In 8988413032026434.wa.herowith.zerogmail@listserv.ua.edu, on
12/28/2013
at 08:28 AM, Rajesh Kumar herowith.z...@gmail.com said:
I need a good tutorial for rexx and cobol.
REXX Reference Summary Handbook, ISBN 0-9639854-2-6
REXX in 21 Days
Both out of print, alas.
--
Shmuel
In 5c8fv3f78unypshw9tyopynk.1388251271...@email.android.com, on
12/28/2013
at 12:21 PM, Charles Mills charl...@mcn.org said:
The user-friendly interactive nature of CMS.
Rhat would seem to describe TSO as well. The only place where CMS has
a clear edge, IMHO, is XEDIT.
--
Shmuel
Gee, I don't want to pose as an expert in the relative benefits of various
Rexx environments. I have near-zero experience on 'nix and USS, no recent
(15 years) experience on CMS, and although I have written large systems in
Rexx, I am not at present writing much Rexx beyond basic TSO helper
These may be helpful:
http://www.kyla.co.uk/other/rexx1.htm
http://www.csis.ul.ie/cobol/
-Original Message-
From: Rajesh Kumar [mailto:herowith.z...@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, December 28, 2013 9:29 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Need tutorial
Hi,
I need a good tutorial
Nobody has mentioned much about COBOL. Depending on what the OP wants to
learn, and his home system. He might be interested in GNU COBOL (formerly
OpenCOBOL) at http://www.opencobol.org . Or, perhaps even more so, zCOBOL,
at http://www.z390.org/zcobol/ . zCOBOL runs on Linux and Windows. It is
I'm just reading about STK/Sun/Oracle tape drives. The latest T1D
drive has uncompressed capacity 8TB, but with Maximum Capacity Feaure
it's 8,5TB.
I can't imagine what the feature is, physically. And why it's not
always-enabled?
Any clue?
Happy EOY'13
--
Radoslaw Skorupka
Lodz,
In m3zjnjsodg@garlic.com, on 12/29/2013
at 09:50 AM, Anne Lynn Wheeler l...@garlic.com said:
note that (at least low-end and mid-range) 360s 370s were emulation
on some native microprocessor ... so 5100 wasn't all that different.
The data paths on the 2030, 2040, 2050, 2065 and 2085
I was trying to execute a batch cozsftp command using tcsh as the shell,
and my dataset allocation (to send a file to an sftp server) kept on
failing, either with an unable to stat DD, or when I attempted to
allocate the dynamically allocate the dataset, that allocation failed
due to it being
In
caarmm9qj3myeauuvhm0dmhx-cpqm2ayso3qc9anon5kznbc...@mail.gmail.com,
on 12/29/2013
at 06:03 PM, Tony Harminc t...@harminc.net said:
I imagine it's written in C, since it runs on Windows and Linux on
i86,
Cite? There are BookManager products on windoze, but I'm not aware of
any that accept
This is my take on it. I am not an expert. Nor do I have access to the
actual source code. I don't believe that tcsh will do what you want. My
reasoning is below.
In order to run a process in the same address space, the code must use the
spawn() function. I base this assertion on
Thanks for the reply. I changed to tcsh since it seems to work better
than /bin/sh when I ssh to OMVS from my FreeBSD 9.2 workstation.
Mark Jacobs
On 12/30/13 08:51, John McKown wrote:
This is my take on it. I am not an expert. Nor do I have access to the
actual source code. I don't believe
In 07dd01cf055e$eb92e0d0$c2b8a270$@mcn.org, on 12/30/2013
at 07:59 AM, Charles Mills charl...@mcn.org said:
It's really a separate topic, but I think there is little doubt
that it makes sense to edit code of any sort in some fast
character-at-a-time interactive environment even if the target
On Mon, 30 Dec 2013 07:51:28 -0600, John McKown wrote:
I note that the description of the fork() function does not mention
_BPX_SHAREAS at all. I therefore conclude that a fork() will always result
in a new address space.
It must, in order that pointers in the child process space validly point
On Mon, 30 Dec 2013 12:20:36 +0800, David Crayford wrote:
Most VMers claim that Rexx is superior on VM because of CMS pipes.
That's a pretty strong argument.
That's analogous to claiming that Rexx is superior on z/OS because
of address SYSCALL (others might say ISPEXEC/ISREDIT).
