Software Identification (SWID) User's Guide
Running SWID With Customized Switches
Software Identification (SWID) User’s Guide—527243-004
4-14
-DV/-DS Switches
Considerations
•
The -DV switch prompts SWID to generate output in a -FA switch format. In 
addition, the output includes VPROC information whenever the file is an object file 
or a microcode file.
•
The -DS switch displays the run statistics at the end of the output. The Selected 
files under Run Statistics indicate how many of the files met the file set criteria. For 
VPROCs, the file is included under Selected only if it is an object, microcode, or 
millicode file.
•
The second file set t* is actually a subset of the first file set *. However, SWID 
processes each file set independently of the others. Therefore, the output has 
been generated twice for files T9298AAJ and TOUT1. 
•
Also the file SOBJ is either an object, microcode, or millicode file. The invoker has 
no READ access. Because VPROC is selected, SWID generates the heading 
Binder Timestamp and writes the error message in that field to acknowledge 
that VPROC information should have been generated for the file.
•
The presence of the target CPU line indicates that the file is a TNS object file (code 
100), while the presence of the native mode line indicates that it is a native object 
file (code 700). When both these lines are not present, the concerned file is not an 
object file. For example, SOBJA is a TNS object file and TOUT1 is a native object 
file, while BG is not an object file. 
When the field contains no version procedures, SWID generates the Binder 
timestamp and displays ** NO T9xxx PROC ** in place of the Version 
Procedure field.










