Spooler Utilities Reference Manual
Spooler Quick Start
Spooler Utilities Reference Manual—522295-003
1-11
Draining the Spooler
You also must know the name of the Supervisor process that has the control file
open. To identify the Supervisor process, you need to:
3. Find the PID of the Supervisor process. Issue the following FUP command:
35> FUP LISTOPENS $SYSTEM.SPOOLER.CTRL3
Example 1-7 shows the outcome of this command:
Using the PID, find the process name, as shown in Example 1-8.
Knowing the supervisor process name allows you to find the collector data files as
shown in Example 1-9:
4. You can now drain the spooler. Refer to Draining the Spooler on page 1-9.
5. Back up the files identified in step 1. The following command will back up all files in
subvolume $SYSTEM.SPOOLER, including CTRL3 and DATAS. This command
also backs up $DATA01.SPOOLER.DATAC files:
BACKUP/OUTSPLBKUP/$TAPE,($SYSTEM.SPOOLER.*,$DATA01.SPOOLER.DATA),LISTALL
Example 1-7. PID of the Supervisor Process
$SYSTEM.SPOOLER.CTRL3
PID MODE USERID SD MYTERM PROGRAM FILE NAME
248,01,0078-P R/W-P 255,255 01 $ZHOME $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.SPOOL
248,00,0093-B R/W-P 255,255 01 $ZHOME $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.SPOOL
Example 1-8. Using the STATUS Command
36>STATUS,1,78
System \BBQ
Process Pri PFR %WT Userid Program file Hometerm
$SPL1 1,78 160 001 255,255 $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.SPOOL $ZHOME
Swap File Name: $SYSTEM.#0
$SPL1 B 0,93 160 001 255,255 $SYSTEM.SYSTEM.SPOOL $ZHOME
Swap File Name: $SYSTEM.#0
Example 1-9. Finding the Collector Files
37>SPOOLCOM $SPL1;COLLECT
COLLECT STATE FLAGS CPU PRI UNIT DATAFILE %FULL
$S ACTIVE 1 155 4 $SYSTEM.SPOOLER.DATAS 63
$C ACTIVE 1 155 8 $DATA01.SPOOLER.DATAC 28