morestdl
Syntax
morestdl -V | -U
morestdl
[-day num]
[-first | -last | -num n | -all]
[-twslog]
[{-name ["[folder/]jobstreamname [(hhmm date),(jobstream_id)].]jobname"
| jobnum | -schedid jobstream_id.jobname}]
Arguments
- -V
- Displays the command version and exits.
- -U
- Displays command usage information and exits.
- -day num
- Displays standard list files that are the specified number of days old (1 for yesterday, 2 for the day before yesterday, and so on). The default is zero (today).
- -first
- Displays the first qualifying standard list file.
- -last
- Displays the last qualifying standard list file.
- -num n
- Displays the standard list file for the specified run of a job.
- -all
- Displays all qualifying standard list files.
- -twslog
- Displays the content of the current day stdlist file.
- -name ["[folder/]jobstreamname [(hhmm date),(jobstream_id)].]jobname"|jobnum
- Specifies the instance of the job stream, optionally preceded by the folder within which the job stream is defined, and the name of the job for which the standard list file is displayed.
- jobnum
- Specifies the job number of the job for which the standard list file is displayed.
- -schedid jobstream_id.jobname
- Specifies the job stream ID and name of the job for which standard list file names are returned.
Comments
[(hhmm
date), (jobstream_id)]
are part of the command, not syntax indicators. This
means that you can supply either of the following for the -name argument:
morestdl -name ["[folder/]jobstreamname[(hhmm date),(jobstream_id)].jobname"
morestdl -name jobnum
The whole job identification
string must be enclosed in double quotation marks if the part identifying
the job stream instance contains blanks. For example, because the schedtime,
represented by hhmm date
, has a space
in it you must enclose the whole job identification in double quotation
marks.
If you just want to identify a job name, you do not need the double quotation marks.
The following
is an example of the syntax to use when identifying a job both with
and without its job stream. In the example, job_stream1
is
the name of the job stream, 0600 04/05/06
is the
scheduled time, 0AAAAAAAAAAAAAB5
is the job stream
ID, and job1
is the job name. You can run the morestdl command
against job1
using either of these two formats:
morestdl -name "job_stream1[(0600 04/05/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAB5)].job1"
morestdl -name job1
Examples
MY_CPU#ELI[(1824 03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR
on
the current day, run the following command: morestdl -first -name "MY_CPU#ELI[(1824 03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR"
0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE.DIR
on
the current day, run the following command: morestdl -first -schedid 0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE.DIR
MY_CPU#ELI[(1824
03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR
on the current day, run
the following command: morestdl -num 2 -name "MY_CPU#ELI[(1824 03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR"
MY_CPU#ELI[(1824
03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR
from three days ago, run
the following command: morestdl -day 3 -name "MY_CPU#ELI[(1824 03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR"
MY_CPU#ELI[(1824
03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR
from four days ago, run
the following command: morestdl -day 4 -last -name "MY_CPU#ELI[(1824 03/09/06),(0AAAAAAAAAAAAAEE)].DIR"
morestdl 455 | lp -p 6