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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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OPUTX<br />

v data_set_name(member_name). Specifies the name of the partitioned<br />

data set (PDS) and the name of the member that contains the character<br />

conversion table.<br />

v data_set_name. Specifies the name of the partitioned data set (PDS)<br />

that contains the character conversion table. The table is the FROM1047<br />

part in member BPXFX000. (This is an alias; when shipped by IBM, it<br />

points to BPXFX111.)<br />

v (member_name). Specifies the name of the conversion table to be used.<br />

It is a member of a PDS. Since the data_set_name is omitted, the<br />

standard library concatenation is searched for the table. (The default<br />

library is SYS1.LINKLIB.)<br />

The following list summarizes what you can specify when you want to<br />

convert data to a different code page when copying singlebyte data:<br />

– BPXFX100. Null character conversion table. Use this table if the<br />

square brackets at your workstation are at the same code points as<br />

the square brackets on code page 1047 (it is the default). Also use it<br />

if you are using a DBCS terminal.<br />

– BPXFX111. Specifies a non-APL conversion table to convert between<br />

code pages IBM-037 and IBM-1047.<br />

– BPXFX211. Specifies an APL conversion table to convert between<br />

code pages IBM-037 and IBM-1047.<br />

– BPXFX311. Specifies an ASCII-EBCDIC conversion table to convert<br />

between code pages ISO8859-1 and IBM-1047.<br />

YES<br />

Specifies that the system is to perform conversation and use the default<br />

conversion table (BPXFX000) in the standard library concatenation.<br />

(BPXFX000 is an alias; when shipped by IBM, it points to BPXFX111.)<br />

NO<br />

Specifies that conversion not be done. NO is the same as omitting the<br />

CONVERT operand.<br />

LC<br />

Specifies that the member name be converted to a lowercase file name.<br />

MODE<br />

Specifies the file mode for any members copied into the z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> file system.<br />

The mode can be specified as three or four octal digits. (The digits can be<br />

separated by commas.) Invalid mode specifications are ignored.<br />

If the specified file does not exist, OPUTX creates a new file. For a new text<br />

file, the mode (permission bits) is 600. When the mode is 600, the user has<br />

read and write access; others have none. For a new binary file, the mode<br />

(permission bits) is 700. When the mode is 700, the user has read, write, and<br />

search access; others have none.<br />

For more information, see z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>Services</strong> User’s Guide.<br />

QUIET<br />

Turns off the echoing of the OPUTX commands before the member or data set<br />

is copied.<br />

SUFFIX(suffix)<br />

Specifies that a suffix specified by (suffix) be appended to the member names<br />

in creating the z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> system file names.<br />

A suffix is an optional additional file identifier that is appended to the file name<br />

following a period (.). It is usually used to identify the type of file. For example,<br />

870 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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