>>> On 6/14/2011 at 01:15 AM, "Sundaram, Parthasarthy"
wrote:
> Iam able to convert the ASCII file to EBCDIC thru DD command
> outside SFTP mode.Is this the right command.
Does SunOS have iconv? It's what I try to use when I'm doing similar
conversions. It's part of glibc, but you mig
On 6/14/11 1:15 AM, "Sundaram, Parthasarthy"
wrote:
>i) In SunOS how to convert the ASCII mode to EBCDIC mode in SFTP
>mode.
If you are talking to Linux on Z, it's an ASCII system. No conversion
necessary.
If you are FTPing to z/OS or other IBM system, use text mode. Conversion
will happen
purpose.
From:
adam shea
To:
LINUX-390@vm.marist.edu
Date:
06/14/2011 10:35 AM
Subject:
Re: ASCII to EBCDIC conversion
If I remember correctly, the way I did this (when I needed to do something
like this) I transferred the files using vanilla FTP in binary mode. There
is an FTP option you must
On Tue, 14 Jun 2011, Richard Troth wrote:
The FTP server on the EBCDIC system should handle translation of text
files.
Let the EBCDIC side do the translation.
heh -- easily said ;)
I had a situation where I was receiver and sender as a
counterparty on credit card clearance data, in EBCDIC f
SFTP, in the OP, is distinctly different from FTP[S]. I assume the OP
was correct in his usage. SFTP is part of SSH.
You're probably thinking of QUOTE SITE RDW, and I totally agree with you
about that.
On Tue, 2011-06-14 at 10:29 -0400, adam shea wrote:
> If I remember correctly, the way I did th
t have the same old ftp client to deal with
William D Carroll
Mainframe Engineering, Build
Office: (614) 677-3885
Cell: (614) 266-5402
Email: carrol...@nationwide.com
From:
Michael Stephens
To:
LINUX-390@VM.MARIST.EDU
Date:
06/14/2011 10:08 AM
Subject:
Re: ASCII to EBCDIC conversion
Sent
If I remember correctly, the way I did this (when I needed to do something
like this) I transferred the files using vanilla FTP in binary mode. There
is an FTP option you must specify to the FTP server on the z/OS system
requesting the inclusion of the record descriptor word (RDW) field. The RDW,
a
I didn't notice the "dd" portion of the question. The problem, to IBM at
least on z/OS, the end-of-line character is not a LineFeed (EBCDIC 0x25)
but a NewLine (EBCDIC 0x15). "dd" converts 0x0a to 0x25 and not 0x15.
On Tue, 2011-06-14 at 10:45 +0530, Sundaram, Parthasarthy wrote:
> Hi Team,
>
>
--Original Message-
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:LINUX-390@VM.MARIST.EDU] On Behalf Of Scott
Rohling
Sent: Tuesday, June 14, 2011 8:49 AM
To: LINUX-390@VM.MARIST.EDU
Subject: Re: ASCII to EBCDIC conversion
I'm not sure this will make a difference -- I misread the table .. and the LF
cha
I am not sure what you are asking.
Linux/390 is an ASCII system, just like Solaris (SunOS).
Linux on the mainframe needs no translation when talking to Solaris
(on any hardware).
Solaris on the mainframe needs no translation when talking to Linux
(on any hardware).
Linux/390 (and Solaris on z) can
I'm not sure this will make a difference -- I misread the table .. and the
LF characters are the same in ebcdic or ibm..
You may need to use 'tr' or some other translate function after the dd.
Scott Rohling
On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 7:43 AM, Scott Rohling wrote:
> Did you use 'ebcdic' or 'ibm' for
Did you use 'ebcdic' or 'ibm' for conversion type on the dd command?
Whichever you used, you might want to try and use the other and see if
results change.
Scott Rohling
On Mon, Jun 13, 2011 at 11:15 PM, Sundaram, Parthasarthy <
parthasarthy.sunda...@eds.com> wrote:
> Hi Team,
>
> Very good mo
This is not a SUNOS forum. But from what I know of sftp there is no option
to convert to EBCDIC. Now, if you are going to a z/OS system, there is a 3rd
party enhancement available from Dovetailed Technologies which does the
conversion. Google that name and "sftp". I can't cut and paste on my
smartp
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