-- gil
On Mon, 30 Dec 2013 09:16:29 -0500, Mark Jacobs wrote:
Thanks for the reply. I changed to tcsh since it seems to work better
than /bin/sh when I ssh to OMVS from my FreeBSD 9.2 workstation.
Examples?
-- gil
--
For IBM-MAIN
On Sun, 2013-12-29 at 09:50 -0500, Anne Lynn Wheeler wrote:
total kernel time ... moved to microcode gained approx. 72% of kernel
time.
Though the wikipedia article doesn't mention it, my recollection is that
Magnuson's M80 system was microprogrammable by the user. Anybody
remember/use that?
On Sun, 2013-12-29 at 14:30 -0600, Andy Wood wrote:
HP called it a calculator rather than a computer as a marketing ploy
Heh. Bob Brigham once told me that the Bell System made electronic
switching systems (ESS) because they were prohibited from marketing
computers.
--
David Andrews
A. Duda
David,
I remember the magnuson, it was PCM for IBM s/370s, I *think*..
Scott ford
www.identityforge.com
from my IPAD
'Infinite wisdom through infinite means'
On Dec 30, 2013, at 10:31 AM, David Andrews d...@lists.duda.com wrote:
On Sun, 2013-12-29 at 09:50 -0500, Anne Lynn Wheeler
Bizarro from Monday 30 Dec 2013
http://www.arcamax.com/thefunnies/bizarro/
--
This is clearly another case of too many mad scientists, and not enough
hunchbacks.
Maranatha!
John McKown
--
For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff /
In 1974, when that video was taped, a desk would fit on a computer. :-)
Bill Fairchild
- Original Message -
From: Charles Mills charl...@mcn.org
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Sent: Sunday, December 29, 2013 8:26:12 AM
Subject: Re: ▶ One day, a computer will fit on a desk (1974) -
Yeah, reminds me of the 70s and 80s
Scott ford
www.identityforge.com
from my IPAD
'Infinite wisdom through infinite means'
On Dec 30, 2013, at 11:48 AM, John McKown john.archie.mck...@gmail.com
wrote:
Bizarro from Monday 30 Dec 2013
http://www.arcamax.com/thefunnies/bizarro/
--
On 30 December 2013 10:31, David Andrews d...@lists.duda.com wrote:
Though the wikipedia article doesn't mention it, my recollection is that
Magnuson's M80 system was microprogrammable by the user. Anybody
remember/use that?
Much earlier the 370/165 and /168 had a Load MicroProgram
That could make for some VERY interesting results from a bad branch...maybe
that's why modern PCs sometimes wedge to the point of needing a power
cycle: they've reimplemented this technology! :-D
On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 2:55 PM, Tony Harminc t...@harminc.net wrote:
On 30 December 2013 10:31,
Reifying personal preferences into claims of superiority is a lot like
arguing from a mystical experience. They may well be personally
compelling; but they don't persuade others.
John Gilmore, Ashland, MA 01721 - USA
--
For
On 30 December 2013 08:25, Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.)
shmuel+ibm-m...@patriot.net wrote:
on 12/29/2013 at 06:03 PM, Tony Harminc t...@harminc.net said:
I imagine it's written in C, since it runs on Windows and Linux on i86,
Cite? There are BookManager products on windoze, but I'm not aware of
For a z/OS to z/OS file transfer of a VB binary file we can use binary and
(structure) record, ie:
//FTPVBGET JOB ,'VB FTP
GET',NOTIFY=SYSUID
//EXECFTP EXEC PGM=FTP,PARM='remote_zos
(EXIT'
//SYSPRINT DD
SYSOUT=*
On Mon, 2013-12-30 at 14:55 -0500, Tony Harminc wrote:
Much earlier the 370/165 and /168 had a Load MicroProgram instruction
that loaded microcode from main storage. X'B9', iirc. Used by OLTEP
tests, I think.
I have a hazy memory of the /145 having a similar instruction (possibly
a variant of
On Mon, 30 Dec 2013 12:37:36 -0800, Frank Swarbrick wrote:
Is there any reason why I would not prefer binary/record over
ebcdic/blocked?� The former seems to make much more sense, since that
is in fact what I am doing.� Specifying EBCDIC implies a text file,
which this is not (even though it
This is just a curious question about how the JCL DD SUBSYS paramater works.
