dyn GMM Stat CIP CMD DSNM SECX CIPPROCESS CMDPROCESS DSNMPROCESS DYNAMICPROCESS GMMPROCESS SECEXITPROCESS STATICPROCESS N.A. N.A. N.A. M N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. M N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. M M N.A.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM For each type of process, Table 2-10 summarizes the use of the PARAM operands that define process attributes. Additionally, it indicates the default value assigned to each operand if no configuration file is used or the operand is not explicitly specified when defining a process type. Table 2-10.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM Table 2-11 summarizes the operands of the PARAM command. Following this table, the operands are discussed in more detail. Table 2-11. PARAM Operands (Page 1 of 3) Description CEXCCF Specifies the name of the file containing the customized Console Extras configuration records. Specifies the name of the file containing the distributed Console Extras configuration records.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM LBANNER Table 2-11. PARAM Operands (Page 2 of 3) Operand Description MDSMAPFILE NCLCUSTOBJ Specifies the name of the NonStop NET/MASTER MS map file. Specifies the name of the file containing object code created by executing NCL procedures in the customized procedure library. Specifies the subvolume name for the customized procedure library. Specifies the name of the distributed NCL object file and sets the default value of the SYSPARMS NCLOBJPATH system parameter.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM LBANNER Table 2-11. PARAM Operands (Page 3 of 3) 2–194 Operand Description SECEXIT Specifies the name(s) of the external security exit process(es) to be used by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Specifies a logical name for a security exit process. Specifies a logical name for a static process. Specifies if switching of Guardian user IDs (GUIDs) is allowed when a user creates a Guardian process using either the PROGRUN or OPSYS SEND command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CEXCCF CEXCCF CEXCCF=file-name specifies the name of the file containing the customized Console Extras configuration records. LBANNER This file is created by NonStop NET/MASTER MS if it does not exist when NonStop NET/MASTER MS is installed. It is empty until you add customized Console Extras configuration records to it. NonStop NET/MASTER MS upgrades do not affect this file. You can specify a file name in the form: $volume.subvolume.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CEXDCF CEXDCF CEXDCF=file-name specifies the name of the file containing the distributed Console Extras configuration records. NonStop NET/MASTER MS upgrades replace this file. You can specify a file name in the form: LBANNER $volume.subvolume.file-name 2–196 The default file name is: $isv-vol.ZNNMDATA.CEXDCF $isv-vol specifies the name of the volume on which NonStop NET/MASTER MS is being installed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CIP CIP CIP=process-name[ [, process-name ] … ] specifies the process name(s) of the conversational interface process(es) (CIPs) with which NonStop NET/MASTER MS communicates to handle Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) utility commands. LBANNER You can specify up to 10 CIPs. If you cannot specify all CIP names in a single line, you can repeat the PARAM CIP command to specify additional CIP names.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CIPPROCESS CIPPROCESS CIPPROCESS=logical-name specifies a logical name for a conversational interface process (CIP) that NonStop NET/MASTER MS starts and uses to handle Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) utility commands. LBANNER You can define up to 10 CIPs. For each, you must specify a unique logical name from 1 through 12 characters long.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CIPPROCESS LBANNER The following table summarizes the PARAM command operands used to define the attributes of a CIP: Operand Use Comment PROCESSCLASS PROCESSCPU N.A. O PROCESSDEBUGTERM PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSNAME N.A. N.A. M PROCESSOBJECT M PROCESSPARAM M PROCESSPRIORITY O PROCESSSWAPVOL O PROCESSWEIGHT CIPPROCESS N.A. M N.A. The order of this operand in the group of operands that defines the attributes of the process is not significant. N.A. N.A.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CMDPROCESS CMDPROCESS CMDPROCESS=logical-name specifies a logical name for a Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) command server process that NonStop NET/MASTER MS starts and uses to handle DSNM subsystem commands. LBANNER You can define up to 10 command server processes. For each, you must specify a unique logical name from 1 through 12 characters long.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CMDPROCESS LBANNER The following table summarizes the PARAM command operands used to define the attributes of a command server process: Operand Use Comment PROCESSCLASS PROCESSCPU N.A. O PROCESSDEBUGTERM PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSNAME N.A. N.A. M PROCESSOBJECT M PROCESSPARAM M PROCESSPRIORITY O PROCESSSWAPVOL O PROCESSWEIGHT CMDPROCESS N.A. M N.A.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CMDSVR CMDSVR CMDSVR=process-name[ [, process-name ] … ] specifies the process name(s) of the Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) command server process(es) with which NonStop NET/MASTER MS communicates to handle DSNM subsystem commands. LBANNER You can specify up to 10 command server processes. If you cannot specify all command server process names in a single line, you can repeat the PARAM CMDSVR command to specify additional command server process names.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CMDSVR Example The following example specifies eight command server processes: PARAM CMDSVR=$ZDC1,$ZDC2,$ZDC3,$ZDC4 PARAM CMDSVR=$ZDC5,$ZDC6,$ZDC7,$ZDC8 LBANNER The SHOW PARAM command displays these processes in the following way: CMDSVR[1]=$ZDC1 CMDSVR[2]=$ZDC2 CMDSVR[3]=$ZDC3 CMDSVR[4]=$ZDC4 CMDSVR[5]=$ZDC5 CMDSVR[6]=$ZDC6 CMDSVR[7]=$ZDC7 CMDSVR[8]=$ZDC8 115412 Tandem Computers Incorporated 2–203
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CPUWEIGHT CPUWEIGHT CPUWEIGHT=( cpu-number, weight ) specifies and changes the relative weight allocated to a central processing unit (CPU), thereby determining the availability of a CPU; this, in turn, affects where dynamic processes are created. LBANNER cpu-number specifies the number of a CPU to which to assign a weight. You can specify a number from 0 through to the highest existing CPU number in your system (the highest possible value is 15).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CPUWEIGHT After NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup: The default authority level of this operand is 9. LBANNER This command immediately changes the current CPU weight of the specified CPU. It does not update the configuration file. If NonStop NET/MASTER MS is stopped and restarted, the weight assigned in the configuration file is reassigned to the CPU.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM CPUWEIGHT LBANNER 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM DID DID DID=domain-id specifies the NonStop NET/MASTER MS domain ID. LBANNER You can specify a domain ID from one through four characters long. You must use alphanumeric characters. The first character of the domain ID must be alphabetic. If you do not specify a domain ID, the default domain ID is the first four characters of the Expand system name (without the leading backslash (\)), or ANON if the system is unnamed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM DSNMPROCESS DSNMPROCESS DSNMPROCESS=logical-name specifies a logical name for a Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) process. LBANNER You can specify a unique logical name from 1 through 12 characters long. You can use the following characters: 2–208 Alphabetic characters: A through Z and a through z Numeric characters: 0 through 9 Other characters: ^ ~ # $ { } - . : @ [ \ ] _ ` | Considerations DSNM processes process DSNM commands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM DSNMPROCESS LBANNER The following table summarizes the PARAM command operands used to define the attributes of a DSNM process: Operand Use Comment PROCESSCLASS PROCESSCPU N.A. O PROCESSDEBUGTERM PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSNAME N.A. N.A. M PROCESSOBJECT M PROCESSPARAM M PROCESSPRIORITY O PROCESSSWAPVOL O PROCESSWEIGHT DSNMPROCESS N.A. M N.A. The order of this operand in the group of operands that defines the attributes of the process is not significant. N.A.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM DSNMSECTION DSNMSECTION DSNMSECTION=section-name specifies the name of the section in the Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) application file that configures the DSNM application used by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. LBANNER You can specify a section name from one through eight characters long.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM DSNMSUBVOL DSNMSUBVOL DSNMSUBVOL=subvolume specifies the Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) distribution subvolume on which NonStop NET/MASTER MS can find DSNM program object files when it starts the default DSNM processes. You can specify a subvolume in the form: LBANNER [ \sys. ]$volume.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM DYNAMICPROCESS DYNAMICPROCESS DYNAMICPROCESS=logical-name specifies a logical name for a dynamic process. LBANNER You can specify a unique logical name from 1 through 12 characters long. You can use the following characters: 2–212 Alphabetic characters: A through Z and a through z Numeric characters: 0 through 9 Other characters: ^ ~ # $ { } - . : @ [ \ ] _ ` | Considerations Dynamic processes are NonStop NET/MASTER MS processes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM DYNAMICPROCESS LBANNER The following table summarizes the PARAM command operands used to define the attributes of a dynamic process: Operand Use Comment PROCESSCLASS O PROCESSCPU PROCESSDEBUGTERM N.A. O PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSNAME PROCESSOBJECT N.A. N.A. M PROCESSPARAM PROCESSPRIORITY N.A. O PROCESSSWAPVOL O PROCESSWEIGHT O DYNAMICPROCESS M The order of this operand in the group of operands that defines the attributes of the process is not significant.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM FEATUREDISABLE FEATUREDISABLE FEATUREDISABLE={ INMC | ISR | ROC } disables the specified NonStop NET/MASTER MS feature. LBANNER NonStop NET/MASTER MS consists of a set of base services, which includes Operator Control Services, User ID Management Services, Edit Services, System Support Services, and so on. Certain services may never be required by an installation; you can, therefore, disable them at NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM GMMPROCESS GMMPROCESS GMMPROCESS=logical-name specifies a logical name for a global memory manager (GMM) process. LBANNER You can specify up to 16 GMM processes. For each, you must specify a unique logical name from 1 through 12 characters long. You can use the following characters: Alphabetic characters: A through Z and a through z Numeric characters: 0 through 9 Other characters: ^ ~ # $ { } - .
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM GMMPROCESS LBANNER The following table summarizes the PARAM command operands used to define the attributes of a GMM process: Operand Use Comment PROCESSCLASS PROCESSCPU N.A. O PROCESSDEBUGTERM O PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSNAME PROCESSOBJECT N.A. N.A. M PROCESSPARAM PROCESSPRIORITY N.A. O PROCESSSWAPVOL O PROCESSWEIGHT GMMPROCESS N.A. M N.A. The order of this operand in the group of operands that defines the attributes of the process is not significant.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM INIT INIT INIT=ncl-procedure specifies the name of the INIT NCL procedure. LBANNER Considerations The name of the default INIT NCL procedure is INIT. When NonStop NET/MASTER MS starts, the INIT NCL procedure is the first NCL procedure executed: it is executed during the system initialization phase. Users cannot log on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS while the INIT procedure is executing. The READY NCL procedure executes after the INIT procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM LOGFILE1 LOGFILE1 LOGFILE1=file-name specifies the name of the activity log file used during NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup. LBANNER This activity log file is used to log messages during NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup. You can specify a different activity log file name or additional activity log files with the same file name in the INIT NCL procedure using the SYSPARMS LOGFILEn command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM MDSMAPFILE MDSMAPFILE MDSMAPFILE=file-name specifies the name of the NonStop NET/MASTER MS map file. LBANNER A map is a set of definitions that describes the entire structure of some item of data being manipulated from an NCL process. NCL processes can use maps through Mapping Services. The file specified by the PARAM MDSMAPFILE command includes map definition for standard maps ($MAP, $NCL, $MSG, $SEC, and $SPI) and user-defined maps.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLCUSTOBJ NCLCUSTOBJ NCLCUSTOBJ=file-name specifies the name of the file containing object code created by executing NCL procedures in the customized procedure library. LBANNER When you execute an NCL procedure, NCL automatically compiles it if it has not been compiled before. The compilation process creates object code from the source file. Object code is NCL code in an executable form, that is, a form that can be executed by NCL.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLCUSTSRC NCLCUSTSRC NCLCUSTSRC=subvolume specifies the subvolume name for the customized procedure library. LBANNER This library contains the source code of customized NCL procedures. These may be procedures that you have moved and modified from the distribution procedure library. They may be system-level procedures that you have created yourself. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS system has only one customized procedure library.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLDISTCODE NCLDISTCODE NCLDISTCODE=file-name LBANNER specifies the name of the distributed NCL object file and sets the default value of the SYSPARMS NCLOBJPATH system parameter. The distributed NCL object file contains the object code of most NCL procedures distributed as part of NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLDISTCODE Example The following example changes the name of the distributed NCL object file: LBANNER PARAM NCLDISTCODE=$DATA1.ZNNMNOBJ.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLDISTOBJ NCLDISTOBJ NCLDISTOBJ=file-name specifies the name of the file containing object code created by executing NCL procedures from the distribution procedure library. LBANNER When you execute an NCL procedure, NCL automatically compiles it if it has not been compiled before. The compilation process creates object code from the source file. Object code is NCL code in an executable form, that is, a form that can be executed by NCL.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLDISTSRC NCLDISTSRC NCLDISTSRC=subvolume specifies the subvolume name for the distribution procedure library. LBANNER This library contains the source code of NCL procedures distributed as part of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS installation or upgrade. NonStop NET/MASTER MS upgrades replace those NCL procedures in the distribution procedure library that are superseded by new versions. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS system has only one distribution procedure library.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLOBJLIB NCLOBJLIB NCLOBJLIB=subvolume specifies the subvolume name of a global library used by all users who create and compile their own NCL procedures. LBANNER The PARAM NCLOBJLIB command creates a global definition. By default, every user’s NCL object file is kept in this subvolume.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLQUEUESVOL NCLQUEUESVOL NCLQUEUESVOL=subvolume LBANNER specifies the subvolume name for NCL queue files. An NCL queue file stores information about each delayed or queued NCL process. These are NCL processes that are waiting for execution in an NCL queue because execution has been delayed or the execution limit has been exceeded. One NCL queue file is created for each static or dynamic process that has delayed or queued NCL processes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM NCLQUEUESVOL Considerations There is no relationship between the EXEC command and the NCL queue file. The EXEC command does not queue NCL procedures in the NCL queue file. LBANNER For best performance, specify a subvolume for NCL queue files on your local system. 2–228 The files pQnnn and pQnnnA are deleted when NonStop NET/MASTER MS shuts down normally.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PNLCUSTSRC PNLCUSTSRC PNLCUSTSRC=subvolume specifies the subvolume name for the customized panel library. LBANNER The customized panel library contains customized panel description files. These may be panel description files that you have moved and modified from the distribution panel library. They may be panel description files that you have created yourself. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS system has only one customized panel library.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PNLDISTCODE PNLDISTCODE PNLDISTCODE=file-name specifies the name of the distributed panel object file and sets the default value of the SYSPARMS PNLOBJPATH system parameter. LBANNER The distributed panel object file contains some of the panel description files distributed as part of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Before distribution, source code is compiled into a panel object file using NCLCOMP. This panel object file is called the distributed panel object file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PNLDISTSRC PNLDISTSRC PNLDISTSRC=subvolume specifies the subvolume name for the distribution panel library. LBANNER Tandem distributes some panel description files required by NonStop NET/MASTER MS as source files. Other panel description files are precompiled and distributed in a single object file, called the distribution panel object file. Distributed panel description files and the distribution panel object file are located within the distribution panel library.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSCHAR PROCESSCHAR PROCESSCHAR=process-character LBANNER confirms the first character of the name of the NonStop NET/MASTER MS control process (NCP). The NonStop NET/MASTER MS process character is specified when NonStop NET/MASTER MS is initially executed. It is the first character of the process name specified using the NAME operand of the RUN command that starts NonStop NET/MASTER MS from TACL.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSCLASS PROCESSCLASS PROCESSCLASS={ BK | EM | IS | MS | NC } specifies the class of a static or dynamic application process. LBANNER BK specifies an application process of the background services (BK) class, which supports the BK function. This process class supports the BSYS, BMON, BLOG, and LOGP virtual users and their background processing environments; handles commands submitted to these virtual users; and supports the system-level LOGPROC NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSCLASS LBANNER If you include the PARAM PROCESSCLASS command in an application process definition in the configuration file, the NonStop NET/MASTER MS control process (NCP) uses the value of PARAM PROCESSCLASS to determine the class of the application process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSCLASS Examples 1. The following example specifies a BK process: PARAM PROCESSCLASS=BK 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSCPU PROCESSCPU PROCESSCPU=( cpu1, cpu2 ) specifies the preferred central processing units (CPUs) for creating and executing a process. You must supply both CPU values. This operand is a variation of the CPU option of the TACL RUN command—a variation in the sense that you can supply a first-preference and second-preference CPU, not just a single CPU.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER PARAM PROCESSCPU Operand Use Comment SECEXITPROCESS O STATICPROCESS O For a security exit process, the first number specifies the PCPU but the second number is ignored even though you must supply it. If the security exit process runs as a process pair, you must specify the BCPU as one of the arguments in the startup parameters passed to the process (specified by the PARAM PROCESSPARAM command).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSDEBUGTERM PROCESSDEBUGTERM PROCESSDEBUGTERM={ device-name | NONE } specifies the name of a device used for debugging a process started by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. LBANNER Note 2–238 Use the PARAM PROCESSDEBUGTERM command only when directed by Tandem support personnel. device-name specifies the name of the terminal used to debug a process. The Inspect utility is started at the specified terminal when NonStop NET/MASTER MS creates and starts the process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSLIBRARY={ file-name | NONE } specifies a library code file name for a process. This operand is functionally equivalent to the LIB option of the TACL RUN command. file-name LBANNER specifies the library code file name. You can specify a file name in the form: $volume.subvolume.file-name NONE specifies that the process does not have a library code file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSNAME PROCESSNAME PROCESSNAME=process-name specifies the local operating system process name for a process. This operand is functionally equivalent to the NAME option of the TACL RUN command. LBANNER You can specify a process name from one through four characters long. The first character of the process name must be alphabetic. Other characters must be alphanumeric.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSOBJECT PROCESSOBJECT PROCESSOBJECT=file-name specifies the object file name of a process. You must specify a file name in the following form: $volume.subvolume.file-name LBANNER Consideration The PROCESSOBJECT operand is mandatory for all process types. Example The following example specifies an object file name for a process. This is the object file for the NonStop NET/MASTER MS global memory manager process. PARAM PROCESSOBJECT=$SYSTEM.ZNNM.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSPARAM PROCESSPARAM PROCESSPARAM=“startup-string” LBANNER specifies a startup string to pass to a process. Usually, this is the string following the last slash (/) enclosing the TACL RUN options (CPU, PRI, NAME, and so on). If no RUN options are specified, it is the string that follows the program object file name in the TACL RUN command. The startup string is passed to the process in the startup message.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSPARAM Examples LBANNER 1. The following examples pass startup strings to DSNM processes: PARAM PARAM PARAM PARAM PARAM PARAM 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSPRIORITY PROCESSPRIORITY PROCESSPRIORITY=process-priority specifies the priority of a process. This operand is functionally equivalent to the PRI option of the TACL RUN command. You can specify a process priority from 1 through 199. LBANNER Consideration 2–244 The PROCESSPRIORITY operand is applicable for all process types.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSSWAPVOL PROCESSSWAPVOL PROCESSSWAPVOL=$volume LBANNER specifies the name of the swap volume used by a process. You must specify a volume on your local system. This is the volume that contains the swap file for a process. The swap file is used for memory swaps of the user data stack during execution of the process. If you omit this operand when defining a process, the default swap volume is the volume specified by the PROCESSOBJECT operand.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM PROCESSWEIGHT PROCESSWEIGHT PROCESSWEIGHT=process-weight specifies the central processing unit (CPU) resources that a dynamic process uses. The PARAM PROCESSWEIGHT command is applicable only to dynamic processes. LBANNER The default process weight is 1. You can specify a value from 0 through 100. A value of 0 means that the dynamic process does not use CPU resources. A value of 100 means that the dynamic process can use all the resources of a CPU.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM READY READY READY=ncl-procedure specifies the name of the READY NCL procedure. LBANNER Considerations The name of the default READY NCL procedure is READY. When NonStop NET/MASTER MS starts, the INIT NCL procedure is the first NCL procedure executed: it is executed during the system initialization phase. Users cannot log on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS while the INIT procedure is executing.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM SECEXIT SECEXIT SECEXIT=process-name[ [, process-name ] … ] specifies the name(s) of the external security exit process(es) to be used by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. LBANNER You can specify up to 16 security exit processes. If you cannot specify all security exit process names in a single line, you can repeat the PARAM SECEXIT command to specify additional security exit process names. 2–248 You can specify a unique process name from one through five characters long.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM SECEXITPROCESS SECEXITPROCESS SECEXITPROCESS=logical-name specifies a logical name for a security exit process. LBANNER You can specify up to 16 security exit processes. For each, you must specify a unique logical name from 1 through 12 characters long. You can use the following characters: Alphabetic characters: A through Z and a through z Numeric characters: 0 through 9 Other characters: ^ ~ # $ { } - .
