Open System Services NFS SCF Reference Manual
SCF Commands for OSS NFS
Open System Services NFS SCF Reference Manual—522582-001
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Considerations
numbers have higher priority.) If you specify a priority of -1 or omit this attribute, 
the priority of the NFS manager process at the time the LAN object is started is used 
as the priority of the LAN interface process.
SWAP file-name
specifies a file used to hold the LAN interface process’s virtual data.  This attribute 
allows you to specify a permanent file for swapping the data stack and to specify a 
different volume for the swap file. If you omit this attribute, the volume on which 
the program file is located is used. 
See the RUN command in the TACL Reference Manual for more information about 
specifying a swap file.
TCPIP-HOST-FILE tcpip-host-file
specifies the name of the TCP/IP HOSTS file. If you omit this attribute, 
NonStop TCP/IP uses a domain name resolver.
TCPIP-PROCESS-NAME tcpip-process-name 
specifies the name of the TCP/IP process (for conventional NonStop TCP/IP) or the 
TCPSAM process (for Parallel Library TCP/IP) to be used by the LAN interface 
process. If you omit this attribute, the $ZTC0 process is used. See the TCP/IP 
Configuration and Management Manual for information about conventional 
NonStop TCP/IP. See the TCP/IP (Parallel Library) Configuration and 
Management Manual for information about Parallel Library TCP/IP.
TCPIP-RESOLVER-NAME tcpip-resolver-name
specifies the name of the TCP/IP resolver configuration file.  If you omit this 
attribute, the name $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP.RESCONF is used. For descriptions of the 
TCP/IP files, see the Tandem TCP/IP Configuration and Management Manual (for 
conventional NonStop TCP/IP) or the TCP/IP (Parallel Library) Configuration and 
Management Manual.
Considerations
Consider the following points when using the ADD LAN command:
•
ADD LAN is a sensitive command requiring super-group access.
•
You cannot use object-name templates to specify object names with the ADD LAN 
command.
•
For conventional NonStop TCP/IP, you can define more than one LAN object, but 
you can start only one LAN interface process for each TCP/IP process at any one 
time. For Parallel Library TCP/IP, you can define more than one LAN object, but 
you cannot define more than one LAN interface process for the entire Parallel 
Library TCP/IP subsystem.