With BLSR you allocate a file to use BLSR with something like this:
//INETACC DD SUBSYS=(BLSR,'DDNAME=INETACC@ MSG=I',
// 'RMODE31=ALL BUFND=256 BUFNI=64 DEFERW=YES')
//INETACC@ DD DSN=DSNENV..INET.INETACC,
Hi,
I have been chaining the CDE entries looking for the executing program of the
job step.
I started from ASXBFTCB looking at TCBJPQ which had a CDE entry but not for
program on the job step.
At the third TCB using TCBTCB as a forward chain.
Looking at TCBJPQ the 2nd forward chain CDCHAIN I
Since EBCDIC is a specific encoding for text glyphs, I would have to
agree with Frank that specifying EBCDIC certainly should imply one is
discussing text data. I have no idea if documentation on z/OS FTP
explicitly states that or not; but if its usage there is not intended to
imply text data,
On 12/30/2013 2:15 PM, Micheal Butz wrote:
Is there any way of knowing what cdentry represents the program job step
RBCDE, in the oldest PRB under the TCB pointed to by TCBJSTCB, contains
that address.
--
Edward E Jaffe
Phoenix Software International, Inc
831 Parkview Drive North
El
http://www.oracle.com/us/products/servers-storage/storage/tape-storage/t1-data-cartridges/overview/index.html
8.5 TB maximum capacity. I assume that includes any built in compression.
2013/12/30 R.S. r.skoru...@bremultibank.com.pl:
I'm just reading about STK/Sun/Oracle tape drives. The
On Mon, 30 Dec 2013 17:15:23 -0500, Micheal Butz michealb...@optonline.net
wrote:
I have been chaining the CDE entries looking for the executing program of the
job step.
As Ed indicated, RBCDE from the oldest PRB in the jobstep TCB would be the CDE
you want, but I'm a bit puzzled why your
This is just a curious question about how the JCL DD SUBSYS paramater
works.
With BLSR you allocate a file to use BLSR with something like this:
//INETACC DD SUBSYS=(BLSR,'DDNAME=INETACC@ MSG=I',
// 'RMODE31=ALL BUFND=256 BUFNI=64 DEFERW=YES')
//INETACC@ DD
Makes sense. Thank you!
Frank
From: Jim Mulder d10j...@us.ibm.com
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Sent: Monday, December 30, 2013 4:47 PM
Subject: Re: BLSR
This is just a curious question about how the JCL DD SUBSYS paramater
works.
With BLSR you allocate
I am doing some XMEM work the user enters an ASID in order to be sure he/she is
looking at the right address space I would like to be able to get the job step
CDE
So for DFHSIP he/she would be looking at a CICS region for IKJEFT01 a TSO
address space
Etc
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 30,
That would the 4th TCB's TCBRBP
As the first three are related to the
Initiator.
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 30, 2013, at 5:49 PM, Ed Jaffe edja...@phoenixsoftware.com wrote:
On 12/30/2013 2:15 PM, Micheal Butz wrote:
Is there any way of knowing what cdentry represents the program job
On 20 July 2012 22:06, Jim Mulder d10j...@us.ibm.com wrote:
The Subsystem Interface in MVS/SP Version 3 GC66-3131-00
August 1989
I'm guessing this should be GG66-3131. Trivia, and I may well be
wrong, but I'm including it here so it becomes searchable.
Tony H.
On 30 December 2013 18:47, Jim Mulder d10j...@us.ibm.com wrote:
BLSR was originally written at Washington Systems Center as
an assembler language subsystem, which was going to be included
with the book The Subsystem Interface in MVS/SP Version 3
GC66-3131-00 August 1989 as a sample
In a batch job started by the initiator
Not a started task.
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 30, 2013, at 7:22 PM, Micheal Butz michealb...@optonline.net wrote:
That would the 4th TCB's TCBRBP
As the first three are related to the
Initiator.
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 30, 2013, at 5:49
John ,
This talks about the _BPX_SHAREAS environment
variable. This environment variable is not mentioned anywhere in the
documentation of tcsh.
Your are right . BPX_SHAREAS cannot be used for tcsh . It is documented in USS
planning guide .
_BPX_SHAREAS
Specifies whether the spawned
On 30/12/2013 11:11 PM, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
Most VMers claim that Rexx is superior on VM because of CMS pipes.
That's a pretty strong argument.
That's analogous to claiming that Rexx is superior on z/OS because
of address SYSCALL (others might say ISPEXEC/ISREDIT).
Perhaps. But pipes are
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