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z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

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cd<br />

Related Information<br />

dirs, popd, pushd, set, sh, tcsh<br />

ceebldtx — Transform message source files into assembler source<br />

files<br />

Format<br />

Description<br />

Operands<br />

Options<br />

ceebldtx<br />

[-C csect_name][-I secondary_file_name]<br />

[-P] [-S] [-c class] [-d AP<strong>OS</strong>T | ’ | QUOTE | ″]<br />

[-l BAL | C | COBOL | FORTRAN | PLI] [-s id]<br />

in_file out_file<br />

Restriction: The ceebldtx utility only works with z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> files; MVS data sets<br />

are not applicable.<br />

The ceebldtx utility creates several files from the message source file. It creates an<br />

assembler source file, which can be assembled into an object (text) file and<br />

link-edited into a module in an MVS load library. When the name of the module is<br />

placed in a message module table, the Language Environment message services<br />

can dynamically access the messages. See Creating a Message Module Table in<br />

the Language Environment Programming Guide for more information about creating<br />

a message module table.<br />

The ceebldtx utility optionally creates secondary input files (COPY or INCLUDE),<br />

which contain declarations for the condition tokens associated with each message<br />

in the message source file. When a program uses the secondary input file, the<br />

condition tokens can then be used to reference the messages from the message<br />

table. The :msgname. tag indicates the symbolic name of the condition token.<br />

See the topic on Using and Handling Messages in z/<strong>OS</strong> Language Environment<br />

Programming Guide for a description of creating message source files and other<br />

corresponding information.<br />

in_file The name of the file containing the message source.<br />

out_file<br />

The name of the resulting assembler source file containing the messages,<br />

inserts, and others items, suitable for input into the High Level Assembler.<br />

An extension of ″.s″ is assumed if none is present.<br />

-C csect_name<br />

This option is used to explicitly specify the CSECT name. An uppercase<br />

version of the CSECT name will be used. By default, the CSECT name is<br />

the output file base name.<br />

-I secondary_file_name<br />

The -I (uppercase i) option provides the name of the secondary input file<br />

generated for the language specified with the -l (lowercase L) option. If no<br />

114 z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>V1R9.0</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>Services</strong> <strong>Command</strong> Reference

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