Open System Services Porting Guide (G06.24+, H06.03+)
Table Of Contents
- What’s New in This Manual
- About This Manual
- 1 Introduction to Porting
- 2 The Development Environment
- 3 Useful Porting Tools
- 4 Interoperating Between User Environments
- Purpose of Interoperability
- The OSS User Environment
- OSS Commands for the Guardian User
- Guardian Commands for the UNIX User
- OSS Pathname and Guardian Filename Conversions
- Running the OSS Shell and Commands From TACL
- Running Guardian Commands From the OSS Shell
- Running OSS Processes With Guardian Attributes
- Using OSS Commands to Manage Guardian Objects
- 5 Interoperating Between Programming Environments
- 6 OSS Porting Considerations
- 7 Porting UNIX Applications to the OSS Environment
- 8 Migrating Guardian Applications to the OSS Environment
- General Migration Guidelines
- C Compiler Issues for Guardian Programs
- Using New and Extended Guardian Procedures
- Using OSS Functions in a Guardian Program
- Interoperating With OSS Programs
- Starting an OSS Program From the Guardian Environment
- C Compiler Considerations for OSS Programs
- Porting a Guardian Program to the OSS Environment
- How Arguments Are Passed to the C or C++ Program
- Differences in the Two Run-Time Environments
- Which Run-Time Routines Are Available
- Use of Common Run-Time Environment (CRE) Functions
- Replacing Guardian Procedure Calls With Equivalent OSS Functions
- Which IPC Mechanisms Can Be Used
- Interactions Between Guardian and OSS Functions
- 9 Porting From Specific UNIX Systems
- 10 Native Migration Overview
- 11 Porting or Migrating Sockets Applications
- 12 Porting Threaded Applications
- A Equivalent OSS and UNIX Commands for Guardian Users
- B Equivalent Guardian Commands for OSS and UNIX Users
- C Equivalent Inspect Debugging Commands for dbx Commands
- D Equivalent Native Inspect Debugging Commands for dbx Commands
- E Standard POSIX Threads Functions: Differences Between the Previous and Current Standards
- Glossary
- Index
Equivalent OSS and UNIX Commands for Guardian
Users
Open System Services Porting Guide—520573-006
A-3
RESTORE Restores backup copies of disk files pax, pinstall
RUN Executes a program run
SET DEFINE Sets values for attributes in working set set_define
*
SET DEFMODE Enables attributes for current command
interpreter process
SETPROMPT Changes command interpreter prompt env, .profile
SETTIME Sets date and time of system clock
(super group)
date
SHOW Displays attribute values set with SET
command
SHOW DEFINE Displays working attribute set show_define
*
SPOOLCOM Monitor and control spooler subsystem lpstat, cancel
STATUS Displays status of running processes ps
STOP Stops and deletes a process kill
SUSPEND Prevents process from running until
reactivated
^Z, kill
SYSTEM Sets the default system
TACL Starts command interpreter process sh
TEDIT Full-screen editor vi
TFORM, TGAL Simple text formatter
TIME Displays date and time date
USE Defines search list to find existing
variables
USERS Displays attributes of users and groups logname, who,
id, env, umask
VOLUME Temporarily changes your default
volume, subvol, security
cd, chmod
VPROC Displays product version information vproc
*
WAKEUP Sets TACL wakeup mode
WHO Displays information about current
TACL process
id, tty, env
! Reexecutes previous command line r, ^p, fc
? Displays previous command line fc, history, ^p
Table A-1. Equivalent OSS and UNIX Commands for Guardian
Users (page 3 of 3)
Guardian Command Description
OSS and UNIX
Commands
* OSS command only.
Bracketed [ ] information indicates a series of command steps.