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM SECEXITPROCESS LBANNER The following table summarizes the PARAM command operands used to define the attributes of a security exit process: 2–250 Operand Use Comment PROCESSCLASS PROCESSCPU N.A. O PROCESSDEBUGTERM PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSNAME N.A. N.A. M PROCESSOBJECT M PROCESSPARAM M PROCESSPRIORITY O PROCESSSWAPVOL O PROCESSWEIGHT SECEXITPROCESS N.A. M N.A.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM STATICPROCESS STATICPROCESS STATICPROCESS=logical-name specifies a logical name for a static process. LBANNER You can specify a unique logical name from 1 through 12 characters long. You can use the following characters: Alphabetic characters: A through Z and a through z Numeric characters: 0 through 9 Other characters: ^ ~ # $ { } - . : @ [ \ ] _ ` | Considerations Static processes are NonStop NET/MASTER MS processes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM STATICPROCESS LBANNER The following table summarizes the PARAM command operands used to define the attributes of a static process: 2–252 Operand Use Comment PROCESSCLASS O PROCESSCPU O PROCESSDEBUGTERM O PROCESSLIBRARY PROCESSNAME PROCESSOBJECT N.A. N.A. M PROCESSPARAM PROCESSPRIORITY N.A. O PROCESSSWAPVOL O PROCESSWEIGHT STATICPROCESS N.A.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM SWGUID SWGUID SWGUID={ YES | NO } specifies if switching of Guardian user IDs (GUIDs) is allowed when a user creates a Guardian process using either the PROGRUN or OPSYS SEND command. LBANNER When a user creates a Guardian process using either the PROGRUN or OPSYS SEND command, the process executes under a GUID. The PARAM SWGUID command determines whether the process executes under the GUID of the user creating the process or the GUID of NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM UACAUTH UACAUTH UACAUTH=file-name specifies the name of the file containing customized Guardian utility authority levels. LBANNER This file is created by NonStop NET/MASTER MS if it does not exist when NonStop NET/MASTER MS is installed. It is empty until you add customized utility authority levels to it. NonStop NET/MASTER MS upgrades do not affect this file. 2–254 You can specify a file name in the form: $volume.subvolume.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM UACUTIL UACUTIL UACUTIL=file-name specifies the name of the file containing customized Guardian utility definitions. LBANNER This file is created by NonStop NET/MASTER MS if it does not exist when NonStop NET/MASTER MS is installed. It is empty until you add customized utility definitions to it. NonStop NET/MASTER MS upgrades do not affect this file. You can specify a file name in the form: $volume.subvolume.file-name The default file name is: $isv-vol.ZNNMDATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM UADAUTH UADAUTH UADAUTH=file-name specifies the name of the file containing the default Guardian utility authority levels. LBANNER NonStop NET/MASTER MS upgrades replace this file. Modifications you make to utility authority levels are not lost when upgrades occur because they are stored in the file defined by the PARAM UACAUTH command. 2–256 You can specify a file name in the form: $volume.subvolume.file-name The default file name is: $isv-vol.ZNNMDATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM UADUTIL UADUTIL UADUTIL=file-name specifies the name of the file containing the default Guardian utility definitions. NonStop NET/MASTER MS upgrades replace this file. Modifications you make to utility definitions are not lost when upgrades occur because they are stored in the file defined by the PARAM UACUTIL command. LBANNER You can specify a file name in the form: $volume.subvolume.file-name The default file name is: $isv-vol.ZNNMDATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PARAM UMSFILE UMSFILE UMSFILE=file-name specifies the name of the file—the UMS database—used by User ID Management Services (UMS). You can specify a file name in the form: [ \sys. ]$volume.subvolume.file-name LBANNER The default UMS file name is: $isv-vol.ZNNMDATA.pUMSFILE $isv-vol specifies the name of the volume on which NonStop NET/MASTER MS is being installed. p specifies the process character (A through Z) specified when NonStop NET/MASTER MS is initially executed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PF LBANNER PF The PF command defines function keys for IBM 3270 or compatible terminals, and displays function key definitions. You can assign a lengthy command string to a function key using this command. This can prove useful when you are typing lengthy commands, such as ROUTE commands. An installation can define global function keys that become the defaults for all users. An individual user can define local function keys while in OCS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PF LBANNER When you press the action function key, the cursor should normally be positioned on a message in an OCS window. When the NCL procedure begins execution, the message in the OCS window is placed in the &$PRM. MDO variable, which is mapped by the $MSG map. Text in the OCS command input line is passed as parameters to the NCL procedure. The system variable &SYS.PARMCNT holds the number of parameters created, and the system variable &SYS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PF When you press the function key, NonStop NET/MASTER MS prefixes the text to any text currently in the OCS command input line. It processes the concatenated string immediately. The concatenated string is not displayed in the OCS command input line and you cannot modify it. SUFF,text LBANNER defines the function key as a suffix function key with the associated text. The text should correspond to part of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PF In the case of an action function key, the text must be the name of an NCL procedure. In the case of all other function keys, the text must be a command, or partial command. LBANNER A global function key definition is a definition created by this command during NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup, in the INIT NCL procedure. A global function key definition becomes the default for all NonStop NET/MASTER MS users.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PF Example LBANNER The following example defines function keys for 3270 and compatible terminals: CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD CMD "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK "FK PF01 PF01 PF02 PF03 PF04 PF05 PF06 PF07 PF08 PF09 PF10 PF11 PF12 PF13 PF13 PF14 PF14 PF15 PF16 PF17 PF18 PF19 PF20 PF21 PF22 PF23 PF24 ACTION,ZOCHHLPN" PREF,-STA
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROCESS ALTER LBANNER PROCESS ALTER The PROCESS ALTER command changes the configuration of a process in the NonStop NET/MASTER MS processing environment. You can use this command to dynamically reconfigure certain process attributes after NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup. That is, you do not need to shut down NonStop NET/MASTER MS, change a process definition in the configuration file, and then restart NonStop NET/MASTER MS to implement certain configuration changes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROCESS ALTER DEFER specifies whether the change takes effect immediately. YES LBANNER specifies that the change does not take effect immediately. For a process running as a process pair: If the specified CPU is different from the CPUs in which the primary and backup processes are running, the backup process is created in the specified CPU only when the primary process stops and the existing backup process takes over.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROCESS ALTER For a process capable of running as a process pair: If the specified CPU is different from the CPU in which the process is running, a backup process is immediately started in the specified CPU. LBANNER Note A backup process is not started for a BK, EM, or NC process. For these processes, the command updates the location of the CPU in which the primary process creates the backup process when a persistent NCL process is started in the BK, EM, or NC process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROCESS SWITCH LBANNER PROCESS SWITCH The PROCESS SWITCH command reverses the roles of the primary and backup processes of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS process pair. You can use this command to reconfigure the process pair online. This eliminates the need to shut down NonStop NET/MASTER MS, change a process definition in the configuration file, and then restart NonStop NET/MASTER MS to implement the configuration change.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE LBANNER PROFILE 2–268 The PROFILE command modifies or displays the profile of the current execution environment. You can use this command to modify your own execution environment (the primary processing environment in which you work while you are in OCS), or you can use it to modify the environment in which an NCL process is executing.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE Table 2-12 summarizes the operands of the PROFILE command. Table 2-12. PROFILE Operands (Page 1 of 2) Operand Description CMDKEEP Specifies whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS keeps or erases each command after you enter it from the OCS command input line. Specifies whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS recognizes the semicolon (;) as the command concatenation character. Specifies the number of commands NonStop NET/MASTER MS retains in a history buffer (command stack).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE Table 2-12. PROFILE Operands (Page 2 of 2) Operand Description PRFTM Specifies whether to prefix each unsolicited message with the time the message was generated. Specifies the minimum size to which the roll-delete message area of an OCS window can contract. Determines the roll-time delay. Specifies whether to truncate messages that are wider than the current width of an OCS window. Specifies whether you can receive unsolicited messages.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE YES instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to keep your last command after you enter it from the OCS command input line. This allows you to rapidly reenter commands. The cursor is positioned at the beginning of the command input line, on the first character of the command. LBANNER NO instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to erase your last command after you enter it from the OCS command input line.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE DELCHAR=roll-delete-separator LBANNER specifies the character NonStop NET/MASTER MS uses to construct the delimiter line that separates new and old roll-delete messages as they roll from the top to the bottom of the roll-delete message display area. The default character used to construct the line is the underscore (_). You can use any displayable character, excluding a blank, to construct the line.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE NO LBANNER instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS not to send you EMS and PPO messages. If you are not authorized to receive EMS messages and you specify this operand, NonStop NET/MASTER MS ignores the command. If you specify this, NonStop NET/MASTER MS remembers the current severity level and reinstates it if you specify EMS=YES later. INFO instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to send you all EMS and PPO messages that are classed as INFO, WARN, NORM, or SER.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE You cannot use screen formatting operands or operands specific to OCS to profile a dependent processing environment: these are CMDKEEP, CMDSTACK, DELCHAR, HOLD, INDENT, INITCMD, MSGPROC, NRDELCH, PREFEMS, PRFTM, RDMIN, ROLL, and TRUNC. PRIMARY LBANNER refers to your current OCS window (your primary processing environment). All other operands of the PROFILE command are valid in this environment.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE INDENT=column specifies the number of columns to indent messages that are longer than the current width of an OCS window. This operand applies if the value of the TRUNC operand is equal to NO. LBANNER The default value is 0. You can specify an indentation value from 0 through to the width of the terminal less 10. (The maximum indentation value depends on the type of terminal you are using.) Messages are indented dynamically.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE definition record authorizes you to receive monitor-class messages: this is defined in the Monitor Status field in User ID Management Services (UMS). LBANNER Note If a user is not authorized to receive monitor-class messages, the PROFILE command does not display information about the MONMSG operand. An NCL process can attempt to check the monitor-class status of a user by using the INTCMD PROFILE statement and waiting for message NNM0366.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE MSGCODE=message-code LBANNER specifies an installation-defined mask that can be used to filter the receipt of messages from NCL procedures, generated using the MSGCODE operand of the NCL WRITE verb. The message code is a two-character hexadecimal message delivery code. You can specify a hexadecimal value from ‘00’x through ‘FF’x. The default value of a message code is set in your user ID definition record.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE LBANNER NCLTEST sets the NCL test mode for all environments associated with a NonStop NET/MASTER MS window. NonStop NET/MASTER MS has two windows available for each user who logs on. Each window has a number (1 or 2), each window is referred to by its number (window 1 or window 2), and each window keeps its number while a user is logged on, regardless of the activity that takes place.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE LBANNER For panel description files, setting test mode on instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to load a panel description file from disk each time an NCL process attempts to display it. NonStop NET/MASTER MS attempts to locate the panel description file using the default search path, beginning with the user panel library specified in your user ID definition record (or the customized panel library if no user panel library is specified).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE PREFEMS specifies whether to prefix each EMS message with an EMS message prefix. The EMS message prefix follows the time prefix, if present, and is placed inside square brackets ([ ]). You cannot use this operand to profile a dependent processing environment. LBANNER BOTH instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to prefix each EMS message with an EMS prefix, indicating both the Tandem system and the Guardian process that generated the message.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE NO instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS not to display each message with the domain ID of the system. PRFTM LBANNER specifies whether to prefix each unsolicited message with the time the message was generated. You cannot use this operand to profile a dependent processing environment. YES instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to prefix each unsolicited message with the time the message was generated.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE If the roll-delete message area contracts to its minimum size, and there are NRD messages that cannot be displayed, the NRD messages are queued. The caption NRD PEND is displayed on the non-roll-delete area delimiter line. You can view messages that have scrolled past on your OCS window by using the recall buffer. LBANNER You cannot use this operand to profile a dependent processing environment. ROLL=roll-time-delay determines the roll-time delay.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE FLAGWORD LBANNER instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to truncate messages that are longer than the current width of an OCS window at word boundaries. (The TRUNC=WORD operand describes word boundaries.) Truncation is flagged by a blank, followed by the truncation character (+) in the last two columns of the window. (The truncation character has the color, highlight, and intensity attributes of the message.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE It means that you can use the following statement from an NCL procedure for these operands (because you are explicitly targeting your primary processing environment): LBANNER INTCMD “PROFILE ENV=PRIMARY operand=value” 2–284 Messages NNM0352, NNM0357 through NNM0362, NNM0364 through NNM0393, NNM0395 through NNM0397, NNM0999, and NNM2200 through NNM2203 indicate the results of this command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROFILE Examples 1. The following example displays a profile in the current OCS window. The following screen displays the results: LBANNER PROFILE (09:42) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------PROFILE NNM0381 USERID: NMTJN TERMINAL-ID: #1520654 NNM0382 NCL PROCEDURE LIBRARY ID: $DATA2.ZNCLPGN NNM0383 USERID HAS MONITOR STATUS. NNM0384 AUTOHOLD SETTING IS ON AUTO. NNM0385 AUTHORITY LEVEL IS 255, NO MSGPROC DEFINED.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROGRUN PROGRUN The PROGRUN command suspends your current activity with NonStop LBANNER NET/MASTER MS and executes an external program, such as a Guardian utility. Using the PROGRUN command to execute a Guardian utility means that you can communicate interactively with the utility and receive the results of commands, but NonStop NET/MASTER MS does not log the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROGRUN utility LBANNER specifies the name of a Guardian utility. You can specify a utility name from 1 through 12 characters long. The utility name can contain letters, digits, and the underscore character (_). The first character must be a letter. The names of the Guardian utilities that you can access are defined using UMS. The utility name you enter using the PROGRUN command must match a utility name defined using UMS; otherwise, the PROGRUN command is rejected.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROGRUN NAME=process-name specifies the process name to be used. You can specify a process name from one through six characters long. (This includes the initial dollar sign ($) of the process name.) LBANNER If omitted, a system-generated process name is created. You can determine the process name created by examining the response message generated after control returns to NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROGRUN Considerations The default authority level of the PROGRUN command depends on whether your installation permits the use of both Format 1 and Format 2, or Format 2 only. LBANNER If your installation permits the use of both Format 1 and Format 2, the default authority level of Format 1 is 0. (The authority levels are set in the INIT NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROGRUN If a PROGRUN command issued to a local or remote system is unsuccessful, NonStop NET/MASTER issues an error message. Refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS Messages Manual for more information on error messages. LBANNER NonStop NET/MASTER MS cannot view exchanges with the process, such as commands sent to the process and the responses to those commands. 2–290 Every NonStop NET/MASTER MS user executes in a Guardian process.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROGRUN Examples 1. Using Format 2 of the PROGRUN command, the following example starts a PATHCOM process and passes a parameter string to it. This command starts PS MAIL 6530. LBANNER PROGRUN FILE=PATHCOM PARAMS="$TRPM;RUN M6530" By default, a PS MAIL 6530 utility definition is distributed with NonStop NET/MASTER MS; you can use the following Format 1 PROGRUN command to access the utility: PROGRUN M6530 The following screen displays the PS MAIL logon screen.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PROGRUN The following screen displays the results from the PROGRUN command. This screen is displayed after you exit from PS MAIL 6530.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PSNDCTL process-spec PSNDCTL process- The PSNDCTL process-spec command associates a Pathway server class identifier with spec a Pathway server class. You can use this command if you did not assign an identifier to a server class when it was made available for use by NonStop NET/MASTER MS and you now want to make the server class available to NCL. Additionally, you can use this command after a PSNDCTL STOP command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PSNDCTL CLOSE PSNDCTL CLOSE The PSNDCTL CLOSE command makes a Pathway server class unavailable for use by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. When this command makes the server class unavailable, it disassociates the server class from its identifier. If the server class is in use by a NonStop NET/MASTER MS user when you execute this command, the command is rejected. LBANNER PSNDCTL CLOSE=process-spec 2–294 process-spec: [ \sys. ]pathmon-process-name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PSNDCTL OPEN PSNDCTL OPEN The PSNDCTL OPEN command makes a Pathway server class available for use by LBANNER NonStop NET/MASTER MS. As a result of this command, many NonStop NET/MASTER MS processes can communicate with the server class, but no other Guardian process can communicate exclusively with the server class. You can make a server class available with PSNDCTL OPEN once only.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PSNDCTL OPEN SWGUID specifies whether to send a request message from an NCL process to a Pathway server class using the current Guardian user ID (GUID) or the GUID of NonStop NET/MASTER MS. YES LBANNER specifies that the request message is sent using the current GUID. NO specifies that the request message is sent using the GUID of NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 4.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PSNDCTL STOP PSNDCTL STOP The PSNDCTL STOP command disassociates a Pathway server class identifier from a Pathway server class. LBANNER The server class must not be in use by any NCL process or the attempt to disassociate the identifier from the server class will fail.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PURGE LBANNER PURGE The PURGE command purges one or more timer command(s), an NCL lock request, or one or more full non-roll-delete (NRD) message(s). A timer command is a command executed using either the AT or EVERY command. A lock request is a request for a resource made by an NCL process using the LOCK verb. A full NRD message, in contrast to a NRD message with the OPER attribute, is a NRD message held in the NRD message queue that has a delete operator message (DOM) ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PURGE user-timer-id purges the timer command with the specified user-assigned timer ID. When you execute a timer command, you can assign a user-assigned timer ID by using the TID operand. LBANNER system-timer-id purges the timer command with the specified system-assigned timer ID. NonStop NET/MASTER MS assigns a unique timer ID to a timer command when the timer command is executed. LOCK purges a request for a resource.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PURGE domain-id/* purges all NRD messages originating from the specified domain. minutesM LBANNER purges all NRD messages older than the specified number of minutes. You can specify a number from 0 through 999999. The letter M following the number indicates minutes. hoursH purges all NRD messages older than the specified number of hours. You can specify a number from 0 through 99999. The letter H following the number indicates hours.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands PURGE Examples 1. The following example purges all timer commands: PURGE TIMER=ALL 2. The following example purges your own timer commands: LBANNER PURGE TIMER=OWN 3. The following example purges a specific timer command: PURGE TIMER=45 4. The following example purges your own timer command and specific timer commands that you do not own: PURGE TIMER=OWN T=5 T=2 T=35 5. The following example purges a request for a resource from an NCL process: PURGE LOCK=23 6.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands REQMS REQMS The REQMS command sends hexadecimal data across the communication network LBANNER management (CNM) interface to obtain information about an SNA physical unit (PU). The data you send and the information obtained in response is in the form of hexadecimal data.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands REQMS Example The following example obtains a summary of error data about the PU #EM3270 connected to the line $SNA03. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER REQMS 0B80004103040000000182 LINE=$SNA03 PU=#EM3270 (11:35) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SYSPARMS CNMAPPLNME=\SYS1.$SSCP.#ZNNM NNM0604 SYSPARMS CNMAPPLNME=\SYS1.$SSCP.#ZNNM OPERAND ACCEPTED.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands RETURN LBANNER RETURN 2–304 The RETURN command returns you to the top-level NonStop NET/MASTER MS primary menu from Operator Control Services (OCS). A primary menu is a menu denoted by the display of a user ID and time on the right side of the screen.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands RETURN Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. LBANNER You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. If you have two open windows and you press the RETURN key from a main, top-level, NonStop NET/MASTER MS primary menu, your current window is terminated. If no other window is open, you are logged off from NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ROUTE ROUTE The ROUTE command sends a command string to a remote NonStop NET/MASTER LBANNER MS or SOLVE management services system for execution. The command sends a command string using Remote Operator Control (ROC).