NET/MASTER Management Services (MS) Command Reference Manual

LBANNER
PROFILE
NonStop NET/MASTER MS Commands
2–274 115412 Tandem Computers Incorporated
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
refers to your current OCS window (your primary processing environment).
All other operands of the PROFILE command are valid in this environment.
GUID
specifies a Guardian user ID (GUID) from among those defined in your user ID
definition record. A GUID is a two-part ID, consisting of a group ID and a user
ID, that defines a user to the operating system.
You can change your current GUID to another GUID if the other GUID is defined
in your user ID definition record. Your user ID definition record can specify a
maximum of eight different GUIDs.
group-id
specifies the group ID. This is a number from 0 through 255.
user-id
specifies the user ID. This is a number from 0 through 255.
HOLD=
message-limit
specifies the maximum number of messages NonStop NET/MASTER MS queues
when the screen is either in AUTO HOLD or HOLDING mode. By default
NonStop NET/MASTER MS holds 200 messages. You can specify a message limit
from 10 through to the maximum number specified by the SYSPARMS HELDMSG
command, usually 999 messages.
You are warned when the number of queued messages reaches 75% and 100% of
the message limit specified by this operand. If the message limit is exceeded,
NonStop NET/MASTER MS displays the warning MSGS LOST. At this point, the
oldest message is discarded from the queue and the new message retained. The
SYSPARMS LMSGWARN command defines the repeat frequency for warning you
of lost messages (this is every 10 messages by default). You can display the
queued messages by pressing any function key or the ENTER key.
Messages that are lost from display at an OCS window are still logged in the
activity log; you can use Log Browse to examine these messages later. You can
view messages that have scrolled past on your OCS window by using the recall
buffer.
You cannot use this operand to profile a dependent processing environment.