MPE/iX Commands Reference Manual (32650-90877)
Chapter 7 271
Command List V
Commands HEADOFF thru LISTF
in the temporary domain, and with user supplied carriage control
characters (CCTL), OUT access mode, and EXC (exclusive access) option. All
other characteristics are identical to the FILE command default
specifications. You may specify a different kind of file or backreference an
existing file.
When you direct LISTF output to $STDLIST from a job, or when you direct
the output to any non-disk device, a date and time stamp preceeds the
data, and
listlevel
0 data appears as one file per record rather than in
the standard multi-column format.
Operation
The LISTF command displays a description of the file(s) you specified in
fileset
. It only
accepts MPE file name syntax, but it displays information in one of two formats, MPE or
POSIX, depending upon whether or not your current group differs from your logon group.
MPE format examples appear below. For examples of the POSIX format, see the LISTFILE
command.
You may list any file, but there are restrictions on the kinds of information available to
various users. A standard user may specify a
listlevel
of 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10 or 11. If
you have account manager capability (AM), you may request
listlevel
-1, -3 or -5, 8, 9
information about files in your own account. If you have System Manager capability (SM),
you can specify any
listlevel
to view all information for all files on the system. List
levels 8 and 9 are also available if you are the owner of the files.
For list levels 8 and 9 the IP address of remote accessors and the program name of the
accessor process are restricted fields. PM, SM, OP, NA, or NM capabilities are needed to
see the IP address. The rules defined by the SHOWPROC command are enforced before
revealing the process name.
The LISTF command does not display #SEG, STACK, MAXDATA, TOTAL, DB, DL or CAP values
for program files. That information is displayed by the VERSION utility. For more
information, see the VERSION command.
You may have the information displayed on a device other than the standard listing device.
To do that, you will need to name the device with a FILE command and then backreference
the file in the LISTF command. For example:
:FILE PRTR;DEV=LP
:LISTF @.@,2;*PRTR
Use
The LISTF command is available from a session, job, or a program, or in BREAK. Pressing
Break aborts the execution of this command.
Examples
Level 0 File Display
:LISTF
FILENAME
CLKLIST CLOCK EDIRC LINKCLK LINKFROG LINKLIST