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ROUTE Tandem NonStop NET/MASTER MS is case-sensitive in relation to passwords; lowercase and uppercase alphabetic characters in a password are treated as different characters. SOLVE management services is not case-sensitive in relation to passwords; corresponding lowercase and uppercase alphabetic characters in a password are treated as the same characters.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ROUTE LBANNER Results of commands sent from an NCL process using the CMD ROUTE statement are sent to the owner of the NCL process, not the NCL process itself. This is an OCS window if the NCL process was executed from an OCS window. 2–308 Results of commands sent from an NCL process using the INTCMD ROUTE statement are sent to the dependent response queue of the NCL process. The NCL process can then read the results using the INTREAD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands ROUTE Examples 1. The following example, issued from the OCS command input line at your local system, LOCAL1, sends a command string to a remote system, REMOTE1: ROUTE REMOTE1 SHOW USERS LBANNER The results of the command string are sent from REMOTE1 to LOCAL1 for display in the roll-delete message display area of your OCS window. 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SESSION DEFINE LBANNER SESSION DEFINE The SESSION DEFINE command defines an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) session definition record and stores it in global memory. INMC is the NonStop NET/MASTER MS service that allows multiple NonStop NET/MASTER MS and SOLVE management services systems to be connected.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SESSION DEFINE X25 specifies an X.25 link. This is a link between two instances of NonStop NET/MASTER MS on the same, or different, Tandem systems. APPLID=application-id LBANNER specifies the name of the remote application to contact. This operand is applicable for SNA and X.25 links only. COMMENT=comment-text specifies a comment to include as part of the session definition record. This operand is a positional qualifier and must be the last operand in the command line.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SESSION DEFINE Examples 1. The following example defines a session definition record for an X.25 link: SESSION DEFINE=SESS1 LINK=LINK1 TYPE=X25 APPLID=APPL01 2. The following example defines a session definition record for a PTP link: LBANNER SESSION DEFINE=SESS05 LINK=REM1 TYPE=PTP COMMENT=LINK1 2–312 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SESSION DELETE SESSION DELETE The SESSION DELETE command deletes an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) session definition record from global memory. SESSION DELETE=session-name LBANNER session-name specifies the name of the session to the remote system. The session name can be from 1 through 12 characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW COMMANDS SHOW COMMANDS The SHOW COMMANDS command displays information about commands available LBANNER within NonStop NET/MASTER MS. You can display all NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands, only those NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands that you have the authority to execute, or a particular NonStop NET/MASTER MS command. The commands displayed depend on the operand used.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW COMMANDS Examples 1. The following example displays only those commands that you have authority to execute: SHOW COMMANDS LBANNER The following screen displays the results. Only the first screen is displayed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW COMMANDS 2. The following example displays all NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands: SHOW COMMANDS=ALL LBANNER The following screen displays the results. Only the first screen is displayed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW CPUWEIGHT SHOW CPUWEIGHT The SHOW CPUWEIGHT command displays the processor type, status, and CPU weight configuration of one or all CPUs installed in a system. LBANNER The SHOW CPUWEIGHT command with no operands displays the processor type, status, and CPU weight (configured and in use) of the CPU running the current process. SHOW CPUWEIGHT[ ={ cpu-number | ALL } ] cpu-number specifies a particular CPU. The value must be a number from 0 through 15.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW CPUWEIGHT Examples 1. The following example displays the processor type, status, and CPU weight (configured and in use) of the CPU running the current process. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW CPUWEIGHT 2. The following example displays the processor type, status, and CPU weight (configured and in use) of CPU 0. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW DOMAINS SHOW DOMAINS The SHOW DOMAINS command displays information about all or specified domains. (A domain is a logical division in a network. It includes the Tandem system on which NonStop NET/MASTER MS is running and all associated devices.) Entering the SHOW DOMAINS command with no operands displays information about all known domains. LBANNER SHOW DOMAINS[ =domain-id ] 2–320 domain-id specifies a domain ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW DOMAINS Examples The first command in the following example displays information about all domains. The second command displays information about a specified domain. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW ENGINE SHOW ENGINE The SHOW ENGINE command displays internal information about the operations of NonStop NET/MASTER MS processes. LBANNER SHOW ENGINE[ ={ process-name | ALL } ] Note Use this command only when directed by Tandem support personnel. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW EQUATES SHOW EQUATES The SHOW EQUATES command displays information about all available global and local equates. LBANNER You cannot use this command to display a NonStop NET/MASTER MS command that has been replaced with an NCL procedure of the same name (using the SYSPARMS CMDREPL command). You must use the SHOW PRELOAD command to do this. SHOW EQUATES Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW EQUATES Example The following example displays all available local and global equates. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW EQUATES 2–324 (11:05) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW EQUATES NNM0245 -STRING- TYPE ------------ EQUATED COMMAND TEXT ----------NNM0246 SYS1 LOCL ROUTE SYS1 MSG ALL+ NNM0246 MALL+ LOCL MSG ALL NNM0246 LEAVE LOCL AT 16:00 LIMIT=1 MSG ALL Goodbye all.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW FILEINFO SHOW FILEINFO The SHOW FILEINFO command displays information about one or more disk files. LBANNER The files displayed using this command are not necessarily user databases (UDBs). This command does not restrict the files displayed to those of a certain file type.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW FILEINFO Examples 1. The following example displays all files in your default NCL user procedure library. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW FILEINFO 2. The following example displays all files in $SYSTEM.SYSTEM. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW FILEINFO=$SYSTEM.SYSTEM.* (11:13) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW FILEINFO=$SYSTEM.SYSTEM.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW FILES SHOW FILES The SHOW FILES command displays information about the physical attributes of user databases (UDBs). A UDB is a file opened using the UDBCTL OPEN command; NCL works with UDBs. Entering the SHOW FILES command with no operands displays information about all UDBs. LBANNER SHOW FILES[ =file-spec ] 2–328 file-spec: [ \sys. ][ $volume. ][ subvolume. ]file-name file-spec specifies the name of the file about which to display information.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW FILES Examples 1. The following example displays information about the physical attributes of UDBs. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW FILES (15:34) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW FILES NNM0310 FILENAME P-EXT S-EXT CUR MAX RCSZ CODE T NNM0311 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ILGFILE1 100 100 16 16 4060 896 K NNM0311 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.IMAPFILE 100 40 11 16 1024 893 K NNM0311 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW FILES 2. The following example displays information about the physical attributes of a specified UDB. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW FILES=$DATA.ZNNMDATA.ZRMSMSG (15:35) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW FILES=$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ZRMSMSG NNM0310 FILENAME P-EXT S-EXT CUR MAX RCSZ CODE T NNM0311 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW FILTERS SHOW FILTERS The SHOW FILTERS command displays information about Event Management Service (EMS) filter file names. This command displays information about filter object files and the filter file names in the library specified by the SYSPARMS EMSFLTLIB command. The command does not display filter source files information. LBANNER SHOW FILTERS Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW ISR SHOW ISR The SHOW ISR command displays information about the status of Inter-System Routing (ISR). The default ISR definition is created using the ISR command. Entering the SHOW ISR command with no operands displays the default ISR definition and all specific ISR definitions for all flow classes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW ISR The link name is defined in the LINK DEFINE command. The link name can be from 1 through 12 characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. link-name displays information about the specified link. LBANNER link-name* displays information about all links beginning with the specified generic link name. In this context, the asterisk (*) is a wild card. * displays information about all links.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW ISR 1. The following example shows the default ISR definition for a local system. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW ISR 3. The following example shows the ISR status for the EMS message flow to LINK SYS1. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LINKS SHOW LINKS The SHOW LINKS command displays information about Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) links. Entering the SHOW LINKS command with no operands displays the current status of all links. (This information is not obtained from global memory; it is obtained by querying (or attempting to query) each remote system for its current operational status.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LINKS Examples Note To assist you in interpreting the following examples, message lines are highlighted in bold type and the results from commands are highlighted in italic type. LBANNER 1. The following example displays the current operational status of all links. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LINKS 2. The following example displays information about a specified link. In the example, the components of each definition record that create the hierarchical relationship are underlined. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LINKS 4. The following example displays the relationships between all link names, session names, and unit names. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LOCKS LBANNER SHOW LOCKS The SHOW LOCKS command displays the current status of resource locks. The main use of the SHOW LOCKS command is to determine conflicts between two or more cooperating NCL processes that are waiting for a certain resource to become available. A lock is a logical resource, identified by a primary name and an optional minor name, established by an NCL process using the LOCK verb. The type of lock used by NCL is called an advisory lock.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LOCKS WAIT displays information about locks for which NCL processes are waiting. PNAME=primary-name LBANNER displays information about the lock(s) with the specified primary resource name. The lock name can be an entire lock name or the leading part of a lock name. If the name is an entire lock name, NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays information about that lock.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LOCKS Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. LBANNER You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. 2–342 Messages NNM1064 through NNM1071 and message NNM0999 indicate the results of this command. Refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER Messages Manual or NonStop NET/MASTER MS online help for a description of these messages.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LOCKS 2. The following example displays information about locks with the primary name of \SYS1.$S. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW LOCKS PNAME=\SYS1.$S (08:56) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW LOCKS PNAME=\SYS1.$S NNM1065 NCL CLASS LOCKS NNM1067 MINOR NAME RESOURCE \SYS1.$S.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LOCKS 4. The following example displays information about locks waiting for resources. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW LOGS SHOW LOGS The SHOW LOGS command displays the current status of the activity log files. NonStop NET/MASTER MS continuously maintains a log of all significant events. You can use the LOGSWAP command to stop logging to the current activity log file and to open a different activity log file (if another is available). LBANNER SHOW LOGS Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW MAPS LBANNER SHOW MAPS 2–346 The SHOW MAPS command displays information about the usage of standard and user-defined maps. Maps are used by Mapping Services to interpret data in mapped data object (MDO) variables used by NCL processes. The name of the maps distributed with NonStop NET/MASTER MS are $MAP, $MSG, $NCL, $SEC, and $SPI. Entering the SHOW MAPS command with no operands displays information about all maps.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW MAPS Example The commands in the following example display information about all maps, maps beginning with a specified prefix, and a specific map, respectively. (EMPREC is a user-defined map.) The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCL LBANNER SHOW NCL The SHOW NCL command displays the current status of NCL processes. An NCL process is an NCL procedure that is executing; it has an NCL identifier. You can use this command to display information about executing, paused, queued, or delayed NCL processes. This command does not display information about NCL procedures scheduled for execution using the EXEC command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCL queue-option specifies an option (described later in “Queue Option Details”) related to delayed or queued NCL processes. LBANNER REGION specifies the NonStop NET/MASTER MS environment in which you are operating. This command displays information about NCL processes executing under either of your OCS windows. ALL specifies all regions; that is, the NonStop NET/MASTER MS environments of all users.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCL Note NonStop NET/MASTER MS does not assume a default system name when attempting to find the device name you specify. This command displays information about NCL processes executing under the specified device name. LBANNER logical-name specifies the logical name of the terminal. This is the name by which NonStop NET/MASTER MS recognizes the terminal. It corresponds to a physical name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCL ARGS specifies that parameters sent to the NCL procedure are to be displayed. ALL specifies that all parameters are to be displayed. LBANNER number restricts the display to the first number parameters. QUEUE=queue-name specifies queued NCL processes sent to the specified NCL queue(s).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCL Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. The ALL, user-id, logical-name, device-name, and ID operands each have a default authority level of 2. LBANNER You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. Messages NNM1035 through NNM1041, NNM1043, NNM2711 through NNM2714, and NNM0999 indicate the results of this command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCL 2. The following example displays NCL processes queued in the queue called TEST1. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW NCL QUEUE=TEST1 (13:32) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW NCL QUEUE=TEST1 NNM1036 NCLID BASEPROC CURRENT LEV W TYPE INIT OWNER G P P-UNITS NNM1037 1561 PROC1 PROC1 0 0 START NMTJN NMTJN 1 1 0 NNM2712 ....
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCL 4. The following example displays delayed NCL processes. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW NCL DELAYED (13:46) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW NCL DELAYED NNM1036 NCLID BASEPROC CURRENT LEV W TYPE INIT OWNER G P P-UNITS NNM1037 1693 PROC13 PROC13 0 0 START NMTJN NMTJN 1 1 0 NNM2711 ....DELAYED UNTIL 19-APR-1995 13:46:34 NNM1037 1658 PROC3 PROC3 0 0 START NMTJN NMTJN 1 1 0 NNM2711 ....
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLGLBL SHOW NCLGLBL The SHOW NCLGLBL command displays the names and information about the contents of NCL global variables. Global variables are variables that are visible to all NCL processes throughout NonStop NET/MASTER MS. All global variables begin with the prefix GLBL. Entering the SHOW NCLGLBL command with no operands displays the names of all global variables, but no information about their contents.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLGLBL Examples 1. The following example displays all global variables. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW NCLGLBL 2–356 (14:11) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW NCLGLBL NNM1044 FULL LIST OF NCL GLOBAL VARIABLES FOLLOWS NNM1045 GLBL NNM1045 GLBLABC NNM1045 GLBLABCXYZ NNM1045 GLBLABCXYZ. NNM1045 GLBLZZZ NNM1045 GLBLZZZ.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLGLBL 2. The following example displays all global variables beginning with the leading characters GLBLABC. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW NCLGLBL=ABC (14:13) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW NCLGLBL=ABC NNM1044 SELECTIVE LIST OF NCL GLOBAL VARIABLES FOLLOWS NNM1046 NAME LEN TEXT NNM1047 GLBLABC 23 Simple global variable NNM1047 GLBLABCXYZ 22 Simple global variable NNM1047 GLBLABCXYZ.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLOBJECT SHOW NCLOBJECT The SHOW NCLOBJECT command displays information about objects in an NCL object file. SHOW NCLOBJECT=file-name [ PROC=ncl-procedure ] LBANNER file-name: [ \sys. ]$volume.subvolume.file-name 2–358 file-name specifies the name of the object file. PROC limits the display to a specific NCL procedure. Only those objects created using NCLCOMP can be specified successfully using the PROC operand.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLOBJECT Examples 1. The following example displays a list of all NCL objects contained in $DATA4.ZNNMNDO.NCODE. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW NCLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMNDO.NCODE (13:48) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW NCLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMNDO.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLOBJECT 2. The following example specifies a particular NCL object contained in $DATA4.ZNNMNDO.NCODE. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW NCLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMNDO.NCODE PROC=PROGRUN 2–360 (13:48) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW NCLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMNDO.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLQUEUE SHOW NCLQUEUE The SHOW NCLQUEUE command displays the current execution limit for each NCL queue. The NCLQUEUE SET command defines an NCL queue and sets the execution limit, or modifies the execution limit of an existing NCL queue. Entering the SHOW NCLQUEUE command with no operands displays information about all NCL queues. LBANNER SHOW NCLQUEUE[ =queue-name ] queue-name specifies the name of a queue.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLQUEUE Example The following example displays the execution limit for each NCL queue. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NCLSTAT SHOW NCLSTAT The SHOW NCLSTAT command displays information about preloaded NCL procedures. This command is synonymous with the SHOW PRELOAD command. See the SHOW PRELOAD command for more information.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NRD LBANNER SHOW NRD 2–364 The SHOW NRD command displays the current full non-roll-delete (NRD) messages in the NRD message central queue. You can use this command to identify all NRD messages in the central NRD message queue, not only those that an individual user is entitled to view. In addition, you can use this command to view NRD messages originating from an NCL process, before deleting them using the PURGE NRD command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW NRD Example The following example displays NRD messages in the NRD central queue. To assist you in interpreting the display, NRD messages in the following screen alternate between bold type and normal type. LBANNER SHOW NRD (10:52) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------NNM0253 SYS1/72 93/05/17 18.28 ---Y NNM0552 NEWPROCESS ERROR $PD45 3/11 ON $DATA9.ZDSMS.SCPE NNM0253 SYS1/73 93/05/17 22.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW OCS SHOW OCS The SHOW OCS command displays information about users who are currently using Operator Control Services (OCS). This does not include virtual users such as the Background Monitor and the Background Logger or users from remote systems. Contrast this command with the SHOW USERS command, which displays information about all users who are currently logged on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PANELS SHOW PANELS The SHOW PANELS command displays information about panel description files in LBANNER the active panel queue. This queue holds panel description files that have been loaded into memory. If a request for a panel description file can be satisfied from a copy in the active panel queue, NonStop NET/MASTER MS does not have to load the panel description files from disk. You can use this command to monitor panel activity to optimize the size of the queue.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PANELS Example 1. The following example displays information about all panel description files in the active panel queue. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PARAM SHOW PARAM The SHOW PARAM command displays a summary of NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup parameters. It shows the values of the parameters used in the configuration file when NonStop NET/MASTER MS was initialized. The command also displays the name of the configuration file. LBANNER SHOW PARAM Table 2-14 lists operands of the PARAM command whose values are displayed by the SHOW PARAM command. Table 2-14.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PARAM LBANNER The following table explains the meaning of the DEFAULT, DEFINED, and EXTERNAL keywords following the CIP, CMDSVR, and SECEXIT operands: 2–370 Keyword Meaning DEFAULT Either no configuration file was used or the process was not defined in the configuration file when the process was created by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. The process was created using the default NonStop NET/MASTER MS configuration.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PAUSE SHOW PAUSE The SHOW PAUSE command displays information about paused NCL processes. A paused NCL process is one that is suspended because of a DELAY or PAUSE verb. Entering the SHOW PAUSE command with no operands displays information about NCL processes in the current execution environment.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PAUSE user-id specifies a user ID. This command displays information about paused NCL processes owned by the specified user ID. LBANNER device-name specifies the physical name of the terminal. This is the name by which the operating system recognizes the terminal. You can specify a device name in the following forms: \* \sys* \sys.* [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. ]* ]$* ]$device* ]$device.* ]$device.#* ]$device.#subdevice* ]$device[ .
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PAUSE PROC=ncl-procedure specifies the name of an NCL procedure. Specifying this operand limits the display to those NCL processes that are executing the specified NCL procedure. LBANNER Note You cannot follow the name of the NCL procedure by an asterisk (*), which in this context would be a wild card, but you can specify a partial name to obtain information about all NCL procedures beginning with the partial name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PAUSE Example The following example displays all paused NCL processes. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW PAUSE=ALL 2–374 (13:30) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW PAUSE=ALL NNM1036 NCLID BASEPROC CURRENT LEV W TYPE INIT OWNER PG PRI P-UN NNM1037 3007 PROC1 PROC1 1 1 START NNMJS NNMJN 1 1 NNM1041 ....PROCESSING PAUSE LINE 14 NNM1037 3008 PROC2 PROC2 1 1 EXEC NNMDI NNMTB 1 1 NNM1041 ....
