Troubleshooting Terminal, Printer, and Serial Device Connections - Edition 5 (32022-90058)
TermDSM Commands
DU[MP]
Chapter 4
60
portnum
Number of the port on the interface card. As you face the back of the
DTC, the ports are numbered from zero beginning at the left of the
board.
Description
Information associated with the port is dumped to a disk file. If the port is also
associated with an ldev number, information pertaining to the ldev number is dumped. If
you have identified a terminal problem and dump information using the PORT
subcommand, complete information about the terminal connection is dumped; there is
no need to also use the ldev subcommand.
NOTE Dumping information pertaining to a port does not reset (or otherwise affect) the
associated device. If you need to reset the device, use the RESET command.
When the dump is complete, the following information will be displayed:
The dump file is TRM
dddll
.PUB.SYS
where ddd is the Julian day of the year and ll is a two-character string in the range:
AA, AB, AC, ..., BA, BB, BC, ..., ZZ
This numbering system allows you to create many dump files in one day and to later
know on what day each dump was created by simply looking at the file name.
DU[MP] SN[P]
Captures data pertaining to a particular X.25 card and writes it to a disk file.
Security level: 2.
Syntax
SN[P]
dtcnum,cardnum
Parameters
dtcnum
Number of the DTC that contains the SNP card (X.25 card). This is the
number TermDSM associates with this DTC.
cardnum
Number of the interface card within the DTC. The cards are numbered
from zero beginning at the bottom of the DTC. (Note that SNP cards
may not be mounted in slots 0 or 1 for DTC 16, and slot 0 for DTC 48.)
Description
Information associated with the X.25 card is dumped to a disk file. Complete SNP RAM
will be dumped to the disk file. Because of this, all X.25 connections using the specified
SNP card are aborted. The following message is displayed:
Warning: This will reset all users on that SNP. As many
as 256 virtual circuit could be affected (TDSM 45).
Do you want to continue (yes/no)?
If you respond no, the DUMP prompt will be repeated for you to enter another DUMP
subcommand. If you respond yes, the dump continues.
When the dump is complete, the following information will be displayed: