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 Guardian Commands for OSS and UNIX
Users
Open System Services Porting Guide—520573-006
B-3
kill Terminates or signals processes
STOP
lex Generates programs for lexical tasks
ln Links files
ASSIGN
locale Gets locale, specific information
localedef Defines locale environment
logger Logs messages
logname Returns user's login name
SHO, USERS
lp Sends files to printer
FUP COPY
lpstat Reports line printer status information
PERUSE,
SPOOLCOM
ls Lists directory contents
FILES, FILEINFO,
FILENAMES
make Maintains, updates and regenerates groups
of programs
man Displays system documentation
command help, HELP,
Total Information
Manager (TIM)
mkdir Makes directories
VOLUME
mkfifo Makes FIFO special files
more Displays files on a page-by-page basis
MORE
mv Moves files
FUP DUP, PURGE
nm Writes the name list of an object file
CROSSREF
nohup Invokes a utility immune to hangups
od Dumps files in various formats
FUP COPY
paste Merges corresponding or subsequent lines
of files
pathck Checks pathnames
pax Portable archive interchange
BACKUP and
RESTORE
pr Prints files
FUP COPY
printf Writes formatted output
#output
Table B-1. Equivalent Guardian Commands for OSS and UNIX
Users (page 3 of 5)
OSS and UNIX
Command Description
Guardian Commands or
TACL Macros
* OSS command only.
Bracketed [ ] information indicates a series of command steps.