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PNLOBJECT SHOW PNLOBJECT The SHOW PNLOBJECT command displays information about objects in a panel object file. SHOW PNLOBJECT=file-name [ PANEL=panel-name ] LBANNER file-name: [ \sys. ]$volume.subvolume.file-name file-name specifies the name of the object file. PANEL limits the display to a specific panel description file. Note You can truncate the file name by using an asterisk (*) to specify all file names that begin with a certain sequence of characters.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PNLOBJECT Examples 1. The following example displays a list of all panel objects contained in $DATA4.ZNNMPDS.PCODE. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW PNLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMPDS.PCODE 2–376 (13:48) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW PNLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMPDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PNLOBJECT 2. The following example displays the status of a specific panel object contained in $DATA4.ZNNMPDS.PCODE. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW PNLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMPDS.PCODE PANEL=ZUMSUMUP (14:42) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW PNLOBJECT=$DATA4.ZNNMPDS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PRELOAD SHOW PRELOAD The SHOW PRELOAD command displays information about preloaded NCL LBANNER procedures. This command is synonymous with the SHOW NCLSTAT command. Preloaded NCL procedures are those available for shared execution in your Guardian process—either loaded into memory using the SYSPARMS PRELOAD or SYSPARMS CMDREPL command, or made available for sharing between NCL processes using the SYSPARMS NCLPRSHR command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PRELOAD Example The following example displays preloaded NCL procedures. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PROCESS SHOW PROCESS The SHOW PROCESS command displays information about Guardian processes defined and started by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. When starting NonStop NET/MASTER MS with no configuration file, NonStop NET/MASTER MS defines processes automatically; you can explicitly define processes using PARAM commands in the configuration file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PROCESS logical-name specifies the logical name of a process, for example, SCPE-EXPAND. This displays the process definition of the specified process and information about all occurrences of the specified process. LBANNER You can specify a logical name from 1 through 12 characters long. The logical name must be unique.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PROCESS Examples Note To assist you in interpreting the following examples, the message line that begins a process definition is highlighted in bold type, message lines with the rest of the definition are highlighted in italic type, and message lines with information about the occurrence of a process are in ordinary type. LBANNER 1. 2–382 The following example displays information about your own process. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PROCESS 2. The following example displays information about all processes. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW PROCESS=ALL (09:47) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW PROCESS=ALL NNM0558 PROCESS DEFINITION NMMS_STATIC1 NNM0556 OBJECT=$DATA9.ZNNM.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PROCESS 4. The following example displays information about the process with the process name of $ZNN0. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PSND SHOW PSND The SHOW PSND commands displays the status of Pathway server classes available for use by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Entering the SHOW PSND command with no operands displays information about all Pathway server classes available for use by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. LBANNER SHOW PSND[ =process-spec ] process-spec pathmon-process-name.pathway-server-class-name process-spec specifies the name of the Pathway server class about which to display information.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PSND Example The following example displays the status of all Pathway server classes that are available for use by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW PSND 2–386 (15:32) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW PSND NNM0322 PATHMON.SERVERCLASS PSNDID ACTIVE-USERS STATUS NNM0323 \SYS1.$TRPM.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW PSNDUSER SHOW PSNDUSER The SHOW PSNDUSER command displays information about the users and NCL processes currently using Pathway server classes that are available for use by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. LBANNER SHOW PSNDUSER Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW SESS SHOW SESS The SHOW SESS command displays information about terminals connected to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. This command is synonymous with the SHOW TERM command. See the SHOW TERM command for more information.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW SYSPARMS LBANNER SHOW SYSPARMS The SHOW SYSPARMS command displays a summary of the current values of NonStop NET/MASTER MS system parameters. Since some system parameters can be changed after NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup, some values may be different from those used in the INIT or READY NCL procedures when NonStop NET/MASTER MS was initialized. Entering the SHOW SYSPARMS command with no operands displays the current values of all system parameters.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW SYSPARMS Table 2-17 lists operands of the SYSPARMS command whose values are not displayed by the SHOW SYSPARMS command. Table 2-17. SYSPARMS Operands Not Displayed by SHOW SYSPARMS Command LBANNER CMDAUTH CMDREPL 2–390 MAPDEL MAPLOAD PPRELOAD PRELOAD PUNLOAD UNLOAD You use the following commands to display the values of the operands listed in Table 2-17: SHOW MAPS for the MAPDEL and MAPLOAD operands. SHOW PANELS for the PPRELOAD and PUNLOAD operands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW SYSPARMS Examples 1. The following example displays all NonStop NET/MASTER MS system parameters. Only the first screen is displayed. LBANNER SHOW SYSPARMS (13:07) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW SYSPARMS NNM0601 SYSPARMS VALUE NNM0602 AUTOEXEC YES NNM0602 CDELAY 15 NNM0602 CMDSTACK 20 NNM0602 CNMAPPLNME \TEST.$SSCP.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW SYSPARMS 2. The following example displays all NonStop NET/MASTER MS system parameters beginning with TO. These system parameters display terminal timeout settings. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW SYSPARMS=TO* 2–392 (10:03) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW SYSPARMS=TO* NNM0601 SYSPARMS VALUE NNM0602 TOACT1 DISC NNM0602 TOACT2 DISC NNM0602 TOALARM 3 NNM0602 TOSTART NONE NNM0602 TOTIME1 0.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TERM SHOW TERM The SHOW TERM command displays information about terminals connected to LBANNER NonStop NET/MASTER MS. This command is synonymous with the SHOW SESS command. Connected terminals are those that have been defined to NonStop NET/MASTER MS and opened for use with NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TERM A logical name must be from one through eight characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. A logical name cannot begin with a backslash (\) or a dollar sign ($). You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a logical name. In this context, the asterisk is a wild card. LBANNER ALL specifies all terminals defined and opened for use with NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TERM If a terminal is not open, the Guardian OPEN procedure call opens the terminal, the information is gathered, and the Guardian CLOSE procedure call closes the terminal. Considerations LBANNER The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TERM 2. The following example displays limited terminal information about all terminals with a logical name beginning with #51663: SHOW TERM=#51663* 3. The following example displays limited and detailed terminal data about the current terminal (an IBM-compatible PC using PCT emulation software).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TERMDEF LBANNER SHOW TERMDEF The SHOW TERMDEF command displays information about terminals defined to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Defined terminals are not necessarily opened for use with NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Terminals can be defined either explicitly (by using the TERMINAL ADD command) or implicitly (by running the NNM utility program from TACL). Entering the SHOW TERMDEF command with no operands displays information about your own terminal.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TERMDEF ALL specifies all terminals defined to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Considerations LBANNER The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. Messages NNM1217, NNM1225, and NNM0999 indicate the results of this command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TIMER SHOW TIMER The SHOW TIMER command displays information about timer commands. These are commands initiated by the AT and EVERY timer commands that are waiting to be executed. The information is obtained from the timer queue. Entering the SHOW TIMER command with no operands displays information about timer commands scheduled for execution under the control of the requesting user ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TIMER Examples 1. The following example displays information about all timer commands in the timer queue. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TRACE SHOW TRACE The SHOW TRACE command displays current trace information. Entering the SHOW TRACE command with no operands displays information about the current values in the trace parameter list (TPL). LBANNER SHOW TRACE[ ={ trace-id | ALL } ] [ DETAIL={ YES | NO } ] trace-id specifies a trace ID. NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays information about the specified trace ID. ALL specifies all running traces.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TRACE Examples 1. The following example displays limited information about the current values in the TPL. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW TRACE 2–402 (11:50) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW TRACE NNM0017 ID=0 FILE=\SYS1.$DATA9.NMTJN.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TRACE 2. The following example displays limited information about all running traces. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW TRACE=ALL (11:53) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW TRACE=ALL NNM0017 ID=1 FILE=\SYS1.$DATA9.NMTJN.UTR00001 NNM0018 USERID=ALL LINK=ALL TERMNAME=ALL NNM0019 COUNT=0 PAGES=64 WRAP=YES RECSIZE=50 NNM0048 TRACE STARTED BY USER NMTJN NNM0017 ID=2 FILE=\SYS1.$DATA9.NMTJN.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TRACE 4. The following example displays detailed information about the current values in the TPL. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW TRACE DETAIL=YES 2–404 (11:54) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW TRACE DETAIL=YES NNM0017 ID=0 FILE=\SYS1.$DATA9.NMTJN.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW TRACE 6.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW UDB SHOW UDB The SHOW UDB command displays the status of user databases (UDBs). A UDB is a file opened using the UDBCTL OPEN command; NCL works with UDBs. Entering the SHOW UDB command with no operands displays information about all UDBs. LBANNER SHOW UDB[ =file-spec ] 2–406 file-spec: [ \sys. ][ $volume. ][ subvolume. ]file-name file-spec specifies the name of the file about which to display information.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW UDB Examples 1. The following example displays information about all UDBs, including file pairs. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW UDB (14:07) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW UDB NNM0313 FILENAME FILEID A/U RKP KYL STUS OPTNS NNM0314 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ILGFILE1 LOGFILE1 0 0 44 SYS I NNM0314 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.IMAPFILE MDSMAP 0 0 36 SYS NNM0314 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW UDB 2. The following example displays information about the specified UDBs. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER SHOW UDB=\SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ZHLPDB 2–408 (14:49) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW UDB=\SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ZHLPDB NNM0313 FILENAME FILEID A/U RKP KYL STUS OPTNS NNM0314 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.ICUSTHLP ZHLPDB 0 0 48 AVAL NNM0314 \SYS1.$DATA4.ZNNMDATA.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW UDBUSER SHOW UDBUSER The SHOW UDBUSER command displays information about the users and NCL processes that are currently using user databases (UDBs). SHOW UDBUSER LBANNER Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. Messages NNM0317, NNM0318, and NNM0999 indicate the results of this command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW USERS SHOW USERS The SHOW USERS command displays information about users who are currently LBANNER logged on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. This includes virtual users, such as the Background Monitor and the Background Logger, and users from remote systems. Entering the SHOW USERS command with no operands displays information about all users logged on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Your own user ID is displayed in high intensity.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW USERS Examples LBANNER 1. The following example displays information about all users currently logged on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. The following screen displays the results: (13:16) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SHOW USERS NNM0656 USERID TERMINAL TYPE PHYSICAL NAME PROCESS NNM0657 -------- -------- ---- ---------------------------------- ------NNM0658 METAGUY #3274792 6530 \TEST.$ATP2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW VARTABLES SHOW VARTABLES The SHOW VARTABLES command displays information about all currently allocated LBANNER vartables. A vartable is a memory-resident database for storing items of data that may change during the execution of an NCL process. Vartables are defined and allocated for use by using the NCL VARTABLE ALLOC verb. Displays can include global vartables.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW VARTABLES REGION specifies region vartables. These are vartables defined by the VARTABLE ALLOC verb using SCOPE=REGION. The display is restricted to region vartables. LBANNER The display indicates the user ID and the terminal with which each vartable is associated. You can use the USER or TERM operands of this command to further restrict the display in a region. USER=user-id restricts the display, when using the REGION operand, to the specified user ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW VARTABLES Note You cannot follow the vartable name by an asterisk (*), which in this context would be a wild card, to specify all vartables that begin with a certain sequence of characters. Considerations LBANNER The default authority level of this command is 0. The ncl-id operand has a default authority level of 2. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHOW VARTABLES 2. The following example displays region vartables. The following screen displays the results.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHUTDOWN LBANNER SHUTDOWN The SHUTDOWN command begins an orderly shutdown of NonStop NET/MASTER MS, and allows a shutdown to be stopped and reversed. Entering the SHUTDOWN command with no operands places NonStop NET/MASTER MS in shutdown status. This prevents users from logging on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. This command waits for all users to log off from NonStop NET/MASTER MS before the shutdown sequence begins (including the user that issued the SHUTDOWN command).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHUTDOWN Refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER MS System Management Guide for more information on using the SHUTDOWN command from TACL. LBANNER This command does not stop processes that are not started by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. This includes the DSNM command server, conversational interface, and security exit processes if they are started externally to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. For related information, see the FSTOP, SHUTDOWN $ABEND$, and STATUS commands. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHUTDOWN $ABEND$ LBANNER SHUTDOWN $ABEND$ The SHUTDOWN $ABEND$ command shuts down NonStop NET/MASTER MS immediately and completely, regardless of its operating state or the functions currently being performed. The processes stopped are the NonStop NET/MASTER MS control process (NCP) and all other processes in the NonStop NET/MASTER MS system.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SHUTDOWN $ABEND$ For related information, see the FSTOP, SHUTDOWN, and STATUS commands. Examples 1. The following example shuts down NonStop NET/MASTER MS immediately: SHUTDOWN $ABEND$ LBANNER 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNOFF link-name SIGNOFF link-name The SIGNOFF link-name command logs off a user from a remote NonStop LBANNER NET/MASTER MS or SOLVE management services system. You must have logged on to the remote system (either explicitly using the SIGNON link-name command or implicitly using the ROUTE link-name command) before you can successfully execute this command. You can log on to any number of remote systems from a single OCS window.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNON LBANNER SIGNON The SIGNON command updates the NonStop NET/MASTER MS security profile of a user. If any changes have been made to your user ID definition record (on your local system) while you have been logged on (for example, to your authority level, NCL user procedure library, or available Guardian user IDs), you can use this command to automatically implement them. You do not have to log off from NonStop NET/MASTER MS and log on again to implement the changes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNON link-name SIGNON link-name The SIGNON link-name command logs on a user to a remote NonStop NET/MASTER LBANNER MS or SOLVE management services system. The command allows you to log on to a remote system using Remote Operator Control (ROC).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNON link-name link-name specifies the name of the link to the system to which to log on. The link name is defined in the LINK DEFINE command. The link name can be from 1 through 12 characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. LBANNER { BKGCOLOR | BKGCOLOUR }=background-color-option specifies the background color on which to display messages from the link.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNON link-name PAREN specifies whether to enclose the message ID of a message from a link in parentheses. This operand is valid only if the message text is prefixed by a message prefix. The message text is prefixed by a message prefix if you specify PREFIX=YES. LBANNER YES specifies that the message ID is to be enclosed in parentheses. NO specifies that the message ID is not to be enclosed in parentheses. PASSWORD=password specifies your password at the remote system.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNON link-name Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. LBANNER You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. If you issue a ROUTE command to a remote NonStop NET/MASTER MS or SOLVE management services system before issuing a SIGNON link-name command, the ROUTE command issues an implicit SIGNON link-name command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNON link-name After you have logged on to a remote NonStop NET/MASTER MS or SOLVE management services system, you can use the ROUTE command to execute commands in the remote system. The results of the commands are returned to your local system. LBANNER If you always have to log on to a number of remote systems, you should consider establishing an NCL procedure containing the necessary SIGNON link-name commands to be executed automatically when you enter OCS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SIGNON link-name 5.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SPLIT LBANNER SPLIT The SPLIT command opens a new window or adjusts the size of the current window. You can use this command to open a second window when you want to view events from two perspectives simultaneously. You can split the window either horizontally (by row) or vertically (by column). Two windows operate independently. Input is accepted from the window in which the cursor is located and results of commands are returned to the same window.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SPLIT On a Tandem 6530 or compatible terminal, after you press the SPLIT key, NonStop NET/MASTER MS uses a mechanism called the SPLIT grid to allow you to split the screen. Figure 2-2 displays the SPLIT grid. Pressing the SPLIT key anywhere in NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays the SPLIT grid. After it appears, you must position the cursor in the grid lines and then press the ENTER key to split the screen. LBANNER Figure 2-2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SPLIT LBANNER If you want to split the screen horizontally, position the cursor at the left side of the screen at the row at which you want to position the top of the new screen and then press the SPLIT key. 2–430 On a Tandem 6530 or compatible terminal, if you have two windows open when you press the SPLIT key or enter the SPLIT command from the OCS command input line, NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays the SPLIT grid again.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SPLIT 2. The following example splits the screen at column 30. This is a vertical split. The following screen displays the results. SPLIT COL=30 LBANNER SYS1------- NonStop NET/MAST Select Option ===> 2 8 E H M S U X - (11:12) ------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ------SPLIT COL=30 ________________________________________________ Operator Control Se Edit Services Console Extras Help Maintenance User ID Management System Support Serv User Services Terminate Window.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands START START The START command invokes an NCL procedure for asynchronous execution. This command executes an NCL procedure immediately. When an NCL procedure is executed immediately, it executes independently of and concurrently with any other NCL procedures executing in the same environment. Contrast this command with the EXEC command, which invokes an NCL procedure for serial execution.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands START For related information, see the EXEC, FLUSH, GO, and SHOW NCL commands. Examples LBANNER 1. The following example invokes three NCL procedures: PROC1, PROC2, and PROC3. Execution of all three begins immediately. START PROC1 START PROC2 START PROC3 2. The following example passes the parameters, MON, TUE, WED, THU, FRI, SAT, and SUN to PROC4. START PROC4 MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT SUN Upon execution, NCL assigns these parameters to &1 through &7, respectively.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands STATUS STATUS The STATUS command displays the current general system status. STATUS LBANNER Considerations 2–434 The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. Messages NNM0608 and NNM0999 indicate the results of this command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SUBMIT LBANNER SUBMIT The SUBMIT command submits a command to a virtual user for execution. Submitting a command to a virtual user ensures that the command is executed regardless of whether you are logged on. For example, submitting an NCL procedure to a virtual user for execution, using the START or EXEC command from OCS, ensures that the NCL procedure executes regardless of whether you are in OCS or logged on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SUBMIT SUBMIT command to enter a command is equivalent to entering the command on a logical keyboard for these virtual users. To receive the results of a command submitted to a virtual user, you must set your OCS profile so that you can receive unsolicited, monitor-class messages.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SUBMIT Examples 1. The following example submits a command to BMON for execution: SUBMIT BMON START PROC1 2. The following example sends a timer command to BLOG for execution: LBANNER SUBMIT BLOG AT 13:20 LIMIT=1 EVERY ::30 SHOW LINKS 3. The following example sets test mode on for EMSP. When you are testing new versions of the EMSPROC system-level NCL procedure, this ensures that you always use the latest version.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SWAP LBANNER SWAP The SWAP command reverses the dimensions of the current logical windows. If you have two windows open and visible on the screen, this command swaps the sizes of the windows. This command is also assigned by default to the F9 function key; for this reason, this function key is called the SWAP key. You can use the SWAP key anywhere in NonStop NET/MASTER MS, not only from OCS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SWAP Examples 1. The following example reverses the dimensions of the current logical windows: SWAP LBANNER The following screen shows the windows just before the SWAP command is executed. The windows look like this just after a horizontal SPLIT command from window 1 in OCS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SWAP The following screen shows the windows just after the SWAP command is executed: LBANNER (10:31) --------------------- OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES ---------------------SPLIT ROW=6 SWAP _____________________________________________________________________________ 2–440 ---------- ------------------ NonStop NET/MASTER D30 ---------------- -------M=> SYS1------- NonStop NET/MASTER MS T6581D30 - 31OCT94 : Primary Menu -------SYS1 Select Option ===> 2 8 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SYSPARMS The SYSPARMS command defines and changes NonStop NET/MASTER MS system LBANNER parameters. These parameters configure system-wide settings in a NonStop NET/MASTER MS system. SYSPARMS commands are executed after a NonStop NET/MASTER MS system is initialized: after all PARAM commands in the configuration file have been executed. SYSPARMS commands are usually executed in the first NCL procedure executed by NonStop NET/MASTER MS, the INIT NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER SYSPARMS 2–442 EMSMAXRATE={ NONE | maximum-message-rate } EMSNRD={ ACTION | CRITICAL | BOTH | NONE } EMSPROC={ ncl-procedure | FLUSH } EVCMDMIN=repeat-frequency HELDMSG=( message-limit-1, message-limit-2 ) ID=system-id LANG={ UK | US } LASTLOGON={ YES | NO } LMSGWARN=repeat-frequency LNKTRACE={ YES | NO } LOCKMAX=maximum-lock-requests LOGFILEn=file-name LOGHIWATER=number LOGLOWATER=number LOGPRCNUM=number-of-log-procedures LOGPROC={ ncl-procedure | FLUSH } LOGWRAP=
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER SYSPARMS SESSMSG={ YES | NO } SPERRORC=color-option SPERRORH=hlite-option SPFKEYC=color-option SPINPHIC=color-option SPINPLOC=color-option SPINPUTH=hlite-option SPINPUTP=pad-char SPLABELC=color-option SPOUTHIC=color-option SPOUTLOC=color-option SPSUBTLC=color-option SPTITLEC=color-option SPTITLEP=pad-char SWGUIDDSNM={ YES | NO } SYSUDB={ YES | NO } TCMDMAX=maximum-concurrent-timer-commands TEDITOBJ=tedit-file-name TOACT1={ timeout-actn-1 | ( timeout-actn-1,rpt-inter
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS You can use, or modify the value of, the system parameters listed in Table 2-20 during and after execution of the INIT NCL procedure. This means that you can execute these system parameters online either from a command input line, such as the OCS command input line or the Display/Update SYSPARMS Settings command input line in System Support Services, or from any NCL procedure. LBANNER Table 2-20.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS Table 2-21 summarizes the operands of the SYSPARMS command. Table 2-21. SYSPARMS Operands (Page 1 of 5) Operand Description AUTOEXEC Specifies whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS treats an unrecognized command as the name of a valid Guardian utility or an NCL procedure. Specifies the period in seconds for which NonStop NET/MASTER MS waits before sending output to an OCS window if a user is entering input from the keyboard.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS Table 2-21. SYSPARMS Operands (Page 2 of 5) Operand Description EMSEVENTTD Specifies the file name and location of the Event Management Service (EMS) event detail database from which you want to retrieve EMS event help. Specifies the subvolume used by NonStop NET/MASTER MS for filters used with the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS Table 2-21. SYSPARMS Operands (Page 3 of 5) Operand Description LOGHIWATER Specifies the size to which the activity log message queue can grow before the reading of messages is suspended. Specifies the size to which the activity log message queue must decrease before the reading of messages is resumed. Specifies the number of copies of the LOGPROC NCL process that can execute to intercept and process messages destined for the NonStop NET/MASTER MS activity log.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS Table 2-21. SYSPARMS Operands (Page 4 of 5) Operand Description NCLUMAX Specifies the maximum number of NCL processes that a user can execute concurrently in a region. Specifies whether the INTQ command or the WRITE verb can send data to an NCL process that is not owned by the user executing the command or verb. Specifies the name of the network. Specifies the internal queuing limit for various types of messages.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS Table 2-21. SYSPARMS Operands (Page 5 of 5) Operand Description SPLABELC Specifies the color in which to display field labels and comments on panels. Specifies the color in which to display output data fields (that are always present) on panels. Specifies the color in which to display output data fields (that are not always present) on panels. Specifies the color in which to display subtitles and headings on panels.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS Table 2-22 summarizes the restrictions that apply to operands of the SYSPARMS command in relation to routing to remote system (Rem) and executing in a background processing environment (Backgd). Following this table, the operands are discussed in more detail. Table 2-22.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS AUTOEXEC AUTOEXEC AUTOEXEC={ YES | NO | OPSYS | START } specifies whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS treats an unrecognized command as the name of a valid Guardian utility or an NCL procedure. YES LBANNER allows NonStop NET/MASTER MS to treat an unrecognized command as the name of a valid Guardian utility or an NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS AUTOEXEC Consideration The AUTOEXEC operand has a default authority level of 9. Examples LBANNER 1. 2–452 The following example allows NonStop NET/MASTER MS to treat an unrecognized command as the name of a valid Guardian utility or an NCL procedure: SYSPARMS AUTOEXEC=YES 2. The following example disallows NonStop NET/MASTER MS from treating an unrecognized command as the name of a valid Guardian utility or an NCL procedure: SYSPARMS AUTOEXEC=NO 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS CDELAY CDELAY CDELAY=contention-delay specifies the period in seconds for which NonStop NET/MASTER MS waits before sending output to an OCS window if a user is entering input from the keyboard. The default is 15 seconds. You can specify a value from 0 through 300 seconds. LBANNER Consideration OCS windows may receive solicited and unsolicited output at any time. If output is available while a user is entering input, a contention condition exists.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS CMDAUTH CMDAUTH CMDAUTH=( command [ operand ],auth[, operand, opauth ] ) LBANNER changes the default authority level of a command or command/operand combination and, optionally, the operand of the command or command/operand combination for which a higher authority level may apply. The change takes effect for all users and NCL processes as soon as the PROFILE CMDAUTH command is processed by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. command specifies the name of a command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS CMDAUTH Examples 1. The following example changes the default authority level of the FSTOP command from 3 (default) to 5: SYSPARMS CMDAUTH=(FSTOP,5) LBANNER 2. The following example leaves unchanged the authority level of the AT command at 0, and changes the default authority level of the LIMIT operand from 1 (default) to 2: SYSPARMS CMDAUTH=(AT,0,LIMIT,2) 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS CMDREPL CMDREPL CMDREPL=command LBANNER specifies the name of a command to replace with an NCL procedure of the same name. You cannot abbreviate the command name specified by command. 2–456 NonStop NET/MASTER MS searches for the specified NCL procedure in the customized procedure library and the distribution procedure library. If NonStop NET/MASTER MS finds the NCL procedure, it compiles it, preloads it, and records that the command is replaced.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS CMDSTACK CMDSTACK CMDSTACK=maximum-commands specifies the maximum number of commands to retain in the history buffer (command stack) associated with an OCS window. LBANNER The default maximum number of commands that a history buffer retains is 20. You can specify a value from 0 through 99. A value of 0 disables the history buffer. A value from 1 through 99 sets the upper limit of the value a user can specify using the PROFILE CMDSTACK command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS CNMAPPLNME CNMAPPLNME CNMAPPLNME=process-name specifies the System Services Control Point (SSCP) application process name for communication network management (CNM) use. The default SSCP application process name is $SSCP.#APPL1. You can specify a different SSCP application process name in the form: LBANNER [ \sys. ]$process-name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS CONMSG CONMSG CONMSG={ YES | NO } specifies whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS writes a message to the activity log each time a terminal is connected to or disconnected from the system. YES LBANNER instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to write a message to the activity log each time a terminal is connected to or disconnected from the system.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSBKGCOLOR EMSBKGCOLOR { EMSBKGCOLOR | EMSBKGCOLOUR }=background-color-option specifies the background color on which to display unsolicited Event Management Service (EMS) messages in an OCS window. The default is NONE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED 2–460 BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration You can use this system parameter to highlight EMS messages on terminals that support color.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSCOLLPNM EMSCOLLPNM EMSCOLLPNM=process-name specifies the process name of the Event Management Service (EMS) collector. The default EMS collector process name is $0. You can specify a different EMS collector process name in the form: LBANNER $process-name[ .#qual-name-1 [ .qual-name-2 ] ] Consideration The EMS collector is used by NonStop NET/MASTER MS to gather internally generated NonStop NET/MASTER MS events and events generated by the NCL EMSSEND verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSCOLOR EMSCOLOR { EMSCOLOR | EMSCOLOUR }=color-option specifies the color in which to display unsolicited Event Management Service (EMS) messages on an OCS window. The default is NONE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED 2–462 BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration You can use this system parameter to highlight EMS messages on terminals that support color.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSDISTBCP EMSDISTBCP EMSDISTBCP=cpu-number specifies the number of the backup central processing unit (CPU) of the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor. LBANNER The default backup CPU is 0. You can specify a value from 0 through 15. The value must be different from the value specified by the SYSPARMS EMSDISTPCP command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSDISTCOLL EMSDISTCOLL EMSDISTCOLL={ process-name | ( process-name[, process-name ] … ) | file-name } specifies the name(s) of the Event Management Service (EMS) collector process(es) or the EMS log file to be used with the EMS distributor. LBANNER The default EMS collector process is $0. You can specify up to 10 collector process names. You can specify a collector process name in the form: 2–464 $process-name[ .#qual-name-1 [ .
