Most users don't even know what the specs mean, possibly even the office paper pusher tasked with writing the manual does not know what they mean, he just got some numbers from the engineering department and put them in somewhere. Most users will not read the manual and just try to use...
And the other side has 239. Might just be a production batch number. But given the weird "rheostat" like winding, it could also mean something It is also blown. You can see the blowout in the middle in the larger image. I am wondering if I should replace it with a "normal" fuse o...
PARMLIB REPLY SYSIN" It would be reasonable to assume that PARMLIB as an origin is SMFPRMnn, that REPLY was a in response to a prompt from the console, and that SYSIN was from a DD statement of that name. In a similar vein it would be logical for DEFAULT to be some pre-assembled ...
SUBSYS(OMVS,INTERVAL(003000)) all the exit parms for OMVS will come from the SYS statement and show SYS in the D SMF,O output. Does that match what you are seeing? --- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to lists...@bama.ua.edu with the mess...
When moving from one note or chord to another, Sibelius will cancel the sounding notes as you scrub to the next or previous note. It does this so you don’t end up with a mush of sound, however Sibelius takes ties into account too, so you get a true impression of what’s in the ...
In the output from a D SMF,O command, what exactly do -- DEFAULT -- PARMLIB -- SYS mean? Are there any other similar "tags"? What do they mean? I guess DEFAULT is the basic default value. PARMLIB means it came from SMFPRMxx. What about SYS?
options mean (since they are not all intuitive) and adds in anything that is not currently shown (specifically, "SYS") Loosely, it is something like this: CHANGED -- conflicting options, SMF changed what was asked for DEFAULT -- as you would likely expect ...
options mean (since they are not all intuitive) and adds in anything that is not currently shown (specifically, "SYS") Loosely, it is something like this: CHANGED -- conflicting options, SMF changed what was asked for DEFAULT -- as you would likely expect ...
>Subject: Re: D SMF,O -- what do DEFAULT, PARMLIB and SYS mean? > >What do you see for SYS on your output? I think SYS means it is subsystem >parms >that took their defaults from the SYS statement. IOW, if you code >something like ...
all the exit parms for OMVS will come from the SYS statement and show SYS in the D SMF,O output. Does that match what you are seeing? Regards, Mark -- Mark Zelden - Zelden Consulting Services - z/OS, OS/390 and MVSmailto:m...@mzelden.comMark's MVS Utilities:http://www.mzelden...