I am out of the office until 11/15/2010.
If you require immediate assistance, please contact my backup Fernando
Vega on 1-404-238-4580 or Jon Regitsky on 1-404-238-3134. Thank you.
Note: This is an automated response to your message IBM-MAIN Digest - 11
Nov 2010 to 12 Nov 2010 (#2010-316)
Since I started this thread, I would appreciate the hijackers renaming it to
something else.
Bob Shannon
Rocket Software
--
For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions,
send email to lists...@bama.ua.edu with
when stl was going to move 300 people from the IMS group off-site ...
they looked at remote 3270s support but found it terribly unacceptable
... after being use to on-site, channel attached, local 3270 vm370
response.
I did the support for them that used HYPERChannel as channel extender to
put
Bob
Assuming that the original poster somehow retains possession of a thread -
an issue open to debate - you have been particularly - perhaps even
unusually - unfortunate in that the very first response contained a gratuitous
slur on something about the 3270 to which the responder appeared to
Dear group,
our Test-CICS abended. The system trace shows me the cause:
PGM03B 040C2001 81977335
in IBM literature I only find about interrupts 0C1-0CF. Somebody could
help me? Where can I find the other PGM's?
With best regards
Monika
Per http://ibmmainframes.com/references/a29.html
S03B
An error occurred in opening an indexed sequential data set.
Possible causes:
1. A write to the data set was attempted when DISP=SHR was coded in the JCL.
2. A write to the file was attempted when it was not opened for output.
3. The
Invalid address, aka S0C4. More technically Third Region Translation
Exception.
http://publibz.boulder.ibm.com/cgi-bin/bookmgr_OS390/BOOKS/dz9zr003/6.5.2.40
quote
6.5.2.40 Region-Third-Translation Exception
A region-third-translation exception is recognized when a region third
table is in the
On Sat, Nov 13, 2010 at 10:15 AM, Monika Amiss monika.am...@arcor.dewrote:
Dear group,
our Test-CICS abended. The system trace shows me the cause:
PGM03B 040C2001 81977335
in IBM literature I only find about interrupts 0C1-0CF. Somebody could
help me? Where can I find the
On Sat, 13 Nov 2010 19:15:35 +0100 Monika Amiss monika.am...@arcor.de wrote:
:Dear group,
: our Test-CICS abended. The system trace shows me the cause:
: PGM03B 040C2001 81977335
Which is yet another version of an 0C4, but in 64 bit mode.
: in IBM literature I only find about
--- On Fri, 11/12/10, Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.) shmuel+ibm-m...@patriot.net
wrote:
From: Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.) shmuel+ibm-m...@patriot.net
Subject: Re: loop detection by program
To: IBM-MAIN@bama.ua.edu
Date: Friday, November 12, 2010, 7:50 AM
In
In snt113-w68fe8a429b5391e1b2e2bc6...@phx.gbl, on 11/12/2010
at 03:03 PM, john gilmore john_w_gilm...@msn.com said:
Free-format languages like C and PL/I, whoich use a
statement-delimiting semicolon, obviously do not confront this
problem,
Instead, they confront a different set of problems.
In
55c15a713058df4dacc44c0f9b25da37a968314...@nywexmbx2106.msad.ms.com,
on 11/12/2010
at 09:21 AM, Baraniecki, Ray
ray.baranie...@morganstanleysmithbarney.com said:
Why is it when I comment-out assembler statements that contain a
continuation indicator in column 72 the assembler complains?
There are more than a few people who would consider using DB2 for metadata
as an advantage (operationally and functionally), but leaving that debate
aside
The original poster noted they have DB2 already. Now, of course I don't
have the original poster's LPAR configurations, etc., but as a
Yes, there is additional zIIP exploitation possible when you move from DB2
8 to DB2 10. For example, DB2 10 inherits DB2 9's ability to exploit zIIPs
for DRDA/JDBC/ODBC queries involving stored procedures. As another example,
the z/OS XML System Services exploit zIIP, and DB2 support for the z/OS
--snip-
I don't know of any language that uses a continuation column and is not
as picky. Take COBOL - please!
---unsnip--
Look at the usage of column 6 in
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