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSDISTFLT EMSDISTFLT EMSDISTFLT={ filter | ( filter[, filter ] … ) | FLUSH } specifies the name of a filter or filter table for the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor, a list of EMS distributor filters or filter tables for the EMS distributor, or whether to remove the current EMS distributor filter(s) or filter table(s). LBANNER filter specifies the name of a filter or filter table.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSDISTPCP EMSDISTPCP EMSDISTPCP=cpu-number specifies the number of the primary central processing unit (CPU) for the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor. LBANNER The default primary CPU is 1. You can specify a value from 0 through 15. The value must be different from the value specified by the SYSPARMS EMSDISTBCP command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSDISTPFN EMSDISTPFN EMSDISTPFN=file-name specifies the program file name of the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor. The default file name is $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.EMSDIST. You can specify a file name in the form: LBANNER [ \sys. ]$volume.subvolume.EMSDIST Consideration The EMS distributor is responsible for starting, stopping, and reading EMS events. If the EMSPROC NCL procedure is executing, the EMS distributor sends events to EMSPROC.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSDISTPNM EMSDISTPNM EMSDISTPNM=process-name specifies the process name of the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor. You can specify a distributor process name in the form: [ \sys. ]$process-name[ .#qual-name-1 [ .qual-name-2 ] ] LBANNER Consideration If you do not specify a process name, NonStop NET/MASTER MS issues a Guardian CREATEPROCESSNAME procedure call to your Tandem system to create a process name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSDISTPRI EMSDISTPRI EMSDISTPRI=process-priority specifies the process priority of the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor. You can specify a value from 1 through 199. LBANNER The default priority of the EMS distributor is the same as the priority of the NonStop NET/MASTER MS process that supports the interface to EMS and the processing of EMS events.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSEVENTTD EMSEVENTTD EMSEVENTTD=file-name specifies the file name and location of the Event Management Service (EMS) event detail database from which you want to retrieve EMS event help. This file is the distributed event detail database, either in its standard form or with customized entries. LBANNER The default value of SYSPARMS EMSEVENTTD is $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.EVENTTD.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSFLTLIB EMSFLTLIB EMSFLTLIB=filter-library specifies the subvolume used by NonStop NET/MASTER MS for filters used with the Event Management Service (EMS) distributor. LBANNER The default filter library is specified in two parts. The name of the default volume is the name of the installation subvolume. The name of the default subvolume is ZNNMDATA. You can specify a filter library in the form: [ \sys. ]$volume.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSHLITE EMSHLITE { EMSHLITE | EMSHLIGHT }=hlite-option specifies the type of extended highlighting in which to display unsolicited Event Management Service (EMS) messages on an OCS window. LBANNER The default is LO for Tandem 6530 or compatible terminals and NONE for IBM 3270 or compatible terminals.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSLINELEN EMSLINELEN EMSLINELEN=number specifies the maximum length, in bytes, of an Event Management Service (EMS) message line (before a carriage return). The default value is 1000. You can specify a value from 80 through 32000. LBANNER Consideration The SYSPARMS EMSLINELEN command must be considered in conjunction with the SYSPARMS EMSLINENUM command because the value of EMSLINELEN multiplied by the value of EMSLINENUM must not be greater than 32000.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSLINENUM EMSLINENUM EMSLINENUM=number specifies the maximum number of lines in an Event Management Service (EMS) message. The default value is 10. You can specify a value from 1 through 400. LBANNER Consideration 2–474 The SYSPARMS EMSLINENUM command must be considered in conjunction with the SYSPARMS EMSLINELEN command because the value of EMSLINENUM multiplied by the value of EMSLINELEN must not be greater than 32000. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSMAXRATE EMSMAXRATE EMSMAXRATE={ NONE | maximum-message-rate } specifies the maximum event messages per second that NonStop NET/MASTER MS reads from the EMS distributor. You can use this operand to limit the rate that NonStop NET/MASTER MS reads EMS messages from the EMS distributor. LBANNER NONE specifies no maximum rate. NonStop NET/MASTER MS does not limit the rate at which it reads messages from the EMS distributor.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSMAXRATE Examples 1. The following example specifies no maximum message rate: SYSPARMS EMSMAXRATE=NONE LBANNER 2. 2–476 The following table shows examples in which the value is a number: Value Meaning .01 0.01 0.02 0.09 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.5 0.75 0.8 1 1.0 2.5 4.7 10 25 99.9 Limits the message rate to one message per 100 seconds. Limits the message rate to one message per 100 seconds. Limits the message rate to one message per 50 seconds.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSNRD EMSNRD EMSNRD={ ACTION | CRITICAL | BOTH | NONE } associates the non-roll-delete (NRD) message attribute with the specified Event Management Service (EMS) messages. LBANNER ACTION instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to associate the NRD message attribute with EMS messages where the action needed token value is present and TRUE.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EMSPROC EMSPROC EMSPROC={ ncl-procedure | FLUSH } specifies the name of the NCL procedure that intercepts and processes unsolicited Event Management Service (EMS) messages, or flushes the current EMSPROC NCL procedure. LBANNER ncl-procedure 2–478 specifies the name of the NCL procedure that intercepts and processes unsolicited EMS messages. FLUSH flushes the current EMSPROC NCL procedure. Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS EVCMDMIN EVCMDMIN EVCMDMIN=repeat-frequency LBANNER specifies the minimum repeat frequency in seconds permissible for an EVERY command. You can use this command to avoid inadvertently flooding the system with timer commands. The default value is 10 seconds. You can specify a value from 0 through 300. A value of 0 in an EVERY command means that the command is to be executed immediately.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS HELDMSG HELDMSG HELDMSG=( message-limit-1, message-limit-2 ) specifies the maximum size of the roll-delete message queue associated with an OCS window, and the maximum value a user can specify using the PROFILE HOLD command. LBANNER message-limit-1 2–480 specifies the number of messages NonStop NET/MASTER MS queues for display on an OCS window when it is in either the HOLDING or AUTO HOLD mode.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS ID ID ID=system-id specifies the system identifier by which to identify a NonStop NET/MASTER MS system. LBANNER You can specify a system identifier from 1 through 12 characters long. It is recommended that you use only alphanumeric characters when you specify a system identifier. If you do not specify a system identifier, the default system identifier is the Expand system name without the leading back slash (\) or ANONYMOUS if the system is unnamed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LANG LANG LANG={ UK | US } specifies the spelling to be used in error messages issued by the system, and determines the default value that is returned in the &SYS.USER.LC system variable when it is queried by a user. UK LBANNER specifies United Kingdom English spelling. 2–482 US specifies United States English spelling.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LASTLOGON LASTLOGON LASTLOGON={ YES | NO } specifies whether to display the initial primary menu, which contains information about the last occasion a user logged on to the system, when a user is allowed to choose only one menu option. LBANNER YES instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to display the initial primary menu when a user is allowed to choose only one menu option.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LMSGWARN LMSGWARN LMSGWARN=repeat-frequency defines the repeat frequency for warning OCS operators of lost messages when the OCS window is in HOLDING or AUTO HOLD mode. LBANNER The default value is 0. This value instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to generate only one warning message each time messages start to be lost. You can specify a value from 1 through 999.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LNKTRACE LNKTRACE LNKTRACE={ YES | NO } determines whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS issues any link trace messages. You can use this operand to monitor the status of the physical connection between two systems. A physical connection is established by the units at each end of a link. The status of the physical connection is either active or inactive.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LOCKMAX LOCKMAX LOCKMAX=maximum-lock-requests LBANNER specifies the maximum number of concurrent lock requests that can be active. A lock is a logical resource established by an NCL process using the LOCK verb. Locks are used by cooperating NCL processes to control access to resources. 2–486 The default value is 128 concurrent active lock requests. You can specify a value from 0 through 32767. Specifying a value of 0 implies an unlimited number of locks.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LOGFILEn LOGFILEn LOGFILEn=file-name LBANNER specifies the number and name of a file in the group of activity log files. When you start NonStop NET/MASTER MS, you can specify an initial activity log file using the PARAM LOGFILE1 command. This file holds messages logged during NonStop NET/MASTER MS startup.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LOGHIWATER LOGHIWATER LOGHIWATER=number specifies the size to which the activity log message queue can grow before the reading of EMS messages is suspended. LBANNER When NonStop NET/MASTER MS receives (reads) messages, the messages are sent to a queue before being written to a log. Because messages can be read at a faster rate than they can be written, the message queue can grow rapidly, thus reducing the efficiency of NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LOGLOWATER LOGLOWATER LOGLOWATER=number specifies the size to which the activity log message queue must decrease before the reading of EMS messages is resumed. LBANNER When NonStop NET/MASTER MS receives (reads) messages, the messages are sent to a queue before being written to a log. Because messages can be read at a faster rate than they can be written, the message queue can grow rapidly, thus reducing the efficiency of NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LOGPRCNUM LOGPRCNUM LOGPRCNUM=number-of-log-procedures specifies the number of copies of the LOGPROC NCL process that can execute to intercept and process messages destined for the NonStop NET/MASTER MS activity log. You can specify a value of 1 only.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LOGPROC LOGPROC LOGPROC={ ncl-procedure | FLUSH } specifies the name of the NCL procedure that intercepts and processes messages destined for the NonStop NET/MASTER MS activity log, or flushes the current LOGPROC NCL procedure. LBANNER ncl-procedure specifies the name of the NCL procedure that intercepts and processes messages destined for the NonStop NET/MASTER MS activity log. FLUSH flushes the current LOGPROC NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS LOGWRAP LOGWRAP LOGWRAP={ YES | NO } specifies whether you can reuse an activity log file from the group of activity log files after the file is used and closed. LBANNER The setting of the SYSPARMS LOGWRAP command is only used when NonStop NET/MASTER MS attempts to automatically swap from the current log file to the next log file in a group of log files and the next log file has been used before since NonStop NET/MASTER MS has started.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS MAPDEL MAPDEL MAPDEL=map-name removes the specified map from global memory. A map that is not in memory is shown as NAMEONLY by the SHOW MAPS command. LBANNER A map is a set of definitions used by Mapping Services. Together, the definitions in a map describe the entire structure of some item of data. Data described by maps are placed in mapped data object (MDO) variables used in NCL processes. NCL uses maps to interpret the data in these variables.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS MAPLOAD MAPLOAD MAPLOAD=map-name loads the specified map into global memory. A map that is in memory is shown as LOADED by the SHOW MAPS command. LBANNER A map is a set of definitions used by Mapping Services. Together, the definitions in a map describe the entire structure of some item of data. Data described by maps are placed in mapped data object (MDO) variables used in NCL processes. NCL uses maps to interpret the data in these variables.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS MAXPANEL MAXPANEL MAXPANEL=maximum-panel-queue-size specifies the maximum number of panel description files loaded by reference that can be stored in the active panel queue. The default value is 10. You can specify a value from 0 through 9999. A value of 0 allows you to store an unlimited number of panel description files in the active panel queue. LBANNER Considerations You can use this system parameter to improve the speed at which panels are displayed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS MODLUSER MODLUSER MODLUSER={ model-user-id | NONE } specifies the name of a user ID definition record in the User ID Management Services (UMS) database to be used as the model to dynamically generate new user ID definition records, or specifies that there is no model user ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLGBTRC NCLGBTRC NCLGBTRC=[ global-variable-name ] specifies a single global variable name or a generic global variable prefix that is traced as changes occur to the variable(s), or specifies that there is no global variable tracing. You must specify the name of the global variable without the leading &GLBL prefix. LBANNER global-variable-name specifies the name of global variable to trace without the leading &GLBL prefix.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLMAXK NCLMAXK NCLMAXK=maximum-ncl-storage specifies the amount of virtual storage (in kilobytes) that can be allocated to NCL processing at any time. The default value is 0. You can specify a value from 100 through 9999. Specifying a value of 0 indicates that there is no limit on the amount of virtual storage. LBANNER Consideration This system parameter does not restrict the amount of storage used for NCL variables.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLOBJPATH NCLOBJPATH NCLOBJPATH=( file-name[, file-name ] … ) specifies the NCL object file search path. You can specify a single NCL object file or a list of NCL object files. By default, the object path is a single file: the distributed NCL object file as set by the PARAM NCLDISTCODE command. LBANNER These files are searched after the distribution NCL procedure library and in the order you set using the SYSPARMS NCLOBJPATH command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLOGTRM NCLOGTRM NCLOGTRM={ YES | NO } specifies whether to write a message to the activity log when an NCL process terminates execution. YES LBANNER instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to write a message to the activity log when an NCL process terminates execution. 2–500 NO instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS not to write a message to the activity log when an NCL process terminates execution.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLPEND NCLPEND NCLPEND={ YES | NO } specifies whether NCL procedures, executed using the EXEC command, are queued if another NCL process, likewise executed using the EXEC command, is executing in the same processing environment. LBANNER YES instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to queue NCL procedures, executed using the EXEC command, if another NCL process, executed using the EXEC command, is executing in the same processing environment.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLPRSHR NCLPRSHR NCLPRSHR={ YES | NO | retain-list-number } determines the action to take for concurrent or consecutive requests for the same NCL procedure. YES LBANNER allows requests for concurrent or consecutive requests for the same NCL procedure. 2–502 The NCL procedure is kept on the active list (a list used to retain NCL procedures in memory during execution) while it is being executed. While on the active list, any other user can execute it.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLPRSHR Considerations This system parameter is not associated with the SYSPARMS PRELOAD system parameter. NCL procedures that are preloaded into memory using SYSPARMS PRELOAD are shared automatically and remain in memory until explicitly unloaded using the SYSPARMS UNLOAD system parameter. LBANNER The PROFILE NCLTEST command allows individual users to explicitly control NCL procedure sharing and override the setting of this system parameter.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLTRLFF NCLTRLFF NCLTRLFF={ MULT | ONE } specifies the number of trailing field separators (hexadecimal ‘FF’ characters) by which to follow the last record written to a delimited user database (UDB) when the record contains multiple trailing null variables. The FILE ADD and FILE PUT verbs are used by NCL processes to write a record to a UDB.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLTRMAX NCLTRMAX NCLTRMAX=maximum-trace-messages specifies the maximum number of trace messages that an NCL procedure can generate. The default value is 100. You can specify a number from 0 through 9999. A value of 0 inhibits all tracing. LBANNER Considerations You can set this system parameter only during execution of the INIT NCL procedure (before users are permitted to log on to the system).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLUMAX NCLUMAX NCLUMAX=maximum-executing-ncl-processes-per-user LBANNER specifies the maximum number of NCL processes that a user can execute concurrently in a region. The default value is 128. You can specify a number from 1 through 32767. 2–506 A region is an environment that corresponds to a user logged on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NCLXUSER NCLXUSER NCLXUSER={ YES | NO } specifies whether the INTQ command or the WRITE verb can send data to an NCL process that is not owned by the user executing the command or verb. LBANNER YES specifies that the INTQ command or WRITE verb can send data to an NCL process that is not owned by the user executing the command or verb. This allows you to send data to any NCL process owned by any user.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NETNAME NETNAME NETNAME=network-name specifies the name of the network. LBANNER You can specify a network name from one through eight characters long. It is recommended that you use only alphanumeric characters when you specify a network name. 2–508 If you do not specify a network name, the default network name is the first eight characters of the Expand system name without the leading back slash (\) or ANON if the system is unnamed.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NMIQLIM NMIQLIM NMIQLIM=internal-queuing-limit specifies the internal queuing limit for various types of messages. The default value is 1000 for each type of message. You can specify a value from 1 through 32767.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS NRDLIM NRDLIM NRDLIM=maximum-nrd-message-queue-size specifies the maximum number of messages retained by the central non-roll-delete (NRD) message queue. The default value is 200. You can specify a value from 10 through 10000. LBANNER Considerations 2–510 If a new message arrives that exceeds the value specified by this system parameter, NonStop NET/MASTER MS discards the oldest message in the central NRD message queue.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS OCSTIME OCSTIME OCSTIME={ YES | NO } specifies whether to display the current time at the top left side of the title line of an OCS window. YES LBANNER instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to display the current time at the top left side of the title line of an OCS window. The current time is displayed each time the window display is updated. This system parameter allows OCS operators to determine when the last message arrived at an OCS window.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS PNLOBJPATH PNLOBJPATH PNLOBJPATH=( file-name[, file-name ] … ) specifies the panel object file search path. You can specify a single panel object file or a list of panel object files. By default, the object path is a single file: the distributed panel object file as set by the PARAM PNLDISTCODE command. LBANNER These files are searched after the distribution panel library and in the order you set using the SYSPARMS PNLOBJPATH command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS PRELOAD PRELOAD PRELOAD={ ncl-procedure | ( ncl-procedure,library ) } specifies the name of an NCL procedure to preload into memory before execution. Preloading an NCL procedure helps to avoid the overhead associated with disk I/O when an NCL procedure is executed. ncl-procedure LBANNER specifies the name of an NCL procedure. library specifies the procedure library from which NCL begins to search for the NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS PUNLOAD PUNLOAD PUNLOAD={ panel-desc-file | ( panel-desc-file,library ) } specifies the name of a panel description file to unload from the active panel queue. panel-desc-file LBANNER specifies the name of a panel description file. library specifies the panel library from which the panel description file was preloaded. If you did not specify a library when the panel description file was preloaded, then you do not have to specify a library when you unload it.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS PWEXPIRE PWEXPIRE PWEXPIRE=days-password-valid specifies the number of days for which a password is valid. The default is 30 days. You can specify a number from 0 through 366. LBANNER Specifying a value of 0 disables automatic password expiration.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS PWHISTORY PWHISTORY PWHISTORY=passwords-retained LBANNER specifies the number of passwords retained for a user. The default value is 0. You can specify a value from 0 through 32. 2–516 If you specify a value of 0, NonStop NET/MASTER MS does not keep a record of the passwords used by a user and does not check for reuse.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS PWMIN PWMIN PWMIN=minimum-password-length specifies the minimum password length. The default value is 3. You can specify a value from 1 through 8. Considerations LBANNER You can set this system parameter only during execution of the INIT NCL procedure (before users are permitted to log on to the system). This system parameter has no effect if there is a security exit that replaces the User ID Management Services (UMS) functions.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS PWRETRY PWRETRY PWRETRY=password-retry-limit specifies the number of password violations that are allowed before a log on failure is recorded. The default value is 2. You can specify a value from 1 through 10. LBANNER If a user reaches the specified limit, NonStop NET/MASTER MS sends a warning message to all monitor-class terminals advising them of the user ID and terminal involved.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SESSMSG SESSMSG SESSMSG={ YES | NO } determines whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS issues any session trace messages. LBANNER YES instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to issue session trace messages when a physical connection to a remote system succeeds (the status is active) or when a physical connection to a remote system fails (the status is inactive).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPERRORC SPERRORC SPERRORC=color-option specifies the color in which to display the error fields and messages on panels. The default is RED. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED 2–520 BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPERRORH SPERRORH SPERRORH=hlite-option specifies the type of extended highlighting in which to display the error fields and messages on panels. The default is REVERSE. You can specify the following highlight type: LBANNER NONE BLINK REVERSE USCORE Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports highlighting and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPFKEYC SPFKEYC SPFKEYC=color-option specifies the color in which to display the left and right titles and function key prompts on panels. The default is TURQUOISE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED 2–522 BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPINPHIC SPINPHIC SPINPHIC=color-option specifies the color in which to display mandatory input fields on panels. The default is WHITE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPINPLOC SPINPLOC SPINPLOC=color-option specifies the color in which to display optional input data fields on panels. The default is TURQUOISE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED 2–524 BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPINPUTH SPINPUTH SPINPUTH=hlite-option specifies the type of extended highlighting in which to display input fields on panels. The default is USCORE. You can specify the following highlight types: LBANNER NONE BLINK REVERSE USCORE Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports highlighting and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPINPUTP SPINPUTP SPINPUTP=pad-char specifies the character used to pad input fields on panels. The default character is the underscore (_). You can specify any character, or NULL. LBANNER Consideration 2–526 The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPLABELC SPLABELC SPLABELC=color-option specifies the color in which to display field labels and comments on panels. The default is GREEN. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPOUTHIC SPOUTHIC SPOUTHIC=color-option specifies the color in which to display output data fields (that are always present) on panels. The default is WHITE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED 2–528 BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPOUTLOC SPOUTLOC SPOUTLOC=color-option specifies the color in which to display output data fields (that are not always present) on panels. The default is TURQUOISE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPSUBTLC SPSUBTLC SPSUBTLC=color-option specifies the color in which to display subtitles and headings on panels. The default is YELLOW. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED 2–530 BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPTITLEC SPTITLEC SPTITLEC=color-option specifies the color in which to display the center titles on panels. The default is TURQUOISE. You can specify the following colors: LBANNER NONE RED BLUE TURQUOISE GREEN WHITE PINK YELLOW Consideration The use of this operand assumes that your terminal supports color and that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SPTITLEP SPTITLEP SPTITLEP=pad-char specifies the character used to pad center titles on panels. The default character is “-”. You can specify any character, or NULL LBANNER Consideration 2–532 The use of this operand assumes that the panel description file uses the appropriate system variable.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SWGUIDDSNM SWGUIDDSNM SWGUIDDSNM={ YES | NO } specifies whether NonStop NET/MASTER MS executes a Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) subsystem command using the Guardian user ID (GUID) of NonStop NET/MASTER MS or the user executing the command. LBANNER YES instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to execute a DSNM subsystem command using the current GUID of the user executing the command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS SYSUDB SYSUDB SYSUDB={ YES | NO } specifies whether NCL processes can access NonStop NET/MASTER MS internal files as user databases (UDBs). YES LBANNER allows NCL processes to access NonStop NET/MASTER MS internal files as user databases (UDBs). 2–534 NO disallows NCL processes from accessing NonStop NET/MASTER MS internal files as user databases (UDBs).
