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SAS® Integration Technologies: Administrator's Guide (LDAP Version)

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Using Telnet to Administer the Spawner<br />

The spawner may be controlled and monitored using a telnet client connected to the operator port or service.<br />

Connecting to a Spawner<br />

To connect to an executing spawner, telnet to the operator interface port/service that is specified in the spawner<br />

definition.<br />

The following example, run on UNIX, assumes 6337 was specified as the port for the operator:<br />

myHost> telnet serverhost 6337<br />

Trying...<br />

Connected to serverhost.<br />

Escape character is '^]'.<br />

After the telnet conversation is active, enter the operator password that is specified. If the operator password was not<br />

specified, use sasobjspawn as the password.<br />

Note: You will not be prompted for the password. For example:<br />

sasobjspawn<br />

Operator conversation established<br />

You may now interact with the executing spawner by issuing any of the Available Commands.<br />

Available Commands<br />

The following is a list of commands that are available via the spawner's operator interface:<br />

btrace filename<br />

bye<br />

etrace<br />

help<br />

list<br />

quit<br />

Begin trace. filename is a fully qualified path to the file in which to log spawner activity.<br />

Terminate the spawner execution.<br />

End trace.<br />

List available operator commands.<br />

List all known servers that are supported by this spawner.<br />

Exit operator conversation.<br />

IOM Bridge Servers<br />

Using Telnet to Administer the Spawner 150

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