Open System Services Management and Operations Guide (G06.30+, H06.08+, J06.03+)

NOTE: In filename, you must put another backslash character before the backslash (\) and
dollar sign ($) characters or else the shell interprets these characters with their special shell meanings
rather than as plain characters.
Example 12 shows examples of using pname. When the file is on another NonStop node, the
pathname of the file relative to the / directory on that node is displayed after the prefix of /E/
and the node name.
Example 12 OSS pname Command Examples
$ pname \\NODE1.\$VOL.ZYQ00000.Z0000DV3
pname: \NODE1.$VOL.ZYQ00000.Z0000DV3 --> /home/henrysp/test
$ pname -s \\NODE1.\$VOL.ZYQ00000.Z0000DV3
/home/henrysp/test
$ pname \\NODE2.\$DATA.ZYQ00001.Z0000DV2
pname: \NODE2.$DATA.ZYQ00001.Z0000DV2 --> /E/node2/usr/test3
Using FUP INFO on OSS Regular Files
The FUP INFO display for an OSS regular file (you must use the Guardian equivalent of the OSS
pathname in this command) shows OSS file access permissions rather than Guardian security.
Examples of displays from the FUP INFO and FUP INFO, DETAIL commands for OSS regular files
are shown in Example 13 (page 177).
The FUP INFO, DETAIL display shows the OSS pathname for the file next to the PATH heading.
The OSS permissions appear under the RWEP heading in the FUP INFO display and next to the
SECURITY heading in the FUP INFO, DETAIL display. For information about interpreting the OSS
permissions, see the Open System Services User’s Guide.
176 Managing OSS Files