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TCMDMAX TCMDMAX TCMDMAX=maximum-concurrent-timer-commands specifies the maximum number of concurrently active timer commands permitted. The default value is 99. You can specify a value from 0 through 9999. Specifying a value of 0 prohibits the use of any timer commands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TEDITOBJ TEDITOBJ TEDITOBJ=tedit-file-name specifies the name of the PS Text Edit (Tedit) object file required by Edit Services. You must specify the name of a Tedit object file; it cannot be the object file of any other editor. LBANNER The default object file is $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.TEDIT. You can specify an object file name in the form: 2–536 [ \sys. ]$volume.subvolume.file-name Example The following example specifies a Tedit object file called $SYSTEM.SYS00.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TOACT1 TOACT1 TOACT1={ timeout-actn-1 | ( timeout-actn-1,rpt-interval ) } specifies the action to take when the first terminal timeout interval expires and, optionally, specifies a repeat interval for the action. LBANNER The first terminal timeout interval is specified by the SYSPARMS TOTIME1 command. The SYSPARMS TOACT1 command has no effect unless the timeout facility is enabled by the SYSPARMS TOSTART command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TOACT1 LOG logs a message in the activity log and sends a message to all monitor-class users. rpt-interval LBANNER specifies a repeat interval for the action. This causes the specified action to be repeated at the specified interval. 2–538 You can specify a repeat interval in the form: mmm.ss mmm specifies the number of minutes. You can specify a value from 0 through 999. ss specifies the number of seconds. You can specify a value from 0 through 59.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TOACT2 TOACT2 TOACT2={ timeout-actn-2 | ( timeout-actn-2,rpt-interval ) } specifies the action to take when the second terminal timeout interval expires and, optionally, specifies a repeat interval for the action. LBANNER The second terminal timeout interval is specified by the SYSPARMS TOTIME2 command. The SYSPARMS TOACT2 command has no effect unless the timeout facility is enabled by the SYSPARMS TOSTART command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TOALARM TOALARM TOALARM=alarm-limit specifies the number of times to ring the terminal alarm if ALARM is the action specified by either the SYSPARMS TOACT1 or SYSPARMS TOACT2 command. The default value is 3. You can specify a value from 0 through 9. A value of 0 suppresses the alarm.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TOSTART TOSTART TOSTART={ INPUT | KBUNL | NONE | OUTPUT | TIO } specifies whether and how to process terminal inactivity. Terminal inactivity starts at the end of the time interval specified by the SYSPARMS TOTIME1 command. LBANNER INPUT specifies that terminal inactivity is to be measured from the time that the terminal last receives input. KBUNL specifies that terminal inactivity is to be measured from the time that the terminal last receives output.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TOTIME1 TOTIME1 TOTIME1=timeout-interval-1 specifies the time interval to use as the first timeout period for inactive terminals. Any terminal that is inactive for the specified time interval triggers the action specified by the SYSPARMS TOACT1 command. You must set a first timeout period before setting a second timeout period. LBANNER timeout-interval-1 2–542 specifies the interval. The default value is 0.00.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TOTIME2 TOTIME2 TOTIME2=timeout-interval-2 specifies the time interval to use as the second timeout period for inactive terminals. Any terminal that is inactive for the specified time interval triggers the action specified by the SYSPARMS TOACT2 command; the timer specified by TOTIME2 is started when the interval specified by TOTIME1 expires. LBANNER You must set a first timeout period before setting a second timeout period.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TRACEFILE TRACEFILE TRACEFILE=file-name specifies the name of a file to which diagnostic information is sent when tracing is enabled by the SYSPARMS TRACEFLAGS command. If you do not provide a file name when tracing is enabled, the diagnostic information is sent to the home terminal. LBANNER Note 2–544 Use this command only when directed by Tandem support personnel.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS TRACEFLAGS TRACEFLAGS TRACEFLAGS=number specifies a decimal number in which each digit sets a switch that enables (if the digit is 1) or disables (if the digit is 0) a diagnostic mode of operation. LBANNER Note Use this command only when directed by Tandem support personnel.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS UNLOAD UNLOAD UNLOAD={ ncl-procedure | ( ncl-procedure,library ) } specifies the name of an NCL procedure to unload from memory. ncl-procedure specifies the name of an NCL procedure. LBANNER library specifies the NCL procedure library from which the NCL procedure was preloaded. If you did not specify a library when the NCL procedure was preloaded, then you do not have to specify a library when you unload it.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands SYSPARMS UNLOAD You can use the SHOW PRELOAD command to display preloaded NCL procedures, including the first library in the search path used to locate an NCL procedure when it was preloaded. You can use the SYSPARMS PRELOAD command to preload an NCL procedure.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TERMINAL ADD LBANNER TERMINAL ADD The TERMINAL ADD command defines the attributes of a terminal to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. After defining a terminal, you must use the OPENTERM command to open it.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TERMINAL ADD You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a device name. In this context, the asterisk is a wild card. LBANNER Note If the device name you specify is syntactically incorrect, but still begins with a backslash (\) or a dollar sign ($), then the TERMINAL ADD command may still accept the definition. If it does, the error is not detected until the OPENTERM command attempts to open the terminal.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TERMINAL ADD NO specifies that highlighting data streams are not to be sent to the terminal. If you specify HLITE=NO, then COLOR=NO is assumed unless you explicitly specify COLOR=YES. LBANNER TERMCONF instructs NonStop NET/MASTER MS to query the terminal configuration and to use the highlighting capability specified there. MODEL specifies the model number of an IBM 3270 or compatible terminal and sets the terminal characteristics to those of the specified model.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TERMINAL ADD Examples 1. The following example defines a terminal with a logical name of TERM21 and a physical name of $ATP2.TERM1 without specifying color or highlighting capabilities: TERMINAL ADD=TERM21 DEVICE=$ATP2.#TERM1 LBANNER 2. The following example defines a terminal with color and highlighting capabilities: TERMINAL ADD=TERM55 DEVICE=$ATP5.#TERM5 COLOR=YES HLITE=YES 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TERMINAL DELETE TERMINAL DELETE The TERMINAL DELETE command deletes a terminal definition record from NonStop NET/MASTER MS. You cannot delete a terminal definition record until the terminal is closed; the CLOSTERM command closes a terminal. LBANNER TERMINAL DELETE={ logical-name | device-name } logical-name specifies the logical name of the terminal. This is the name by which NonStop NET/MASTER MS recognizes the terminal. It corresponds to a physical name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TERMINAL DELETE Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. LBANNER For related information, see the CANCEL, CLOSTERM, OPENTERM, and other TERMINAL commands. Examples 1. The following example deletes all terminals with a logical name beginning with the characters TERM: TERMINAL DELETE=TERM* 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TERMINAL LOCK TERMINAL LOCK The TERMINAL LOCK command locks the terminal from which the command is issued. To unlock the terminal and continue using NonStop NET/MASTER MS from that terminal, you must enter your password in a panel that is displayed on the screen. You can use this command for additional terminal security—to ensure that no one else can use your terminal while your terminal is temporarily unattended.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TIME TIME The TIME command displays the current time and date. TIME LBANNER Considerations The default authority level of this command is 0. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. Message NNM0607 indicates the results of this command. Refer to the NonStop NET/MASTER Messages Manual or NonStop NET/MASTER MS online help for a description of this message.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TITLE TITLE The TITLE command sets or erases the title displayed at the top line of all Operator Control Services (OCS) windows; that is, the windows of all users using NonStop NET/MASTER MS. Entering the TITLE command with no operands removes the current title from the top line of the OCS window. The default title is OPERATOR CONTROL SERVICES. LBANNER TITLE [ title-text ] 2–556 title-text specifies the text of the title.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TITLE Examples 1. The following example specifies a new title for the OCS title line. The following screen displays the results. LBANNER TITLE OCS SYSTEM 1 (08:23) ---------------------------- OCS SYSTEM 1 ---------------------------TITLE OCS SYSTEM 1 NNM0363 NEW TITLE SET. _____________________________________________________________________________ ---------- ------------------ NonStop NET/MASTER D30 ---------------- -------M=> 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec LBANNER TRACE trace-spec 2–558 The TRACE trace-spec command specifies trace parameter settings, which determine the events that are traced by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. There are two types of events that can be traced: event messages and internal NonStop NET/MASTER MS events. You can specify the types of event messages to trace using the CNM, EMS, INT, LOG, and MSG operands.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands LBANNER TRACE trace-spec cnm-spec: CLEAR ISRIN ISROUT READ SEND ems-spec: ALERT COLL CONT DEL DIST ISRIN ISROUT READ SEND int-spec: CLEAR CONT Q READ log-spec: CONT DEL READ msg-spec: CONT DEL READ CNM specifies tracing of communications network management (CNM) messages. ALL specifies all NCL CNM verbs and message flows; that is, tracing is performed as if CLEAR, ISRIN, ISROUT, READ, and SEND are all (separately) selected.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec READ specifies tracing of the NCL CNMREAD verb. SEND specifies tracing of the NCL CNMSEND verb. LBANNER NONE specifies no tracing of NCL CNM verbs or message flows. EMS specifies tracing of Event Management Service (EMS) messages. ALL specifies all NCL EMS verbs and message flows; that is, tracing is performed as if ALERT, COLL, CONT, DEL, DIST, ISRIN, ISROUT, READ, and SEND are all (separately) selected. ems-spec specifies an NCL EMS verb or message flow.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec ISRIN specifies tracing of EMS events arriving at NonStop NET/MASTER MS using ISR. You can restrict tracing to EMS events arriving from a specific link by specifying the LINK operand. ISROUT LBANNER specifies tracing of EMS events sent from NonStop NET/MASTER MS using ISR. You can restrict tracing to EMS events sent to a specific link by specifying the LINK operand. READ specifies tracing of the NCL EMSREAD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec Q specifies tracing of the NonStop NET/MASTER MS INTQ command. This traces all messages sent to an NCL process by using the NonStop NET/MASTER MS INTQ command. LBANNER READ specifies tracing of the NCL INTREAD verb. This traces all messages read by an NCL process in a dependent processing environment. NONE specifies no tracing of messages in dependent processing environments. LOG specifies tracing of log messages.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec MSG specifies tracing of MSGPROC messages. ALL LBANNER specifies all MSGPROC messages; that is, tracing is performed as if CONT, DEL, and READ are all (separately) selected. Note If you specify ALL and no MSGPROC is active, messages that would otherwise be passed to a MSGPROC are still traced; that is, all messages destined for an OCS window are traced. msg-spec specifies an NCL MSG verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec ALL specifies all internal trace points. internal-tp-number specifies an internal trace point number. You must specify a positive integer. LBANNER NONE 2–564 specifies no internal trace points and resets any that were previously set. LINK restricts tracing to or from the specified link(s), or specifies unrestricted tracing by link. This operand is only meaningful when tracing messages to or from a remote system.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec device-name LBANNER specifies the physical name of the terminal. This is the name by which the operating system recognizes the terminal. You can specify a device name in the following forms: \* \sys* \sys.* [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. [ \sys. ]* ]$* ]$device* ]$device.* ]$device.#* ]$device.#subdevice* ]$device[ .#subdevice ] You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a device name.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec USERID restricts tracing to or from a specified user ID. user-id LBANNER specifies the user ID(s). You can specify an asterisk (*) as the last character of a user ID. In this context, the asterisk is a wild card. Note The specified user ID(s) does not have to be defined to User ID Management Services (UMS) or currently logged on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. ALL specifies unrestricted tracing; that is, tracing is not restricted to a specific user ID.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE trace-spec Examples 1. The following example specifies tracing of the CNMCLEAR, CNMREAD, and CNMSEND verbs: TRACE CNM=(CLEAR,READ,SEND) LBANNER 2. The following example specifies tracing of outbound and inbound EMS events, to and from all links: TRACE EMS=(ISRIN,ISROUT) 3. The following example specifies tracing of all messages traveling through the LOGPROC NCL procedure: TRACE LOG=ALL 4.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE ALTER TRACE ALTER The TRACE ALTER command alters the trace parameter settings in a running trace to LBANNER the current settings in the trace parameter list (TPL). If you start a new trace (using the TRACE START command) but then make changes to the parameter settings for that trace (using the TRACE trace-spec command), you can use this command to implement the changes to the running trace.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE RESET TRACE RESET The TRACE RESET command resets the trace parameter settings in the trace parameter list (TPL) to their default values. This command can prove useful after using the TRACE trace-spec command to make many changes to the parameter settings if you decide some or all changes are not required. Use this command to reset parameter settings before specifying parameter settings again.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE START LBANNER TRACE START The TRACE START command starts tracing the specified trace parameter settings— either messages or internal trace points (as described in the TRACE trace-spec command). This command starts a trace collector process (the process name is returned when the process is started), which opens a trace file to collect trace records and controls the writing of trace records to the trace file.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE START The default file name is: $isv-vol.user-id.pTRnnnnn $isv-vol LBANNER specifies the name of the volume on which NonStop NET/MASTER MS is installed. user-id specifies the user ID starting the trace. p specifies the process character (A through Z) specified when NonStop NET/MASTER MS is initially executed. nnnnnn specifies the five-digit trace ID allocated to the trace.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE START Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3. You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, except the INIT NCL procedure, by using the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb. LBANNER For related information, see the SHOW TRACE and other TRACE commands. 2–572 Examples 1.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands TRACE STOP TRACE STOP The TRACE STOP command stops tracing for the specified trace ID. This command stops the trace collector for the specified trace ID, which closes the trace file that is collecting the trace records. You cannot stop a trace that has not been started. LBANNER TRACE STOP=trace-id Note If you want to examine the trace records after stopping the trace, you must use the PTRACE utility program distributed with NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL file-spec UDBCTL file-spec The UDBCTL file-spec command associates a user database (UDB) identifier with a file LBANNER name or a pair of file names. A UDB or UDB pair is a file or a pair of related files, respectively, opened using the UDBCTL OPEN command; NCL works with UDBs and UDB pairs. Entry-sequenced files, key-sequenced files, edit files, and Guardian processes are all regarded as UDBs by NCL. You can open only key-sequenced files in a UDB pair.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL file-spec Examples 1. The following example assigns a UDB ID to a file name: UDBCTL \SYS1.$DATA10.SUBVOL3.MYFILE1=UDBID1 2.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL CLOSE UDBCTL CLOSE The UDBCTL CLOSE command closes a user database (UDB) or UDB pair. A UDB or LBANNER UDB pair is a file or a pair of related files, respectively, opened using the UDBCTL OPEN command; NCL works with UDBs and UDB pairs. Entry-sequenced files, keysequenced files, edit files, and Guardian processes are all regarded as UDBs by NCL. You can open only key-sequenced files in a UDB pair.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL OPEN UDBCTL OPEN The UDBCTL OPEN command opens a file or a pair of related files as a user database LBANNER (UDB) or UDB pair, respectively. This command does not create the file(s); the file(s) must exist before being opened (the FUP CREATE command from TACL, for example, creates a file). This command opens the file or pair of files for access by NonStop NET/MASTER MS processes.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL OPEN The UDB ID is the logical name used by FILE verbs in NCL processes to access the UDB or UDB pair. (For a UDB pair, the UDB ID refers to both files in the pair.) The UDB ID provides a logical connection between NCL and the UDB or UDB pair. A UDB or UDB pair must have a UDB ID before an NCL process can work with it. LBANNER udb-id specifies a UDB ID for the UDB or UDB pair.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL OPEN INPUT opens the UDB or the first file in a UDB pair for read-only access. If you specify both the BUFFERED and INPUT operands, BUFFERED is ignored. LBANNER For a UDB pair, the INPUT operand applies only to the first UDB in the pair. The second UDB is always given the INPUT attribute because it is always opened for read-only access. (The attribute is displayed for both UDBs, however, by the SHOW UDB command.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL OPEN YES specifies that the UDB or UDB pair is opened using the current GUID when an NCL process uses the FILE OPEN verb. The UDBCTL OPEN command does not use the Guardian OPEN procedure call to open the file(s). LBANNER Note 2–580 Because the file or pair of files is not opened by UDBCTL OPEN, you do not know whether the file or pair of files is available until an NCL process attempts to open it using the FILE OPEN verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL OPEN Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3, except for spooler processes (authority level of 0) and Guardian processes (authority level of 0). The RESET operand has a default authority level of 4. LBANNER You can enter this command from any NCL procedure, including the INIT NCL procedure, by using either the CMD core statement or the INTCMD verb.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL RESET LBANNER UDBCTL RESET The UDBCTL RESET command performs a Guardian PURGEDATA operation on a file. (A file opened using the UDBCTL OPEN command is a UDB; NCL works with UDBs. However the UDB must be closed before you can use UDBCTL RESET; therefore, strictly speaking, it is no longer a UDB.) Entry-sequenced files, keysequenced files, edit files, and Guardian processes are all regarded as UDBs by NCL.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UDBCTL STOP LBANNER UDBCTL STOP The UDBCTL STOP command disassociates a user database (UDB) identifier from a UDB or UDB pair. A UDB or UDB pair is a file or a pair of files, respectively, opened using the UDBCTL OPEN command; NCL works with UDBs and UDB pairs. Entrysequenced files, key-sequenced files, edit files, and Guardian processes are all regarded as UDBs by NCL. You can open only key-sequenced files in a UDB pair.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UNIT DEFINE LBANNER UNIT DEFINE The UNIT DEFINE command defines an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) unit definition record and stores it in global memory. INMC is the NonStop NET/MASTER MS service that allows multiple NonStop NET/MASTER MS and the SOLVE management services systems to be connected.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UNIT DEFINE DEVICE=device-name specifies the device name used by the unit. For an SNA link and an X.25 link, the device name must be the name of a subdevice, in the form: [ \sys. ]$device[ .#subdevice ] LBANNER No other unit on the same side of the link can specify the same device name or share this device name. For a process-to-process (PTP) link, the device name must be the name of the disk file used as the mailbox, in the form: [ \sys. ][ $volume. ][ subvolume.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UNIT DEFINE PASSIVE specifies the passive unit in an X.25 link and specifies that the unit is a switched virtual circuit. The corresponding unit to a passive unit must be active. LBANNER The passive unit is responsible for waiting for a call from its corresponding active unit. PERMANENT specifies a permanent virtual circuit in an X.25 link. The corresponding unit to a permanent unit must also be permanent.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UNIT DEFINE COMMENT=comment-text specifies a comment to include as part of the unit definition record. This operand is a positional qualifier and must be the last operand in the command line. You can specify a comment from 1 through 50 characters long. You do not have to enclose a comment in quotes. LBANNER Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UNIT DEFINE 3. The following example defines a unit definition record for the primary unit in a PTP link: UNIT DEFINE=TNDMU SESSION=TNDMS3 DEVICE=\LOC1.$DATA7.SUBVOL1.MAILBOX1 MODE=PRIMARY CONNECTDELAY=60 LBANNER 4.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands UNIT DELETE UNIT DELETE The UNIT DELETE command deletes an Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) unit definition record from global memory. UNIT DELETE=unit-name LBANNER unit-name specifies the name of the unit to the remote system. The unit name can be from 1 through 12 characters long and can include any displayable characters. Alphabetic characters are not case-sensitive. Considerations The default authority level of this command is 3.
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands X LBANNER X The X command exits from Operator Control Services (OCS) and returns to the top-level NonStop NET/MASTER MS primary menu. A primary menu is a menu denoted by the display of a user ID and time on the right side of the screen.
Appendix A Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands This appendix lists the default authority levels for Guardian utility commands defined using User ID Management Services (UMS) and distributed with NonStop NET/MASTER Management Services (MS). The appendix lists the default authority levels for conversational Guardian utilities (those you can execute using the OPSYS SEND command) and block-mode Guardian utilities (those you can execute using the PROGRUN command).
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands ALTPRI Utility ALTPRI Utility Table A-4 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the ALTPRI utility. Table A-4. Default Authority Levels for ALTPRI Utility APCCOM Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 3 Table A-5 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the APCCOM utility. Table A-5.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands BUSCMD Utility BATCHCOM Utility Table A-8 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the BATCHCOM utility. Table A-8.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands CMI Utility CMI Utility Table A-10 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the CMI utility. Table A-10.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands CUP Utility COUP Utility Table A-12 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the COUP utility. Table A-12.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands DCOM Utility DCOM Utility Table A-15 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the DCOM utility. Table A-15. Default Authority Levels for DCOM Utility DEFAULT Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 2 Table A-16 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the DEFAULT utility. Table A-16.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands DSAP Utility DNSCOM Utility Table A-19 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the DNSCOM utility. Table A-19.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands EDIT Utility EDIT Utility Table A-21 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the EDIT utility. Table A-21.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands EMKCOM Utility EMCOM Utility Table A-22 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the EMCOM utility. Table A-22.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands EMSCCTRL Utility EMSCCTRL Utility Table A-24 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the EMSCCTRL utility. Table A-24. Default Authority Levels for EMSCCTRL Utility EMSCINFO Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 4 Table A-25 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the EMSCINFO utility. Table A-25.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands FILES Utility FILEINFO Utility Table A-29 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the FILEINFO utility. Table A-29. Default Authority Levels for FILEINFO Utility FILENAMES Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 0 Table A-30 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the FILENAMES utility. Table A-30.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands FUP Utility FUP Utility Table A-32 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the FUP utility. Table A-32.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands LOAD Utility HLSCOM Utility Table A-34 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the HLSCOM utility. Table A-34.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands MEASCOM Utility MEASCOM Utility Table A-38 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the MEASCOM utility. Table A-38.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands PDEBUG Utility PASSWORD Utility Table A-40 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PASSWORD utility. Table A-40. Default Authority Levels for PASSWORD Utility PATHCOM Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 4 Table A-41 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PATHCOM utility. Table A-41.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands PEEK Utility PEEK Utility Table A-43 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PEEK utility. Table A-43. Default Authority Levels for PEEK Utility Command ∗ / PERUSE Utility Authority Level Command Authority Level 255 0 /CPU 0 Table A-44 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PERUSE utility. Table A-44.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands PPD Utility PMSG Utility Table A-46 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PMSG utility. Table A-46. Default Authority Levels for PMSG Utility PPD Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 0 Table A-47 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PPD utility. Table A-47.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands PSMAIL Utility PSMAIL Utility Table A-48 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PSMAIL utility. Table A-48.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands PSTOP Utility Table A-48. Default Authority Levels for PSMAIL Utility (Page 2 of 2) PSTATUS Utility Command Authority Level Command Authority Level R READ REP REPLACE REPLY RP S SA SC SCAN SD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SE SEND SF SHOWATTACHMENTS SHOWDISTRIBUTION SHOWFOLDERS SHOWWORKSPACE SW X XEDIT 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 255 255 Table A-49 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PSTATUS utility. Table A-49.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands PTRACE Utility PTRACE Utility Table A-51 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PTRACE utility. Table A-51.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands RCVDUMP Utility PUP Utility Table A-52 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the PUP utility. Table A-52.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands RDFCOM Utility RDFCOM Utility Table A-54 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the RDFCOM utility. Table A-54.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands RJECIR Utility RESTORE Utility Table A-58 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the RESTORE utility. Table A-58. Default Authority Levels for RESTORE Utility RJECIR Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 2 Table A-59 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the RJECIR utility. Table A-59.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands RJECIS Utility RJECIS Utility Table A-60 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the RJECIS utility. Table A-60.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands SEGINFO Utility SCF Utility Table A-62 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the SCF utility. Table A-62.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands SETTIME Utility SETTIME Utility Table A-64 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the SETTIME utility. Table A-64. Default Authority Levels for SETTIME Utility SPOOLCOM Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 3 Table A-65 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the SPOOLCOM utility. Table A-65.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands SUSPEND Utility SURVCOM Utility Table A-67 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the SURVCOM utility. Table A-67.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands SYSTEM Utility SYSTEM Utility Table A-69 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the SYSTEM utility. Table A-69. Default Authority Levels for SYSTEM Utility SYSTIMES Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 0 Table A-70 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the SYSTIMES utility. Table A-70.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands TACL Utility TACL Utility Table A-71 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the TACL utility. Table A-71.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands TAPECOM Utility TAPECOM Utility Table A-72 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the TAPECOM utility. Table A-72.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands WHO Utility USE Utility Table A-74 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the USE utility. Table A-74. Default Authority Levels for USE Utility USERS Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 4 Table A-75 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the USERS utility. Table A-75.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands XBUSDOWN Utility XBUSDOWN Utility Table A-79 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the XBUSDOWN utility. Table A-79. Default Authority Levels for XBUSDOWN Utility XBUSUP Utility Command Authority Level ∗ 3 Table A-80 lists the default authority levels for commands used by the XBUSUP utility. Table A-80.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands Default PROGRUN Utility Authority Levels Default PROGRUN For Guardian utilities you can execute using the PROGRUN command, the UMS Utility Authority Levels definition consists of a single entry for the asterisk (*). This gives the authority level required to use the Guardian utility as a whole.
Default Authority Levels for Guardian Utility Commands Default PROGRUN Utility Authority Levels (This page left intentionally blank) A–34 115412 Tandem Computers Incorporated
Glossary This glossary defines NonStop NET/MASTER and Tandem system terms and abbreviations used in this manual. %INCLUDE rule. An RMS message action rule that allows a message handler to use rules from more than one ruleset. %START rule. An RMS message action rule that instructs a message handler to perform user-defined initialization actions on startup. => prompt. Any prompt that ends with =>: for example, Command ===>, M=>, and Select Option ===>. absolute time.
Glossary attribute byte. The data that defines the display attributes of a field on a screen. The attribute byte is displayed as a blank on the screen. It is represented by a field character in a panel description file. authority level. A number assigned to users, NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands, and NonStop NET/MASTER MS operands that signifies the authority to execute a command or operand. Authority levels range from 0 (lowest) through 255 (highest). autohold.
Glossary BIU. See basic information unit. BK process. See background services process. blank concatenation operation. An operation that replaces multiple blanks between two terms in an expression by a single blank. block. A logical group of statements. Blocks are bounded by core statements such as PROCEDURE and END, FUNCTION and END, DO and END, and SELECT and END. BLOG. See Background Logger. BMON. See Background Monitor. Boolean.
Glossary COBOL85. The Tandem compiler and run-time support for the American National Standard Programming Language COBOL, X.3.23-1985. The code for most Pathway server processes is written using COBOL85. Command Entry facility. The NonStop NET/MASTER MS facility used as an alternative to OCS for entering commands. See also Operator Control Services. Command prompt. Command ===>. You enter commands at a Command prompt. Command Server Process.
Glossary communications network management (CNM). An IBM architecture that describes the structure of messages traveling to and from SNA devices. compilation. The process of creating object code from a source file of NCL statements. compilation error. An error in an NCL procedure detected during compilation (before execution). There are three types of compilation errors: from least to most severe these are warnings, errors, and fatal errors. See also error, fatal error, run-time error, and warning.
Glossary correlation key. An RMS key that restricts the use of a rule feature to messages with the same key. One example of a key is a text string containing variables. CPU weight. The relative availability of a CPU for the creation of dynamic processes. cultural indicator. An indicator that identifies the culture of command help information. culture.
Glossary DDL. See Data Definition Language. DDL data dictionary. A database consisting of prenamed and predefined files created by the DDL compiler or Pathmaker. deadly embrace. A situation in which a resource required by one NCL process is indefinitely locked by another NCL process. debug. To locate and correct errors in an NCL process. decompilation. The process of creating NCL statements from object code. Decompilation occurs during the debugging of an NCL process, when using the DEBUG commands.
Glossary delayed NCL process. An NCL process whose execution has been explicitly delayed. delete operator message (DOM) ID. The attribute of a full non-roll-delete message that uniquely identifies the message and is used to delete it. It consists of the domain ID of the system from which the message originated, and a NRD ID (a unique number assigned by NonStop NET/MASTER MS to the NRD message). delete record. A record in one file that logically deletes a record in a related file. delimited UDB.
Glossary distributed panel object file. The file distributed with NonStop NET/MASTER MS that contains the object code for most panel description files required by NonStop NET/MASTER MS. distributed procedure. An NCL procedure in the distribution procedure library. distribution panel library. A library that contains distributed panel description files. distribution procedure library.
Glossary element header. The beginning of an element. An element header consists of two parts: a length field and a key field. EM process. See event management services process. emergency shutdown. A shutdown operation started by the NonStop NET/MASTER MS control process (NCP). See also immediate shutdown and normal shutdown. EMS. See Event Management Service. EMS event collector. A Guardian process, part of the Tandem EMS subsystem, that collects and stores messages. The default EMS event collector is $0.
Glossary environment. An area in which NonStop NET/MASTER MS users, NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands, and NCL processes operate. An environment is designed to limit the default activities of these users, commands, and processes. environmental profile. A profile that determines what a user can do in an environment. The user can change certain aspects of this profile by using the NonStop NET/MASTER MS PROFILE command.
Glossary execution error. An error detected during the execution of an NCL process. execution limit. The maximum number of times a timer command executes or the maximum number of NCL processes that can concurrently execute in the specified queue for each NCL processing environment. exit NCL procedure. A user-written NCL procedure that can be invoked by and executes in line with an RMS message handler.
Glossary field-level justification. In a panel, the process of stripping trailing blanks, padding, and justifying the data in a field. fields list. In NCL, a list used by certain VARTABLE verbs introduced by the FIELDS operand. file pair. Two key-sequenced files that are treated as a single logical file in all file operations. See also UDB pair. fixed data. Data in an output field of a panel that cannot change when the panel is displayed. fixed length data section.
Glossary global memory (GM). Memory that holds information required by all NonStop NET/MASTER MS processes. Information is maintained by the global memory manager (GMM). global memory manager (GMM). The NonStop NET/MASTER MS component that manages information in global memory. global time-based rule. An RMS time-based rule that is independent of message flow. global variable. An NCL variable that is visible throughout NonStop NET/MASTER MS (the name begins with GLBL). global vartable.
Glossary implicit declaration. The definition of a procedure that does not begin with the PROCEDURE core statement. implicit execution. The execution of an NCL procedure without an explicit START or EXEC command. import. To transfer command help information from a command help edit file to the command help database. See also export. inbound message. An unsolicited message received by ISR on a local NonStop NET/MASTER MS system from a remote NonStop NET/MASTER MS or SOLVE management services system.
Glossary inter-system services (IS) process. The application process that supports INMC, ISR, and ROC for the multiprotocol exchange of commands, command-response messages, and event messages with another network management application (NonStop NET/MASTER MS, the SOLVE management services, or NetView). internal function. A function inside a source file. internal procedure. A procedure inside a source file. internal trace.
Glossary label. Within an NCL statement, a label is a symbol or quoted string (excluding hexadecimal and binary strings) that ends in a colon (:) and begins a statement. Labels are used to mark segments of code. length field. Part of a map header or element header. The value contained in the length field is the length of the data item. The length of the length field is normally included in the length of a data item. length variable specification.
Glossary logical name. A sequence of characters that can be used as an alias for a device name. logical NOT. The Boolean operator that negates 1 (TRUE) to 0 (FALSE) and FALSE to TRUE when evaluating two terms in an expression. logical unit (LU). An IBM term for a unit through which end user application programs and I/O devices access the SNA network to communicate with other end users. An LU2 is an IBM 3270 or compatible terminal using SNA protocols. logon screen.
Glossary Mapping Services. A proprietary architecture that allows data to be represented in a tokenized form suitable for passing between network management platforms. mask. A string of characters used as the basis of comparison with another string of characters. MDO variable. See mapped data object (MDO) variable. menu. A screen display that allows you to select an option to access a function. Message Services. The NonStop NET/MASTER MS service that controls message flow within NonStop NET/MASTER MS.
Glossary message trace. A trace of one or more message types. (Types are CNM messages, EMS messages, messages in dependent processing environments, log messages, and OCS messages). NonStop NET/MASTER MS supports multiple simultaneous message traces. message trace point. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS code position that can be identified for a message trace. message validation exit NCL procedure. An optional user exit NCL procedure that provides a final check on whether a message triggers the RMS rule. minor name.
Glossary native character set. For Tandem computers, the ASCII character set; for IBM computers, the EBCDIC character set. NC process. See NonStop NET/MASTER MS consolidated services process. NCL. See Network Control Language. NCL base procedure. See base procedure. NCL ID. See NCL process identifier. NCL object file search path. The search order through the NCL object file(s) defined as part of the search path for NCL procedures. NCL PATHSEND requester. A PATHSEND requester written in NCL. NCL procedure.
Glossary NMVT. See Network Management Vector Transport. NNM program. A program distributed with NonStop NET/MASTER MS that allows a user to log on to NonStop NET/MASTER MS from a dynamic terminal. non-roll-delete (NRD) message. A message that does not roll off the message display area of an OCS window. NRD messages report events of critical importance. There are two classes of NRD messages: full NRD messages and NRD messages with the OPER attribute. NonStop NET/MASTER Management Services (MS).
Glossary object. In NCL, the object code of a specific NCL procedure that is loaded into memory. In SPI, an entity subject to independent reference and control by a subsystem: for example, a disk file or a data communications line. An object typically has a name and a type known to the controlling subsystem. object code. NCL code in executable form. object file. A key-sequenced file containing the object code of all NCL procedures owned by a certain user. object procedure library.
Glossary operating mode. The mode in which NonStop NET/MASTER MS is running, defined by the mix and presence or absence of application processes. See also advanced mode, basic mode, and extended basic mode. Operator Control Services (OCS). The NonStop NET/MASTER MS service that provides the central point of operational control of the local Tandem system, the local NonStop NET/MASTER MS system, and remote systems. operator. In NCL, a lexical element used for working on terms in expressions.
Glossary panel queue. A central queue, maintained by NonStop NET/MASTER MS, that holds panels currently in use. The maximum size of the queue is set by the SYSPARMS MAXPANEL command. panel skipping. The ability to chain menu-selection requests together without having to display intermediate selection panels. Panel skipping is used in conjunction with direct function selection. parameter. A value passed from one procedure or function (the caller) to another procedure or function (the callee).
Glossary Pathway system. The TCPs, servers, terminals, programs, and any subsystems associated with Pathway that run together under the control of one PATHMON process. pend-unload list. A list, maintained by NonStop NET/MASTER MS, that holds in memory copies of NCL procedures that have been unloaded from the active list while still being executed. Peripheral Utility Program (PUP).
Glossary primary processing environment. A processing environment that is controlled and owned by an OCS window or a virtual user. The output from this environment goes to the OCS window or virtual user, respectively. primary program operator (PPO). In IBM terminology, an operator who is authorized to receive unsolicited messages. primary trigger. One of the RMS message recognition elements. You cannot change a primary trigger. private loading.
Glossary protected field. A field in a panel that cannot be updated by a user. PU. See physical unit. PUP. See Peripheral Utility Program. purge ID. An ID used to purge a timer command or NRD message. purge message. A message sent when a timer command is purged from the timer queue. qualification name list. A mapped data object variable specification that uniquely identifies an enclosed element. qualifier. The part of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS command that modifies the action taken by the command.
Glossary Remote Operator Control (ROC). The NonStop NET/MASTER MS service that allows users to log on from a local NonStop NET/MASTER MS system to a remote system; to execute NonStop NET/MASTER MS commands at the remote system; and to receive the results at the local system. remote command. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS command sent to a remote system. remote system. Any NonStop NET/MASTER MS or SOLVE management services system other than the local system. remote user.
Glossary retain list. A list, maintained by NonStop NET/MASTER MS if procedure sharing is allowed, that holds in memory copies of NCL procedures that have been previously executed but are currently not being executed. RETURN key. A key that returns to a NonStop NET/MASTER MS primary menu from any menu level when pressed. By default, the RETURN key is the F4 function key. RH. See request/response header. RMS. See Rule Management Services. RMS message variable.
Glossary ruleset. A set of RMS rules that defines responses to events such as message arrival and time conditions. A message handler uses the information in a ruleset to set up its execution environment and respond to incoming messages. A timer driver uses the information in a ruleset to set up the execution environments for the timers that respond to time events. run-time error. An error detected by NCL during the execution of an NCL process that can be trapped using an error handler. running trace.
Glossary server process. A process that implements requests for an application and returns replies to the requester process. server program. A program in a Pathway system written using a language such as COBOL85, TAL, MUMPS, FORTRAN, BASIC, C, or Pascal. session definition record. A record, created by the SESSION DEFINE command, that names and establishes the characteristics of an INMC session type. share list. The list of elements after a SHARE, NOSHARE, SHRVARS, or NOSHRVARS keyword. shared loading.
Glossary special character. In NCL, a lexical element that is a single character and acts as a delimiter in a statement. Its meaning depends on the current context. SPI. See Subsystem Programmatic Interface. SPLIT grid. The grid composed of one vertical and one horizontal line that appears after the SPLIT key is pressed on a Tandem 6530 or compatible terminal. splitting. The opening of a new window or adjusting of the current window.
Glossary strict test of equality. A test of equality by a strict relational operator. stripping. The removing of characters (including blanks) from text. In a panel, usually to either left justify, right justify, or center the text on a screen. In an expression, usually to perform a test of equality on the text. structured file. An Enscribe file type consisting of records, each of which consists of defined fields and keys. Entry-sequenced UDBs and key-sequenced UDBs are structured files. subject.
Glossary System Services Control Point (SSCP). The subsystem responsible for managing and allocating all resources in a domain in an IBM Systems Network Architecture (SNA) network and for communicating with network operators. There is one SSCP for each domain in an SNA network. System Support Services. A group of NonStop NET/MASTER MS services that includes the Activity Log Browse facility, the Command Entry facility, and the Display/Update SYSPARMS Settings facility. system panel library.
Glossary term. The basic unit of an expression in NCL. There are five types of terms: symbols, quoted strings, variables, parenthesized expressions, and function references. terminal control process (TCP). The Guardian process that interprets SCREEN COBOL object code, handles input-output to operator terminals, and sends messages to server processes. terminal definition record. The record created when defining a terminal to NonStop NET/MASTER MS. test mode.
Glossary trace parameter. A value in the trace parameter list specifying the events to trace. trace parameter list (TPL). A list associated with an OCS window that holds the current trace parameter settings. trace point. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS code position that can be traced. trace record. An entry in a trace file: a message mapped by the map $MSG, text data, or binary data. Transaction Application Language (TAL).
Glossary unmapped UDB. A user database in which NCL treats the data in each record as a sequence of contiguous bytes. NCL does not interpret the data in an unmapped user database: an unmapped user database can contain any binary data. unprotected field. A panel field that can accept input. unquoted string. Within an NCL statement, a sequence of characters that do not begin and end with quotes, do not result in a number, and do not have a predefined meaning when used in a particular context.
Glossary user NCL procedure. An NCL procedure created by a user. user panel library. A panel library containing the panel description files belonging to a particular user or group of users. user procedure library. A procedure library containing the NCL procedures belonging to a particular user or group of users. user variable. A variable created by an NCL procedure. Parameters are user variables. user-defined error handler. An error handler defined by a user. user-defined map.
Glossary verb. Sometimes called a “verb statement,” an NCL statement that is not an intrinsic part of NCL. Its availability depends on the enabling of a NonStop NET/MASTER MS feature. Verbs do not affect the structure and flow of NCL process execution. virtual user. A NonStop NET/MASTER MS user that does not have a terminal associated with it. A virtual user acts the same way as a real user and has the same attributes as a real user operating in OCS. wake-up timer.
Index 100% LIMIT See %100 LIMIT 75% LIMIT See %75 LIMIT A A mode indicator 1-2, 2-97, 2-260 Absolute time 2-7 Action function keys 2-97, 2-259 ACTIVATE utility commands, default authority levels A-1 Active list 2-44, 2-502, 2-546 Active panel queue 2-495 Activity log displaying status of 2-345 files used for 2-487 logging messages to 2-148 reusing files 2-492 swapping 2-151 Activity Log Process (LOGP), submitting commands to 2-435 ADDUSER utility commands, default authority levels A-1 AID utility, default a
Index B Background Logger (BLOG), submitting commands to 2-435 Background Monitor (BMON), submitting commands to 2-435 Background processing environments profiling 2-273 submitting commands to 1-15 Background System Process (BSYS), submitting commands to 2-435 BACKUP utility commands, default authority levels A-2 Banner, logon screen 2-131 BATCHCOM utility commands, default authority levels A-3 BLOG See Background Logger BMON See Background Monitor Breakpoints clearing 2-35 listing 2-42 setting 2-28 BSYS S
Index CLOSTERM command 2-22 See also CANCEL command and OPENTERM command default authority level 2-23 entering from NCL 2-23 examples 2-23 CMDAUTH operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-454 CMDKEEP operand, of PROFILE command 2-270 CMDPROCESS operand, of PARAM command 2-200 CMDREPL operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-84, 2-378, 2-441, 2-456 CMDSEP operand, of PROFILE command 2-271 CMDSTACK operand, of PROFILE command 2-271 CMDSTACK operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-271, 2-274, 2-457 CMDSVR operand, of PARAM command 2-202
Index Commands (continued) retrieving oldest 2-26 routing to a remote system 1-15 summary of 1-2 unrecognized 2-451 Communication network management (CNM) 2-24, 2-302 Compilation, test 2-158 Configuration file 2-186 CONMSG operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-459 Console Extras 2-195, 2-196 Contention delay 2-453 Conversational function keys 2-97, 2-260 Conversational interface processes (CIPs) 2-197, 2-198 COPYDUMP utility commands, default authority levels A-4 COUP utility commands, default authority levels A-
Index D DCOM utility commands, default authority levels A-6 DEBUG BREAKPOINT command 2-28 default authority level 2-32 entering from NCL 2-32 examples 2-33 DEBUG CLEAR command 2-35 default authority level 2-35 entering from NCL 2-35 examples 2-36 DEBUG DISPLAY command 2-37 default authority level 2-38 entering from NCL 2-38 examples 2-39 DEBUG HOLD command 2-41 DEBUG LIST BREAKPOINTS command 2-42 default authority level 2-42 entering from NCL 2-42 examples 2-43 DEBUG LOAD command 2-44 default authority lev
Index DEBUG START command 2-61 default authority level 2-63 entering from NCL 2-63 examples 2-64 DEBUG STEP command 2-65 default authority level 2-66 entering from NCL 2-66 examples 2-66 DEBUG STOP command 2-71 default authority level 2-72 entering from NCL 2-72 examples 2-72 DEBUG TRACE command 2-73 default authority level 2-73 entering from NCL 2-73 examples 2-74 Default authority levels See also individual commands changing 2-454 guidelines for assigning 1-9 summary of 1-9 Default search path customized
Index Distributed Systems Network Management (DSNM) commands default authority level using OPSYS 2-176 using PROGRUN 2-289 executing using OPSYS 2-174 using PROGRUN 2-286 Distribution panel library 2-231 Distribution procedure library 2-225 DNSCOM utility commands, default authority levels A-7 Domain identifier 2-207 Domains, displaying 2-320 DSAP utility commands, default authority levels A-7 DSMPM utility, default authority levels A-33 DSNM See Distributed Systems Network Management DSNM processes 2-208
Index EMS event distributor (continued) primary CPU of 2-466 priority of 2-469 process name of 2-468 program file name of 2-467 EMS messages as NRD messages 2-477 background color of 2-460 color of 2-462 highlighting 2-472 receiving 2-272 EMS operand, of PROFILE command 2-272 EMS prefix 2-280 EMSBKGCOLOR operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-460 EMSCCTRL utility commands, default authority levels A-10 EMSCINFO utility commands, default authority levels A-10 EMSCOLL command 2-78 default authority level 2-78 enteri
Index END function key 2-590 See also RETURN function key ENTER command 2-81 default authority level 2-83 entering from NCL 2-83 examples 2-83 ENTER function key, defining 2-81 ENV operand, of PROFILE command 2-273 ENV utility commands, default authority levels A-10 EQUATE command 2-84 See also SHOW EQUATES command default authority level 2-84 examples 2-86 Equate commands creating 2-84 deassigning 2-84 displaying 2-323 global 2-84 local 2-85 ERROR utility commands, default authority levels A-10 EVCMDMIN o
Index F F16 function key See END function key F2 function key See SPLIT function key F3 function key See END function key F4 function key See RETURN function key F9 function key See SWAP function key FC command 2-95 default authority level 2-95 entering from NCL 2-95 examples 2-95 FEATUREDISABLE operand, of PARAM command 2-214 Features, disabling 2-214 FILEINFO utility commands, default authority levels A-11 FILENAMES utility commands, default authority levels A-11 Files See also User databases displaying
Index Function keys 2-96, 2-259 action 2-97, 2-259 conversational 2-97, 2-260 defining as ENTER key 2-81 displaying 2-96, 2-259 immediate 2-98, 2-260 prefix 2-98, 2-260 suffix 2-98, 2-261 FUP utility commands, default authority levels A-12 G Global memory manager processes 2-215 Global variables displaying 2-355 tracing 2-497 GMMPROCESS operand, of PARAM command 2-215 GO command 2-110 default authority level 2-110 entering from NCL 2-110 examples 2-111 Guardian user IDs 2-253, 2-274, 2-533 Guardian utiliti
Index History buffer (continued) maximum size of 2-457 retrieving commands from newest 2-27 oldest 2-26 HISTORY command 2-112 HLPMAINT command 2-113 default authority level 2-117 entering from NCL 2-117 example 2-118 HLSCOM utility commands, default authority levels A-13 HOLD operand, of PROFILE command 2-274 HOLDING caption 2-15 Holding mode messages AUTO HOLD caption 2-15 FS-HOLD caption 2-15 HOLDING caption 2-15 MSGS LOST caption 2-15 MSGS QUEUED caption 2-15 NRD PEND caption 2-282 %100 LIMIT caption 2-
Index Inter-NET/MASTER Connection (INMC) disabling 2-214 link definition records defining 2-134 deleting 2-141 links resetting 2-142 starting 2-143 stopping 2-144 session definition records defining 2-310 deleting 2-313 unit definition records defining 2-584 deleting 2-589 Inter-System Routing (ISR) configuration displaying 2-332 modifying 2-123 disabling 2-214 Internal events, tracing 2-558 INTQ command 2-120, 2-507 default authority level 2-121 entering from NCL 2-121 examples 2-122 INTREAD verb 2-120 IS
Index L LANG operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-482 LASTLOGON operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-483 LBANNER command 2-131, 2-132 Libraries NCL procedures 2-221, 2-225 panel description files 2-229, 2-231 LIGHTS utility commands, default authority levels A-13 LINK command See also SHOW LINKS command LINK DEFINE command 2-134 default authority level 2-135 entering from NCL 2-135 examples 2-136/140 LINK DELETE command 2-141 LINK RESET command 2-142 LINK START command 2-143 LINK STOP command 2-144 Links displaying 2-
Index LNKTRACE operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-485 LOAD utility commands, default authority levels A-13 Location customized panel library 2-229 customized procedure library 2-221 customized procedures object file 2-220 distributed panel object file 2-230 distributed procedures object file 2-222, 2-224 distribution panel library 2-231 distribution procedure library 2-225 user procedure library 2-226 LOCKMAX operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-486 Locks 2-340 displaying 2-340 maximum 2-486 purging 2-298 LOG comman
Index M M mode indicator 1-2, 2-276 M6530 utility, default authority levels A-33 Map file loading 2-494 naming 2-219 MAPDEL operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-493 MAPLOAD operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-494 Mapping Services 2-219 Maps displaying 2-346 loading into memory 2-494 removing from memory 2-493 $MAP 2-219, 2-346 $MSG 2-97, 2-219, 2-260, 2-346 $NCL 2-219, 2-346 $SEC 2-219, 2-346 $SPI 2-219, 2-346 MAXPANEL operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-367, 2-495 MAXUSERS command 2-155 MDSMAPFILE operand, of PARAM comma
Index Messages (continued) unsolicited prefixing domain ID 2-280 prefixing EMS prefix 2-280 prefixing time 2-281 Mode indicators 1-2, 2-97, 2-260, 2-276, 2-373 Model user ID 2-496 MODLUSER operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-496 MONMSG operand, of PROFILE command 2-275 MSG command 2-156 default authority level 2-157 entering from NCL 2-157 examples 2-157 MSG operand, of PROFILE command 2-276 MSGALARM operand, of PROFILE command 2-276 MSGCODE operand, of PROFILE command 2-277 MSGPROC NCL procedure 2-277 MSGPROC
Index NCL processes communicating with 2-507 debugging 2-28/73 displaying current status of 2-348, 2-358 paused 2-371 flushing 2-106 logging 2-500 maximum per user 2-506 passing data to 2-120 tracing 2-505 NCL queues defining 2-165 deleting 2-163 displaying active 2-348 displaying delayed 2-348 displaying execution limit 2-361 NCLCHECK command 2-158 NCLCOMP command 2-159 default authority level 2-161 entering from NCL 2-161 example 2-161 NCLCUSTOBJ operand, of PARAM command 2-220 NCLCUSTSRC operand, of PAR
Index NCLXUSER operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-106, 2-110, 2-121, 2-507 NETNAME operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-508 NETSTATUS utility, default authority levels A-33 Network Control Language See NCL NMIQLIM operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-509 Non-roll-delete messages See NRD messages NonStop NET/MASTER Management Services displaying engine 2-322 processes 2-380 system status 2-434 exiting from 2-304, 2-590 network name 2-508 shutdown canceling 2-416 fast stop 2-108 immediate 2-418 normal 2-416 reversing 2-416
Index O OCS See Operator Control Services OCS window identifier 2-169 OCSID command 2-169 default authority level 2-169 entering from NCL 2-169 examples 2-170 OCSTIME operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-511 OPENTERM command 2-172 See also CANCEL command and CLOSTERM command default authority level 2-173 entering from NCL 2-173 examples 2-173 Operands, changing authority level of 2-454 Operator Control Services (OCS), entering commands from 1-2 OPSYS command 2-174, A-1/32 default authority level 2-176 entering f
Index PARAM command 2-186 See also SHOW PARAM command CEXCCF operand 2-195 CEXDCF operand 2-196 CIP operand 2-197, 2-370 CIPPROCESS operand 2-198, 2-370 CMDPROCESS operand 2-200, 2-370 CMDSVR operand 2-202, 2-370 CPUWEIGHT operand 2-204 DID operand 2-207 DSNMPROCESS operand 2-208 DSNMSECTION operand 2-210 DSNMSUBVOL operand 2-211 DYNAMICPROCESS operand 2-212 FEATUREDISABLE operand 2-214 GMMPROCESS operand 2-215 INIT operand 2-217 LOGFILE1 operand 2-218 MDSMAPFILE operand 2-219 NCLCUSTOBJ operand 2-220 NCLC
Index PARAM command (continued) SECEXITPROCESS operand 2-249, 2-370 STATICPROCESS operand 2-251 SWGUID operand 2-253 UACAUTH operand 2-254 UACUTIL operand 2-255 UADAUTH operand 2-256 UADUTIL operand 2-257 UMSFILE operand 2-258 PASSWORD utility commands, default authority levels A-15 Passwords alphabetic characters in 2-307, 2-425 minimum length of 2-517 retaining 2-516 retrying 2-518 validity of 2-515 PATHCOM utility commands, default authority levels A-15 PDEBUG utility commands, default authority levels
Index PF21 function key See SWAP function key PMSEARCH utility commands, default authority levels A-16 PMSG utility commands, default authority levels A-17 PNLCUSTSRC operand, of PARAM command 2-229 PNLDISTCODE operand, of PARAM command 2-230 PNLDISTSRC operand, of PARAM command 2-231 PNLOBJPATH operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-512 PPD utility commands, default authority levels A-17 PPO messages, receiving 2-272 PPOPROC NCL procedure See EMSPROC NCL procedure PREFEMS operand, of PROFILE command 2-280 Prefix
Index Processes (continued) defining class 2-233 debug terminal 2-238 library 2-239 name 2-240 object file name 2-241 preferred CPUs 2-236 priority 2-244 startup string 2-242 swap volume 2-245 weight 2-246 DSNM 2-208 dynamic 2-212 external 2-370 global memory manager 2-215 security exit 2-248, 2-249 static 2-251 PROCESSLIBRARY operand, of PARAM command 2-239 PROCESSNAME operand, of PARAM command 2-240 PROCESSOBJECT operand, of PARAM command 2-241 PROCESSPARAM operand, of PARAM command 2-242 PROCESSPRIORITY
Index PROFILE command (continued) INITCMD operand 2-275 MONMSG operand 2-275 MSG operand 2-276 MSGALARM operand 2-276 MSGCODE operand 2-277 MSGPROC operand 2-277 NCLTEST operand 2-278 NRDELCH operand 2-279 operands of 2-269 PREFEMS operand 2-280 PREFSYS operand 2-280 PRFTM operand 2-281 RDMIN operand 2-281 ROLL operand 2-282 TRUNC operand 2-282 UNSOL operand 2-283 PROGRUN command 2-286, A-33 default authority level 2-289 entering from NCL 2-289 examples 2-291 issuing to a remote system 2-286, 2-287, 2-290
Index PURGE command 2-298 default authority level 2-300 entering from NCL 2-300 examples 2-301 Purge message 2-9, 2-89 PWEXPIRE operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-515 PWHISTORY operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-516 PWMIN operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-517 PWRETRY operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-518 Q Question mark See ? command R RCP utility, default authority levels A-33 RCVDUMP utility commands, default authority levels A-21 RDFCOM utility commands, default authority levels A-22 RDMIN operand, of PROFILE command
Index RETURN command 2-304 See also X command default authority level 2-305 entering from NCL 2-305 example 2-305 RETURN function key 2-304 See also END function key RJECIR utility commands, default authority levels A-23 RJECIS utility commands, default authority levels A-24 ROC See Remote Operator Control ROF utility, default authority levels A-33 ROLL operand, of PROFILE command 2-282 Roll-delete messages See also Messages clearing 2-20, 2-184 delimiter line 2-272 displaying chronologically 2-182 limitin
Index SESSMSG operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-519 SETTIME utility commands, default authority levels A-26 SF16 function key See RETURN function key SHOW COMMANDS command 2-314 default authority level 2-314 entering from NCL 2-314 examples 2-315 SHOW CPUWEIGHT command 2-317 default authority level 2-317 entering from NCL 2-317 examples 2-318 SHOW DOMAINS command 2-320 SHOW ENGINE command 2-322 SHOW EQUATES command 2-323 See also EQUATE command default authority level 2-323 entering from NCL 2-323 example 2-3
Index SHOW LOCKS command 2-340 default authority level 2-342 entering from NCL 2-342 examples 2-342 SHOW LOGS command 2-345 See also LOGSWAP command SHOW MAPS command 2-346 default authority level 2-346 entering from NCL 2-346 examples 2-347 SHOW NCL command 2-348 default authority level 2-352 entering from NCL 2-352 example 2-352 SHOW NCLGLBL command 2-355 default authority level 2-355 entering from NCL 2-355 examples 2-356 SHOW NCLOBJECT command 2-358 default authority level 2-358 entering from NCL 2-358
Index SHOW PNLOBJECT command 2-375 default authority level 2-375 entering from NCL 2-375 example 2-376 SHOW PRELOAD command 2-378 default authority level 2-378 entering from NCL 2-378 examples 2-379 SHOW PROCESS command 2-380 default authority level 2-381 entering from NCL 2-381 examples 2-382 SHOW PSND command 2-385 default authority level 2-385 entering from NCL 2-385 example 2-386 SHOW PSNDUSER command 2-387 SHOW SESS command 2-388 See also SHOW TERM command SHOW SYSPARMS command 2-389 See also SYSPARMS
Index SHOW UDB command 2-406 See also SHOW FILES command default authority level 2-406 entering from NCL 2-406 examples 2-407 SHOW UDBUSER command 2-409 SHOW USERS command 2-410 See also SHOW OCS command default authority level 2-410 entering from NCL 2-410 examples 2-411 SHOW VARTABLES command 2-412 default authority level 2-414 entering from NCL 2-414 examples 2-414 SHUTDOWN $ABEND$ command 2-418 default authority level 2-418 entering from NCL 2-418 entering from TACL 2-418 examples 2-419 SHUTDOWN comman
Index SPLIT command 2-428 See also SWAP command default authority level 2-428 entering from NCL 2-428 examples 2-430 SPLIT function key 2-428 See also SWAP function key SPLIT grid 2-429 SPOOLCOM utility commands, default authority levels A-26 SPOUTHIC operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-528 SPOUTLOC operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-529 SPSUBTLC operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-530 SPTITLEC operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-531 SPTITLEP operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-532 SQLCI utility commands, default authority levels
Index SWGUID operand, of PARAM command 2-253 SWGUIDDSNM operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-533 SYSPARMS command 2-441 See also SHOW SYSPARMS command AUTOEXEC operand 2-441, 2-451 CDELAY operand 2-453 CMDAUTH operand 2-454 CMDREPL operand 2-84, 2-378, 2-441, 2-456 CMDSTACK operand 2-271, 2-274, 2-457 CNMAPPLNME operand 2-24, 2-458 CONMSG operand 2-459 EMSBKGCOLOR operand 2-460 EMSCOLLPNM operand 2-78, 2-461 EMSCOLOR operand 2-462 EMSDISTBCP operand 2-463 EMSDISTCOLL operand 2-80, 2-464 EMSDISTFLT operand 2-465
Index SYSPARMS command (continued) LOGWRAP operand 2-151, 2-152, 2-492 MAPDEL operand 2-493 MAPLOAD operand 2-494 MAXPANEL operand 2-367, 2-495 MODLUSER operand 2-496 NCLGBTRC operand 2-497 NCLMAXK operand 2-498 NCLOBJPATH operand 2-499 NCLOGTRM operand 2-500 NCLPEND operand 2-501 NCLPRSHR operand 2-44, 2-279, 2-378, 2-502 NCLTRLFF operand 2-504 NCLTRMAX operand 2-505 NCLUMAX operand 2-93, 2-432, 2-506 NCLXUSER operand 2-106, 2-110, 2-121, 2-507 NETNAME operand 2-508 NMIQLIM operand 2-509 NRDLIM operand 2-
Index SYSPARMS command (continued) SYSUDB operand 2-534 TCMDMAX operand 2-535 TEDITOBJ operand 2-536 TOACT1 operand 2-537 TOACT2 operand 2-539 TOALARM operand 2-540 TOSTART operand 2-541 TOTIME1 operand 2-542 TOTIME2 operand 2-543 TRACEFILE operand 2-544 TRACEFLAGS operand 2-545 UNLOAD operand 2-546 System parameters defining 2-441 displaying 2-389 System Services Control Point See SSCP SYSTEM utility commands, default authority levels A-28 SYSTIMES utility commands, default authority levels A-28 SYSUDB op
Index Terminals closing 2-22 defining 2-548 deleting 2-552 disengaging 2-17 displaying connected 2-393 defined 2-397 IBM 2-3270 defining function keys on 2-96 displaying function key definitions on 2-96 locking 2-537, 2-539, 2-554 logging 2-459 opening 2-172 processing timeout 2-541 ringing alarm 2-540 Tandem 2-6530 defining function keys on 2-96, 2-259 displaying function key definitions on 2-96, 2-259 timeout action 2-537, 2-539 timeout interval 2-542, 2-543 Test mode, setting 2-278 Time absolute 2-7 dis
Index TOACT1 operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-537 TOACT2 operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-539 TOALARM operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-540 TOSTART operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-541 TOTIME1 operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-542 TOTIME2 operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-543 Trace altering settings 2-558, 2-568 displaying 2-401 multiple 2-570 resetting settings 2-569, 2-570 stopping 2-573 TRACE ALTER command 2-568 Trace collector process 2-570 Trace file 2-570 Trace parameter list 2-558, 2-568 displaying 2-401 resetting
Index UDBCTL OPEN command 2-577 default authority level 2-581 entering from NCL 2-581 examples 2-581 UDBCTL RESET command 2-582 UDBCTL STOP command 2-583 UDBs See User databases UMSFILE operand, of PARAM command 2-258 UNIT DEFINE command 2-584 default authority level 2-587 entering from NCL 2-587 examples 2-587 UNIT DELETE command 2-589 UNLOAD operand, of SYSPARMS command 2-546 UNSOL operand, of PROFILE command 2-283 USE utility commands, default authority levels A-31 User databases (UDBs) See also Files a
Index V Vartables, displaying 2-412 VIEWPOINT utility, default authority levels A-33 VIEWSYS utility, default authority levels A-33 Virtual users, submitting commands to 2-435 VOLUME utility commands, default authority levels A-31 VPROC utility commands, default authority levels A-31 W WHO utility commands, default authority levels A-31 Windows closing 2-17 reversing dimensions 2-438 splitting 2-428 WRITE verb 2-507 X X command 2-590 See also RETURN command XBUSDOWN utility commands, default authority leve
Index &SYS.LOOPCTL system variable 2-47 &SYS.NCLID system variable 2-94, 2-432 &SYS.OCS.ID system variable 2-169 &SYS.OCS.IDO system variable 2-169 &SYS.PANEL.FLD system variable 2-47 &SYS.PANEL.SKIP system variable 2-47 &SYS.PARMCNT system variable 2-94, 2-97, 2-110, 2-260, 2-432 &SYS.RETCODE system variable 2-47 &SYS.USER.